Deseret News | 1929-08-24 | Page 30

Type issue
Date 1929-08-24
Paper Deseret News
Language eng
City Salt Lake City
County Salt Lake
Rights No Copyright - United States (NoC-US)
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
ARK ark:/87278/s65f3ppx
Reference URL https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s65f3ppx

Page Metadata

Type page
Date 1929-08-24
Paper Deseret News
Language eng
City Salt Lake City
County Salt Lake
Page 30
OCR Text : - THREE SECTION THE DESERET NEWS, SATUIMAY, 'AUGUST 24, 1929 M......, Life of Sam Houston. Australian Wlites Book On er ure America's Gift To The World ti 2 The Work Is an Answer to Those Who Apologize For the Contribution of the U. S. to World Civilization. Denmark's Best A Consecration Ons of the recent reviews dealt with a VOIII1136 by an 'Australian lecturer on The American Background ," and It attempted to Siva a true picture of the foundation upon which we ars building this nation. "The American Foreground" would have bettor fitted this worker, as the author does not look past the external aspects- -the and the ubiquitous politicianeand view the soul of this rapidly maturing nation.. Nor' can he be blamed for this omission when so many of our own citizens cannot yet realize that the United States is now qualified to take its place beside the proudest rations of the Old World. Mr. Sherlock, returning from a trip of historical. exploration . remarked to a friend that he bad "seen America." "Just what IS America?" was the reply. This book in Mr. Sherlock, answer to his friend. and to those who doubt the maturity of the United States. This is not bletory. .in usually accepteq .sense. It is exactly what the name impliesa brief summary of what the United States, has contributed to world advancement in the past on. hundred and fifty yearsfor our destiny began only with the War of Ind. Part one contains an historical synopsis of our growth up to the present timenot military campaigns or naval engagements, but those events, persons and writings that have furthered the development of the. nation. Pioneers, statesmen. soldiers, orators , In United States The publication en August T of Gods!' by Otto Lutkea to Americo ono of the re, of Denmark. succeisse ,Ifttngs 'Congo The men of the tattered battalion which fights till it dies, Dazed with the dust of battle, the din and the cries, The men with the broken heads and the blood running into their eyes. money-grabbe- last year '.11 Copenhagen !it immediatley became ono of the teteen' outstanding peeks. and !within six menthe wills translated iinto German and Russian., It is a first novel Put not the work of a breathlem youth anxious it i l Commander. beloved"of the throne, Not the cock-horto parade when the bugles are blown, Riding But the lads who carried the koppie and cannot be known. autobiography. se n be was years old never Iwrite anything but entries in a home as be letters and ship's log. as frvm Iceland !wandered the forty-seve- Not the ruler for me, but the 'ranker. the tramp of the road, The slave with the sack eni Ns shoulders pricked on with the goad, The man with too weighty a burden, too weary a load. The sailor,-th- e to 'Africa. As a roving soldier of fortune be served six years as a captain 'Lad the Belgian army in Africa; for an American. comm.!, was OA concern in the Congo; terped-oeby submsenes during the war as he commanded Danish vessels; was shipwrecked In Iceland; organized the stevedores of 1Petrogra4,1 barber for the Soviet; shipped as a wireless operator on , l stoker of steamers, the man with the l clout, The chantyman bent at the halliards putting a tune to the shout, The drowsy man at the wheel and the tired lookout. i a steamer- - trans-Atlant- ic our country's past. though short in years. is long in accomnlishment. Should our future keep pace- with our past uo one need 1. feel pessimistic. Part two answers those critics contriclaim America's who That We bution is wholly material. have no literature, they say, comOld World; parable to that of the we have no poets, ito philosophers. no Orators. 