OCR Text |
Show PAGE EIGHT TROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERAED,? WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 193? Payson Farmers Protest Damage By Dird Hunters PAYSON Many farmers in Payson and vicinity are signing a petition, protesting the shooting of pheasants and hunting on their farm property. A letter- has been sent by them to the State Fish and Game department voicing this protest. It is similar in content to one sent recently by Spring-ville Spring-ville residents and is as follows: "The undersigned representing farmers owning thousands of acres of land in and around Payson do hereby protest to your department the hunting of pheasants upon their property. These pheasants do ' these farms and their crops grown thereon as much harm as a hord of locusts and grasshoppers grasshop-pers would do at their very worst, but these pheasants are not quite so bad as the huntsmen and would-be sportsmen that the state license to come in great groups down upon us like an avalanche of Indians. These hunter come upon up-on us with the authority of Napoleon Na-poleon and tear down our fences, shoot our livestock so that if they do not die, they scon turn up their heels on account of the wounds inflicted. in-flicted. Our gates are left open, our livestock are chased -by their hunting cars, and much damage isdone in various ways. Of course fney think we farmers are as stupid as they are and do not know what our rights are under the constitution, which says that 'private property shall not be taken tak-en or damaged for public use without with-out just compensation and no person per-son shall be deprived of life, liberty, lib-erty, or property without the process of law.' "In defiance of both our constitutional con-stitutional and our natural rights, we understand that you, under some pretended law, claim the right to confiscate our farms, turn them into breeding grounds and pheasant ranges, and issue licenses li-censes to sportsmen to shoot and this without even a pretense of making compensation for damage dam-age done. Hundreds of farmers are signing a petition at this time to be sent you in the very near future." Yours truly, VVM. PETERSON OUR BOARDING HOUSE WITH MAJOR HOOPLE H SOLELY TO "BILL AKJO COO WITH TH' POOT THAT Mi AV, THAT'S IP AAV BROTHEB, 5UT TO 5ET ) OTPOPTUNJITV Vj WHAT TH'. SOME "BACKIKJC5 "FOR MY HOOPLE l SOMETIMES L WORLP U SPF-UklCS SKI AV SPR1K1G W KMOCKS OkJ, ffl "BEEKJ 1 K MOUkJTEC? OKI SKI IS ENABLES M AkJTP 6ME VVArTIKJ5 4 A SKIER "TO 3UMP AS 1AK, Jft OFFERET? AAE. ftf R)R Y SLrOIKJQ OFF A HOT-HOUSE Jl A THOUSAND SKIS WITH ) "7 KOOF, AS WET COULt? BY T?OM MEKJ TOR 1 SPFMMQS 1 CRAWLIAJS LTP A MOUMTAlKJw, TWO BUCKS I YOU OLk5 HT MAYBE YOU BOYS HAVE A VZ HAVE TO TO SOAT Ijf LITTLE CASH THAT WEEPS I ' TURM HER THAT IDEA i EM"PLOYvEKrr-3AY ABOUT iJ POWM AS COLO - SO MO I'l'lW WH IOOO J A AS OWE OF Si OWE CAW HTITTPVi -Sr-n P-7 MRS. MOOPLES ) I GRAB IT V Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) have occurred during the New Deal, both a little worse than the present. Therefore the present recession re-cession should be checked the more easily. The most severe slump since the New Deal occurred in the summer sum-mer of 1933, just five months after Roosevelt took office. Stock values dropped one-half of what they had gained, and it took exactly ex-actly four years for them to come back to the July, 1933 level. There was another drop in the summer of 1934, lasting five months, during which stocks went back to their 1933 lowest levels. Three minor business drops occurred, oc-curred, in addition to the above, none of them serious. In other words, climbing out of a depression is a process of fits and starts, and this was also true in previous depressions. DOCTOR" ROOSEVELT i K. S, L. Radio Programs WEDNESDAY, Oct. - --s Freddie's Happy; Gets Dollar Each Day For Spending HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 19 U.R Freddie Bartholomew's salary was doubled today, raised to $98,000 a year, and he was scampering around his movie studio celebrating celebrat-ing his new fortune. But fortune to him meant that his producer, Louis B. Mayer, had raised his spending money allowance from five cents a day to $1 weekly, and that was why he celebrated. The , movies' 14-year-old "Little Lord Fauntleroy" waved his first week's banknote, the first one he ever had to spend, and he was estimating what it would buy in the way of ice cream and trinkets. The new contract pays Freddie $2,000 weekly for 40 weeks a year, and $3,000 weekly for six weeks while he is on a personal appearance appear-ance tour. The old contract paid $1,100 for 40 weeks a year, and his aunt had threatened to end his career and return him to school in England because" he could not save anything any-thing from that sum. and 80 Utah County Boys Enroll in the CCC Sixty Utah county boys "between ages of 17 and 23 have been enrolled en-rolled in CCC camps thus far this month, William H. Callahan, director di-rector of the county welfare department, de-partment, announces. "As many boys as can qualify may enroll up until October 31," Mr. Callahan states. Enrollees will be sent to the Provo camp. They must be unmarried, unemployed, and 17 to 23 years old, inclusive. NEW SUPER-COACH SUPER-COACH BUSES AT THE SAME LOW FARES Denver ..