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Show PAGE FOUR ' AfUr y Harsra PabUahad by tb KaraM Corporattoa. M Bout FM Wsat BtrMt. PrOTO, Utah. Kntarad aa Mooal olaaa matter at tha aaatofflaa irora, Btaa. nto tM Mt a Mara ; ''oUraaa. Wlool Katbmsa. National ASrarUataff NKC , MattUrw, Naw Tork, Sa fYaaetaao, Datrott. Bsttw, iM Anraiaa, ' Clil0. " Marabar United Praaa. If. K. A. Sarrtaa, Waatara faatwraa. tha Scrtppa laa Nwpapara aa4 Aadlt Baraaa at Circulation. - ' ' "' Subacrlption taraaabr earriar ta TTtah aounty. aaaM taa month, fJ.M for alx atoatha, ta advaaaa; tt.1t tka yaar, : In advaaea; by mall a aoaaty, M M; aatatda aaaatr tba jraar ta adTaaea. , y -Ub.rty through an tba land" Taa I.I hart Ball , KalA arm aot aaaama flnanata) wmmy appear in advartlaamaata anbllabad ha vbM tba P Par la at fault. It will raarlM vhlea tba trpoaraafctaal aalataM aaewra. sins are like circles In the it; one produces another. Philip Henry. . , - Therefore as by the offense of one Judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousiiHS of one the free J gift came upon all .men unto Justification of life. Romans 5:18. Voice of Peace Intrudes British statesmen, charged with the conduct of the war, are beginning to hear distant rumblings that sound distressingly like peace pleas. . The British Labor party, nominally behind the Chamberlain Cham-berlain government's war policy, is beginning to have some qualms about the war. The party has under consideration 13 separate resolutions for withdrawal of support. The various proposals will be debated at the Labor Party's Whitsuntide conference May 13. War leaders obviously are disturbed. The hostility of the Labor party would seriously menace Britain's home front. In the meantime, other pacifist groups, emboldened by the lengthy prelude to actual warfare, . are becoming too articulate for the government to ignore. Chief among these groups is the Pubic Economy; League, formed during - the World War to promote sound economy. Its members argue that a long War might conceivably mean the defeat of Hit-lerism Hit-lerism and the prostration of an exhausted Germany, but that England, too, would be economically and morally bankrupt. bank-rupt. V . . . , z On top of all this, H. G. Wells, "who still enjoys an ap-'preciable ap-'preciable British audience and who has been; a constant : critic of British war aims, has come to the conclusion 'that the government is ."grossly incompetent." Wells said that : a recent British government publication showed that 'we are fighting for the British empire andimperialism." "If this is the stuff we are fighting for," he said, "then it is foolish to fight." :. , '" . - The trouble is riot so much a conflict with the Chamber?; " lain government as with the fundamental principle of war - itself. While the military has been getting up steam for the ' big offensive, the populace of Britain has had time to won- der whether's it's a smart idea to have a war at all. ' The World War brought this - cynicism : and ' eventual ; disillusion, toobut not until it was all over. This time it - is cropping up before the war has seriously begun." It looks hopeful for the peace crowd. The people don't need to go to war if they make it clear that they don't want to. - - We Zive On Credit Credit keeps the wheels of Jng. vx-'v:-: . Relatively few business transactions involve the immedi ate use of cash. When you. make a telepone call, when you purchase a new car, when you order tonight's groceries, as a i rule you defer payment until some future day. Ana tne teie- phone company and the automobile dealer and the grocer also " live bv credit when they buy from wholesalers and manufac turers it is agreed that payment will be made, not at the time of delivery, but 30, 60 or Some 90 per cent of all country require the use of credit. In only 10 per cent is "cash on the barrelhead involved. A very large part of all banks. Ana when the banker he-is doing precisely what the grocer does when he trusts you for ten dollars' worth of food until pay day. On top of that, the banker is bound by his depositors from loss. It credit record, your abilities, your character and your prospects.