OCR Text |
Show 1 THE MURRAY EAGLE C. B. WALLACE, EDNA Editor Invitation Associate Editor M. WALLACE, By GRANT M. SASSAMAN Telephone Murray 33 Issued every Thursday Newpair ByndlcaW. u ocn t DEKI'lINQ wheeled from LOIS window and turned stur-tieunbelieving eyes upon her 6. Entered ns second class matter February Suit Luke City, Utah, under Act of March at the 8, 1027, INwtofflec at 3, 1875). TERMS OF Sl'KS( KH'TION Salt Lake County, I (ah One Tear In advance Six Mouths in Advance $1.00 50 Elsewhere in I'nited States One Year in advance $1.50 by McClur tL-EDE-N mother who was standi"!? In the doorway of the bedroom. From stairs enme the subdued noise of a party Lois' birthday party. "What does he want here?" she flamed. "Everybody knows he wusn't Invited. If I were ClilT Chalmers I'd be ashamed to he seen In a crowd that knew me. If he came here to offer me a present a a Ml throw It In his olTerlnK. fWpG,G,,B-KG- JAILED FOR PRICE CUTTING From the viewpoint of critics, the supreme commentary on the new economic regime in the United Stales h;is arrived: A man in New) Jersey has been sent to jail for a nickel he did not take. Jacob Maged, a Jersey City tailor, spent three days in durance for pressing a suit of clothes for 35 cents when the cleaners and dyers' code set a minimum of 40 cents. On its face the case gives an impression of combined pettiness and It sounds like an insufferable invasion of the right of the individual to make a living by any honest competition. And maybe it is. Yet there may be as much injustice in taking less than a fair pirce as in takFrom such practice has come the sweatshop, ing more. and in the recoil from it has come a wide acceptance af price fixing. Mr, Magcd is a type of the puzzled small business man under the NRA codes in America. His prices or many of them are made for him when he buys or when he sells. These price controls are of many kinds in method, but of just two kinds in essence. One is the kind in which an influential group in the industry, a code authority or some public authority announces a "fair" or minimum price below which it is bad form if not illegal to sell. The other is the kind which simply sets up facilities through which both seller and buyer may know accurately on what terms sales are being made, what quality is maintained and what resonable costs of production are. This latter sort may have a useful future for it aids rather than attacks the law of supply and demand. The cleaners and dyers' code, it happens, is one of the outSome standing examples of rigid minimum price fixing. emergency grounds may have existed for such schedules at the low point of the depression and in especially demoralized industries, of which cleaning and pressing is one. I!ut as a permanent measure such price freezing can only lead to trouble. Mr. William Hard, a Washington commentator, charges that the "real revolutionists" in Washington are not any brain trusters or parlor pinks, but are the individulaistic and practical business men who come to the capital in lobbies to obtain codes that will give them prices sufficient for "a reasonable profit" and assure them against having to compete in industrial progress to earn them. If codes of this sort are to be perpetuated, it may become a popular and eventually profitable way of attaining business martyrdom to be jailed for price cutting. Christian Science Monitor. high-handedne- Mild-mannere- d hard-boile- sttp"-posed- ly THE CRIMINALS! DISARM So many manifestations of crime are published garishly day after day, and so much has been written bout the cube's and prevention of crime, that it might seem a crime to write more, yet crime is a phenomenon which challenges as well as intrudes. Unmistakably we are living in the machine age of crime. Seldom a major robbery or other crime but newspapers record that the perpetrator was armed with a machine gun, and an automobile with engine running w"s waiting for a getaway. It was with a whittled wooden imitation of a pistol that Dillinger, the desperado, bluffed his way out of jail at Crown Hut machine guns have enabled him' and his alPoint", Ind. lied