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Show Deepest Spot in Star Bust Comfort, Safety Keynotf, of Trick Inventions Bruckart's Washington Digest Politicians Believe Roosevelt Now Campaiging for Third Term A The deepest place yet found the ocean is off the island of Mj' . danao, in the Philippines, wVJIHj soundings of 35,400 feet have be reported. J Second Abe Lincoln Kenny Wins Protesters Bob Burns Make-Read- j- y Tongue-Twist- ''VNU Virginia Vale EVEN after the many Politics long has been described as a game, and it Is. In consequence, there are certain rules to be followed. They are rules that are born of experience, and the participants in the game of politics know full well what will happen when those rules are violated. Outstanding among these rules none of which are written, of course is a thorough understanding by a President of the United States that he must remain silent about his choice of a successor just as long as it is possible to do so. Otherwise, he obviously loses some of the support that he can command from members of his party. Any pronouncement that he favors this one or looks with disfavor upon that one immediately produces a split. Those not blessed with the presidential smile become embittered and assert their enmity. Another rule Is that once a man Is elected President, he automatically becomes a candidate for a second term. This results from the fact that whether he is good, bad or Indifferent as the head of the political party that sponsored him, that party cannot dump him overboard for the sake of the party itself. Now, however, there is a new condition developing one for which no apparent or obvious rule exists. Tradition has set up a rule in this country that no President shall seek All a third consecutive term. Presidents have followed it, heretofore, and some indication has been given by them as early as was convenient that they intended retiring. The most recent situation of this kind, of course, was the famous statement by the late Calvin Cool-idg- e who was the author of "I do not choose to run." Mr. Coolidge had served a part of the term to which Warren G. Harding was elected and was elected for one full term. He considered he had served two terms, and thus stated his plans for return to private life, albeit the announcement had people guessing. WASHINGTON. Believe Roosevelt Is Planning for Third Term The problem that now confronts the politicians, and about which there is no rule, concerns President Roosevelt's course. According to old precedent, Mr. Roosevelt is under no compulsion to suggest whom he favors as a successor. Indeed, he would be borrowing trouble were he to do so at this time. But members of his own party and voters generally are wondering more and more whether he intends to seek a third nomination and election, and thus climax his record as a breaker of precedents. There are many political leaders and students of politics who are convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that Mr. Roosevelt is campaigning even now for his third nomination. They base their conclusion on countless small indications, and the drive for this result that is being carried on by a small group of White House intimates. And to make the confusion worse, there has come the announcement by Secretary Ickes of the interior department that Mr. Roosevelt must This be renominated and was like a bombshell in the ranks Democrats of the who read into those lines, printed in the magazine, "Look, the first publication of united efforts on the part of the Presidents advisers with the consent of Mr. Roosevelt. But if the Ickes statement was a bombshell, a subsequent statement by Stephen Early, one of the secretaries to Mr. Roosevelt, must be regarded as an explosion of an entire powder storehouse. To the onlooker, Mr. Early's statement cannot be ignored; it must be accepted as having presidential approval because of the intimate relationship between the two men, and if it has presidential approval, it is tantamount, ns far as I can see, to an announcement of Mr. Roosevelts intentions. Early Declares Voters Will Not Be Confused Writing in the Saturday Evening Post. Mr Early concluded his discussion of unfair criticisms of Mr. Roosevelt with a fervent declaration that the voters will not be confused. With the gracious consent of Mr. chief