OCR Text |
Show Tuesday, October 27, 1912 The Cliche American, Logan, Cache County. Utah Face Two in the armed senior or on, Uie publ.c pejr.ll. There call he .hat most of the-i io r. are necesaorker federal extra one can no cert Most inly j sary. yt THE CACHE AMERICAN Nemipape'. Published Tuesday the Cache American Publishing Company, at Logan, Utah Semi-Weekl- y WTLLIAM C. ENGLAND, Managing JAMES W. POLAND BAVID W. ENGLAND C2 J and Fridays by West Center bt. tv.n MitesConfis eMinerteari Gmuus 1897. Subscription rates: Outside County, one year $2 00; Inside Cache County, $1 50 Advertising rates made known upon application NOW VK MI ST HITCH IT ti:c:m as the cod oj tlu evening, O Wanderer, h the hos- pitality of the man ul;o rcmembcrst'She : cnj best bug is the whiskey thats dry ..Saul Jones!" it should not be greatly increased sus-- 1 But there U eiery reason W consider-- 1 be must there pert that able overlapping In the civilian braiuh of the government. Thia can be partially excused by the efneed of speeding up the aar jeo-pi- e to hue better la fort. It doing a Job Hiat handle than to have at the 3. V, quarrel about ;he number elnudy In the armed lows or a gue that Manager Editor Mechanical Deparmont. Edllar-Buslne- Entered as Second-Clas- s Matter, November 2. 1031, Post Office at Logan, Utih. under the Act of March - fe- to OUR BELTS ton tes Dry of th Paul Jon s Csmtl For a generation people in Cache county have been eatA Job. that all Besides available of wanted ing commodity. they every However. the Increasing numbers eating without stint there has been plenty and to spare, on our publ.c payrolls cor.st.tute a even to the point of waste. Times were normal and we national jroblem. a menace to our r period, lived to eat. economy. In the will be something our statesmen it Pearl Harbor changed all that and overnight this TM AmeUmt lfliM tk grmma 4, As a will hvae to study wrKw-ly$Im4 y, i OyUm country of ours became the Arsenal of Democracy. This matter of fact, it is not too early the evolution meant that for the duration it was our obligation commence problem to studying THEODORE ROOSEVELT now. We will hive more t say reto furnish implements of war to our allies and more imgarding thtf tn future editor.a.s. handicaps career at the age of portant we were charged with the responsibility of furnish- BORN with physical ar.d make whit wc hope wl be From as ormade have State an Assemblyman. might ing food stuffs to them and to the countless millions of suKgcVions as to how and that time forward he was a podinary man a ."a vt can cope with the tent life in we nat.on coun-a Theodore factor as the Roosevelt in human the political weakling, unfortunate occupied lieings j starving, alif became for his countrymen the of his State, serving it in many which a situation situation tries, so far as it is jossibe to relieve their untold suffervery symbol of the strenuous capacities, including that of Govlowed to continue after the war. both before and With after the life. he ernor, physical vigor ing. w.'uld Inevitably lead us to So combined mental leadership and War. In that m or Totalit irianlsm Until Decemler 7, we had held to the weird notion that conflict he won additional glory a vibrant patAotism ot Riders as Colonel the in his Rough New York birth At at men his valiant and City, Valley Forge George Washington on October 27, 1858, Roosevelt who made the dramatic charge UNIFORMS had won for us, our liberty and that democratic institubabe up San Juan Hill. was a deiirate, The assassination of President who all through his boyhood tions in this country were assured by the sacrifices made aeemed destined to a life of inac- McKinley in 1901 made RooseBy Leona IL Carl on in 1776. Fortunately we have now awakened to the falicy then our tivity. Fortunately his family velt, His uniform was first a gown was able to give him the best of Chief Executive at of this reasoning. We know now that liberty and security Of soft and down white. care and his was a character that the youngest man ever to hold are never fully paid for by any previous generation but refused to be hampered by ob- that exalted office. He filled the Above that gown lus silken hair He trained in gymnas- post with characteristic vigor stacles. calls Looked just as black as night. which matter to is a as men live free that the right until himself 1909, distinguishing tics, horsemanship and managed his defense for of the especially each of and American, regardbuild into the Rough to himself for the loyal support every And then he wore blue coveralls Rider who was to thrill the coun- common people against the large With bright red colored trim less of when lie may have fitted into our national pattern adwon His the trusts. his with courage exploits. try A happy laughing boy of two and enemies of A blmJ ef straight u billies 00 friends miration of social justice and our American Way of Life. devotion to nature study His We were so fond of him. proof. T rani fort