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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH spired and uninspiring as (hey may seem to ons who looks upon them coldly tnj Impersonally The setting to right of ths lit tie home, ths preparation of ths meal do-ti-e the family will enjoy sre the trying to a woman of Imagination? For my part I should say tbs more Imagination, the leas trying they sre. Every Job, of course, at some time palls, si! work ho Its good and Its less pleasant aspects. Duties which Id thcim-clve- s might be plensureabl become a Strain when multiplied beyond the capacity of a single person to cope with them. But If the demand upon her are within reasonable limits, I ran very well understand a wife and mother with abundant Imagination- - enjoying the tasks Involved In the making of a home and the up bringing of children. It require Imagination on th part of the observer to feel th Joyous thrill In the task of making up a lunch for tittle Ilohhy to tak to school, to measure the nubounded flights of fancy enjoyed by a mother monotoA bedspread In crochet la s work bent over the apparently of art, attracts attention and fre- nous Job of making party dress for quently becomes nn heirloom. A her daughter. Is It thnt women are suited to mospread crocheted In one piece becomes cumbersome as the work pro- notony or that their Imagination degresses. How much simpler to cro- feats monotony? , Bell Sradleata WNU Srrvtr. chet one motif at a time and then assemble the motifs to complete spread Watch your work grow when It can Record Whitewsibed he taken along with you to social When John Varko, headman of gatherings. I.liots, Czechoslovakia, returned home The above lllustrniion represents he found thnt the walls of bis room tlie "Snow Hake motif and how It had been whites ashed by bis wlfe.so shows up when put together. Tb's he bent her. John told the Judge th motif when made of carpet warp local council meets In the room, and momeasures six Inches. Thirty-twto save paper, he lind written the tifs can lie made from one pound of minutes on the walls. Ills wife's warp. This I only one of tlie 29 set caused tlie loss of an entire motifs shown In our bonk No. 27 on year's records. motif bedspreads. These motifs can also he used to make match sets for bedroom: curtains, pillows, scarfs, etc. Write our crodtet department Inclosing 15c for tills honk No. 27, Illustrated, with Instructions, or send 25c and receive also book No. 20, with 72 edgings and Insertions In crochet for all purposes. Address llonje Craft company DepL II Nineteenth A St. Louis avenue St. Louis, Mo. Crochet Motif for Bedspread THE of DANX National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart By ELMO SCOTT WATSON k N NOVEMBER 2. 1731, there was Washington. As the federal relief administration looks forward burn lo a Quukcr weaver mu J blacksmith In Exeter tnwnahlp, near tliu present city of Heading. Is-- . a Kon to whmn wai given t lie inline of Daniel. Anil time, 20 Jiiirn la lor, tluil boy'a name Kill! tins the mwer to stir the lmng.ua-lioof hi For he wn Innlo Boone, the nmi;lc of hi mime drew to a in ii In Kentueky all the high ollldal of oiiiiiionwoullh, representatives of the (or of eight ataio and a treat crowd of from every art of the country. They bail .! there to participate In the openingI cort Le-n...i.-of the I.ouiie bicentennial which ; oloerxed thl year am which will come to a Inias kite till month. v.ihcnigli the celebration at lloonesboro on .iiinU-- r 3 wa primarily a Kentucky affair, Dun'l ItiHine a cseon-- I Mine Kentmky re.-ari her own. a dozen other mate have aome .i . ... in upon him. Among them are Pennsylvania, wlue he wa hoin; Virginia, North Carolina Relit! Cot! n follow-America- i .1 li , ' I Birthplace of Daniel Boone and Tennessee, where his youth was spent and emerged new Daniel Boone who bears little where he started upon his career as a hunter resemblance to the Boone of the Fort Boonesboroutjh. and frontiersman; West Virginia (then a part One of the first of these was the late Clarence of the old lioniinion) where he made his home Walworth Alvord of the University of Illinois Here, perhaps, Is a clew to the reason why n'ter the loss of Ills lands In Kentueky; Ohio, and the University of Minnesota, whose reputn "heie he h.ul some of Ills most thrilling adven tion, gained in his researches into the early his- there's still magic for us In the name of Daniel Boone. We are more Influenced in our thinking titles; and Missoutl, where he spent his deeli tory of the Mississippi valley, is too secure for It Is lug years and where he was buried when death him to he regarded as an Idle delinnker" of tlie by the fiction we read than we realize. ilainied Inin In 1.S29. Keen Kansas, Nebraska great. Writing in the American Mercury nearly easier to think in terms of symbols and types than it Is to take into account Individual differNmth and South Dakota, Wyoming and Mon' a decade ago, he declared: ences in arriving at an estimate of some one tana h.ue more than a casual interest In him Tlie