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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 11, 1927. What Cooljdge Has Done, Topic for $100 Prize by Boston Club have (Omtlmi tram Tif On.) which minimise President ' CooHd-- ' hot rather the truth that Mr. Coolldge was a president who Wt ui m our own accomplishment, rather than maanify-luway, did not exhort us, nor to lead them or cataluglnf them complete- us or change us? Who lettry ue follow ly. Undoubtedly, however, many per- our own bents, and for himself made son will enter the contest who think It point of pride to stand oU? Mr. C ootid re hue made a considerable MAQAZINI tCI. DEFECT. record of worthwhile accomplishments. Somewhat the earn notion that NIOATIVE VIEW. here expressed held by a oontxlbu-t- o who want to support the To tho to The New Republic, except that a can New be made, a The president Republic ea this trait In device of ilalec-ti- Mr. Coolldge decidedly not a an afperfectly The reocrrd of President Coolldira. firmative accomplishment, but as a delike the reoord of any president, Is not fect. The New Republlo would like confined to what be did, but Include to see a man In the White House like what he refrained from doing. Since Roosevelt or Wilson, one who would Mr. Coollrtf has the temperament that keep us looking toward him, would he has, the negative positions he took give us a thrill In each morning's will bulk larger In his record than In newspaper, would provide us or some the record M presidents more amb- of us with Ideals, would cause ue to ition, more energetic, or more merely imltats him. The New Republlo thinks restless. Considering Sir. Oooltdge the present a sordid time. It does record from this point of view, It is not blame Mr. Coolldge for the quality possible for a contestant for the Roose- of the time, of course; but It ha develt club- prise to take a his theme cidedly the manner of saying Mr. Coolan outstanding characteristic of Mr. ldge as president ought to have made us different, ought to have administration. Coolldge' the It can be expressed a an affirma- time's either a brighter color given of Imagtive accomplishment bv saying that ination, or a softer, one of Idealism. "President Cooltdae reflected the SDlrit ThW New Republlo contributor writes;. of hi time." Historians may readily is It not true that even such In ay of the years In America, following I telllgenoe, such Imagination and such in worm war that tney composed a j aramatio sens a distinguished Rooee- hi uia uiagrrnt sex vi quail- period of such political deification of business, of material things, as never ties which distinguished Wilson hav wa before In any rountrv. President a positive value quite apart from, and Cooildtr did not Mart It. It was under perhaps squally Important with, th he cam Into of floe. wisdom or effectiveness of a presiway befoc Neither, apparently, is It going to end dent' policies? To act on th Imagination of a people Is to affect their with President Coolldge. The Republican are entering the campaign next morale, and to affect their morale is year on the theory that the political to affect their work and their socialdeification of business popular, that relations. Such stimulus to ths lmag. th public will vote to continue it, and nation Is the Justification, In counthat It will continue for some years to tries which still have them, for the excome. pense of the upkeep of a court which serves a a device for securing the KEPT HANDS OFF. President Coolldge did not stop prestige and romance of the governmerits of th ment, irrespective America's exaltation of business, nor ruler. Is it conceivable, for example, Interfere with It, nor mess Itjjip.ln that under Roosevelt or Wilson either any way. He did not want to sKpMt . . . the newspapers could ever have nor Interfere with It. He made a virtue been as up, they hav recently , of reflecting It, and that trait of his been, given to the brutalities and squalors administration can be expressed by questions which those who Uk It and apparently a of crime, with all th might conceivably Interest th1 rational majority of the American voters do part of humanity ralegated to second as an ' affirmative accomplishment. or no place? . . . Coolldge' llno What such a president as Roosevelt or capacity for not exWood row Wilson would have done, we leave us blank: a I av virhimself dubious vary can guess by what they did In their pressing It remained for administrations. Quit certainly they tu In a president. . . . us. rescue and Byrd to would have Interfered, would have Lindbergh We were .starved for a national hero, given the government a modified di- and th famln Is not yet at an and. rection and would have stamped their own personal oonvlctlons-o- r MASS PSYCHOLOGY. prejudice on the spirit of the tiroes Is there anything In thi theory? No less did Mr. Coolidg stamp hi. psychology I a curious We are bound to believe he shared the Maybe. andMass we don't know much about thing, It "was of and times believed the spirit It. If we did, possibly we should un good. For not only did he refrain from derstand, anion other pussllng ques- interfering; h praised It repeatedly. what causes wars. Th Freud Jions, Can we say, however, that Mr. Coo- and the other modern psychologists lldge In a positive sens stamped hi personality on th times? Did the times become different because of him? Did America or any considerable num-'bof Individual. Americans change their ways, take on new Ideals or vibrate more eagerly to old Ideals, because