'They forget Cooper and Hawthorne. Bryant and Longfellow. Thoreau and Emerson, Clay, Calhoun. Webster. Ingersoll, Broons and Bryanand that Is merely scratching the surface. Our inventors. front Franklin to the Wright brahers.k, have bulked large in world prelims'. and our contributions to political. economic and ethical thought have not. lagged behind.-Free religion, free speech and free assemblage are American principles. In a country founded by pioneers, we are pioneers still, ready and willing to blaze new trail4 Prohibiopen diplotion, disarmament. macy are still in the experimental attn.t . but the Unitel States has already taken the lead. As the author truly says, there will be more to this record." One volume cannot do justice to this subject, for the United States is more than 'a record. It is an a mighty surging tidal Pulse, wave that has suddenly swept into the civilized world and left its mark on every interest. oh every institution, on every concept of thought." The book is published by the Stratford Company. n then when be wag his health failed, be could no work. and he and his wife' land younr son faced hunger. AtOthers may sing of the wine and the wealth and the in desperation he turned to and set down ae a short li:nest mirth, one of his egrariences in the The portly presence of potentates goodly in girth; Congo. lio sent it to the Politiken. Mine be the dirt and the dross, the dust and scum of tl. leading Copenhagen newspa1 gsr, and much to hie delighted the earth! astonishment the editor accepted it land cried for more! More shed If you read more than one book 967, Germany 31,062 and Russia 'stories followed. and then a Var. Theirs be the music, the colour, the glory, the gold; Grand Duke." peiformed at a year you have more of a literary 36,680- In that procession of na.l"The Mine be a handful of ashes, a mouthful of mould. Pelitiker" Experimental thee.- - taste than the hypothetical aver- Zion we rank Math. Of the maimed, of the halt and the blind in the rain and jibe age American. Only 160.000,000 "Why the United States should ' tre, and the Tonga Gods." volumes excinsive of textbooks. lag behind less populous and ler. the cold Against the background of Bel- - are read in the United States year- prosperous nations In finding glen Congo. which .he knows so Of these shall my songs be fashioned, my tales be told. of 120,000,000. books worth publishing and redlwell. Lutken has set hi. characters ly by a population re0 we to are inclined is a ine which has peen Although question Amen. .Lucien, the timid, little white ourselves as leaders among answered- in a variety of waYs. It cellar clerk from Brussels, one of gard lb said that the average American John Maselield. the America literate nations. pubthe white. races wvakeet mem- lishes only two new titles for ev- reads fewer books than thé averof a, native chief. en published In Russia. bers. Maria, age European because he reads 'atelligent. strong. ent of the Week aa many as Germany. half as many more newspapers and magazines: races flneet sons: an.. Tata, the and fever than either that he would read more books if Japan who France or Great Britain. pretty little colored he had more time; that books are married Magna. These are the fac:s brought out too a 'good I with a wry smile cf Irony. Lut- In the current issue of Worid's blOgranhY of a great American ksts contemPlates lets fellow whites Work magazine by a writer who rfists almost as much ao out significantly that while a ticket to a musical revue and - -in Africa. who with ostentatious A intim OF LIFE. '1 not fit Into the syltem they Must.alutriam 'take up the white mans points the average person will not pay $2 that there are not enough book , be overcome. burden" with one band and Ill or $3'for a book a year. he or she stores In the United States to olt MAT M01... THE TOL-NIn this lurid the Inces- consumes $10 worth of candy in market a larger production ether Clirn vockote with the other Martha Ostenso.