- And if it appears that you will be able to repay the loan as contracted, the money be unable to, he must decline sonal feelings. . His obligation money, plus the strictures of leave hmy no other course. "Without bank credit our ture, as we know it, would collapse. Bank credit was far more of a factor than most of us realize in the astonishing commercial and geographical development of this nation. And in the future, as in the past, bank credit, extended by an up-to-date banking industry, progressive factor. , A Goal Is Set ' "What important problems do we face?" asked 700 young men attending the convention' of Pi Kappa Delta, debating de-bating society, in Knoxville, Tenn. - ' They got their answer from five different sources : : Said President Roosevelt: Making democracy work should be the chief consideration. Secretary of State Cordell Hull: Development of a keen interest in government affairs. Senator Burton K. Wheeler: Unemployment. Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt: Maintenance Main-tenance of peace. " . , Publisher Frank E. Gannett, G. O. P. presidential candidate: candi-date: Managing our affairs so well that every other nation will want to emulate our example. Put them all together, and we have a real program to shoot for. - Thank You Provo for the Wonderful Response on this Service. Now . . . We Caa Jbke You This Offer for All Times. ; CHECK CHART GAR LUDMGATIOI - 1 and Your Car Washed Free Before c STAN'S SUPER SERUIGE We Call For and Deliver Your Car ' 391 WEST CENTEK , PHONE 1518 (BccttB Satvdar s4 maat rvnn mur Mara rag - - ' water when a stone Is thrown into .. ' commerce and industry turn 90 days hence. business transactions in this credit is provided, of course, by loans you a thousand dollars rigid rules designed to protect is his job to analyze your past is yours. If it appears you wil the loan, irrespective of his per to his depositors who own the the unrelenting banking laws, economy and industrial struc will continue to be a vital It's Lubricated! PROVO TUTAHT DAILY HERALD, OUT OUR WAY . :VS':.' By Williams '' - . GOOD GOSH AM OLD . HE TOLD ME HIS 1 WORK MARE, A KID'S I .SECRET OF SUCCESS J I SADDLE, OME SPUR., A ) A WS THAT EVERY V WORK BRIDLE, ROPE A -TIME HE SAVED ENOUGH 1 " V REJWS-ANP'50UAy W MONEY TO LOCK LIKE. !: h- (A P HE'S OWE OF TH' BEST I A COWBOY'S 5POSEP ) WtOV'T' AMD BICOEST V TO LOOK, HE'D BUY- 'JMWT Pf I CATTLE MEM AKIOTHER. RANCH y i a mtfmK. . -.-i -s) r- - Fight Oyer Labor Ties Up Passage of , Railroad. Bill BY BRUCE CATTON ; Dally Herald Washington , . Corespondent WASHINGTON, April 4 A fight ' over "how much protection inhnr' mirht to " eet when rail roads are merged is "the chief thing delaying the omnibus transportation trans-portation bill the big" "reform" the railroads want so badly. '" A " senate-house commti tee , Is welding together the" senate's Wheeler bill and the house's Lea bill. Basically they are much the same; v what the railroads like is that they put water carriers under un-der the interstate - Commerce Commission. Big difference , is what they say about mergers. The Wheeler bill simply says that In mergers there must be 'a ' fair and equitable arrange ment" for labor, the L C. C to it,. - lnlra. (h. Tta Kill ttaflv forbids any merger that would reduce employment or cut workers work-ers pay. , The railroads naturally want the former clause. It has been okayed by all the railroad brotherhoods broth-erhoods .except the. Trainmen's. The latter found an ally in Congressman Con-gressman - Harrington f of Iowa, who got the clause they like Into the Lea bill and is now keeping it there by a novel parliamentary maneuver. Harrington circulated a petition demanding ' that ' the ' committee keep his clause in the bill and got 275 congressmen to sign it. .; Committee Plugs ' Loophole In Draft ' - When the Smith committee was drafting1 its bill to ; change r. the Wagner act and the labor board, lots of model amendments covering cover-ing different points . were submitted sub-mitted by organizations anxious to have the law modified. The committee threw out all samples and used its own language except ex-cept in the case of the "free speech" .amendment, where it used us-ed the one the A, ; F. of L. had handed in. - "It was too drastic even - for us old conservatives, though, and we had to tone it down," says Congressman., Smith. . "It didnt give labor, enough protection. The way i the A. F. of L. wrote It, it would be lawful for an employer to talk with his workers about UTAH Contributions to this column should be sent to Mrs. J. M. Redd, 1076 East Center street. Enclose stamps for return of manuscript. manu-script. 