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Show I UINTAH BASIN RECORD Tenth Avenue Debutante Models Spring Clothes Bruckarts Washington Digest -- WHOS National Union Endangered by Trade Barriers Between States Ask Me O A Gene. (Jarff NEWS Ttle Quests a?0L 1. VTiat was known , history as Seward. t4 Parti 2. Where in the New sb 0 .tier. the sun rise in the 3- is the wordt sbich , THIS Bootlegging of Milk and Cream Calls Attention to Condition Thats Become Flagrant; Proper Government Functions Used to Accomplish Unscrupulous Ends. with reference to 4. What was the first in the U. S. govern WEEK ' WNU By LEMUEL F. PARTON Young Sherman M. EW YORK. WASHINGTON. City officials and newspapers of Washington, D. C. Flirchild inherited about ir i Ls'j ... Aviation Profits i I f ii f New Yorker, designed the dress which she is modeling before her playmates Dorothy Kelly, at a fashion show staged in a Tenth avenue recreation center recently. Thirteen girls modeled costumes which made themselves. Little Miss Kelly won first place for the best appearance with her smart little jumper ld they dress. $1,000,000 BELL Tom Sharkey Weightlifter in Pageant panjandrums of the plane designing and building industry. Just now, the Civil Aeronautics authority certifies Mr. Fairchilds e ennew 500 horsepower more powhas he which, says, gine, er for its weight than any other. For several years, Mr. Fairchild has e enbeen pioneering the gines as against the radial type of foreign nations. In 19S6, he sold 20 of them to the Greek government, which, it was later reported, found them highly satisfactory. His enthe size of gine is about a radial engine. His father, the late George W. Fairchild, began his business career on $8 a week, invented the dial telephone, the computing scale, and the adding machine. He wanted his son to become a junior executive of International Business Machines corporation. The young man, however, was interested mainly in cameras. At 17, he bad invented a revolutionary flashlight camera, and, at 21, a radial aerial camera. He organized Fairchild Aerial Surveys and in 1924 carried through an air camera survey of New York, e camera of his invenwith a tion which was a pioneering exploit in that field. By 1927, he had corraled several companies in the Fairchild Aviation corporation, had Igor Sigorsky building planes, and soon unveiled the first cabin monoplane in the United States. In Harvard at the start of the war, he was rejected for military service because of physical shortcomings, later remedied in Arizona. Intent on war duty of some kind, he brought out an aerial camera for war use, completed just before the Armistice. He is typical of a number of free and adventurous selfstarters in Uncle Sams industrial and technical establishment who can be rounded up in case of trouble a refutation of the totalitarian belief that only the can yield efficiency. goose-ste- p d one-thir- I I, 1 a six-mil- Tom Sharkey, famous veteran of the prize fight ring, is now appearthe Cavalcade of the West pageant at the Golden Gate International exposition in San Francisco. At the end of bis scene. Sharkey, appearing as a weight lifter, tucks his 600 pound" dumbbell under his arm and leaps off the stage with an agility belying his 66 years. ing in Using 11,600 cultured pearls, 366 diamonds and more than 26 pounds of silver, Japanese craftsmen of Tokyo have created this copy of the American liberty bell for exhibition at the New York Worlds fair. The bell Is valued at $1,000,000 and required many months of work. Canada Prepares for Royal Visit in May f " " "it, i ca!in( 5. What is the length H tion? ortsm 6 Who is the youngo, of the present congre 7. What is the atr- 0- cas total pvt! l'n tta?ec income? 8. Do all kinds of duce valuable pearls 9. During the World country was the first peace with its enemies 10. Is there any Lr amount of national deb o The 0 fican trea i gh psrtr coxey re Answers 1. The purchase of 2. On parts of the Panama, which turns 1 ja if the is a a stipe A peacock t od j a manner that t Ls the canal farthest ne the Atlantic. 3. Lucre is from the yes, a crum, meaning gam 4. The department of 27, 1789). 5. The whole body of als born about the sane a generation, and by the term is applied to HOTiL i y Ql DT- covered by their lives 6. Lindley Beckworth who is 25 years old. 7. The department i. fbeb ; t e ' ' o' reports that Sand America: $64,200,000,000 m varioi income in 1938. 