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Show ? i - v . ' PAGE TWO t PROVO ' (UTAH) : EVENING - HERALD, FRIDAY, : SEPTEMBER 17, 1937? f 'SECTIONS TWO OUT : " OUR : WAY 5 J1HE Publlhd by th West street, Provo. Utah. JSntered as secona-ciass matter at the ptof fic in Provo, Utah, .under the act -of March 3, " .- . Oilman. Nicol Buthnjan, National Advertising: representatives New. Tor. San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Lofc Angeles, Seattle, Chicago. --Member United Press, N. E. A. Service, Western Features and the Scripps League of Newspapers. Subscription terms by carrier in Utah county 60 cents the month. 13.00 for six months. In advance; $5.75 the year in advancer by mail in county 5.00; outside county 15.75 the year in advance. Ubertr the laaa" BU " There is no power bat of God: the powers that be are ordained of God. Romans 13, 1. Of 19 out of 20" things In children, take not special notice; but if , as to the twentieth, you give a direction or command, see that you are obeyed. Tryon Edwards. . Constitution Reflects Nation9 8 Faith, Ideals Perhaps the most encouraging thing about the Constitution Constitu-tion the .United. States is the fact that after living under it for 150 years we are still arguing about its precise meaning. mean-ing. That means that the document is flexible. Being flexible, flexi-ble, it is adaptable to changing times. Because this is true, it can obey that inexorable law of nature "adapt or die." That fact is a good one to keep in mind this fall, as we celebrate the Constitution's sesquicentennial. We might save ourselves a good deal of argument about horse and buggy days' and the fact that the founding fathers fath-ers did not foresee this era of sea-to-seahighways, giant corporations, mass production and so on. For while it is quite true that the country for which the Constitution was devised contained none of these things, it is equally true that that does not necessarily make any difference. They gave us a Constitution which is not rigid and inanimate, but supple sup-ple and alive. It is easy to lose sight of the goalwhich the founding fathers sought to reach. . Fundamentally, they were simply trying to make certain that their America would continue to be a democracy, a land of freedom jand of equal opportunity, opportun-ity, where men could live without butting their heads against the-injustices and stupid cruelties inseparable from authoritarian authori-tarian regimes. They had a pretty clear idea about the things that had been fought for and won in the American revolution, and they wanted those things preserved. During the century and a half since they finished their work, the Constitution has done its part nobly. Triose goals of freedom, democracy and equality have in large measure been attained, not perfectly, perhaps for perfection is rare in human undertakings but very substantially. And the very fact that the country has existed for a century and a Jialf under this Constitution is the best guarantee that it Will continue under it in the future. A charter of. f reedom like our Constitution does not go on living of itself. It lives because it expresses ideals which are dear to the people who live under it. Our Constitution -is rounding out 150 years of service because the American people are and have been determined to remain free. The Constitution is merely the instrument through which they make their determination effective. . It is no blind subservience to the written word that makes us revere our Constitution, nor is it an unthinking obedience to the dead hand of the past." It is a reflection of the ideal that animates us, of the faith by which we order our society. As long as we are true to that ideal and that faith, we need not fear for the Constitution's continued good health. Funny thing, the boys think, that almost every game of scrub that they start on the corner lot ends up at the kitchen sink at' home. Much of the Far East trouble is traced to the Boxer rebellion, re-bellion, with a minor flareback in the Joe Louis-Max Schmel- ing feud. : i 'We, the People of the United i k If v 1 fr LU JIB UW v. v Heral4 qprporatMjn. eouin j? int.. HUERAVf HURRAY look w Look - he's 1W PfcOFESSOfc rvpe. VVBVVOMnr EVER, HAVE TO VvOlK FOR, MM tOOKf he's WALKIM' WITH OKIE FOOT Ikl TH' WATER1 AM' OUST BUMPEO -HIS HEAD 4 l AW POMT 1 O J r. . if i a COT. 103T SV NCA SCBVICt. Wfc The Great BY X REPORTER Everybody is going places these days. Perhaps now we'll settle down for the winter, send the kids to school and try to build the savings sav-ings account back into some kind of shape, but we'll just as surely be on the march again