0-;v-: ..".-. v. -:' i ' Prairie A wanderer of lonely westering j trails, . V : He found primeval prairie, where no man " Before , had: built a hearth or turned the sod:, v ' ' Here he could follow no familiar plan . ; Of seeding time and harvest, but must learn . '- ' New ways to wrest : a crop -from alien soil ' That seldom knew the blessed touch of - rain; . And here, with scanty recompense for bitter toil, He made his "home. The land was niggardly ' No trees, no springs, and barren . draws , to show ' Where rivers once had greened the plain. The "man v Dug deep and tapped a subterranean flow? ' Of prcious water, found a constant friend, - Companion, helper, in . the , ever-moving air; . 'llie wind brought music for his solitude, ' Infrequent clouds to ease the summer's glare, And scent of strange, far-distant, growing- things. ' He harnessed this unfailing wind and made ; ' .' It draw his water, serve his need. Sometimes ' ' ' The wind rebelled, burst shackles, laid v ! : A, mill' in ruins,? dimmed the sky with dust,- Came down in .biting wmter blizzards. Then, Repentant, brought spring: rain and turned the wheels. The cycling: years went by, and many men Set plow, to many acres, wrenched too far ' From Nature's plan this grassy sod. Grown gray. The man beheld the wind no longer friend " r ' But mocking demon blot the light of day With black dust blizzards, root from prarie loam - 0 His crops, his trees, his faith and hope, his home. '. v. ? . . Cleone Montgomery, j'ii tJj&slt ij.. - SaltLakeCityr:.UUh . . nnlomlzatlon provided, the talk wasn't aoompanied by an 'act of discrimination. ' " , . "You could drive a , horse through that. Why under It, an employer could call in a worker and say, 'Bill Jones, you've worked work-ed for me -20 years; but you old so-and-so, if you Join the union I'll fire you and the law couldn't have touched him. So after the words, 'act of discrimination discrim-ination we added, 'orintimidation or coercion'." . Puerto Rican BUI Runs Into Trouble' " "' 1 Both Puerto - Rican interests here and the Wage and Hour Division Di-vision . hope -. that Congress ; will decide, soon to do something about modifying the wage-hour law as it affects Puerto Rico. The ' House - has before ' it the Slanato-passed, Kng bUIr - under which special industry committees commit-tees would be set up to find out what Puerto Rican wage mini-mums mini-mums ought to be. The bill is okay by . the Wage and , Hour people, but every time . an effort is made , to pass it, It gets tagged tag-ged with broad : amendments exempting ex-empting big labor groups on the mainland, which the .Wage and Hour folks won't stand for. Result, Re-sult, so far, is no action at alL ; Meanwhile the situation on the island - is tad.- Aside from sugar, the .big industry is : needlework, with 90,000 workers getting about 10 cents an hour. ? The Jump : to the legal : level of 30 cents Just isn't being made, and ' the Wage and Hour Division isn't prosecuting:, prosecut-ing:, realizing the Jump is too big and figuring the law will presently present-ly be modified. . BntTIIS REPORTED Recent births in Spanish Fork: Mr. and Mrs. Gene Houston, girl; March. 22. Mr. and Mrs. Fawn Anderson son, March "26. 'Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swell, Gen-ola, Gen-ola, daughter, March 22. The mother is the former Erma Hone of this city. - ' " """ - Thomas ' and Clara Moore Men-love, Men-love, son, Easter Sunday at Spring Lake. VERSE Pioneer v THURSDAY, 'APRIU - Peppery Patter AN Ohio farmer gets : hlo i XX coughs every seven years, a v calamity that might happen to ' anyone who has to suffer thin ' traditional period of drouth. In setting AprU 10 as Invent-vors Invent-vors Day, the president Is one mors honoring royalty. . The Swedish Institute of Gen- - etics has successfully, extracted perfumed vitamin C from wild - roses, and now should see what can be done about limburger. In Ireland "unity" Is a "fight-; lng word. ' " ' ' ' -' ' -J, . . ! .. m - The sun has set April 7 for IU : blackoijt.' " ' 7 . . The race is on to find which i pressure group will get that 28 i per cent increase in federal in-. come taxes. - -v..; , v. '-" ' - - " . A Chicago woman, whose bus-i. bus-i. band Insisted she give up clothes - and become nodlat, decided to divorce him, f Ijruring that clothes ' win wear much better than bo 'did." v When a candidate has wound !up his campaign, he . Is usually 'run down. , - Dr. Gustaf Stromberg, Mount '- Wilson astronomer, thinks a race . of super men might be developed ,oa the earth, but to date we j have gone only as far as super-'colossals super-'colossals and super-super-service ' stations. t -The labor department report i that among women's expenditures expendi-tures for clothes, "shoes are the i biggest item." j. This assertion will be much resented, except, J perhaps. In Chicago. VINEYARD MRS. GEORGE F. WELLS Reporter Phono 0I-B-4 . i Mr. and Mrs. Ariel Larsen have spent the past two days in Vernal. iM.rs. Maud Rowley and Mrs Amelia Latta of the stake genea-ldgical genea-ldgical committee were visitors at the - genealogy meeting; Monday evening in the ward chapel. f Mrs. S. H. Blake and son. Grant spent the. -week end at Deseret with Mr. and Mrs. George W Cropper. , - :. Mrs. Anabel Roger and Mrs. Al-veretta Al-veretta Sorensen will sing at the Relief society conference in Salt Lake with the haron stake singing mothers. " c- - . i Choir practice will be held Thursday evening at 8 p.m. in the ward chapel.' G. A. II. VETERAN ' IS 94 YEARS OLD SALT LAKE CITY, April 4 OLE) OLE) Ira - Stormes, only surviving member of the Utah department of the Grand Army of the ,Re-public ,Re-public celebrated his 94th birthday birth-day today. . He has been commander com-mander of the Utah G. A. R. for the . last five years. . ' , The Hall of Fame Building: Is located in University - . Heights, New York City. - Wfrwud IKiUlilli'l Borrow cash to pay your bills. Than benra LESS to pay each month, and nor LEFT OVER lor living xpa-nsas. No eo-aaksrs. No indiarr t inquiriaa. Quick, quiet, frisadly awvic. Com in. 3, 1940 O SERIAL STORY I(. O. CAVALIER TESTER DAT I Vl rff B-Bn B-Bn lt r baadle h tkankal IrtlM. T tr krk will krlBK laTratlcattoa ky rt (rltl. Br 4rlar. rrtmrm 1m tmrm fcark. trlla CUer m will ral kar ! tt Ha t. -Wfcat ataryr rata-m. Wait m - ataryr CHAPTER V pAPTAIN HANSEN'S Jaw saztred a full Inch. "Val." he said softly, "how in thunder Is that box-flghler goin to train on board the Belle,?,, Duffy Kelso looked sick. Eddie Cavalier looked at her with eyes that said he longed to get his hands around her throat. "Miss Douglas." It was Pop Grimes, pleading with her. "Hon est, lady, this Is as funny as a crutch. Your admiral there, is right. Even " if you don't put around and take us back to Frisco how can Eddie get in shape here?" She was quite cool and Informative Informa-tive In her answer. "Simple stuff, gents. In the first place I know Cavalier Is Just about in shape already. al-ready. He had a strenuous Indoor season. Three fights, if I remember remem-ber correctly. He doesnt need much training for this one. I know he happens to be all through with his heavy work. Just last week, you. Pop Crimes, gave out a story to the effect that Eddie looked over-trained ... that you weren't going to have him do .much more than road work, some light work on the bags' and a little sparring. Right?" . Fop Grimes licked his .lips. "Right, he whispered. "But , . . "But nothing," she flashed. "It so happens that Mike . Kelly, who you probably remember as : a pretty fair heavyweight a . few years back, is a seaman aboard this ship. : Fortunately for us he has a couple sets of gloves and a light bag which he! and some of the boys use in their spare time. Mike'll be as good a sparring partner part-ner as you'd want. And Cavalier can do all the road work he wants to around the deck." Duffy Kelso just sat there and groaned. She looked at him and laughed. ' ; - '".' "Before . it get through, Duffy, you're going to thank me." "Shoot you, you mean." On The Sunny Side BY MARY ELLEN CANE Card playing is no longer con sidered a. waste of time. And don't be surprised if your doctor advises you to learn to play bridge and to play it quite regu larly for he knows through