outlaws to keep pursurers at bay since then and to shoot their way out of traps laid for them. Measures of crime prevention have their place, but the surest preventative of further crimes in the Dillinger reign of terror would be to capture him and his gang5 at the earliest It is a challenge to the possible moment, and at all costs. community to preserve law and order, a showdown between savagery and civilization. If it is necessary to supplement federal agents and sheriffs' posses with troops, it should be done and done now. In all such instances the question arises. Where were the criminals able to get machine guns? Sale of poisons is .safeguarded by law. Yet revolvers, rifles and machine guns seem to be re.ubly procurable in the open market. Why? How? Where? From whom? Answers to these questions and appropriate action, are the most urgent need in the fight against crime. Mere discussion of the theories of crime prevention and penology, while m.uhine guns are on sale to desperate criminals, is a travesty. (icorge P. I.cP.run. chief clerk? of the tnedic.d examiner who investigates homicides in New York, would stop entirely the sale to the general public of weapons which m.iv be concealed on the person, and limit their possession u the army, navy and police. Such sale is now restricted oidv in Massachusetts and New York. A federal law against interstate commerce in firearms failed of passage. he law now merely covers manner of shipment. Is there any valid reason win an embarro vlmuM not be nation-i.ie is overdue. -- Christian Disarming ci ihtio.il Science Monitor. 1 The oliler woman's eyes were troubled. "I told lilm you wouldn't want to see him, Lois," she said gently, "lie Insisted, and said he came only to apologize." The girl looked sharply at her mother. "Von want rue to go down and see him?" "We II. you inlclit, Lota," she said slowly. "It's only fair. I think It would please Paul." Lois bit her lip, Yes, to be sure, her brother would want her to be a good sport. I'ntil arid Cliff had Lois at college. been classmates Idolized her brother, and be In turn thought a lot of CHIT. She hadn't Been 1'aul smile much since the night she had bud that ugly affair with Cliff Chalmers. The girl's face Hushed hotly at the recollection of that night. Down deep In her hpart she knew she had goaded Cliff on. For two years she had wanted (Miff Chalmers. Intuition had told ber, at that country club party the other night, that she might at last have him. When he helped her Into the roadster at the end of the dance, he had seen something more than friendly Interest In his dark eyes. He bad Anally realized that she was grown up, and beautiful. Hut she had overdone It, somehow. Lois admitted that to herself. She should have stopped at two highballs. She didn't like them anyhow. Cliffs lips had tightened Into a thin line of disapproval when he noticed her unsteadiness. She was the one, too. who had suggested the lonely road und flnnlly, thnt they stop the car In thnt stretch of woods. Some wild. Inexplicable Impulse had taken hold of her that night; an Irresistible urge to show Cliff Chalmers she nn mature, sophisticated, and not h naive little thins to be treated with brotherly solid-tousnes- She vv.n.u.serviceJI parents. the police, who found H to HI f4 b ti.,.. T tit rki' uinl n,trription TUG CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR FuMUhf4 by Tiii r uiox ftortrtt A Boilon, Mchuiwi!t, 0. Cf-ttu- M for Cniimm Flfuo wnd iit to lit io4 n i. vi tH to fc-'- t nf ih h. r.,4 noi u ftnm ( Her father hud notltled and It had to be they her soblilng roadside at daybreak. ' ii,. M"m.triallUrlt fit Pution.t po.iT onM tki tntlow tubtcrption. - - - the des.--ndin- g ii VJTi 4, " dolltr " i !'