Distilleries, I tic., throughout his life. It alike. In 1912 he ran again for persisted Soon we shall have more and more rationing. Just what is this side of his the Presidency on a Lost in ills & Baltimore, He next wore denim overalls career that was particularly me- ticket, but was defeated. items will find their way on the list cannot now be foreseen. And shirt of blue chambray, Januhis in New morialized of the .To the death, day impressive When with his pal on that fall Regardless of what this program may bring it will place a York State Memorial Building ary 6, 1919, President Roosevelt morn forin the affairs of the monument was which us. active of the and That one were, on and each moral obligation every dedicated to him on the country. At the same time he To school he danced away. mally beside not the fool is be point. proof rationing system may grounds of the American Mu- undertook important exploraft May He pledged himself unto the flag seum of Natural History in Jan- tions "and wrote many significant There is no justification for chiseling on Uncle Sam. Each Cause 1938. The monument is the books. He was buried in the cemIn Boy Scout uniform. uary, Infection citizen has an equal stake in this conflict. work of James E. Fraser, a sculp- etery near his home, at Oyster And something wakened in us then For quick relief from itching caused by eczema, tor who has done much to make Bay, Long Island, and hia grave athlete foot, scabies, pimples and other itching Or loyalty was bom. Since we have lived in a community of abundance, and the features and character of marked by the atone shown in the condition. ue pure, cooling. medicated, liquid conwe food stuffs of the D. O. D. PRESCRIPTION. A doctors formula. since we produce a good share Roosevelt familiar to a new sketch, is the scene of annual A farmer lad with levis Grraeless and stainless Soothes, comforts and thousands of by pilgrimages to the us And a hat of straw so wide point get sume, it may be difficult at first for quickiy calms interne itching 35c trial bottle Roosevelt began his political admirers. With honest sweat upon his brow proves or money back Dont suffer Askyour of view, that merely because we grow some of the most druggist today fur D. O. D. PRESCRIPTION. Memorial Xrlendo. OMaadaaka.) to (Coorrlzhtod He seemed more dignified. essential foods, it does not follow that we should use them High school clothes and dancing in violation of the pirit of the rationing orders. The man duds THE NEW of a wheat or who never produced a bushel of pound sugar And courting clothes he wore. of none the in will the future and on gains fire enjoy they to The same entitled the years sped by so quick and or butter is an American and therefor 150 years unless they put fast amount of these fundamental food stuffs as the man who they have made over the past SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH that fire out cold. The time to start pouing on the water He wsa a boy no more. cultivates hundreds of acres. We saw him then in robes of white When complete rationing does come the people of Cache is now! Beside his lovely bride. In gratitude our hearts were filled county will have to hitch up their belts and march shoulder pioximately 4 million men and With sacred, hallowed pride. to shoulder in the war of production with a hundred and women in our armed services. one the in We of here And the end is not yet. The And now a soldier boy at last thirty million of their countrymen. trend is still upward and probably In khaki uniform, chosen spots must get the vision that we are not secure will so continue until the end ot He goes to serve his country s when even the remote outpost of civilization is threatened cause in one the war. For instance In hours of stress and storm. of 140,881 June this year, month, by the forces of dictatorship. By GEORGE PECK civilians were added to the federal Our job is pretty well defined and our moral and finanThis uniform is glorified THIS COUPON Civilian federal employment payroll. A symbol, yes, and more, cial responsibilities have been pointed out very distinctly. Entitles the holder to reached a peak of 918,000 during the State 525,000 workers, We hope hell wear it Adding just as well The price for good things is always high, therefore the World War 1. By 1923, this had the 931,000 city employees, the 335,- - As those he wore before. NEW cost of freedom as we have known it in the past generation, fallen to around the half million 000 county workers, those on remattresses beds - springs will pinch but must be met without reservation or mark and fluctuated between that lief, the employees of the legislacarpets - throughout the p.'M-a- 4 twenty-thre- j Jfia e, toust-ucti- neer-do-we- ll ve i i , lal-- t: Spanihh-America- near-sighte- n d forty-tw- many-facete- o third-part- y d -- 1, Semloh Hotel One Out of Fifteen on Public Payrolls TO ROUSE FLOW POUR ON THE WATER NOW Anyone who has poduced anything for human consumption knows that