Wesley Winans Stout, editor-iof the Post, I herewith reprint the salient paragraph from Mr Early's article that has served to spread in new and broader form the feeling that Mr. Roosevelt will seek to a third term: "Certain it is that with the ap pri ath of 1110, as has been the case four jc.irs since tins demo cratic form of g ivernmen was adopted by the people of the UniUd Mills, ntw rumors, new whisper mgs vanaloos f truth and untn.th to mix wi'h the old v ill come I nr tun ill v, it is equally true that tl ova t m ijoritv of thoT win ole in t! e in t p'( - deutial eh etion w ill h ism e in i pu t .l.o 1 lot irv mg tin r c nti n t f a t at 11, i double- n i - 1 of Abraham we have had on Lincoln that and screen, Henry stage Fonda has given us, in Young Mr. Lincoln, one that is different. He could have walked through the part, because by nature he had been fitted to play it. It would have been no effort at all for him to look like Lincoln, with a little help from the makeup man. C. and their tongued scandal-mongeilk may do to confuse the real issues. I find the general question being asked: Why is notice being taken now s of rumors and which have thus far been ignored through six years of the administration, unless it is the purpose to dispose of them in advance of another campaign? I hear also this question: How can the voters express "contempt for these false rumors and vilifications unless by a vote for Mr. Roosevelt, personally? The answers to these questions, of course, will vary. Those who are heart and soul with Mr. Roosevelt are saying naturally that he wants to put an end to the unfair and poisonous attacks by answering them openly. Those who want to stand by the two-tertradition are reading into those lines Mr. Roosevelts determination to go ahead and seek Why, they ask, should the Early article and the Ickes article be published simultaneously, especially since Mr. Roosevelt has remained silent on his future course. rs half-truth- to HOTELS The Farley transcontinental tour, however, is not impossible of anal- First, Mr. Farleys ambiysis. No tions are rather well known. man can be blamed for wanting to be elected President of the United States. If he werd seeking facts about the political situation for use in behalf of Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Farley would have made exactly the same tour that he has made. But if the tour were in Mr. Roosevelts behalf, it is only natural to suppose that Mr. Roosevelt himself would not find it necessary to make a trip to the Pacific coast himself So, as the guessing continues and the number of political leaders who suspect Mr. Roosevelt has started out to be a candidate for a third time continues to grow, the move ment on the Republican side is completely overshadowed. Few persons are heard to talk about the pronouncement by Senator Vanden-berg- , of Michigan. Now, Senator Vnndenbcrg has come forth with a real issue. He proposed, in replying to an utge by the Michigan representatives m congress that he run for the Republican nomination, that the presidential term be limited; that is, he says no man should have more than four years at the job. It is a new thought. It is a hot one at the moment. Whether Sena tor Vandenberg can smoke out Mr Roosevelt on the issue is something else again, but the Michigan sena tor has taken a position that will provoke debate. Along with that sideswipe at Mr Roosevelt, how iver, Mr Vandenieig has raisid a rumpus in his own paity Many Re publicans are gettu g pritty eoikv about the r own outlook fir ' M 0 and the liijicl.on of the Vamienl eig ;hilisohy it .o the picture p could rtir up as much f.os niuce i the Republicans as Ins bi n stnric up on the Dim m tic xice bv t'o gcrxiul uni it untie s of tht Iioi APARTMENT dmts (Hull com e si (J bv f tr rn N r vi pijpi i U ni n Laki jearmi jaon. L. from Temple. Reasonable or month. Completely RICHMOND. 7 E No. Temple "" Roll Dev and RFX PHOTO PRINTS 16 bCH t 0 jit Rate.- (b - chair 3,?ul PHOTOGRAPHY 16 be ?5f M HOTEL Block week i iaS i. When in BENI). 