next spring as early as first Dussv-willow Ltime. A large-sized American financier finan-cier back from Europe early this fall said the Europeans were having hav-ing something in the nature of a boom in business due to the greatly increased tourist trade. Another one said that during the hard years of the depression we had "tuilt more sources of reserve strength than some of us thought possible." AH this means that we strange creatures who 'call ourselves Americans Am-ericans have all the bounce of a rubber ball. We can get all bruised and crumpledwhen a depression comes along and uses up a lot of our reserves, but come up strong on the next turn of the wheel and are soon grinning and spending again. Five years aeo a bic- mai'nritv of us thought the end of things ws just arouna the next bend. Today a big majority of that big majority are figuring on how they can spend their excess big or lit- ue oeiore it accumulates too greatly and becomes a responsibility. responsi-bility. The easiest, quickest and most utterly delightful way to spend this excess is to go places and see things. Even with the new rates on railroads and for roadside road-side accommodations, it is still no job at all to put a year's savings into circulation thru travel. While we're doing all this trav eling, tho, we certainly should consider the thought that aU parts e) ; States' OSW; THAT'S RIGHTS WE CUX HE4WA& BIHTJM SCHOOL. HE'D OWMTWTOWN, KNOW IT aw; It SCHOOL miE TM.s.rT.ofr. 6- Parade of America are just as much due for a visit and part of our largesse lar-gesse as are the cramped and somewhat stodgy countries of Europe. There are wonders in Texas, California, Oregon, Washington, Utah and Idaho that' will stack up against any of the natural attractions at-tractions of the old world and which are a lot cleaner. Th6 few old world travelers who come our way are always impress-f ed with the Sierras of California the Cascades and Olympics of Oregon Ore-gon and Washington, the Tetons and Coeur d'Alene of Idaho, and the wonders of Utah's Wasatch range. There's a lot to see before you have to cross an ocean. - Howdy, folks! Do your Christmas Christ-mas shopping early and avoid the rush! There is a limit to everything, except the number of times you have to crank a second-hand outboard out-board motor before it starts. MEN OF VISION Oswald Z. Blimp, brilliant young Provo business promoter, expects to make a fortune during the next year signing up all the midgets In the country,, and then taking them over to the South Sea islands and selling them to the cannibals for appetizers. The physician's office nurse answered the telephone and said: "I don't know how long the doctor doc-tor will be away. He's been called out on an eternity case." And then there was the escaped es-caped convict who called himself a manicurist. He did all Ms work with a file. ABIGAIL APPLESAUCE SEZ: An open mind Is all right If your mouth Isn't that way. Gashouse Gus declares he doesn't see how some of these roadhouse entertainers keep sober with all the boos they get "Your honor, I desire to be excused from jury service " "Why," asked the judge "Because I can only, hear with one ear. "Oh. you'll do,"- replied the judge. "We only hear one side of a case at a time Dermatologists. according to a new item, have decided to change the name of "athlete's foot" to "dermatophytes " This marks an advance for oviciiue an advance of about a treatment. $5 I YE DIARY I Neighbor Opplewitz house, and little Gloria Opplewitz, age five, do be sitting on the front porch, caterwauling loudlv, and do ask her what do be the trouble, and she doth reply: ? want an; lee cream cone and daddy won't give me a nickel." And I do query: "Does be ever give you a nickel when you cry like .that?" And she doth" answer: "Sometime he does, and sometime he doesn't, but It ain't no trouble tq vpll.". . . And so, rivmg the little tot a licorice loDipoo. to" home. v-. , Out for lunch. A . pound avoirdupois. . is Jbavier than a tfov sound, but Mia- iiw ounce is heavier than the avoifdtHf0 pphances skyrocketed to such 1 AIMTi OLOAT1MV VET-HE. MAY PS TESTTIM OUT A THEORY THAT IF VOU THIMK WHlllE MDUfUQWKI'TH S PLACE WHEM ; YOU OET THERE- tea ,1 V'.v, Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) and labor the abortive CIO strike against the independent steel companies. All of the other major strikes have resulted from s between rival unions. xlivcu uau uue lauur puaru so desired,, it could not nave avoided taking a hand In this new type of. dispute. The battling has gone to such lengths that the rights of employers as well as labor have been jeopardized. 