( the stricken farmers and stock raisers he would Induce his debtors to While Fate was busy staging u borrow on mortgage, at 5 a per tragedy In Eden Val- cent, sufficient funds to pay off ley, Forlorn Valley had not been the mortgages at 8 jkt overlooked by the By cent existing lite Hank of Valley held by lsso practically every acre had Center. In to sweeten the order been honiesleaded ; the district de- deal Mr. ltubson even considered veloped into a dry farming section waiving the accumulated and unund later into "mixed" fanning. paid interest fur a copule of years. Cold It mi was the county seut. All he wanted back was the prinand In the heart of Forlorn Valley cipal of Ids foolish loans, for with a settlement known as Valley Centhat in his vaults he knew his ter hud gradually developed Into a bank would be miite safe. village of iiMit rive hundred Inhab he bulldozed a fanner itants. The entire valley was stag- intoPromptly making application for such a nant and drali until a large hydro-elec- t mid with commendable celeloan, rle company erected Its steel a government farm appraiser rity pyramids aevoss the valley. There- came from San Francisco to up upon an enterprising farmer had a the proffered collateral. It deep well drillwd on his ranch and seconds for this inrequired thirty developed a surprising flow of wa- dividual to make his appraisal and ter which rose almost to the surdecision. face; with a cheap centrifugal pump "The government," he said "will e mvor elee-iridriven by a not consider loaning nioney on motor he was enabled to irrifarms which are listed California seemfarm, gate his quarter-sectious lands." ingly without appreciable effect on "Hut these lands are irrigated," the water level. ( IIAITKH FOl'K long-draw- land-hungr- Hahson reminded him. A former Middle West bank clerk, so I observe, but from "Yes, Silas Hahson, who had inherited an lint us more and wells. deep Iowa, farm from his imrctits und more wells are bored and the sold it for seventy-livthousand funning in this valley tends more dollars, came to Valley Center and nud more toward intensive croik started a1 state bank. The Hank ping, thus rispiiring more and more of Valley Center was successful water for Irrigation, the water levfrom the start. el will recede and the cost of I'.iilison was u son of the soil; the water to the surface thill ly, shrewd, rapacious, compe pumping will lncreae norport innately with tent. From banking lie reached out the lift until a jxdnt will be reacli-and interested himself la such local where the water will be tinctmerles, a lumber ured enterprises as with red ink. Hence, such yard, the largest local garage with lands as these are listed as the agency for a inipular cheap uu lands and constitute a toiiiobiie and pumps; he sold insur- - loan risk the government is unamv of all kinds. assume. to It will loan onwilling Duly once had Ilabsun lost hi ly 011 lands that are surface irriIHTspei ilve on valtK's and that was gated und with an assured and during the World war. and for this roiiiiniious water supply." It would seem he was not to be "So I've loaned money 011 dry blamed, since all his fcllnw locause I was jackass farms lost theirs slmuliaiiiMiusly. nougli to consider them irrigated l'r',", ",' i'1'1"' rai,i'1 '"I1"'' .'arms," Hahson almost moaned. had hrotmht th farm He made a survey of the water usual Ikioiu of prosiiorily to Forlorn situation and discovered to his horValley. The bank, sharing in the ror that the water levels were inand unusual prosperity, general deed receding. had a glut! of money on pii lint the old ability to scheme his In m. sit mid. siuiv banks exist by out of a tight hole did not deway o:iiiiug the funds deHiiied with sert him. He reduced his situathem. I'.aliMin. with so much money tion to its lowest common divisor. 011 hand, and faced with the probif surface Irrgatioii, from a never-failinlem of making that nioney pay divand ample source of water idends, let down his guard, so to could lie brought to the supply, money 011 farm icak, mid loam-lands of Forlorn Valley, then Formortgages. lorn Valley lands would lie classed The is war deflation H'iiod the government ns Irrigated nud the values of farms mid 'iy whose value would Imlauds, overalmost farm product dropped return to the old war mediately marks. As the pre-wa- r sight time figure. And the federal farm unse-cunhe c onicmplnlcd the bank's loan bunks would then have no notes and frozen assets In the hesitancy in loaning up to C0 perMi h.iM of mortgages