in most articles or farm crops the greatest cost is for labor. Anyone who can read a newspaper knows that the number one aim of labor organizations has been constantly shorter hours and higher wages. Government has cooperated with labor along these lines. Many of the objectives sought by this program have been in the public interest. But as in every movement that becomes monopolistic and political, grave abuses creep in, for which the public pays. We are witnessing that result now. The government policy has been that labor must lose none of its gains in short hours, high wages, closed shop, etc. Then, after everything that goes into the cost of production has reached a record ceiling, there is a great hullabaloo raised that the cost of farm products is responsible for the high cost of living. The situation is pretty much like the old story of the pot calling the kettle back. No group in this nation can, long profit at the expense of another group. The people cant have cheap food while the farmer pays war wages. We are now in a war to save our own necks, rather than to save wage or hour 'or price gains made by labor, industy, or the farme. We are in exactly the same position as a man whose house is afire and who refuses to exert himself to keep it from burning he is faced with a condition that recognizes no social gains, or leisure, or soft hands. He may have to work to exhaustion to put out the fire, or lose his house. If the Axis wins this war, there will be no more labor unions or free enterprise, or the right to say and do as we please there will remain only the ashes of ideals and freedoms that we have enjoyed, just as there would remain only the ashes of a house which the owner refused to work to save, after hours, or over hours, or double hours, if necessary. We hear a lot about lack of manpower in this nation, while there is resistance to working longer or harder than in normal times. If we are running out of manpower, the men pivileged to stay at home and produce for the armed forces are going to have to work longer and harder, just as do the men on the firing line when faced with an emergency. The house of the farmer, of labor, and of industry is number and 600,000 until the New tive and judicial branches, and the 4 million of our armed forces to Deal entered the picture with its those 2,200,000 civilian federal em spending program m 1933. ployees, we arrive at a total ol .of When the second World War about 8'i millions or that about Salt! tonight i,5our b'i,or hreikfaat, taka aa much started In the Fall of 1939, there one out of fifteen of our popula-wer- e or Kia,a Ot on, d m ,n In your morning cup water (hot 920,000 civilians on the federal tion are getting their pay checks KrusSiS P f?,r 30 daySit B,p uch symptoms payroll, or 2,000 more than the from Federal, State or local as sick headaches, bowel ilURrtihntu anri reached in 1918 during World ernments. As most of these In " Uk "7 tott'J'S War 1. Since Pearl Harbor, the turn have dependents, it means foanfad. 5 Federal Government has really that probably one person out of atora. You muat be aaUaflVd monebwk? to now gone there five is either directly or indirectly town, and are 2,200,000 civilians drawing their dependent upon government, stipends from Uncle Sam. This That puts quite a burden on the -. does not include any of the ap- - four-fiftof us who are not as house. RATES OF LIVER BILE "S gov-pe- S"1 I Ah International Daily Newspaper as room one coupon to the room. NOW FEATURE FREE Garage USE TIIIS COUPON RATES $li$ Grant Avenue and up SAN FRANCISCO The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Price 12.00 Yearly, or 1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, 2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 2J Cents. Headquarters for Utah and Idaho People Nsnu . COPY ON REQUEST Managing Owner, Wallace (Spick) Carlisle YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FROM ir IL during 38 to 52 Years of Age! m If you like so many women between the ages of 38 and 52 suffer from hot flashes, weak, dizzy, nervous feelings, distress of Irregularities", are blue at times due to the functional middle age period at once in a womans life-s- tart try Lydia E. Plnkhams Vegetable Compound. Its the best known medicine you can buy that's made especially jor women. Plnkham's Compound Is famous to relieve such distress Taken regIt helps build up resisularly tance against such symptoms. It IS also Is a fine stomachic tonic I Thousands upon thousands ot women rich and poor alike have reported benefits. Also beneficial for younger women to help relieve distress of monthly tlonal disturbances. Follow label directions. Vortn trying! Furniture 10 to advertised .. 342 Conatructiv. Unbiased Free from Sensationalit Truthful ism Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. on any WE Hotel The Christian Science Monitor SAMPLE the rates ' Washington The Worlds News Seen Through Address $1.50 to $3.50 reduction 300 Autos - Livestock |