4c j FIRST DISPUTE The board moved cautiously into in-to its first jurisidictional row. For it knew it was bound to have either CIO or AFL hanging on its ears. Finally it picked the National Electric Products Co. of Ambridge, Pa., for the initiation Here it overruled a closed-shop agreement agree-ment between the A. F. of L. and the company, and ordered an election. elec-tion. The workers, the board argued, ar-gued, had a right to choose which union should represent them in collective bargaining. The protests from the A. F. of L. could be heard at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue. The labor board was damned as being picked and paid by the CIO. However, a federal circuit court in Wilmington, Wilming-ton, Del., upheld the board to the extent of refusing an injunction against its action. Then the board plunged even deeper into the labor melee. It ordered an immediate election among seamen in Atlantic and Gulf p6rts. The A. F. of L. had demanded a delay. It wanted to "reorganize" its. seamen's union. But the CIO threatened to tie up 56 shipping lines if the delay was granted, and the board, torn between be-tween the two factions, became the advocate of promptness. jje jt AFL-EMPLOYER LINK , All this has caused such resentment resent-ment in the A. F. of I that an undercover campaign now is reported re-ported under way to- "smear" the labor board and undermine its influence. in-fluence. It is charged with being pro-CIO and at the beck and call of John I Lewis. Result of this probably will be a link-up between the A. BV of tt. and employer groups. In fact, the board already has confidential information in-formation that certain A. F. of L. leaders in local areas are working hand-in-glove with certain employers em-ployers to smash the . CIO. Most notable of these is on the Pacific coast, where a fierce offensive of-fensive by A. F. of L. teamsters against CIO maritime workers threatens to tie up the entire waterfront. wa-terfront. Most unfortunate result from labor's viewpoint may be a drive against the labor board in the next session of congress. Bills curbing its power were offered at the last session, by employer groups but got nowhere. With secret A. F. of L. support, however, it might be a different story. - I MERRY-GO-ROUND m- Since the trouble began v, in China, Secretary Hull has. spent part of every Sunday at 'his, desk. . . . Manufacturers of - electric blowers fori drying seed cotton are doing a heavy business,7! according to the department, of agriculture. Heavy rains in the south have" re- L suited in much; wet-picked cotton, and the newly-invented artificial dryers are in demand'.'. rjDoth Marvm Mclntyre and StevevEarly, White , House secretaries are sons of clergymen. v TVA boast After low-rate' TA- iuice was In troduced in Somerville, Tenn, sale -iiJ IT III til -tft VIK a J hert, M AttTA . BOGEBI, JWItk'S BBUCB : KWIGim . amtfcr. Ja. JUIIXICENT BAT!fK,uB "Tutryt JWtta'a prlA itdm mvwt- at c tm wck-ed r vartr . B'aiaka-llarfa k thta., AT ait teten a Jadlta acar : tm leaw Nnr Ytrk, Marta UU4, awetV "jttaya I'd better ?a; way - ' rK CHAPTER VI TifARTA, who had called Judith at midnight to make a mis-placeb! mis-placeb! plea for sympathy, did' not run away, nor did she- need Ju dith's' request that she remain where she was to keep her there. She was at the couturier's the next afternoon, when Judith went in for a! last fitting on a white crepe sports dress covered with luscious rosy strawberries. There Was a brief, short-sleeved rosy Unen Jacket with .'the dress. A brief green bolero adorned it. Judith had expected to wear it gaily through the summer , months. Now it was just something else to take along to Reno. ; The day went swiftly. She dressed in a black woolen suit, thin and cool, that fastened with patent leather chessmen. A shiny black sailor tipped rakishly over her right eye and saved itself from severity with a single white gardenia. She picked up her summer foxes and carried them. She had lunch with Anne, in the dining room at Pierre's, that topped the hotel and let Central- Park spread out below. She told her only that she was going to Reno. CHE went back to the apartment later to complete her packing. Millicent called and asked if she might come over for a little while. She came, tossing her big straw hat on a table, and crossing her legs under her as she sat on an enormous cushion. Suddenly she said: "Judith, may I go with you?" Too wise to ask questions, Judith Ju-dith nodded. "I'm a consummate fool," Millicent Milli-cent said. "The show's closing in another week,, or maybe I would mot have courage to do this. I want to get away from Bruce. I seem to love him and he