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There are other excellent performances in the picture, notably those contributed by Alice Brady, Donald Meek and Richard Cromwell. Put Young Mr. Lincoln high on your list of the pictures that you must be sure to see. IT 6f t Infections for best results. Literature m information on request. L SURGICAL CLINIC 511 Templeton Bldg Salt Lake City. Uti HENRY FONDA Bo S, TRUSSES Instruments, Hospital Surgical Manufacturers of Abdominal gu4?V Trusses 5 porters. Elastic Stockings. The Physicians Supply Company I r'" - Salt Lake Cfco UL 4 W 2nd South St OFFICE EQUIPMENT- - ... NEW AND USED deak. and ehairx ! typewriters, adding inch's, safes, fc 15 W. Broadway. Lea 8. U DFSK E , USED TRUCKS Kenny Baker, of radio fame, has won new laurels for himself on the screen. When it was announced that he would play Nanki Poo in the screen version of The Mikado there were loud protests from the 1035 Dodge K60 heavy L. W. B Dual1936 Ford ls-to- n 1037 GMC F18H Cab Forward 1935 International C40 .. Midget Colony Embarks for Equine Tour A V versatile clipper wm. .fM.M 2i JJf.4 JtS 6- -. X Mm 'M David Niven may have lost out in private life, when Merle Oberon became Mrs. Alexander Korda, but hes doing all right in his professional career. Assigned to appear in Whose Wife? opposite Loretta Young, its stated by the producers that he has the most important characterization of his screen caWhether its cutting the garden reer. Whose Wife? is an original Here's a real study in contrasts at San Francisco's Golden Gate hedge, sheeps wool or a head of screen play by Gene Towne and International exposition. When the little grownups of a side show decide hair, its all the same to Mr. E Graham Baker, and Tay Garnett Teffont, Eng will direct it with those three to go horseback riding, they don't have to take turns. No matter bow Goddard, lie has been cutting involved its got to be many midgets are around, they ail climb aboard Brooklyn Supreme, the land, farmer. hair for 40 years with his long steel good. worlds largest horse. The Belgian stallion weighs 3,270 pounds. shears the same length of time spent in clipping hedges and sheep. Bob Burns has a method all his He is proud of his ability and claims his work is Just as good as that done own for preparing his material for those Thursday night broadcasts. by the city tonsorial experts. He doesnt have a word ready at " yww-yr'XV I f rehearsal time just runs through I ' the spots with the guest stars H and Bing Crosby and rehearses his Mack Trucks-Fact- I Bf ory Salt Lake Citv 807 8o. Main - L i TERMS Art flapped on clotheslines as a brisk wind swept through Rittenhouse square in Philadelphia, Pa., outside exhibit sponsored by the Art League of Philadelphia. Several cently. It was the annual three-da- y Gilbert and Sullihundred oils, water colors and etchings were on display and for sale. Thousands of interested spectators filed van fans. What, they demanded, past the displays. would a crooner do with the role? Hed be horrible, they declared, in contrast with Martyn Green, Sydney Granville, and the other members of the celebrated DOyly Carte Opera company, who have concen! ' trated for years on Gilbert and Sullivan products. I Now theyre acclaiming him. Its no surprise to the rest of the cast. After he sang his first selection, "A Wandering Minstrel, they realized how good he was. Elizabeth Berg-ne- r, . who was working on a neighboring set, behind screens, promptly gave orders that the screens were to come down and work on her set was to stop every time that Baker sang. And those who protested that he was a crooner now agree with Victor Schertzinger, the director who insisted on having Baker, that the lads not a crooner at all, but a lyric tenor. re- Wasaf 7 War? Unthinkable, Says London Woman , BABY CHICKS flocks culled by State Lkens Experts for 18 years. Red, RcKk, Orpmgtc Wyandotte chicks A grade $6 76 per 100. i $7 25, AAA $7 50. Leghorns for le. Due lings. Prepaid guaranteed delivery Eventw1 ly Better Chicks, why not now? Write Colo. Hatchery, 1416 Larimer, Dens cartalog Blood-Teste- d ELECTRIC REPAIRED MOTORS , pai Satisfactory work guaranteed In minims aton time on motors and transformers. SfHRAt j FLFCTRJC CO., 141 Pierpont. Salt La) 00g TIRE REPAIRING and RECAPPING BAILEY, Inc. m Firestone Distributors Salt I Went Third South , arsal We can Repair or Recap in our shop Tire Any sue Truck or Tractor 50 up to and including $13 nt , ; ae Ft k oi 8 kill PHOTO-KRAF- i T ue. ECONOMY FILM SERVICE ' Any Roll Developed with 25c 8 Quality Print 3c Extra Prints Wrap coin and film carefully