8. While many kinds H CMik make pearls, only those by mollusks possess ng VEH r type of shell, with an it of mother-of-pea- rl are ir 9. Russia, by the treatv Litovsk, March, 1918 10. The national debt U2 by law to $45, - If Your Sore, Scratchy Conies from a Co!d- -l: Often Get Fast Relief - & SEVERAL notable moving - A 1 'TX-- Jk&l, il n Xv- -. '! I: P-- (u v,V4s ..ikti'-- s recent appearance have achieved portraits rather than caricatures. They also have shown a trend away from Moving Picture the star system Renaissance Is and a new reli- on colherent m the picChastened by hard Looming High fce r ture as a whole. times, the films are taking thought and adding cubits to their stature. This bystander hears much talk of a coming moving picture renais0 y'4sance not in any splendiferous outbreak, but in a new infusion of creative intelligence into the industry, and a longer tether for the same. r ? In focus here is Stagecoach, te .tv vM t j ? opening In New York with generous salutations by reviewers, who note that, with a , cast, a natural-bor- n horse opera ... has been conjured into an ex4,. cellent film by the deft artistry The first visit ever paid to Canada by a reigning British sovereign will be marked on May 15 when King of John Ford, director, and DudVI his and George queen, pictured at the left, wUI arrive in Quebec. The royal conple will spend four days ley Nichols, scenarist. in the United States, according to present They will visit all the They cities plans. of Canada, before reprincipal also scored, jointly, In The turning home on the battle cruiser Repulse. At the right is pictured a portion of the living room In the bungalow Hurricane and The Informwhich the king and queen will occupy at the main lodge in Jasper National park, Alberta, for one of their er. This film Is commended periods of rest. for its further trend toward simplicity and artistic integrity, and FOPE BLESSES U. S. away from overemphasis, the A traditional occupational disease of Hollywood on or off the lot. Mr. Ford, born Sean OFearna, in Portland, Maine, 44 years ago, thinks moving picture directors see too little of the world about them in proportion to what they record. Renoir had the same idea, insisting that, if an artist observed intently enough and long enough, his line would be almost self recording. So Mr. Ford stokes his pipe, meditates, observes, studies types, speech, dress, mannerisms, behavior, regional and occupational traits, and achieves characterization. His older brother, Fi anils, was ahead of him at Hollywood, as a serial star and director. John Ford tagged along and soon had his brother working for him. Before he was 25, he had directed many westerns. When he was 28, he directed The Iron Horse. He Is an autocrat on the lot, apt to throw the script away and Improvise busiAfter a recent private audience 4MT1Wr ness and lines, working V. with Tope Iius Ml, Cardinal Munusually In a frayed sports V delein of Chicago stated that the jacket and old He sidesteps dungarees. new pontiff considers the faithful Hollywood parties and passes back home among the dearest In the Jiggs IV, puppy, has been named official mascot mu h of his the time on his world. The pope Imparted his R hand,r80n small yaeht. He is big and of auppUe at 'e t,harl PHi'Tm depot t,, In apostolic blessing English, speciof coronation ceremonies. Jiggs is the rirt charge bulky, with thinning, sandy hair fying that It extended to America of Dr. licderhk M. James of Temple university. 1IIS predecessor, Ji.gs and glasses. and your families, U, was killed two weeks ago by a hie truck, G Consolirt iteii Ntua Feature No r - , d i yiH iff r.fAi no-st- ar New Jiggs Joins the Marine Corps v, Ay vV s 2. la To ease pain and discomfort and re- duce fever take 2 from tow. dissoiwJ kw Bayer Tablets water drink a glass of Just Make Sure Genuine BA YER k The simple way pictu u often brings amazinglysort from discomfort and accompanying colds. Try it. Then sof ( lie probably will tell y01 tmue with Bayer Aspma biscot it acts fast to relievefever a cold. And reduce This simple way, m- speittive, iferi trai Lf5 t- authority, scientific use of stn supplanted the ernes in easing cold haps the easiest wayyetdiscovered. But get genuine BAYER Aspinn. X K IDfOR 12 TABLETS 2 FULL DOZEN 2K I tg lufoi (I v a sS, J r w i $ If it, A Li t iX j c , i ' It , L. Hotel V off-shi- ft WNU v $10, and the money took wings not around the night spots, but in aviation enter-HePools His prises which Money, Brains; have made him 000,000, .elk a created? By WILLIAM BRUCKART Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C. keted with