facts of tlie life oi tlie man Boone, InI or in Ids old So, when Cooper symbolized tlie Amerage, still the keen hunter and deed, lime little in common with those of the person. in tlie romantic figure of Natty ican pioneer Is . . . he lie made long trips Into the western superman so universally exalted. ti.ipper, wilderness and It is possible that he trod the idolized as the most heroic of western explor- Bumppo, we accepted Leatherstocking as tlie proof all frontiersmen. And when a charsoil of ail those states. ers, as the first to make known to settlers the totype In real life came as close to fitting tlie acter Ken of Mark and Lot in a larger sense Daniel Boone bloody the country' of belongs to fertility fictitious portrait which Cooper drew ns Daniel to plant in tlie West Hie whole nation. Symbolical of that fact was tin k.v, and as the first Boone did. It was almost a certainty that his of Americans. tlie nutlionznt ion hy the last congress of a spe- permanent settlement name would be stamped indelibly on tlie Amerre most But it requires only the cial r superficial for the Boone bicentennial till consciousness. ican year. Designed hy one of Americas most dis- search to knock tlie story Into a cocked hat. Involved In this result, of course, Is a matter tinguished sculptors, Augustus Ltikenian, the study of tlie historical sources proves that thou com iK'iirs on the obverse side Boone's likeness sands of men explored Kentucky before Boone, of racial and national pride and also personal was well known to multitude vanity. We Americans like to consider ourselves and on the reverse the figures of a frontiersman and tlie region mid mi Indian mid the who needed no superhuman herald either to superior to other peoples, esiecially those whose 11)34 as of designation J'iiineor Year. These coins will be sold at tell them of the fertility of the soil or to summon skins are another color, although In tills respect we are, perhaps, no different from the British, premium and the proceeds will go to the Boone them to action. Finally, In tills whole complex bicentennial commission of Kentueky to be used movement across tlie mountains Boone played the French, the Germans or the citizens of any in niquiring the sites of three subordinate part ; he was little more than an other country. pioneer forts When we set out to overrun this continent, we bort Booneshorough, Boones Station und Bry- employee of an empire builder, Itichard Henan's Station. These three, together with the site derson, a North Carolina speculator and the encountered a natural opposition from its origtlie Transylvania company. Daniel inal owner, tlie red man. He was wily and darof the Battle of Blue Licks, will comprise the founder of s lmneer national monument with a memorial Boone was one of many pawns in the magnifi- ing; he was skilled in woodcraft; he was a cent game of chess being played on Kentucky fighting man. In order to survive, tlie piohighway connecting the four shrines. there is no trace." neers who invaded his hunting grounds bad to without these material reminders of the territory. Of tlie superman Another distinguished historian, who Is prob- outwit and outfight him. Those who didnt, soon fame of Dan'l Boone, his Is a deathless name in the American consciousness. He Is the eternal ably the leading authority today on tlie history lost tlieir scalps. Those who did, were able to hold on their new symbol of the pioneer, of a land where there of tlie Old Southwest (Kentueky and Tennessee) maintain their precarious were frontiers to he pushed ever westward and and who is now writing a definitive biography homes in the wilderness until the overwhelming in an arliele which appeared in tlie numbers of the white man made certain the a wilderness to be won. In the America of today of Boone, there are no more frontiers where venturesome New York Times Magazine in 1927, corroborated subjugation of the red man and the acquisition Alvord's statements in regard to the priority of of his lands. souls may escape the humdrum of everyday Outstanding among the pioneers who were there Is no wilderness to he conquered; other men as "Kentueky pioneers" but dealt somewhat more kindly with the superman myth. able to survive was Daniel Boone who, as Henami pioneer life exists only In the fading memories of g few aging men and women facing the He is Dr. Archibald Henderson who is, inci- derson has said, was unsurpassed as an indiof Boone's em- vidual Indian fighter." So when we read of one dentally, a smiset f their days. ployer. Writing of Boones activities as agent of his victories over tlie wily redskins it conSo this nation, still youthful but how reaming tor the Transylvania company, he says: firms our feeling of racial superiority, just as 'Ihbklyr it spent Its youthful heritage of high While these are the revelations of modern reading of Washingtons victories in the Devoluaihentnre and brave enterprise, looks back historical investigation they do not detract from tion and those of Scott and Taylor in the Mexsomewhat longingly to those glamorous days