- Dodd, Mead & tuoint- brother isdrama thrown to are less than 6,000 of them) the blacks be has an affection. the same period. For mtan .Company, New York; 301 pages. baracuda. the "Whatever the merit of these "It is diticult to make a comate understanding'. is the deported. nations different and other between potsuperstitious ..-parison says explanations', sener to is raised clarkhood under to of In the number Worlds Work editorially, "the fact total resct re, 3dartha Ostenso, who will be the eye of the chie. and the emirbooks printed since fig,ures are remains that a nation with an Faith. utembered for 'Wild Geese' and tecus private becomes a corporal. lacking but figures do exist re- annual Income of 689.000.000.000 rh Mad Carewes." strikes a Oellf Tat even With such good uses of 0 World, thou ehoosest not the garding the number of separate now spenda something like tone in impressionistic delineat ion the before better part" titles published and here our showof I per cent on books each principles of expediency in- nin this rove of humanity him, the system is upset by a fear- It is no: wisdom to be only wise, ing ii anything but impressive." rear- Conaidering our eagerness small country town less old man who is not afraid to And on the Inward vision close the he for the says,. .life' acquisition of When one loves beauty and In the came year in which the eyes. the profit and diversion to as MarthaGunther loved and then face the music. IN wisdom the to believe new But iitates be it United 10,152 found in a good book and the pdablished has youthful widowhood thrust AUTHOR NAMELFSS , books. France mibblished number of good books offered us heart, 'upon a gay. bright spirit. la there and had found a world, Great Britain, 12,619, Japan. 13, each year, we could do better." cause for bitterness. She loved her THE LAsLErr AFFAIR:. by.' A COurobus no chart. GENTLEMAN WITH A husband With' a passionate inter). in faith one that Faye deciphered Editor Writes Novel. A Prolific Writer. ER. Macaulay. publiebers. New airy and Yet she longed for the the shis; York. Frive $2.00. freedom and liberty a staid. corn. Commander sours Invincible surJUStill To trust the novel whose Green, Flithttgh Henry Smith, monpiace country town forbade. uuthor of 26 books. ant: collaboramise The Gentleman With A Duster. Devil." has just been pub'Poor In a spirit of challengo she ran Ms tor in Lindbergh's 'W.:, is one 0,: only Was ell his science and lished by Civic'. Frtede. is a native the most away one night to return before a mysterious personage whom) sen, art. prolific of modern wribooks have enjoyed such eon of the great American middle-wes- t, dawn, contrite and repentant. to !rational torchrof is a He says he c.in write any smoky Our knowledge find her husband had giten her art enormous IFUCC4.6. both here and which he invariably chooses t'era any pine place, anti under any his the freedom she desired, the only! ahroad..bas kept Be anonymity vete as the setting for his noveis. He has ,written with the time when his i That 14hte the pathway but was torn and reared In Chicago. rcnditions. freedom campatr)le. with s. tine.complete. from -alvad about him. aloft. on the step gunfire con- - I first book, The Mirrors of Irown-- 1 spirit and hat puritanical and drtaa I and was graduated from the Uni- bt,ttorn in a ubmarmo during a oss a Street." as of appeared. to his preacareer science. Tne transformation of a His Chicago. versity of faith tender 11 then. the Lght at sea, and In an Eskimo noted, 'The Isslett Aff.iir." Bd. shine soul and Its growth is revealed in I newspaper man started immedi- it gale at 60 degrees below zero. We LISVO the- Courage to prevent lent his inbooks .should- atrract so I By which alone the mortal heart ately after his gradua.tion. with the 'Igloo book is Bob Pa:liettMas- Oaten son the Chicago spite of being published ' :the mittgrans tongues of vitisse , rcle,of rub i v lead ' ter Mariner, and It has just been is One of the. greatest ' gossiper from making public her arintIll'notillY 0 f tb a th o ught rsasly News. leading unhesitatingly tributes to his writing. ky G. l'. Putnata's up the lnurnallatic ladder . toeslitor published tragedy. drtine. "The Las:ett Affair" Is a novel i It is a tale of life of More than Mr. 