a variance of laws on most subjects that it seems almost have worked themselves into a ter- a hopeless job to untangle them. For example, there are 170 differrible dither lately over a new kind of bootlegger a bootlegger of milk ent state laws dealing with the laand cream. This city, like every belling and grading of farm prodother city, has tight regulations con- ucts. A good ear of corn in one enstate wont be recognized as a good cerning milk and cream that ters the national capital. They are ear of corn in another. My friend, potato may be acregulations designed to protect the the ordinary irish health of those who reside here. cepted as No. 1 in one state, and Moreover, maintenance of such reg- find himself as No. 3 in another. A bottle of beer in Missouri, tax paid ulations are an entirely proper function of government, because there and respectable there, becomes vircan be nothing more important than tually a bottle of slop in an adjoining state. Wines from grapes grown health. According to the charges filed and in California cannot possibly be as upon which arrests were made, a good as wines grown from grapes m dairy four or five hundred miles Oregon, because the Oregon law says from Washington, inspected and li- so and lays a burdensome tax to censed by the state of its location, prevent Oregon citizens from having brought m a truck load of refrig- their stomachs corroded or someerated cream without first having thing Cement entering Florida, for obtained a permit to do so. The city a time, was not as good as cement officials, prodded perhaps by local produced in Florida and Florida was dairies and nearby milk producers, prepared to tax it until the case got threw a couple of men into jail and to the Supreme court of the United barked and squawked all around the States. place because of this bootlegger. States DilTer as to What The local press reports indicated the Constitutes a Truck Load city officials had made asses of Take another and less known conthemselves over the whole matter, but that is of no particular concern dition less known because fewer people come m contact with it, but to this discussion. The incident is very important as it enters into the cost of the things illustrative of a condition that is you buy, just the same. I refer to of rapidly endangering the national un- state laws about load limits ion of states, and is, therefore, a trucks. I dont have any love for trucks; they are so doggoned big matter for analysis here. Frequentthese days that I want to take to ly, great national issues lie around, or are kicked around, for months the timber when I see one of them before somebody inadvertently sets coming head-o- n along the highway But they have rights. Yet, there a match to the powder; and it hapare no two states as far as I can pened to be local officials who struck learn that have the same regulation the match. about the size of a trucks load. The Barriers to Trade Between trucks can be regulated because States Has Become Flagrant they use the highways, and yet one state says 120,000 pounds is a load The thing called to national at- and another state says 18,000 pounds tention by the cream bootlegger is is a load. The others have laws the existence through the nation of a load at varying sizes barriers or obstacles to trade be- specifying tween the states. It has become fla- in between, and there you are! Just what is a load, anyway? grant. Selfish interests have been The truth of the matter is that in one then, state; first, operating, local interests are to blame in most been have Laws another. in passed cases. They are taking advantage utilizing proper government func- of situations to further their own tions to accomplish unscrupulous selfish ends. And where are they ends. These have bred retaliatory to with this polyglot of leg measures Other states have passed leading islation? laws to get even" with those acting The whole thing seems a bit inahead. State officials, state trade to me. Here, on the one congruous and civic organizations have threatMr. Cordell Hull, the very hand, ened, and have been threatened able and valuable secretary of state, right back, until now we have has been moving heaven and earth throughout the United States thouto get rid of trade barriers between sands of people sticking out their nations. Reciprocal trade tongues m the most childish fashion he calls his method. Some treaties, of them at other thousands of people. Each seem to work badly, and some othgroup saying in sign language or ers appear to