doesnt love me. He' been honest and yet I don't know. Maybe he does and won't acknowledge it. I can stay here and get all cantankerous worrying about the phone ringing, ring-ing, and whether hell be here and there, and get my heart ground to a pulp if his name gets tangled SQUAW CREEK Provo Newspaper Looks like autumn season has set in. Every spring Indian Charlie Char-lie moves from south to north side of cabin to keep in shade. Every fall he moves from north, side back to south side to catch warm sun. Charlie has moved back to south. Will go inside when snow flies. Mush Hank say its easier to look out at Charlie than to fool around with calendar. PIUTE JOE SCIENCE A new type of airplane engine, which runs equally well on either gasoline or heavy fuel oil. has been perfected in Europe. The heavy oil is not burned , in the usual Diesel principle, but runs through a miniature "cracking" plant which breaks it down into volatile form, reducing operating expensed by thirty per t cent. Frankie Crbsetti Has Hidjieh Charms NEW YORK. Sent. 16 Frankie Crosetti is proving that Barnum and Texas Guitian were ngnx a. sucker is born every minute. The New York Yankee shortstop hn caueht three rival American league players oh the ancient hid den-bail tricic ithis year. SOUTH AFRICA HAS ' SHORTAGE IN LABOR SOUTH AFRICA (American Wire)--Shortage of farm and mining laborers has created an acute working problem in Johannesburg. Johan-nesburg. -Mining expansion, employing 20,000 . additional workers yearly, has maintained a stationary employment em-ployment for .many months. July figures showed a 3000 decline de-cline in June. each customer in one year was $112 ,xf purchases. ... It was an odd moment in the life of Joe .Green, boss of munitions exports to the. state department, when an sithma stiff erer walked hi and asj3d fdr-relter for his affliction. Green - handles exports, of helium gas, which li supposed io relieve respiratory diseases." ', (Copyright 1937, by United Piute coy;Cm f, up with somebody elseY in the tabloids or,-1 can go away! ? At least'! T3nt be4 expecting tar see' him. ' " . -j r "I'm glad you are coming, Milly. You're wise for your years. Young people grow up so much more easily -today," saldT Judith. JShe forgot that she had known this lesson.- After all,, she had acted on instinct, not figured affairs out as.had.Milliceht. Then Mnilcenf hurried home to pack, new light in her eyes, new eagerness in her step. New places they helped ' Judith thought. Now Judith filled the sunken pool in the bathroom and climbed into the warm green water, letting let-ting it calm her as she closed her eyes' and relaxed. She wondered dimly if Phil would take her to dinner or just to the airport. She hoped she could be gay. fmiEXf she left the tub she A WaJaSVa 4S aaWtJT p up her face carefully, and put on gray taffeta lounging pajamas that reminded her of -a gray, sea on a cool day. She slipped her feet into gray and - green mules and clasped a heavy old-fashioned silver sil-ver bracelet, a -long-ago gift from Phil, on her arm. She would wait for him to call, then prepare for the plane. When the bell rang, though, it wasn't Phil. It was Marta. "Oh my dear, how quaint and old-fashioned," she said, at sight of the pajamas. "I've often wondered won-dered if you maintained your remarkable re-markable sveltness in the privacy of your home. It's a mistake not to, darling. Women can be too careless . . ." Then the blue eyes filled with feigned embarrassment embar-rassment "Oh Judy, forgive me! I didn't know I mean I forgot . . . I'm so stupid." "I'm leaving for the West tonight, to-night, Marta. Did you have something important about which to see. me?" "Yes, I aid." The voice was brittle. "I'd like a written acknowledgment ac-knowledgment that I did not steal your pearls." "But why?" Judith marveled that her voice was so cool when her hatred was so acute. "Because I don't want any blot to cast its shadows on the love that Phil and I have for each other." "No blot can come unless you cause it," Judith answered. "I'm very busy. Will you go, please?" Oh, to hold back her anger until this woman left! Marta wanted a written acknowledgment ah acknowledgment to use as proof that there had Jeen suspicion., of ONCE NEWS, TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY m From the Files of the Prow Herald, Sept. 17, 1917 The Bonneville ward completed arrangements for the erection of a new ward chapel to cost $18,000. Chairman of the building committee commit-tee was O. H. Berg. The second contingent of Utah county's draftees, consisting of 60 youths had been selected, ready to leave for mobilization on September