'Stns. It is an adliion to Corn. cf the News. In George Fantayana. i of le, nealyrich Niodern Adven. Green's Smith acted as correepondent for ordinary pathos and some sordid. "Ind s ;IT' W.! for boys abouL lure problems. brought about by al nem and yet withal i t is human in Perla. per city Of the romance. to hie Post ast manag- !modern heroes. and the hu manity is both titta and ;rapid accumulation of wealth. Wittill it delightful at he rertirned answered. is it and hinaland of the riddenly acquirod Aesst in so far as the. cheracters ing editor of the Daily News. the interesting. Laslett fortune. Seephen. the poeltson he holds at the Present "Jim the Conqueror." in a mariner eatis time liant 1110n 14 the family. seeks to 1,4.4i efel concerned Besides "The Poor Devil." LIFE I CI:B.t. In his July 1Dth was the date of publlfather's wealth. Itecauie i factor,- - tt, leverYnn4.coup SIr. Strtts ss the author of "Dead-Hots- .. of Peter B. Kyne's new novTHE Se.,IN OF PERDITION "Its the Way Pp ration"Jim by ot Written"tosslyn." the Conqueror.., The James Gould Corzens; 'William end The Other Side of el. of the staff is laid in end belief,. greater -Morrow company. !slew York; mined battle for trioney that hie the traditions. previces; father "raged. Seeking his career let eeleetial life fr4 ti the highest' the Wa;1 Kyne's familiar southwest, the IPA pages; he has lived for in polities. he tittle the same ob.. to the lowest. country where Charles Evans Hughes has writ most of his career. The Mere la, laid in an obecure Riding on the crest of a wave etacies recur. Journalism becomes -au ten the introtuction f.r J. Hutch' of liCentico46 literature cornea "The his last resort, and it is here that 'tillage where NatumtAtteroline, The Viking Press will publish Son of Perdition." twovolumo lite of David R. is a Well he becomes InYolved with a group lEnglish widow of a Chinese lives, lid, wi;1 October the autobiography of so written and tight little story of life of radicals whose activities lead a perfeift maniple Cvorgo. which &ars everyone, as it is lived in Cuba. The color- him through an exciting area of thinke. of a Mixed marriage that ; publish in October. ired E. Smith. ing of the novel with real serni- 'escapades. was a success- - 31, e; V. ung has se, ' love. e:ement le loand i tnoroughly convinced herself that tropical heat waves and genuine The but enervating passions. is the Ithroughout the between Ste- - i the is all Chinese that rile hurts, most notable thing about it. for phen and Susanstory the .conceasion peolide and event- Anstey . a , such characters as it has are to isuthor who inapires Stephenyoung and !thing European. As her neighbor i -be found anywhere Is who and every' the character in it, another Enrlish woman Mrs- - Ca- .. where in literature only having ,the book. . strotgest Mrs ccme to 'het rent, a writer who different and perhaps In most --..