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Show PAGE TWELVE Position of Rural . Inhabitants Shown If iUCoutInuear.lroin page eleven) gress extends the operations more widely over the crops and other farm products but aoes not alter the essential principles of the proposal otherwise. Due as stated to the political farm problem a srareTrf,tfttr great deal of Immature opinion has gained currency and has formed a background for the present political agitatiorfc enc. of fehe greater fallacies surrounding this - whole discussion is that govern- ment has by legislation assured prosperity to industry and to labor and that agriculture alone is neglected. Without analyzing In detail this assumption, it may be said that while the tariff, the transportation, act. immigration restrictions, the Adamson Act and similar legislation have undoubtedly contributed to American prosperity in the industries and labor, it is probable that their influence is greatly -Stiey are probably minor contributors to American industrial development. The fundamental cause of American industrial prosperity is tne fact that we have 6 percent of s popuation .and have 50 per cent of the word's resources of iron, steel cooper, timber, cotton and oil. It is estimated that, we are producing now: 5 5 ',4 cf theworlds iron ore 55', of the worlds pig iron 66 of the worlds steel ' Site of the world's copper 62 of the worlds petroleum 43 of the worlds coal 52 of the worlds timber output 65 of the world's naval stores 42 of the worlds phosphate 80 of the world's sulphur 63 of the world s mica 62' 4 of the worlds lead 647 of the worlds zinc 60 of the worlds talc and soapd. d tire-wor- , stone. 45 of the world's barytes 65 of the worlds cotton Ml. Such, a why we produce in America 50 percent of the worlds railroads 75 per cent of the world's tele- 9Q in American industry and the American wage is efficient man agement and utilization of power which makes high .wages possible and even with high wages enables America to sell automobiles in competition with the world In any, part of the world and enCalifornia ables,. for instance, farmers to produce rice cheaper than Chinese farmers, ship to China and undersell the 'Chinese growers. Due in part to the political nature of the discussions of the farm problem, the public has come to believe that everybody is prospering except - the- - farmer. To show the winnowing process that takes place in industry as well as in agriculture the, follow- ing figures are interesting : 37 per cent In 1920 54 per cent In 1921 41 per cent In 1922 37 per cent In 1923 41 per cent In 1924 39 per cent. In J925 reof manufacturing concerns ported deficits or no net profits. The rate of bank suspensions in the past five years is 28 times the rate of farm bankruptcies, 01 course this comparison should not be taken too seriously because a farmer during recent years has hardly been able to get any one to permit him . to go bankrupt because no one wants to take over his assets. Additional facts could be cited to show the political rather than the economic nature of the discussion relating to agriculture. And yet agriculture Is in serious need of help.' In order to provide the help needed we must first are. know whaL the ailments Briefly they are three fold in character, as has recently been summerized by Professor Boyle. Disorderly development of our agriculture. Disorderly production of crops and animals. Disorderly marketing. Because of the absence of a generally recognized and observed national program In Agriculture we put new lands under cultivation without any regard to need for new supplies. From of 1909 to 1919, 40.000,000 . acres , , , , U.P Man , pasture wsn -- By PresL Peterson , Saturday, July 21, 1928 TITE JOURNAL', LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAII - per fores! land was cleared and crop- each state and each county. On this basis and utilizing the cooperatives now in existence and others which will be organized. Professor Boyle proposes a plan of farm relief which appeals to me strongly, because, many other virtues it has, it is substantially a plan I recommended to Senator Smoot in 1925 when thr farm discussion was so Smoot did me the courtesy of sending it on to the .President for his consideration. Boyle's proposal is briefly President F. D.FarreU Discusses Seven Points A Motor Car i of Unusual Merit i of Success in Life During the last twenty-on- e years there has been a wide difference in the rate of progress stated among the - farmers, President of Kansas Farrell the this: . ini-- f - The organization -- of - a small Agricultural College i but permanent group of experts tial lecture here Tuesday evento be added a heated-Sehato- v - r Professor in-h- by larger and more representative eri for purposes of discussion and ultimately to propose and secure acceptance . by the growers, as far as possible, of a program of development, production lind of marketing. The small group of Council should have oq. it representatives, as experts, from the Department of Agriculture, the Interior Department, Forest Service, Bureau of Agricultural Ec- ing: lini, life and farm prosper-il-y are being developed, not