on farms foi cent of the appraised value. t value and ;s r cent of their the thing to do was Therefore, doubtful bat value an surface secure to irrigation for Forbad a very clear vision tie. Itiib-o- ii lorn Valley. I icdlate f hard times in the creek." Hahson 'Kdeli Valley offing. "A dam In that gorge cried aloud. If lie forelosed his mortgages he In he lower end of Kden Valley, .void I li ne the farms on Ids bands h reniiially at n high level by l.epl - likewise their taxes and the bss the flood waters f Kden Valley f Interest. held Ihri'iiih a tuanel .reck and four years Mr. For the r a canal cut through the low Itiilo-oii'-s was commercial progress 'dlls on the northern rim and tinctured with camion. Then the down liio Forlorn Valley, will do sw to a liihiui coinuicia-oing the i the trick." .'tiicr way very slowly, and one day The next problem was that of a brilliant thought leaped Into his the wa'cr. but this Hib-sobruin. ied hurt did not regard as a difficult . IU' decided to transfer bis linan-a1. II.' Lad but to aeiuire Hie dam lal burdeis to the capnble hands of te from young Nathan of all gold the riulilful lin-heLand sole nw'ier of the Far II bricks, to wit. the government. and CaMle company. From the joint bind Mock bank LiIiIUIkhI by the government to aid (To He Continued) Mr. e d dry-farmi- conn-trvnie- g , I siitvi-ctliu- -i n more inoiucn a flight of r tops. Th thought sobered and teiidiod her, HFi.i In i moment the tumult of her anger wa hut a faintly throbbing regret. She reached the foot of the ntslrs and tiioviil towiird the uninvited guest. Shu had to look up now. Cliff was looking iliiwn, She mw the tense rigidity of bis lips, the nncoin. , promising net f 1,1 jatti Hn, deniy the girl rva lined why he bad come. Cliff wTit-- d to make It up to her In full. Here, under Hip s. ru tiny of all their friends, he would apnlogu.. to .r n,, witiittf humiliate himself Ju- -t n (,,. m( though GREEN CAB CO. PHONE In WASATCH 7777 to your uticiillou otol for year i oniihTa! bn ihe most prom-tiiollotcicMH of Salt like, we lire please I to 11 oii inel.d CUI'.f.N CAH CO., to all of mr renders, as tiny exhibited ai 'filming bn-lli- the all limes 1 to give their pairmis the LeM S"nice lit the luost reasonable price. And the large they have e.iiildishiil is a Pstttiioiiv to thdr ri.iMiviitinu ini'lhods. unwittingly, bumillaied her. I 'event 7 Lois' heart skipped a tent and her footiepi faltered In The I'nited he and Ten Cent Store features real bargains. There is net another firm in this section that Is doing more tii assist people to economically secure the numerous household wants of every day life. A large portion of your shopping can lie done here In a pleasing and leisurely way. Loads of candy and confectionery specials-ara feature. And any of the thousand and oi:e articles found here will be found useful and appropriate. The nost important establishment in nt!.v community is the one that can furnish the thousand and one necessities for the home the mos1 and satisfactorily economically and it was not until the advent of and 2,"e stores the popular fie, thnt this economic source of supply was available to the buying public. Most any article purchased at The I'nited ive and Ten Cent Store today represents a saving of from ID to '2ti per cent. The idea of collective buying, selling for cash and dejxndnig cn the sreat volume of business for the profits, has won the world end is being accorded a nation- - wide patronage by people from every walk a -s tmllwH.v, j m"r-hmdt- t..r.i i.Mt!- - 41.1. in--- - cm- i.i. - m f f I i . " r io iieniniKi prjfp i ar "oneoss'ons wh'eh are enormous and t tlw l,v piestiv.' th's suviiv on in the ii- i l.i,t-lnTillltll nnn t..,l! " " ' " " 'or irnn 5 re. KV and 25'. f thi Ano'her outstanding feeture nffrt, 'his store is thnt all cinplnv,. m courteous and nftaltle. never Intrude on you'" ide-ior foi sniw w'H''vr to render anv servjeo n 1 TP alet oli.ontl I., Iw.v llu'tp lwiu-p'" 'I' 5. von seh'"t your wants whether A "bey be l'irre or small. " m - E. ii. in.