DRUGS SCHRAMM-JOHNSON PHOTO-KRAF- Box 749 T ' I rusty plied 4 tha 'ti ay liv BUSINESS TRAINING L D. S. Training Doesnt Cost- -lt LOOKING FOR WORK? te ay U -- ilthe Salt Lake City. Utah inn's Paysfi WHAT CAN YOU DO? ,h( inexpensive course in business training, and you can answer n that question satisfactorily. Take L a short, COLLEGf. D. S. BUSINESS SALT LAKE 70 NORTH MAIN rs X t In SALT LAKE CITY aj Stop at the BELVEDERE APARTMENT HOTEL r bazooka - M 4A FM . is rr Y o rM V ; -- M 5? - Vy- ' -- v T- v V J t ' Ft " - V -. A, solo. After the rehearsal he goes to a dressing room, armed with his pipe and tobacco pouch. Two hours later hes ready. IIis script consists of a few key words jotted down on the back of an envelope or a scrap of paper things like Aunt Boos mousetrap or Snazzys automoto remind him of what he bile, want,s to say. Trobably thats the reason for at least part of the informality of that program something that a great many people ure striving to inject Into other broadcasts, without marked success so far. 4, ' OHK Al) EADS In The lifter SiM Douglas fair banks IK Sun Jr. 'bous an astonishing resemblance to mfe ( Gable . , . John Corfu hi so strenuously to making more prison pictures that ('.purge any uill rrphue him in it), mm 1 earsliajt in Sing Sing" , , , Joan Craujiitd hasnt guen up the nh a of doing a musiutt play on llroadnay , . . iugnd Curie lull make luo pit lures a year lor f mi I Mil for file years; remember hrr in by Western Newspnper Union.) d 1 c iaer, r But he gives such a superb performance that he seems really to be Lincoln as a young man; he is n Ambitions of Jim Farley Are Rather Well Known lq fc Ca Every Reason to Wonder What the Answer Will Be There has been considerable criticism of Mr. Roosevelt because he has kept his own counsel concerning the scads of favorite-socandidates that go shouting about the countryside. Such criticism is silly. The President, whatever his thoughts may be about the third term, is not called upon at this time to say whether he likes any one or all. It accomplishes nothing for those who dislike the President to stir up a stink along that line. But the determination of the President, or lack of it, to run for a third term is quite a different proposition and there is every reason under the rules of the game as it has been played for people to wonder what the answer is to be. The record of history being what it is, a tradition of two terms for a President, there can be no justification of the New Deal attacks upon Vice President Garner, whose friends are now openly seeking delegates for him. Mr. Garrers friends surely have the right to assume that the time has come for them to cultivate votes in the next national convention of the Democratic party. Such attacks as Mr. Ickes made against Garner in the Icke3 state ment favoring Roosevelt for a third term sounds like spoiled fish to me, and you know what a mess that is. The vituperations by Mr. Ickes, however, are not different than his usual line of thinking. As a part of the general picture of confusion resulting from the activity of Mr. Roosevelts friends, the recent tour of the country by Postmaster General Farley must be examined. er Honorificabilituihmtatibus f from Act V, scene 1, Hne Shakespeares play Loves Labor Lost It is a stock example of t ISy Bombshell by Ickes and Blast by Secretary Early Accepted as Having Presidential Approval; Attacks Upon Garner Are Without Justification. By WILLIAM BRUCKART Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. Ocean Pircmen in a Cambridge, Mass., station are proud of Np.irkj, a tliree-inhs od kitten who otieys defense m'nisler, planned When Sir John Anderson, British t his air raid preraiit.onx shelters, he forgot all about Mrs. Dobson of all (he ru.s, The is shown I.onilon, who, through no fault of her own, just nnt get through the as she shli s down the at the sown 1vg of at al trm, fa. low one doorway of a standard shelter.. Mrs. Dol son, ns you mav hue in; Is somewhat oversized, and undoubtedly believes iu an app aseinent polii y, of the In . belilt i s. m ma-eo- not-ied- e eve ' postcard or letter and without cost or obligation to you Ill send you details of my LOW COST loans all mode under slate bank-In- c department supers in inn jf'ird Vile live. cairchEn FaraAfJCE Continental Bank HMg.. 8sU Lake f - |