on- ly between different people and counties but between different nation si In some sections the foundations are "not progressive. ... Differences inoTf, climate, market and educational facility are reasons for the differences in. progress, but theyUare not the major reasons, said the It is very hard to speaker. find the difficulty in situations as the differences are so close together. Differences occur primarily from the differences in the individual. President Farrell gave seven factors which show the differences between individuals that account for a progressive or a. retrogressive individual or a community. These are, he said, First, the quality of discontent. People who are content with every .thing never progress. Utah was founded by people who were discontented with conditions elsewhere. The Commerce onomics, Inter-Sta- te . the two Federal Commission, Banking Boards, the Federal Reserve and the Farin Loan, the Department of Commerce, the Agricultural Colleges, and farm- - ers representing several major soil products; dairy products, grain, live stock, cotton, poultry, fruits, vegetables, and' tobacco-Thicomparatively small group would devote all their time to their duties with permanent headquarters and adequate facilities to conduct surveys and investigations they would know what the agricusubstantially ltural needs are as regards acreage, credit, transportation, foreign and domestic markets and other similar matters to form the basis of their advice to the farmers as to what to produce and how much of it is needed. They would of course have many duties not mentioned above. Theyi could essentially develop an Agricultural program. The larger group should be drawn from the the Experiment SI Colleges, tlons, the farmers themselves, y arid organizations presented s second quick response in a car so moderately priced. We will gladly place one of these cars (with four speeds forward standard gear shift) at your disposal body-wo- uid nt. 00 h, AAI BLAIR MOTOR COMPANY 55 West First North ce cent of the world s automobiles ped. Il is estimated that not parts of the United States and ' Figures are not availabe in regard half of this 45,000,000 acres Was would be deliberative in charactto hom6 , plumbing but it would needed for crops. From 1920 to er. One or two meetings a year show an overwhelming preponder- 1925. 31.000.000 .acres of this land of a week or so duration each ance in America of tnis great ad- went out of use. Such Is typical would probably be sufficient dition to our civilization. Plumbing develthis large group to mainI think, conics as near being ip of our record in disorderly , tain contact with the smaller most useful modern development opment. EDITOR ANNOUNCES The same lack of organization group through the larger and the as any other of the great contributors to our comfort and mater- exists in our production. With more representative body and in PRINTING OF A. C, ial well being., modem incubators one New Jers- all other possible ways could , .2(1,0(50 Engineers 4jKILus that- - as ares ey- breeder- - is producing keep toe fore the-- f ar mers the facts CATALOGUE suit of the utilization of power baby chicks per day. A Missouri regarding . production and the in America, every man, woman breeder 40,000 chicks per day markets. and , child in our country has and in Petaluma one plant hatThus the farmers would have To Be Distributed Next Week-- Fall working for him thirty five invis- ches 85,000 chicks per day. Fol- what might develop into the ible slaves, making the total army Quarter to Commence World War we ex- (equivalent of a thoughtful preof 3,500.000 000 slaves constantly lowing the without needing the view and analysis 'of their busiSeptember 18. toiling for us. This is the mydern panded. from 45.000,000 inness now business to which the miracle. Comnare this host with wheat, terests of the ' country have. Student Life acres in wheat. any of the armies of Zerces, Phar-oareis Professor A. N. Sorenson, ColIt is not likely that the precise Alexander, Jenghiz Kahn, or Disorderly marketing be even Foch. lege editor, has announced that vealed In the record of peach control of agriculture could the annual catalogue of the ColEducation and orderly govern- shipments to Pittsburgh. Pitts- established by, such an organizament alone of course make control burgh can consume 15 cars of tion which k characteristic, .of lege will be issued some time next of sm.li a vast povf'er possible. And Market week and will be distributed genmanufactur S. U. business and The a many day. 4 education is the basis of orderly peaches show But a measured in erally over the western area and that September enterprises. lng reports of The tragedy government. 