Septem-ber 20. The Epperson band was engaged to play on the streets in honor of the departing boys on the evening of September 19, and a dance was planned at the Mozart Moz-art the same night, the guests of County Clerk L. T. Epperson. One of the leading social events was" the shower given by Mrs. Jessie W. Johnson and Mrs. Ned Hoover in compliment to Miss Jean Holt who was to marry Nelson Cooper. Dr. George E. Hyde, superintendent superin-tendent of the insane asylum, reported re-ported at the meeting of the state board of insanity that the insti-ution insti-ution cared for 606 patients at that time of whom 44 were feebleminded. feeble-minded. The current cost of operations op-erations for the month were $8383.49. Board members present were State Auditor Joseph Ririe and State Treasurer D. O. Larson. Miss Florence Jepperson who Sportsmanlike Driving There is nothing new in the batic rule of the road keep to the right. It is an ancient rule observed in the horse-and-bnggy days and before. Without this basic rule, traffic conditions would be.' chaotic. Sportsmanlike Drivers always keep to the right. i ATTENTION!- WE PAY HIGHEST PRICES houses .mnpGGusn Phone CoIIectr-Spanish UTAH HIDE & TALLOW COMPANY GEOPMCE, l&nCT. nea service, inq'v 'I course. Her crafty brain held some use for it. -n i6TBE 1 written statement?" Mar :" , a prompteot . I x TVe apologized. That will be enough Judith said. r You hate me! YouVe always hated me! You want me to get Into trouble," Marta screamed, t "You wouldn't do anything to help me. Not you. Not you, ever! "How could this help . you?" Judith asked calmly enough. ! "Why do you want to know? What business' is it of yours? Oh you you ..." Marta's hand reached out and struck Judith ' sharply across the cheek. A ring; whose 1 sapphire was turned inward, in-ward, cut Judith and drew blood. She reached up' to touch her cheek. At that moment the bell rang5 again and Phil appeared. ; "Hello, what's the matter?" In the dusk he caught the . strained expressions. I He would have turned on the switch that filled the room with glow from many lamps, but Judith Ju-dith stayed his hand. "We like the peace of the twilight. We're being lazy for a few minutes; Phil. This is a modern farewell. Outgoing wife takes tea with out lemon or sugar with incoming incom-ing wife and former husband." If , the room became warm wiu; light Phil would detect her bruised cheek. She could stand no more strain. She would scream or fling herself from the balcony rail that surrounded the terrace, or throw the tea cups against the great mirror at the far end of the room, if the emotional problem began again. She was eager now for the ship among the clouds, that would wing its way to the stars, to peace, to Reno. Marta was a poo little fool-Very fool-Very quickly she would play her ' hand with Phil. Ah, it was heartache heart-ache to know he must be hurt, but Judith was wise enough to sense that she could not stay his moves. She would only antagonize antago-nize him against her. If she were ever to win him back, she must go now and let him have Marta. They had tea together, drank a gay toast to love and life and partings, a toast that Judith proposed pro-posed and Phil drank hesitantly, and then Judith excused herself to dress. Phil stood then, torn between a desire to talk wUn Judith alone for a little while and a desire to see Marta home. Judith waited, wondering what his decision would be. CTo Be- Conliaued) NOW HISTORY has been spending the summer in J the east, where she has been giv ing concerts, has returned home to resume her teaching at the B. Y. U. She will spend one day each week In Salt Lake City to teach at the Lb D. S. School of Music John Brook, pianist at the Columbia Co-lumbia theater, has accepted a position with the San Luis Stake academy. Mrs. Matilda J. Strong, wife of Joseph S. Strong of the First ward, died at her home from a heart affection. She was 66 years of age. TYPOS TO VOTE ON NATIONAL AFFILIATION LOUISVILLE, Ky . Sept. 16 (HE) The resolution known as "Proposition "Prop-osition No. 36," relating to the question of affiliation with the American Federaation of labor or the committee for industrial organization, or-ganization, was to be presented at ,the International Typograhical bunion convention today. A diamond fell out of the crown that the king was wearing during the coronation of George in, , of England. When a score of years later, the American colonies se- ceded, superstitution pointed back to this incident. Keep to the Right Fork 88,'orEnlerprise 30 : r-1 ii 1 S (I ... t: j '- , i pois ounce. flgure , that theaverage ion ' 'Feature Syndicate,, IncX l ' - , v- . |