of the presence of Mr. Coolidg In the White House? Probably less then In the case of most presidents. This again can be Sf" expressed as an affirmative accomMr. of he Coolldge; permitplishment ted the American spirit to be what It T 1 1 susg-sUo- d. 1 - not got around to explaining emotion and crowd anion as they have tried to txpialn Individual mental phenomena. But we can asy with that the country wants for thecertainty While House a different kind of man from Coolldge? Was It not, rather, clearly apparent that we wanted more of Coolldge? Is 11 not fairly certain he would have been renominated and reelected If he had willing? To the knowledge of this Democratic , leader writer, many of th thought o, Including om prospective candldstes for that party' presidential nomination. If th American crowd baa an appetite for strong leadership, It ha had a long fast. Ther wa a feast of leadership or majmeUO personality for about a quarter of a oeiwtiry Roosevelt, Bryan and Wilson all liv. to aay nothing ing at the same of LaFollette and tim, some minor dynamo of politic. Ha rely ha so considerable a group of powerful personalities functioned in th politic of th country simultaneously. They all paused, almost at one. If w must hav that type of man In th Whit Hou, If w demand a national hero, where In politic shall w find him? Lindbergh Is too young to be president Th othr hraof th air, Byrd, has a brother who might do th .present governor of Virginia, com monly accepted a so good a governor that many think the Democrats to give him Uieir nomination forought Ui presidency. dynamic action. If that I what th Incompeople hunger for. Dawe pletely understood by the present genunwill eration, and acnarentlv h ing to be an active candidal for th presidency, and therefore not likely to ao tne tnings which would enable th public to ee all of him and understand him. Dawes understood, and affectionately approved, by those who know him, of course. He I understood by thoe who know th figure he wa In politics thirty years ska. iiut th present generation think of Dawes In chiefly two connection, II smokes an pipe, which newspaper tend to treat as if It wer paragraph a pose; and he once said "HeU and Maria." Hjw many know th circumstances under whlah Dawes said that lh Important nubile oumoae ha had and accomplished la saying those precise words? that a Probably th puhllo man doe not establish a bank, head It for a quarter of a century, and make It one of the great commercial Institution of th time. If he a Doseur, On thinks of Dawe as a rar and fin personality, probably meant by nature to tie a musician and an artiet, who made up his mind to be a success In business and public affairs, using the variety of talents and th warm emo tional qualities nature rave him as aids to practical accomplishment. True, Dawes Ava acting when he said "Hell and Maria," but he was using hi power to be an actor In a fine and Important ruae. Th bountry was being DAWES HAS COLOR. told by politicians that America had There I nlentv of color and Hf. in fought the war with a good deal Daw' personality; magnetism and of needles wastbadly and some fraud. Our crowd j i9i the right time and circumstances for th loud "Hell and Maria" that made America a more wholesome and happy Dawe In th Whit House place. would be a man of action, courag and determination, who would remind u In no small degre of RoovelL I "en" HOOVER Hoover on 1 Joins Paris Co. Buying Staff would . be. SYMBOL OF PEOPLE. People always like to think of the man In the White House as affecting the time, like to think of him as th This popular symbol of the people. has led us. In Mr. Coolidge s case, trait to-- a queer Inconsistency between th Ideal and the fact. The one principal practice or what not fjoilcy, such legends as there are about Mr Coolldge is expressed by tlis word "economy." We take It for granted, Indeed, we say repeatedly, that "economy" was the great characteristic of th Coolldjte administration. But wa it? Reasonable economy in the conduct of the government, probably yes . W UU71IIK WBia laiviiia ..-- 1- IB ., 11171 J ifiius I A MCCUCtl, t.. jn UI t 3 1 i per- the affirmative agency through which g cam much of th material of the recent year. This, In Hoover' case. Is not mere To "business," nor mere economics. say that Hoover has, among his other varieties of Intellect, a "business man's mind" Is to state th case Inadequate- well-bein- FALLS. Idaho. B4t L. Chase, 45, a resident of Dubois for th past Jfourteen years, D. 8. Iiosoltal here died at th Friday afternoon following a alx-da- y Illness from blood poisoning. Mr. Chas wa born In Columbus. Ohio, where he epent hi chrRlhood, follater moving to Dubola, where he lowed th carpenter trad. H la ur-vlNaonrf Mrs. by his widow, and Chas. and th following brothers Mrs. sisters: Mr. Jeesl Ponavan, and Jack Clark. Chester A. Chao Leon Cha, all of Venice. Calif , and hi father, Bdgar Chase, also of Venice. IDAHO t Funeral bean road tive. hav arrangement pending word from .rim ' .,!..! pot rela- STUBBORN. M'CARL WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 (APT Comptroller General MoCarl th today war authorise to again refused ua J3.OOO.0O of the department to and harbors 1927 unexpended river flood appropriation for Misalsalpp work. .iuLurpvinrvwir-.-i-i-i- ' ' . J 1 Sept. S (TJnlvansaD Great Britain, with a limited prohibi tion ayatem for the sal of alcoholic. 