'and Extension Workers be established could control among high school and junior colPittsburgh a on Monday certain Russia. of Mexico, of China is the a control of into cars 32 this graduates. Student body mem might grow, peaches: Home From Laramie lege tragedy of Illiteracy ana of ig- received bers of last year who did not sufficient to prevent the tragic norance. Resources are valueless On Tuesday 24 car& lack of adjustment which now to graduate will also receiver the unless they accompany Intelligence On Wednesday 16 c Director William Peterson, catalogue. Summer Session stutoo great an extent characterand information. Time will not On Thursday 1 car-OW. W. Owens and dents who want a copy of the but here izes our agriculture. And by some Professor permit a discussion of it education Friday 15 cars. to save we B. Mrs. Rena cars. 74 such method (on the correlation of might Maycock of the catalogue can obtain one late On Saturday ex- the country the great values of Utah with resources) and not in our a division almost re next week at the office of the de is extension typical This material wealth is the key to - America- - has turned service, marketwe apwhich how traditionally partment... of, Information of ."after . toLtogan Friday t American achievement; in out ample those carloads of come to expect from a superior 'annual' the western? attending educational Ideal and our result- proximately a million each . it il they will' leave their year. farm population. wishing - achievement, fruits and vegetables extension educational conference regional ing names at this office. Summer which in turn . goes back to our Disorderly marketing of course held during the week in Lara- Session students who know of most affect import- does not Games-ioMen spiritual Ideal. The r mie, Wyoming. Fifty extension prospective students of the Colant contributor after all to Amer- as it does perishables. In the League lege are requested to leave the the proIn Coaching School leaders, representingin eleven ican prosperity 13 the free Ameri- case of states, participated the con- names of these prospects in the can public school and back of and duct such as wheat can be office. the cause of the public s'liool the stored. It is important to know Los Angeles, July 19 You don't ference. ideal ol eserit ially religious not reOwens is ball the Professor see to a it supply school the ditch game According to the catalogue the however, that gave eqnaity of opportunity. at of students will register the freshmen on supply In of the these a you the days; presence port development enlightened labor output The comparative determines on and Saturday, Septemtree which a ticket to and school market largely different Friday extension get. go county her inhabitant in the so to the game. Such appears to be ber J4 and 15 this year. Former the price of countries Is as follows through organizacommunity non- the system in vogue in the course 1 students and upper clansmen China disorderly " production of 1 same on coaching athletics being taught tion, while Mrs. Maycock dis- from other colleges and univerthe British India produces perishables cussed the of 2 feasibility holding sities will on Monday, Russia effect as disorderly marketing of by Coach Leo Calland at the Uni- a state conference 2 for training September 17register instruction for and California of Southern Italy , perishables. versity 3 community leaders. .Japan has been said to In- Summer Session this week. the Fall Quarter will begin on Enough 6 Poland 18. The dicate that it is in these three - Calland is devoting this weekss Tuesday, September 7 Holland is somewhat earlier date economic waysthat we must ap- work to instructions in the coaching California Athletes 8 starting 14 France than in previous years but it is 8 12 proach the farm problem. It can and playing of baseball and Australia on. Boat believed that it wlil be more sat9 12 be solved only by organization of has decided that the best kind of Improve Czerho Slovakia 12 the producers either as formal laboratory" for his labors would isfactory. The Fall Quarter will Germany Los Angeles. July 19 Reports begin immediately after ThanksBelgium cooperatives or by coordinated be the Coast League ball game at Great Britlan . action otherwise in such a way Wrlgley Field between two of the from the? boa- t- that is taking giving. This is a return to a preCanada as to enable them to produce and top notch teams, Hollywood and Uncle 'Sams track team across vious Arrangement. For !he past United States ... market In an orderly way San Francisco. At noon each day the Atlantic to Amsterdam' for few years the Winter Quarter the of demands the demonstrable that is following the games, Calland s the Ninth Olympiad state that has not began until, after the It relief no and This has students will meet in classroom two of the Universiy of Southern Christmas holidays. of cause public prosperity overwhelming be expected if such lor an hour to analyze the play of California's injured athletics are meant that the Fall Quarter has are the preceding day and pomi out improving daily and are expected always been somewhat longer and marketing not put into effect. what plays showed good judgment to be in the pink of condition for than the others. This situation This means that we must uti and what ones revealed the old the world's championship meet will be remedied this year and all vhlch starts July 29. lize the processes of education in ivory. quarters will be the same length. There are more than 40 students Charley Borah, sprintace of the agriculture. There is already a the catalogue According to at in Calland's