-' I Vacs to seek isotetiret. she also ,..,,,, cases lees vivid trappings. ,,,'071 , ANOTHER MYSTERY STORY . , shuns everybody ma the tato tie!1. Strange to say there is some- i i hot know eaeh other )f 12 AND 1. ' V ernc'n i : thing of philosophy in the book. LETE e the-Then 1, ,,,,' i Mtrgaret not expressed in to many worls. It'61's:'r;':'Icirrc2r. ic Coril3tilY New Itivere. cousin to theet both. no i but rnade plain in the irony which I crk. 3... I pa ges. $2.Ce. se love begine !framed:Vey the author chooses to focus on. ' Here ia aeo'ii-ei- 'farroer rt- - - i afiair with Man 1.1.t.r. the charmShowing. as the events do. the re' ' ' 1 ;,,,4-'; ' ' actions of certain people to terry cf motive murder et erein at 1ii and close frien d of Mra. Wung, i truth is after ibe i leaet Immediately nine petipie ate tun.eete of atition and re1gon desire 41IT''..:', and cennbire i ri 4,1 honor. law and order and human the police. Wha &I It- took st tot "rned the cerrins to Orli. coneetelens kindness. It seems to be proved of uork te flea c,.;- e,,,,,,,,, the i tkith '''' '' 't remanee reasons but break for the ,,..,(4,7 up. that such things change the perthe deed are many 1 l eff eta ere their of no hy nine. It, meant find- - al; sonaltty very little. The COLCi- mu: npe4 ' ' ' a 1,et of hid,len ,,h.nge eite,it avail. The youtg people are too usten 'ems to be that .' 1 ,,,,,,te' 4 peopie can ng cut e104 ' ' 401: ''''''''';' Ivan'etimos, te fitYed tnto posItI,E:p pretty --, pe,epe, end tieept in lo,o. Thl,.;.: Move raP-- I lhr sit ; , ',. 41, leftli in the r;it trs,7,ecy ty tc the eh. attilant:.f.t :here Inca .)' X ristem, but that when they can ; an. C.ve NiertJe, end Mary fltenne. rucement ard the reader while! 7 "Wit are made to condemn the mixing of , ;,'' t., ,: '',::, , , I ,,. the chief characters, The two !rrices can not feel tet, thee.. tw t.,,,,,,,-,,,,,,,,,Toe i tr,rtner w.th tte,r I've affair ?ell should wreck their lives. Then ' , :, the latter with hie therough inver- - tthethtng happen, t t make ev tigat.tin of the murder keep the erytody feel reconteled, 1 1,7.4 mYsterY tn action an! the reader's The ' is wetten let a de- ,;, excitement at fever pitch, In face l lightful eory and its de- -. ...,,...8.,,,i.,,,...t....., l'Al literary $ty,e this story has CI the 1r ereiterts 1Crlitttnee2 , p rALIviroo. ,.!,!..,,,1 tine A ,', i ,J -.of a thrilling time ref lovers of the rl,t. development make it easy to z , ,, ,, ':. ti taTei tterA.,...".re wbe,re faecinatIng t ., ., !eve and hate att4 fltethirt. tea- ' a ,4. ... sriMrig are all roled tve t.nto yrte, t ; writt-eris it The well Except that Scente ' West. ih,p . , 1110Vel le 1P3 better than the gen- - i , ant Picture. eral run of sueh. but at that the : BY inirtrinit modern thriller provides an.u1.? the author. Wairt Myall. has r,- - i' ". mtnt note stimulating than a Eta. ;:teatel, before .etir eyes the glor- :nil e;dr,oars,Votfrgeacniedr: rano c,lie and I sky y. leer, and a :I the awetiome heste:les ROMANCE OF (1,1NALAND. , ., of Nature, seu.ptur.ngs in Arder- le y. 1 net' o na' SOOCIirt.:lat y:A. TEES.. .b;at par k e an4 in thelI Lou nte Jordan Milt', Fre (Prick of i M0.1 A Stokes Company. New York; the Rocky Mountaina peek, 317 rag... rrice S: CO. The trA e:er. the '12 shlt In,. the man and sr 07rte ri Manrprefel it as Althourh erer7ona nal" bel!TA wti ; eeleerhe hie tv.,rot Bell Wright, American author of a dozen Or more internstonHarold 1.cc,mmerce a Spead far Bread' riatts ca:atritty for E2tt and WeHt sthich turns their leisure novels. bas dropped out of public sight for some ally-known to intemarr. St!! T'Ung l'ersem4' Mto sikeePulg curves aryl m"mens g;"-1"4404. ti GM- the Occident v"Ii fat! in love co!oro but he has teen redlicovered by ships news reporters at Los time, e sr!th.ot the then Tweve cloar-c,:- t scenie strolling the deck of aHawailanAngeles, who found to be d,,ne' what Such is the tiors. all t eauty anl interest to bound ship,.11sjszboyewith Mrs.:Wright. 31tais 7.1.1;:n '. creates in the butik. , ye problem wh.ctt And forty-seve- ! AkIRD ' IN BOOK BUYING. - i ., 1 in BOOKS OF TI;IE DAY one-thir- d I expensive---althcrug- h one-thir- d I O ) I - most-unmora- l -.- One-thir- d - . , i - '. DI-ST- I" ve I se , I f thinking ! llal . 1913-20- ! thins I front-whi- : ch Series--book- "44" I - . ' i ; NOVEL WRITER HEADED FOR HAWAII i ' .:,, i r4e4;P: art-it'- s I ; vent i i l , , ' '' 4 "'" i I , I ; : i i I i : t41 :-T1 I 1 : t ' .,11, , ,.;... -- Have Y9,11 Tried 1,);:, 4 l ,-- .', chef-371..