$ 8.00 Phoenix $11.00 Chicago. 21.50 jLos Ang. 8.00 Detroit.. 24.25 jSn Diego 10.25 Wash. DC 30.15 jSan Fran 10.90 St. Louis 20.75 JPortland 13.90 Union Bus Depot PHONE 810 JESS SCOVHJLE, jAgent 10 P. M. 5:00 KSL Adventures of Sonny and Buddy. 5:15 KSL Adventures of Jimmy Allen. 5:30 KSL Words and music 5:45 KSL International News. b:30 KSL, The Oldsmobile program. pro-gram. 6:45 KSL Easy Aces. 7:00 CBS Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra and chorus. 8:00 CBS Gang Busters with Phillips Lord. 8:30 CBS Hudson Motor Program. Pro-gram. 9:00 CBS Poetic Melodies 9:15 CBS Boake Carter. 9:30 CBS Texaco Town with Eddie Ed-die Cantor. 10:00 CBS John Jacob Astar. 10:30 KSL Weather Prophet. 10:35 KSL International News. 10:45 CBS Bob Crosby and his or- orches trs. 11:00 CBS Witching Hour. 11:15 CBS Your Witness, a drama. Midnight 12:00 CBS Ted Fio kilo and his orchestra. 12:30 CBS Tommy Tucker his orchestra. 1:00 KSL Goodnight. ( THURSDAY, Oct. 21 A. M. 6:00 KSL Music of the Morning. 6:30 KSL Sunrise Serenade. 7:00 KSL International News 7:15 CBS Music in the Air 7:25 KSL Melodic Interlude- 7:30 KL Early Morning Shopping Shop-ping News. 7:45 KSL Morning Moods. 8:00 KSL International News. 8:15 KSL Breakfast Melodies. 8:45 CBS The Instrumentalists. 9:00 KSL Words and Music. 9:15 KSL Jennie Lee's "Timely Tips." 10:00 KSL The Milky Way with Mary Lee Taylor and Bonnie Walker. 10:l.r CBS Your News Parade with Edwin C. Hill. 10:30 CBS Romance of Helen Trent. 10:45 CBS Our Gal. Sunday. 11:00 CBS Gold Medal Feature Time. P. M. 12:00 CBS Big Sister. 12:15 KSL Internationa! News. 12:30 CBS American School of the air. 12:45 CBS Ted Malonc's Between the Bookends. 1:00 KSL The Musical Revue with Betty Marlowe. 1:15 CBS Heinz Magazine of the air. 1:30 KSL Wordsand Music. 1:45 KSL Voice of Experience. 2:00 CBS Myrt and Marge. 2:15 CBS Pretty Kitty Kelly. 2:30 KSL The Oneida Silver program. pro-gram. 2:45 KSL Shoppers Musical matinee. mat-inee. 3:00 KSL Buyer's Guide. 3:15 KSL International News. 3:30 KSL Words and Music. 4:00 CBS Del Casino, songs 4:15 KSL Words and music 4:30 KSL Melody Minutes. 4:45 KSL Knighthood of Youth Program. OREM I MRS. MERRILL CRANDALL Reporter Phone 026-R-3 ! But He's Not Under Wraps ANN HARBOR Fred Olds, left guard of the university of Michigan Mich-igan eleven, has 20 yards of adhesive ad-hesive tape wrapped around his left knee daily since it was wrenched wrench-ed in the Michigan State game. A WHY PAY FOR POOR LIGHT? When You Can Get the Right Kind of - - - LIGHTING FIXTURES AT 33E1 ESflestone (30 AT SUCH LOW PRICES! 46 North University Avenue; Phone 418 An interesting and well attend ed P.-T. A. meeting was held by the Sharon school organization Friday evening. The school principal, prin-cipal, Ford Paulson and Mrs. Grace Washburn-vice president, were in charge of the meeting. Each of the four teachers, Mr. Paulson,, Miss Mathis, Miss Arvey and Miss Thurman gave an interesting summary of their work and activities ac-tivities and the following program was given: solo, Niel Edwards; piano solo, Dorothy Farnsworth with Miss Mathis playing the ac companiment; a tap dance by Rosa Mae Wentz, with little Donna Mae Christensen playing the accompaniment; accom-paniment; an instrumental duet played on the clarinet and coronet by Paul Washburn and Lee Bishop accompanied by Jane McBride; a vocal solo by Donna McDonald; a committee was organized to proceed pro-ceed with the plans for the beau-tification beau-tification of the school grounds with Mr. Paulson to act as chair man. Mrs. Loraina Allen and her children, Jack and Ilia Mae of Loa are visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. tHarl Mecham. Mrs. Vera S. Bishop and children, child-ren, Francelle, Marjory and Don visited with relatives in Orem over the week-end. They were house guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Bishop. Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Christensen and daughters, Donna Mae, spent Saturday and Sunday in Logan where they visited with their son, Lowell, who is attending school at the U. A.'C. H. L. Peterson of Sclpio visited with his niece, Mrs. Bessie Excell and other relatives in Orem over the week end. Mrs. Leslie Bylund has returned from Canada where she was called call-ed by the illness and death of her mother, Mrs. John Anderson. Her father, Mr. John Anderson and her brother, Mrs. Burton Anderson returned re-turned home with her and will spend the winter in Orem.. Mrs. J. D. Bishop entertained at a gay birthday party at her home Monday afternoon honoring her little son Bobbie who was five years old. Gay Hallowe'en decorations decora-tions were used and each little guest was fitted with a paper cap in Hallowe'en colors. Amusing games were played and dainty refreshments re-freshments were served the following fol-lowing little guests,, Donna Stewart, Stew-art, John McDonald, Katherine and Dixie Memmott, Barbara Ex-cell, Ex-cell, Janette and Hallis Walker, Lucile GatenLy, Carrole Cook, Ilia Mae and Jack Allen, Garn Mecham, Mec-ham, Richard Peterson, Don Ferguson, Fer-guson, Duane Jewitt and Bobbie Bishop. Mrs. Hellen Rhodes of Reno, Nevada was the over night guest of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Maycock. Sharon stake M. I. A. executive board members met at the home of Mr. Ernest Frandsen Monday evening. After the business meeting meet-ing refreshments were served to, Mr. W. M. Vernon, Mr. Ernest Frandsen, Mr. Edgar Booth, Mrs. Lorna Maycock, Mrs. Adelle Fielding, Field-ing, Mrs. Winnie Graff, and Mrs. Lucy Poulson. Miss Grace Hallam of Oroville, California is visiting with her sis- DENTAL CLINIC NEED REPORTED Dr. M. W. Merrill and Dr. Da- Costa Clark of Utah County Den- i iai society were speaKers at a Parent-Teacher association meeting meet-ing held recently in Central building. build-ing. Dr. Merrill spoke of the need for dental assistance for school children chil-dren and the necessity of keeping the clinic open. He stated a lecturer lec-turer was coming to Provo about Oct. 29 to teach the children, by visual education, the need of good sound teeth. Dr. Clark read government re- From the President's point of view, there is one good thing about the present recession. It plays directly into his hands in helping to squelch revolt from within his own party. He can now say with some justice: just-ice: "Congress deserted old Doctor Roosevelt just when the patient was getting well, and now you see what happened." There is nothing like the fear of depression to whip recalcitrant Congressmen into line. And all the good old-line Democrats who were such loyal party members that they secretly sabotaged Roosevelt on the wages-and-hours bill and the farm bill last session, now should come galloping home to roost. This is exactly what the Presi- 1 dent is counting on when- the spe cial session opens November 15. v - - ' . I . ( : : ' DR. JDKJES a&o4u te-xo CPR. If 37 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. "Doctor, I have had a peculiar feeling in my neck all morning r (Si . Law Meets Law in Rapid Search for Escaped Criminal ECONOMIC MEDICINE ports emphasizing the need of oral hygiene for children, and the necessity to educate people to dental health habits. Mrs. F. F. Raile, school nurse, stated eighty per cent of school children were found to need dental assistance; she expressed appreciation for1 past financial assistance from the P.-T. A. and round-up workers: ' Mrs. Hattie Larsen, president of the P.-T. A., made a plea for help with the clinic, so its doors would not have to close. She as signed tickets to be sold for the, matinee which will be held Sat-usday. Mrs. E. L. Aiken speke of prep arations for the national P.-T. A. convention in Salt Lake City. Hebrew Prophets Assembly Theme "In the original religious and spiritual development of the Hebrew He-brew people, it is unquestionably true that the prophets have been the most potent factor in the process," pro-cess," Guy C. Wilson, professor of religious educaion, declared at the Monday devotional period at Brigham Young university. His lecture was one of a series given in a Bible appreciation course each Monday by various faculty members. It is the glory of the prophets that they alone saw and proclaimed pro-claimed the deeper meanings of their time; that they dared to arraign their day and summon people, priest, and king to repentance repent-ance and reform, he continued. "These great ethical prophets possessed a passion for righteousness, righteous-ness, and their insight and conscience con-science for truth and justice is amazing," Professor Wilson stated. stat-ed. "The prophet is a radical he would change or destroy things as they are for the sake of things as they ought to be. The prophet is a friend of the poor on whom the ill doing of the church and of the s,tate falls most heavily." Preceeding the lecture, the uni versity choir sang, "Up Arouse Thee, O Beautiful Zion," composed com-posed by Professor LeRoy J. Robertson. ters, Mrs. Jennie Smoot of Provo and Mrs. Adelle Fielding of Orem. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Wells were in Salt Lake City on business Tuesday. FREE: A SERIES OF ARTICLES ON UTAH'S MINING INDUSTRY HAVE BEEN PUB-LISHED PUB-LISHED IN THIS PAPER. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION INFOR-MATION ON THIS IMPORTANT SUBJECT OR SPEAKERS TO ADDRESS CLUBS OR OTHER GROUPS OF CITIZENS WILL BE FURNISHED X WITHOUT COST ON APPLICATION TO THE MINING COMMITTEE SALT LAKE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE The Administration has a lot of economic medicine in its closet to bolster business. Here are some of the possible doses: 1. Issue currency against sterilized ster-ilized gold now lying idle at Fort Knox, Ky. This was done not long ago with $300,000,000, but there still is enough gold, both sterilized and in the stabilization fund, to issue three billions more of currency. cur-rency. Used, for instance, to tuy up tax-exempt government bonds,, this would start a healthy stream of money flowing into other investments. in-vestments. Holders of tax-exempt bonds would have to find some other place to put this money. 2. Housing. This was the way tne British pulled themselves out of the depression. So far, under i-tooseveit, nousing has been untouched. un-touched. .. Meanwhile there is a tremendous tremend-ous need for new houses. More houses burned down in 1935 than were built. Doubling up of families shows the country short of 3,250,-000 3,250,-000 houses, while 2,500,000 others are "unfit for human habitation." 3. The crop control bill to be passed by Congress at the special session will distribute about half a billion in processing taxes among the farmers. This won't hurt buying power. (Copyright, 1937. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Boy Scout Leaders In Training Course Three Provo Boy Scout officials Sunday conducted training courses for district committees of three sections. A. A. Anderson, chief executive, Utah national parks council, gave instruction at Castle Dale; Merrill Christopherson. assistant as-sistant executive, at Mt. Emmons; and Roy Passey, chairman of leadership lead-ership training, at Roosevelt. Wings of the Morning! It's the Flavor thai mellows his morning mood and sets his heels a'clicking . . that Schilling Flavor. Schilling fee One for Percolator anothei one for Drip or Glass Maker. An excited call into the sheriff's office Sunday morning morn-ing early informed officers that Eugene T. Bassett, 31, escaped state prison convict, had just been siffhted . . . The sheriff and Deputy Reuben Christianson immediately immedi-ately left for Geneva where the call originated with happy hap-py thoughts of nabbing the companion of Richard Cotti, 26, prison inmate captured October 10 at American Fork. The search began . . . And the man was taken but alas, the "suspect" turned turn-ed out to be no law violator, but a law enforcer J. J. Madsen, state game warden, intent upon his own duties. Just a case of mistaken identity, we guess . . . Government Seeks Airline Safety WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (U.P The federal government, it was learned today, is working on a dual program to increase the immediate im-mediate safety of airline flights over the deadly Rocky Mountains and to conceive a long-range method of insuring safe air voyages voy-ages over the Continental divide. The immediae objective, it was learned, is development of techni- cal aids to prevent such accidents as the fatal United Airliner crash which cost 19 lives in the Wyoming Wyom-ing mountains. Officials pointed out the following follow-ing difficulties in Rocky Mountain Moun-tain flights: A plane must fly at a higher altitude to clear the ranges, and it is unsafe to fly through passes because faulty instruments would facilitate a crash. The weather is more turbulent. One expert said,: "Thick weather piles' up along the ridges with JOE ROBINSON'S SUCCESSOR SET LITTLE ROCK, Ark.. Oct. 19 (UJ) Rep. John E. Miller, who admires ad-mires President Roosevelt but didn't always support his program in the house of representatives, was named by the voters today to fill the unexpired term, of the late Joseph T. Robinson in the senate. Miller defeated Gov. Carl E. Bailey who accused Miller of disloyalty dis-loyalty to the national