- i ni- .mi n.i i ;i rip'i Li tin s vfr tb"y carry would be wholly 1 'mn'ssl!iie w''bin this limited j. "tvico, Fvery day nf this stnre Is i day from morning un- en til night. .a tn Any community, large or small, is fortunat" in possess'ng a store tn of supply the many aeeos-.-orie- s In 'in" life in such an economical nmener. Tie T'nlied ive and Ten Cent Stow ('"serves the large they ei'ji y and we feel that 4V I continue to do so in the will they years to come. Moos lc ft -- Personality Sia;r.ps the Wirc-ilalFox Terriers low,! j l 1 Send r Personality is something a dog can have to as marked a degree as n iii.y humans, declares a writer In And It Is per the I 'droit News soiialisy. probably, more than any thing else, that makes many dog owners favor the wire-haiterrier The wire, when lie is right -- and nmre often than not. he Is Is as worthwhile In Invent ment In dog flesh as one contd ma';e. When yon acquire one. you are really getting a whole lot of dogs wrapped up in one hide $1. t. Tlw Atlantic Monthly the n.oit of your rrndliii; the lours, fcnjoy tho vl.'ilnm, tlie cmop.-- i n in. shi p. tie chirm Unit li.ive nnolo the ears. ATLANTIC, for seventy-nv- e Anicrleu's most iiiiolcd and most i lii'ilsliid in ..izlnc. AKK Send $1. (iiientliniliii! this Ad) t wore; a valiant war.ior and friend. True It h to loyal Th Atlantic Is that, on occasion, you 8 Monthly, Arlington Boston St., will find your patience put to test by the wire's Irrepressible dynamic When he Is In buoyant spirit. mood, there Is no holding him back and when be has made up his mind to show you who Is boss, your attempts to surprise him are likely to be met with a display of defiance that Is astonishing as It Is deter mined. !csp!!e the wire's ruguert Indl vlduality, however, and In deference to his extraordinary intelligence. If may well be said that probably no other spoeb's nf dog Is nmre Arlington Garage AND Service Station New Management Body, Fender, Auto and Ignition Woik of his master's wishes when he wants to be. It Is the wire's contrasting moods, ns well ns bis Inherent dignity and pride, that make him such an Interesting and compeMlii" chap I lis swiff transitions from momenta of "smartness" to those of the most utter elifiiseness constitute one of his most distinctive characteristics. If Is his antics In his obtuse moods that will most amuse you and. at times, make you skeptical nhout his family tree. One minute a mutt, and the next a blue ribbon winner that Is the wire. Battery Charging - Welding Washing. Tire licpairs (J reusing, Union & Golden Eagle Gas and All Standard Oils MI Male I'boiie Mur. MIKUAV. ' j,,i, 5.Vi tTAH PLUMBING! Columbus Was Severe Jn Treatment of Mutineers Columbus was no angel sent from ' heaven, ns the Indians believed him to be when they first saw him. He! was a bni'-qoFifteenth century ie:i captain, who knew how to handle n crew of mutinous sailors, mid after his third voyage to Amer lea, he and his brothers were taken home In chains. They were ac- cased of being too severe In their treatment of the unruly Spaniards wrm mine out ns America a earliest Kliropenn settlers. Their arrival In Spain created a great sensation almost ns specfac u'ar s Colunib is' return from his frsf expedition, when the king and ipicen could think of nothing too g'xn for the man who had conferred so Incalculable a benefit upon the nation. Now It was the people who were loud 111 their reproleitfcn of his treatment--eve- n those who bad been willing to believe the Morles th.it lnd been brought home by the explorer's enemies. ''One of those react buis took place," any Washington Irving, historian of the Voyages nf Columbus, "so friiptenl In the public tnlml, when pereci. tloti Is pushed to an inigmirded length." an MURRAY 317 All Work Guaranteed! Murray Plumbing j & Heating Co. Ifij.i So. Mnte Murray Allan & Walker Urar of City H.ill Murrav We Specinlize In Welding Truck Body Work and Blncksmitliing "Tell Ut Your Troubled THONE MUR. 2RS-- J j sf' IB DRAPER QUALITY FEEDS j jes t for ihe next 5 months of For In t lie wire you will Mad a scamp, a self .vtartii a trickster, a clown nf ihe first wafer, a trage dian who can online more woe-bgone expressions than ever