be producing results, otherwiseyoure another. but no one knows yet whether the It is serious business, and there is whole system should be kept or no doubt in my mind but what the thrown out. That question does not condition bodes ill for national unity. here. It is the national polIt takes no expanded imagination to belong of breaking down obstacles, jarthink of the time when we might icy loose log jams, so that our have 48 little nations, snarling and ring may move into other naproducts frothing at the mouth as crudely, to be considand qurte as unintelligently, as they tions that is important ered when within our own boundado throughout Europe. known means is being ries Now, it is one thing, and a very used every to block shmments and sales proper thing, to use regulations for between states. I cannot figure it the preservation of health, for the out unless some folks are strict folprotection of property, for the sup- lowers of the Biblical injunction not port of government, or governmento let the left hand know what the tal policy. It is quite another, and right hand doeth. dastardly, tiling to make use of those regulations to prevent the flow of National Government Policy commerce and the products of farm To Blame for Conditions and factory. It is such things as I have been wondering, therefore, that from which monopoly is made what had actuated the selfish interIf the now rather monopoests of the country to start on this ly investigation is worth its salt spree of battling among themselves. (which it has not demonstrated thus There must have been some reason could it demonstiate its value far), behind that. At least, I have come beinto trade barriers by examining to believe there is. I believe that tween states. the condition fundamentally springs from national government policy Proper Legal Power Used, which for years now has been in But It Is Used Selfishly the direction of destroying the rights Representative Halleck of Indiana of individual states. Little by little, has been engaged for weeks in dig- the federal government has tom ging up facts about these trade baraway the rights of the states and riers. lie told me the other day that the states, with pain reduced by fedhe intends to try to break them eral money, have permitted it either by constitutional down, Suddenly, however, the states and amendment or by national statute. their citizens have discovered their There are plenty of difficulties con- whole jurisdiction is enveloped m fronting him, he admits, because all creeping paralysis. We have all of these tilings have been done by noted resentment in the last few using entirely proper legal power, years at the encroachment of fedbut by using it selfishly. eral regulation upon individual To illustrate, Mr. Halleck referred rights and freedom. When these to that assertion that things were realized by the rank the power to tax is the power to and file of the people, there develdestroy " Indeed, it is! The power oped a new disease as a counter to tax for government revenue is, irritant, the disease of the and always has been, used. But other fellow off. It willknocking take more there are many instances of record than socialized medicine to correct where that taxing power was em- it. The national governments poliployed to levy suah high rates of cies, having started it, will have to tax that the tax collector took every- assume the blame and will have to thing produced The business was find a way to remedy the condition. destroyed And it is the same thinly I hope Mr. Halleck, and those he disguised use of proper power that has enlisted to help him, can find the is getting the nation into an awful proper prescription for the cure. mess, now. This choking of trade is Western Newspnper Union. going on despite the constitutional W ill Cares for 4,000 provision which says emphatically that no state may levy tariffs Bequeathing her money to relaagainst Importations from other tives to the twelfth generation, a Belstates The bright law makers, and gian woman has given the courts In their henchmen, have got around Termonde, Belgium, a task of dividthat in the manner mentioned ing millions of francs among more above. A than 4 000 people professional Mr Halleck supplied some facts genealogist has made a family tree to show how widespread tile condi4r0 feet long and going bark to 1600 tion has bicome He mentioned, Among the heirs are a cabinet n moreover, that the nation is so blan and two professors which j beivlce TEMPLE Onpo.il 'Ut ( gr 0 SQft Jil h Tin 18. |