administration administra-tion and told the voters that he had and would support President Roosevelt "100 per cent." Roosevelt Opens 'Y' Lyceum Course Coming with the reputation of being one of America's most brilliant bril-liant speakers. Nicholas Roosevelt will open the Brigham Young university uni-versity community lyceum, in the Utah state tabernacle at 8 o'clock tonight. He will discuss "The Restless Pacific." For discussion of this subject, his experience as vice-governor of the Phillipine islands gives his authoratative information. He has also been U. S. minister to Hungary. Hun-gary. He appeared before tne student assembly in College hall at 11:30 a. m. Following the assembly, he was entertained at a luncheon in the "Y" cafeteria by faculty members mem-bers and students of the journalism journal-ism department. Community concert or B. Y. U. activity tickets must be presented at the door. storms and uneasy air currents.'' More static is believed to interfere inter-fere with ljadio reception, thus damaging the value of direction finders and beacons. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- the MtretBf tana' to G The lrrer bonld poor ont two poonda of liquid bil into jrour bowela daily. If this bi)a i not flowing freely, your food doesn't direst. It just decay in the bowels. Gas bloats tp yoor stomach. Yon ret constipated. Yooe whole system is poieoned and yoa feel soar, sank and the world looks punk. Laxa tires are only .makeshifts. A mere bowel mo rem en t doesn't ret at the cause. It takes those rood, old Carter's Little Livei Pills to gt these two pounds of bile flowins freely and make you feel "op and op". Harro-lesa. Harro-lesa. re title, yet amazin? in makins bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by bum. Stubbornly refuse any thins- else. Sc (Adv.) TEN YEARS AGO THIS OCTOBER It is interesting to turn back the pages of the years and read the record of a business. For time has a way of testing purposes and policies. The fundamental policy of the Bell System is not of recent birth it has been the corner stone for many years. On October 20, 1927, it was reaffirmed by Walter S. Gifford, President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. if : J WnpHE business of the American Tele-phone Tele-phone and Telegraph Company and its Associated Bell Telephone Com panies is to furnish telephone service to the nation. This business from its very nature is carried on without competition competi-tion in the usual sense. These facts have a most important bearing on the policy that must be followed fol-lowed by the management if it lives up to its responsibilities. The fact that the ownership is so widespread and diffused imposes an unusual obligation on the management to sec to it that the savings of these hundreds of thousands of people are secure and remain so. "The fact that the responsibility for such a large part of the entire telephone service of the country rests solely upon this Company and its Associated Companies Com-panies also imposes on the management an unusual obligation to the public to see to it that the service shall at all times be adequate, dependable and satisfactory to the user. Obviou8ly, the only sound policy that will meet these obligations b to continue to furnish the best possible telephone service at the lowest cost consistent con-sistent with financial safety. This policy is bound- to succeed in the long run and there is no justification for acting other wise than for the long run. "Earnings must be sufficient to assure the best possible telephone service at all times and to assure the continued financial finan-cial integrity of the business. Earnings that are less than adequate must result in telephone service that is something less than the best possible. "Earnings in excess of these require ments must either be spent for the enlargement and improvement of the service furnished or the rates charged for the service must be reduced. This is fundamental in the policy of the management. The margin of safety in earnings is only a small percentage of the rate charged for service, but that we may carry out our ideals and aims it is essential essen-tial that this margin be kept adequate. Cutting it too close can only result in the long run in deterioration of service while the temporary financial benefit to the telephone user would be practically negligible. "With your sympathetic understanding understand-ing we shall continue to go forward-providing forward-providing a telephone service for the nation more and more free from imperfections, errors or delays, and always at a cost as low as is consistent with financial safety. " -d 3 |