1 spirit. Is gradually tending toward a) greater degre of temparanc aad sothan ver before in her history. briety it wa Indicated when licensing statistic of m wer published recently by th home offlc. Th statistics nvealed a marked for drop In the number of conviction drunkenness in England In 192 over conviction total the previous years, for th yeT registering th lowest for seven years. Actual figure for England and Wale In 1926 numbered 7- ,124 conviction a against 75,077 convictions In 1H25. Saturday, according to th report, wa the most fruitful day for arrests for drunkenness, th singl day conper cent of th. tributing thirty-tw- o total. Monday and Friday wer th next best day with twelv and sixteen per rent respectively. Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday trailed with nin to eleven per cent each,. conviction. It, IS ?t Of last and 11,290 wr womn,,, were men, year'' This mi about the cam proportion as prevailed for IMS. LONDON, , , - k political philosophy and In He la probably the only man erloJusly mentioned for president r Rooms, house or apartments of the United State who hod the letexchanged ter "C- K." (civil engineer) after his bought. old, rentedad and la Th Trio wa himself an accepted every day through nam, who un Want Column. master In science and Industry. a prartlc. ever both This KARPEN Trade Mar tso attached to vry KARPEN SUITE. KARPEN Mohslr puaranteed for S year 'against damage by moths. KARPEN filling sre only e new material', mad clean, and sanitary by special KARPEN process. KARPEN springs sre tempered and steel, securely hand-tieCushion r spring psrately en cued In muslin to prevent spresdlng. Yur Assuranc of Quality' We win Deliver within radlu of fifty r mil,willyourbe furnl-tudellv. j you IN 11 th I dust-fre- rd t ! V d agl. THE NEW STORE NEW STOKE THE available SUITES Don't Buy a Suite Till You See These Values! 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Was Mr. Coollrtge'e their Incomes? administration that kind of a period D. 8. Miller hag recently been In America? For the answer on needs Mrs. to think only of the automobiles, the bnyer and manager of the radios, the motion picture audiences; appointed th praotloa, entirely new In America women' and children' onderwear, running counter to all the ancient negligee and house dress departmaxims of thrift the practice of ments of The Parii Co. Mrs. Miller mortgaging future salary through the system that be a me widespread in Mr. time under the nam of inCoolldge stallment payment. Can we say that even In that respect Mr. Coolldge Influenced hi time? Is It s has had long experience is these departments and Is pleased to announce that she ii now a member of Th Paria Co. gtaff. j?T'''fi'ifli (Adv.) ...... HACaiLT0t3 I x lUVJ. MAMMOTH CARLOADS 1 ' P?TKjw.. -- ' Enormous Purchase from the Leading Manufacturer of the finest living room furniture! ... - 11 KARPEN MOHAIR SUITES! 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To say there Is one fraction of Hoover that duplicates Coolidg I and then a to undergreat deal more besides state th richness and variety of Hoover' personality. On aspect of Hoover constitute th earns economic: as Coolidg appeal xcpt that Hoovr I affirmative where Coolldge Is negative. Hoover believe In what business men call prosperity. But his way of accomplishing It 1 not merely to let It oome about by fortuitous conditions, and to refrain from Interfering with the condition. Hoover 1 too dynamic) a man to be content with that. Hoover believe In bringing pros perity about; actually hi presence In the department of commerce has been for masses of Material well-bein- g people 1 with Hoover a political creed, a social philosophy. He believe In the of goods at the production of masse In human effort, lowest reasonable cost and most of all tie believes in the Distriof goods. diffusion widespread bution of th material fruit of civilisaman of acoes the average tion, th to the maximum of comfort and luone mind. In Hoover's xuriesthat. of government and of th main end social organisation. CREEDS OF COMPLAINT. Obviously he Is right about It. Most of the political creed current In th of comthos world, particularly munism and socialism and th other creeds of complaint, express themselves In lUamntent because the average man To bring It haa not enough goods. about that the averag man shall have more and more good Is fundamental In Hoover eoonomlo philosophy. That philosophy I working out In th United State. Invention and science are the Instrumentalities through which It Is being accomver plished, muoh mor than It ha been accomplished by any political phiIf all socialism. the Including losophy. soclslists snd th other extrem reformers In the United States twenty-fiv- e go If all the year changes they clamored for had been made, If everything they demanded had been done in the way of "dividing up." the average man would have got less goods thsn he ha actually reand ceived through the invention business devices of men like Henry In Inventor the Ford, electricity, and others. Hoover understands all this. ly. 3ju3ssBaaEsl? 5BJS3 e 1 1 bn 1 ' way to be 00m e, not people wer In proud of our part In th war. but rather ashamed of It Dawe felt outraged that such a thought should gwt abuut among the people. He determined to reverse th current, and he chose just 1 15, in honor of the lo s.". NOWI Any selection you make will be held without charge until convenient for you to install it! jFKLZ ToRemember! DELIVERIES to aU points in our territory. ' morrow the grest day stong-- vr. v Trie- - , v I - rety "c Icrms c'T Vj . g:' 1 tj m tt-.- ' x v v v , |