and of Bonnes real fame. ican war confirms our feelings of national superiseeks some figure in w Inch Is embodied the spirit the distinctive qualities Boone was probably tlie most skillful hunter of ority. of its lusty youth. In Daniel Boone it finds such who ever lived upon tlie American conDaniel Boone was an American; we are Amera figure. Americans of today, reading of him big game was a peerless explorer, a supreme icans; ergo, we, too, would have been able to and associating themselves In their minds with tinent. lie even tlie as a leader lead scout. Unsuccessful liave outwitted those wily redskins. He was a bim, can experience vicariously the adventures ershlp in tlie defense of Booneshorough seems to crack shot with the long rifle of that period; which befell him In real life. have fallen not to Boone but to Itichard Calla- lie was "tlie most bkilltul hunter of big game Such Is the magic of the name of Daniel way Boone was unsurpassed as an individual who ever lived upon tlie American continent; Boone and to 03 out of a hundred Americans Indian lighter, who on countless occasions be was a peerless explorer, a supreme scout. lie Is tlie pioneer par excellence. Ills npotheosis iroved himself more than a match for tlie crafti- Therefore, by tlie same process of reasoning, we began long ago, for just ns George Washington est and subtlest of Ids Indian opponents. are all of those tilings. In other words lie was bad his Parson Weems to make him more of a "Seen through the glorifying halo of a century champion in his field of endeavor. And how s Boone still we Americans do love champions and love to of time, Daniel myth than a man, so did Daniel Boone have his and bihn Filsnn to make hltn a frontier demigod. ses before us as a romantic figure, poised and be champions! ) lie result has been many a miscon jeptinn about solute, simple, benign as naive and shy as Tlie scientific historians may take away our Boone's part in the settlement of Kentucky some wild tiling of the primeval forest five feet popular belief that Daniel Boone was tlie first and many a "popular belief about his imporchest broad and with in inches height, ght explorer of Kentucky and tlie outstanding piotance as a frontier leader which are partially, If shoulders, dark locks, genial blue eyes arched neer leader in a romantic pioneering era. But not entirely, erroneous. ith fair eyebrows, thin lips and wide mouth, so long as we can cherish our belief in him as counnose of sBghtly Human east and fair ruddy Modern historical scholarship paints a somethe symbol of something which we consider eswhat different picture of him from the one which tenance. In suit of buckskin, Indian moccasins sentially American, bis name will be a living our schoolbook histories have presented. Scienand coonskin cap, with rifle, knife and toma- memory during the centuries to come as it has tific historians, devoted to seeking the truth anil hawk, alternating with tlie axe and the survey- during tlie two centuries that have passed since making the truth known, have gone back to the or's compass, lie Is the true Leatherstocking of he was horn. source material and out of their Buttings has Cooper romance." by Western Newjpnper Union. myth-maker- half-dolla- tirst-cias- ; three-quarter- lo the winter months when tlie rxlu'f burden obMount I viously Is heaviest, llarry I Hopkins, federal relief odniinlfctrtt.'.r, mukes public figures showing that tlie average cost of maintaining a family of four on public relief now Is $23.09 a month, lie says this figure varies materially from section to section, that It Is materially higher In the Industrial centers of tlie Smith where relief rolls are largest and that, probably, the country may expert a higher average cost during the forthcoming winter. The statement by Mr. Flopklns becomes exceedingly significant. In tlie opinion of observers here, especially with reference to the likelihood that there will be an Increase In cost this winter. It reflects two things. First, the administrations drive to bring about Increased prices through crop limitation or crop destruction or any of the several methods employed not only Is adding to tlie burden of those with limited buying power but it is compelling Uncle Sam and tlie states and counties and charitable organizations everywhere to pay an added price to keep peoSecondly, the ple from starving. Hopkins statement gives more thnn an Intimation of how many additions to the relief rolls there may be as a result of refusal of some people to accept any kind of Jobs. It La been known many months that if ief rolls carry a certain percentage of Individuals who amount to the same thing as parasites, but the mounting cost both In the average and In the total figures are being examined by many experts with the thought In mind that considerable waste Is In prospect. has The relief administration been attempting to make surveys of relief rolls In many Jurisdictions. The results in some of the cases have been quite disturbing to those In the government who are wholly desirous of lending help