The Cneii Cub Co. has nsently 'lie same care In haiidling ber! No words p:is.tig lia-e- d a liiilitN'r of new cabs ' r as Is the rule at the wheel, could make inure articulate pun of their uit In their cf'orts to best wrve tin than did the stricken look lu hi for the convcnlciH-iiililb' H ey have Iliad a thi roimh eyes. Wbaicver of anger may have tolls. One of the great necessities of iinlved Hi descent nf the stairs lil'ly of the litsds of this section was a fretiMed hnpplriess. she un- the commercial life of today Is the -- f the country und !n the enulpmeiit laodi rn and rapid of the I lie derstood oV spurel tichhcr time nor exAn Impulse c;iiiie ever Ixda to put lie I n bub service, llrevity is elii .As II result of their splell laugh, to ,ry, to minuter the allelic the oul ,f buduess now iiii.l rapid did iiieTropotitati wrxhse the teller-n- ods of this company you are safely wilh a sliiiiit of J..v. She ,ti,t hliti,M Iruiiopot tulioii an Impoitatit fae- pllldle has response lis It ubvilVt and swdiiy tratispotted f.i (he do ho t.iok I,,,!.) .f t.'lilT's mat Itaiisact . iled objeifhe. Their rate has been '"r " l eii I'oes Its reiprri mollis arc lapels, A bo te sum of tuo'i. y has be 11 and w ith iO age lemtitness ulleiJ nt the minimum service ami placed i oiip'iecl with and this company Ms fare i)on to hers. ti led In sisuiit g tnodern aipiip- coiisiderid, ifeiy oil'' of the tun t thfiv'-ltctiliccl'tis riii tsM'iity years old w I It is a pleasure for us to dlimt ,H,.V rbllng uualil f In Ibid to M' found in the en today, Cliff," the attention of the nubile lo Ihe ahiperei( in lilj Mr, "i "'id in sufficient tumi'sT to Insure ('re s ate today. I a lit tnetity V iK,t tiom a fie.oi.nt and h riuaiieiit wrviie. Tin ir response t upThilhe mtiIi-- uni.nbil by The ,. p and and right in front of cveryij Tic Cr.-et- i Cab Taxi drhers aiv most Instantaneous and for this C recti Cab Co. reason tbrv btive Im'COIo Lm, no Second L.rg it K ;drnt il d weiiilicr i iiliditioiis. the busy lien's first tlionctit In The poieii; Pie Is the nocnud turg-s- t They ore instructed lo ticn l IN daily niovetiielits. Hv the lneth-rodent lii North America ClitT of life. Th nubile has lng since i"t to jud-r- the stT's hv the nrico It is so'd for in:l '"' . ,.1.1.. 4.. e ten-hors- pn-sen- Iil was doing something tons than M il Lois' father hud been furious, but Paul had looked Rearchlngly at her. then patted her shoulder. IJut he Lnd said nothing. Lois' anger, ns she started down the Htnlrway, wan the Incandescent unreasoning anger of the humiliate. Halfway down the stairs l.ols mw Cliff. He stood In the doorway of the vestibule, straight and tall. At the llrst Koine! of her foot steps upon the stairs the music, the darning and the forced laughter had ceased. There was no sound now but the s;e;n!v assault of her heoM upon the flushed siMlrs. It occurred to suddenly that she !,,.. llwn) along Jk 1 1 d ne A DOLLAR'S WORTH 1 Cliff. tin arms boulder, and CHfT. calling her name frenzledly. had whrched for almost an hour without discovering her hiding place, I'liflf had gone to her home, then, and bad told ber brother and her And iih balled rcit men sue around her, and his breath was hot upon her Hps. There hud been something brutal In his vehemence, hut his voice was fio.irse, strangled, as he said: "All right, Lois, If that's the kind you ore. , . She had wrenched loose, furious now and chastened. She had Jumped from the machine and had run down the road, hating herself and hating Cliff. She had bid behind a largo the Clip tlii coupon and mull it bad nna I FIVF This is one of the outstanding Commercial Features of the t'oiaiimnty that is doing a large share in assisting to reduce the high rost f living by mentis or supplying nigii :rade mereunnuise at t tie mil price of 5 cc.rs :.nd ID cents. It is Indeed the true ''"""my fen. tor of the Community, and you cant go wrong In chopping at tie I'nited Five and Ten Cent Store at KKi!) East 21st South. M w jicitce face!" EDITORIALS g OUTLAWS Without SAVE BY BUYING AT THE UNITED AND IhiM ULNl blUKK Distributed by W. E. CAIN PHONE Murray 4001 So. 5th 535-- Eat |