his years of ' experience, that all serious thinking and worry, without with-out sufficient diversion. Is not conducive to good health. He also knows that In order to play a good game of cards one must concen trate on the game; and 'that the keen competition in cards is a challenge to one's pride, as well as a stimulus to dormant ambition ambi-tion It is a natural instinct for everyone to want to be the winner In any game, or contest or any kind. In his book, "The Return of Religion," Henry D. Link is most convincing- in his explanations of the merits of bridge playing as a diversion. .. . , . . . If you have ever wondered what fascination cards hold for people, or if they all have the same reasons for the interests in the game, the opinions of your frinds or neighbors will be of interest in-terest to you: Mrs. George Worthea. says, "I like to play cards for the enjoyment enjoy-ment of the game, and for the association " with others." Jin, W. R. Green finds diversion di-version and relaxation in cards. She says, "To play a good game of cards you must keep your mind on the game." Card playing appears to Mrs. Clarence Harmon and Mrs. H. A. Hansen because of the sociability It affords. While Mrs. R- W- Craven Cra-ven enjoys cards for social contact, con-tact, concentration, and diversion. Mrs. Robert I Reid has taught her children to play cards, and finds that it has taught them concentration con-centration and . has made that hated subject, mathematics much easier for them. She says, "I like to play cards Just for the sociability socia-bility of it." ' ' One of Will Rogers', favorite quotations was, "All I know Is ROOM 207, IS E. CENTER ST. (Over Walgreen Drug) " Phone ZlO Provo, Utah . JOHN F. MOORE, Mgr. ANN a BY JERRY "Go ahead," Cavalier said grimly. This is the most fantastic thing I've come across sine Jules Verne." , - "We can pitch a ring cn the after deck." Pop Grimes clapped a hand -to his cheek and groaned again. "But his timing his timing. Itll be ruined. This tub probably pitches like a bucking bronco. It'll throw him so far oil balance hell fall flat on his face." "Wrong again. This vessel Is the smoothest Coating freighter cn the Pacifle. And a guy who punches as sharp as Cavalier doesnt have to worry about losing his timing in a few days." Eddie Cavalier presented her with a mock bow. "Such flattery must come from the heart," he murmured. "To think you might have a good word to say about me." " "Make the most of it," she retorted. re-torted. "It might be the last one." rUFFY KELSO shook his head mournfully. "Eddie, it looks like this dame is going through with it, Maybe we oughta wire Sam Golden and tell him to cancel." can-cel." Then turning once again to Val. "Look, lady. Sam Golden is one promoter we want to do right by. He had to work on Mike Jacobs plenty hard to get this fight in Frisco. We owe Sam a lot. He gave us our start three yesrs ago. What'U we tell him?" "That's exactly why you cant cancel, Duffy. You see, I know what ground I'm treading on. You can't let Golden down now. And you also know darn well that if you don't get a crack at the champ now hell stall you off for another year." Duffy Kelso spread his hands eloquently. "This dame. Pop . . . she knows all the angles." "Right again, Kelso." And then it was Val Douglas who was pleading. . "Duffy, ItU be terrific Cant you see it? All you've got to do is wire Sam Golden that every-think every-think is okay. That this was a surprise move on your part. . . . Didnt want to tell anyone, not even him. You can explain that you wanted to get Eddie away from the usual hurly-burly of the training grind. ... That Eddie needed the rest as much as the private training quarters. "Duffy, it's great publicity. Terrific, Ter-rific, Duffy. ItU pack that ball park so that an undernourished gnat wont be arle to get in. It's the natural of the century, Kelso, and if you can't see it you're not! as bright as I think you are." j what I read in the newspapers." Many ; columnists might well say, "I learn a lot Just listening to conversations." Yes indeed, one hears . a great deal about many things. And the recent publicity that was given to the Utah Coun-J ty relier situation Is no exception. One hears such remarks as, "Nowadays, there seem to be a lot