wherever help Is necessary, but who obviously are unwilling to see government funds drained off to care for Individuals who are refusing to help themselves. How far this condition Is going, none can foretell; nor can anyone at this time say accurately how extensive has become the list of those who regard relief roils as their rlghtfjl meal ticket. Some of the political leaders ' ave become alarmed because, having knowledge of the dole system In Knginnd and in some of the other Kuropenn countries, they know how hard It Is to separate Individuals from relief after those Individuals have lost the pride and morale u hieh causes people to support themselves. Hearings before congressional committees last winter disclosed In numerous cities how some people had declined to do the odd Jobs created under the make work campaigns for the unemployed and had preferred to make their trips to the relief stores. semi-weekl- y 1 have heard several members of congress express tlie opinion that tills phase of tlie Difficult relief problem Is Problem really tlie most difficult of the whole structure. They want to see tlie government spend all tlie money that is necessary to keep people from starving but they are beginning to demand that some way be found by which the sheep may be separated from the goats and properly fed. Here In Washington a taste of the condition mentioned above has been exposed as the result of complaints by a taxpayers organization. The taxpayers group declared tiiat its Investigators had found many unemployed appearing at relief headquarters driving their own automobiles, they thought It was that a man could paradoxical afford to maintain his automobile and could not maintain his family. Belief authorities in the local offices denied these charges. The relief experts said 'some of the destitute were being transported to relief headquarters in the cars of friends, but despite tlie denials there seemed to have been some fire In all of the smoke. Whatever the facts In the National Capital situation may have been, the condith n itself nevertheless Is attracting attention for the reason that some of the individuals who usually do more talking than anything else have risen to the defense of those who called for tlieir doles In their motor ears. Tlie upshot of this and of the veiled charges of waste and sometimes graft In other cities Is that tins government is approaching a point where it must become more or less hardboiled in Its relief administration. If it does not, nearly all of the observers agree, the Unit ed States will have a relief roll of six nr eig.it million which will continue to serve as a drain npon the treasuries, both national and lo cal, for a good many years to come. Some of the authorities are grow-Uifearful, too, of what may hap g . pen should the parasitic element tie separated from Its meal ticket. With winter coming on rudirnla ran make fine case out of a re fu rail by relief manager to feed this or that I have even aturvlng family," heard suggestion that tlie coming winter may see some riot of a character more severe than anything we have yet known. But If they do come It seems to lie agreed they will not be due entirely to lack of food but to agitation on tlie part of some of those who have desires only to wreck our present structure of government With the return of the winter session of the Supreme Court of th United New Deal Up New Dealers a to High Court weU a 0,J dealer may have some ground for belief Hint questions respecting their acta In the last year soon will lie answered. In tills country, we have always looked to the courts os the last resort to tell us when our legislative bodies as well as executive officers of our governments, state or national, have gone beyond bounds. All through the summer there has been the mounting demand for Judicial construction of New Deal acts. It appear we are about to get them in numbers from the highest court In the land. There are sulllclent petitions before the Supreme court to provide a rather accurate delimitation of tlie New Deal scojie in Its constitutional aspects. Expert legal opinion here seems to lean toward substantiation of most of tlie New Deal activities by But at the same the high court. time some of the best legal minds In the country are maintaining that while part of the New Deal props look good, they are outside of what has hitherto been regarded as constitutional acts on the part of government and so the consensus Is that there will be many decisions forthcoming from the Supreme court before it lays aside its robes this spring. As the Supreme court now Is constituted, I think It is generally regarded as leaning to the conservative side. Wlille the court Is not supposed to be Influenced by economic phases, the economy of tlie New Deal Is so entwined with law that many astute observers tell me there can be no segregation of those two elements when It comes to ruling on constitutional phases of the New DeaL The best available figures show that the government has Instituted uliout 140 cases charging violation of NBA codes. It