University of South- - Trojans is gradually-worki- ng foundational organization the various departments cf the Ina beginern California class and almost kinks out of the leg in which he hand to put into effect will be strengthened by over all of them are already holding pulled a muscle on two occasions, stitution ning measure of control the addition of new instructors. but coersion not and Jim colby down jobs as high school and Stewart, giant University The same division of the departproduction, by information; ultimately pro- lege coaches. The course is de- of Southern California decathlon ments of instruction as last year bably a decisive control may be signed to teach the latest methods star, is recovering from an injury will be carried out. This means! , When in Salt Lake Slop at the established, in developing basketball, baseball, to a tendon. in his heel. Despite that courses will be offered in the fact that lies leg was covered the six schools of The United States- Department track and football teams. De- Agriculture.j with bondages in- - recent meets of Agriculture, the State VEERY1IOTEL, ''thel - 'Strager "Say wlieFe- can- I oh flirt id the southwest Education, Engineering, and also1 partment of Agrieu!ture-fltarty some gas in this town? col. decathlon or. agricultural That Home like Place tryouts and second Ut Home Economics. Professor P. E. far Prospector "Right over there,-ththeir with national reaching d:cathlon champion-th- feterson of the School of Com- -i leges to Modern Clean, Respectable, qounty agent system, provide the up one flight of' stairs, la ships. merce will be acting Dean of the' office-estate Reasonable real the Minute. Rates largest educational fqrce In the School during the absence of Dr. Practically every county $1.23 to $3.00 r world. a leave f()rPIump I.adics.. W. LWanlass,,whd -- t . Consolr.(ion Tmv-Foor- soon Tbe he United SUtes-basWe Saw so fat that we of absenc and is spending fifteen! will have at least one paid work- They tittered when I sat down npVcr knew vfhat wrinkle she months, in Europe. Professor Dew j er in agriculture in addition to to the piano. Dai n those tiBhi would open when she was gonna Cy Clyde will Temple and Broadw ay have acting charge talk. j a staff of specialists available to of the School of Engineering - I t open-mindedne- Self-telian- fa, n irrfr &AAAAMI FiT diaMis tires and eight prices ranging from $360 to $2485, Illustrated is Model 614, Sedip, with transmission, $1295, (special equipment extra). All prices o. b. Detroit. People whose minds are closed are not progressive. For greatest progress we .must find new ideas. Those with open minds always wclcorrt&truth.al-thoug- h it may be painful. is a third factor for progressive rural- - foundations.' Efficiency is also a necessary factor. We have the most efficient farmers in the world. Due to this, in spite of all the hardships he has to undergo, the American farmer has more liberty, more luxuries, etc., than any other farm people. Cooperation is the fifth-one finds a highly developed people one also finds a highly developed community spirit. A sixth factor is the ability to' meet changing conditions. Last but not least of these factors is a well and clearly developed sense of social values. A person who lives badly, altho rich, is poor. We do not live to just work and. struggle, but woik and struggle to live. re-b- bedrAwa.-,fi'om...-aU-T-laa,porta- factor is comfort the YOU will appreciate of thebeauty, 614 as unusual ve " while Dean Ray B. West Is attending school in California. The prospeetd are bright for an unusually- - excellent year. All of the departments are fully manned with well trained faculty members. Requests for catalogues and Information are very numerous and indicate that strong registration may be expected. The student body organization is already developing its plans for a successful college year. President Lund Johnson of he student organization has Just written a letter to former and prospective students outlining in a general way the very fine social and athletic program that is in prospect. - 'i! ai' British .Line Builds Worlds Greatest Ship The Belfast, July 21 ($) keel of the worlds largest liner is soon to be laid here. The vessel, owned by the White Star Line, will take three years to build. It will cost $35,000,000 iff pas-- , and will be employed senger service between Southampton and New York. It will be 1,000 feet long, have a 0 speed of 25 knots' and have 60,-00- tons displacement. Customer good second Salesman I d like to see some hand cars. "So would I. n Il , Thursday July -- . program - ! I 1 J ac-t- h i j t , I j 'BIgOlsarInAll Tfao World 5 Continent Menagerie he , I The Newest - 1250 People 500 Horses 50 Cages Animal 2 Cars of Elephants and Camels 30 Lions ' 5 Bands 2 2 Complete Electric Calliopes i I Light Systems V f 6-P- 2 ole 30 Double Length Steel Cars 5 Big Top' Steel Arenas- - il 1000 Character Mammoth Rings st Hippodrome Wild-Bea- -- Bible Spectacle yKoah and the Ark j i - d land-gra- - Tfca laagMtCostQMt'aad Kwt UafaUkeat ftp an Pm nt j i ut i , . in-t- r - et i A X rrl -- f fnt Street Parade at UOdockNooaDally I - - , ,z i t " i a x |