of people who are trying to DO their- own state " or government." govern-ment." "Yes?" another queries. "Well-people "Well-people are no different now than they have ever been, only there are more tryg It now, that's all." Another was heard to remark: "It Just depends on who it is that's getting something for nothing. noth-ing. Let's see, how much pension do the widows of United States presidents and congressmen receive re-ceive each year? Are they questioned ques-tioned as to the amount of their savingsproperty, and their needs, or do they get it because of an old law that was passed many years ago I'd sure like to know why the discrimination." All of which is food for thought and most serious problems can SPRING GARDEN NEEDS Superfine Mixture of Lawn Seed vJV or Lawn beea 1 ( vs - Ib. PLANET JR. CULTIVATOR S&i ....... 03.69 Garden Hoe, 6-in. Atlas, fine quality, 79c Shovel the famous Pony; bargain, $1.49 Digging: Fork, Jumbo, heavy $1.39 Gonl VJagon u r.lacliine. Company Provo, Utah SECTION TWO BRONDFIELD comtaKT. IMO. U tn vrCC HC- Pop Grimes was bug-eyed. Eddie Cavil. er etared at her woo-deringly. woo-deringly. Sieve Hansen was awed. And over Duffy K1k's face stole a far-away look of understanding. under-standing. "I u isht It wasnt you," he sili "I wiiht it wasnt you because 1 think maybe you got scmetiiiEg." "Sure I got something, Duffy," she purred. "For awhile. thou. I thought you were going to t a little hard to handle, what with such swell physical support 3 o- have behind you," she concluded, eyeing Cavalier deLbera'.ely. She turned to Hansen. "They Ye your playmates for the time being, be-ing, Strvie have fun." "T7AL leaned against a iL'fbftsT. letting a soft spring wind blow through her hair when she heard footsteps on the deck. She turned around quickly. It Wis Ldl.e Cavalier. "Oh ... It's you." "Yeah ... me. " Aren't you afraid IU throw you overboard?" He looked up at the dark, overcast sky. "Good night for something like that and no one's around." "You're positively gruesome. It's a wonder they never tagged you Killer Cavalier." "Of course you inenr there wouldn't be a Jury in the world that would convict me." She. laughed mockingly. OI course not." And then changing the subjert. "How goes it with friends Kelso and Grimes? Are they settled for the night? They're such sweet people." "Last I saw of them," he replied, re-plied, not without a trace of humor, "they were trying to figure out how a human being goes about sleeping in those iron dousle-derk bunks." "You're practically on a luxury liner. What would TOU do if we had hammocks?" For the first tim that night h smiled, and she figured it musi hve hurt him terribly for the effort "You weren't serious about making us work?" he asked." "Quite," she said Icily. "That was the purpose of the thing la the first place, you know." "And if we refuse . . .? "You simply don't eat," she said blandly. "I never was one to shirk a lit- . tie labor,"' he said quietly, "but don't you think you ought to make a little concession in my case. I've still got a lot at stake, you know." fill have to think about that," she said. "We'll see if Captain Hansen can spare you entirely, or at least part of the time." -(To Bo Continued) -,. . Cranium Crackers GETTYSBURG ADDRES3 Familiar to most people, at least during their school years, is Lincoln's Gettysburg address. Do you still remember It? Test yourself by fOlLng in the blank spaces In the folkwing excerpt: Now we are engaged In a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so and so ........ can long We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to a portion of that field, as a final resting place cf those who here gave their lives that might live. It Is altogether alto-gether and that we should do this. Answers on Page S, Sec 1 " INSURANCE MAN ILL SALT LAKE CITY. April 4 rt-pi Friends reported tenia y G. Ous Baxter, manager cf the Prudential Federal Savings and Loan association associa-tion office here, was a "very sick man." Baxter, formerly of Butte Mont-, is In St. Marks hospital, where attendant said his condition condi-tion was "Just about the same." be solved through serious thinking. think-ing. Perhaps even the balancing of the National Budget. Premier 1 Braid LAWN HOSE 25 Feet... $2.29 |