has won about 87 of these, and has lost about 15 of those coming to a decision. Private litigants have brought action against the NBA In 39 cases and the gov eminent has won 20 of these. Similarly, there have been something like 20 cases In tlie courts Involving Agricultural Adjustment administration rules and regain tions. Of those that have gone through to a decision tlie govern ment has won seven and lost three. State, t e clmir-baek- Daily Tasks for Wife and Mother Few Women Will Look Upon Household Duties as Monotonous. Hospital and doctors have always used liquid laxatives. And the publie is fast returning to laxatives in liquid form. Do you know the reasons? The dose of liquid laxative can be measured. The action can thu be regulated to suit individual need. It forms no habit; you need not take a "double dose a day or two later. Nor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys. The right dose ot a liquid laxative brings a more natural movement, and there is no discomfort at the time, er after. Tne wrong cathartic may often do more barm than good. A properly prepared liquid laxativa like Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin brings safe relief from constipation. It gently helps the average persons bowels until nature restores them to regularity. Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin is an approved liquid laxative which all druggists keep ready for use. It makes an ideal family laxative; effective for all ages, and may be given the youngest child. "Women are best suited for monotonous Jobs. That heading to a news dispatch sent several of our readers op In arms. "Best suited Indeed. What they mean Is that women did the monotonous work that was put upon them os long as they could not help writes one of the themselves, friends whom we heard from before. The basis for It all was the publication of a report of a British sociologist, that women adapt themselves to monotonous work with greater success than men, that they can best bring themselves to the daily performance of monotonous work without losing tlieir Interest In life. It Is true enough that women have for centuries done uncomplainingly the work that was their duty, though it was not always the work they fewest Hotel would have chosen. The reference to is of course the monotonous grind of housework, the job of home and children. But It seems to me thnt A situation somewhat unique in that Is not all there Is to It. In Is American polities developing The question is, are household vl Wisconsin, where tasks as monotonous to the wife and I , Wisconsin the LaFolette mother as i they seem? Are tlie rouunare brothers Politics tine chores involved always as unin dertaking to continue the family dynasty by march ing under the banner of a new organization, the Progressive party. It is all being done very quetly, but the facts seep through the national political headquarters here In Wash lngton. The regular Republican organization sees an opportunity to knock off the LaFollettes by throwing 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Put Mentholafum In II tlieir support to John M. Callahan, the nostrils to relieve II the Democratic candidate for the Radio connection in every room. Irritation and promote V senate. Apparently they have little RATES FROM $1.50 dear breathing, or no hope of electing their own senfust opposite ilormon Tabtmack atorial candidate, the Wisconsin ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. publisher, John B. Chapelle, who ended the political career of former Senator John J. Blaine In the primaries of 1932. TIIE If Mr. Callahan does poll a sizeable Itepublican vote tlie question is whether this will offset the defecWlJll He tions in the Democratic party. was one of the leading supporters of Alfred E. Smith at the 1932 convention, and neither the President nor his lieutenants have forgotten that it was the present Democratic senatorial candidate in Wisconsin A . JSi. who gave publicity to charges that Mr. Roosevelts early campaign In the South for Presidential nominaMrs. J. H. Waters, tion was In part financed and sup President ported by the officers of the Ku Klux Klan In Georgia. All of which leads to the observation that political leaders sometimes do very strange things. They have been known to throw overboard tlieir own candidates when the occasion required if they were to hold their own control ot TIIE the party machinery, state or na SINGLE tional. Consequently, It is not par $2.00 (O $4.00 ticnlarly strange that the Repuh DOUBLE T-E- . SUTTON, General Manager Means will supiiort a Democrat for $2.50to$4.50 tlie senate if it would mean the re CIUUNCEY W. WEST Rooms 400 Assist. Gen. Manager moval of the thorn in tlieir sides 400 Baths which the LaFoliette family has proven for several decades. & Westers NewsDeDer Unleflk Salt Lake Citys 'h Head COLDS H HOTEL TEMPLE ' SQUARE mmm nawwiwi NEWHOJJSE HOTEL - ifssfi : 3 ISistinctivc Residence An Abode, ..renowned Throughout the West Salt Lakes Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES Motel ITewIioiisc |