- 2. ros74 , , ',,-''- -- )I i,,,, ! -- - , .; , , v ti,,,r, I ! i 10 )1(41e-bod- ! ne-a- nd Costs About Halt , L .6.111,-- ' The Bobbs-Merr- ill hopes to announcs within company the tiet fortnight the publication date lel itiersica blielLve 'Marquilli'llini7; DESERET NEWS. wilt be & permanent contribution to Americateblography and letters. Hoskins. The smiles and tears of four women were responsible for Much that am tioaston did toward re. ait the map of a continent. onir thrsopectis that adecislia orontanhatvplogioier; ms the gifted young governor of to Houston wooed Eliza. Tenneesee. With difficalty he won alsbuturnPstiu:nh :013:1848:Pai:loCnonstAlress.bil Allen. ber. Eleven wee its later he re- has strictures would seem to be inevit- - signed tis office, changed eble with a strong man at the name and vanished from civil:tea.. Odt. the holmand even tee critics concede tion. Nothing, whatever could that. iloover is no weakling. casion, whatever the cost, o el! Induce him to tell why he did 'it. " "tern.nly even though trans- He died helleving that the secret planted to the degenerate and ef- was buried Wit h h l me In exile among the Indiana, Ile it!e! East. Were glad to gee that met Tians.,e the bead Thomas A Ellben and his group :: .. e niece, and dreamed of a chief western vt eggepurts" 'elected a e boy as the briehtest prospect In het Empire. But Mexico beckon.. his the land. This shows their good ed sand Anna Raguet tied sword-knto sent him and even some If of the fighti. judgment "Half of the taurels of San Jacinto questions they asked didn't, to her. Anna are .yours." The questions ran something like eluded the-- conqueror. however, this: and .helot control of his Texas Where were you born and why? Republic. At a strawberry testi- . Watt did James .Watt do and vat on the lawn of a stately manor. near Mobile. Ala.. Sam Houbtom Watt for? Define work? (Ansi That which; met- Margaret Lea. Oyer familibb : moin of us try to get out of. educh le:totems she marled the easier to define than to do.). and reformed his habits- - i:.-'ter, Solve: If X: phis Y2 equal R. Houston regained the helm and ,XY equal S. whatare the pr03-- in .Texas and reshaped history. peels for u Democratic victory let' bringing Into the Unem a dornaitt ' IS"? :larger than the thirteen colonies. What Is the difference entilittailitig tory of Clara Bow in "Dangerous Curves'l these romances is the product of of "erious research. Without and a blimp? or "popularizatton" If the galvanometer measures 'years e between gall and-- he weaves them into a balanced the eelete,. o , rec-naerative of the historical epoch of vanity. and the oseillograph ord. the telly oscillations of the which they are a vital part. The . shimmy, what is the use of the book ei thoroughly docomented. , pantograph? Aa entomologist is "one who It but was recaptured. makes 'large collections of peculiar Texas, Is -- BillY the l'..lil" which is. insects and studies their charace name 'all eald done. a is end when wet.. teristica" Accepting this defini- good name for a goat, better lion as accurate is a dog an en- - ty rate than Rose or Honey- at any tomologist? SVhat three very low forme of suckle. -That whch w e call a gee, t , life can you name? (Note, AP- By any.other name would smell plicants Will please avoid person' es- sweet'' alitietein answering this question) . s Distinguish between the follow- Vacationists are returning to lig: Calvin Coolidge and Pollytown. .eorue are tanntd by the anna: Wall street and. the Re-- 1 D. ocean sun; ethers be- - L e tales of Franklin publican party ; at Solomon's Island and.fishing Roosevelt and Teddy. Jr.; the vice' Benedict on the Patuxent river, or president's sister and the wife with kodak pictures. the Speaker of the House; (Belo- matte Immunity and intoxication. of their catches to bolster up their Who Invented the cotton gin? HI stories. But all seem so 'glad to get back, e,) glee to enter the so, who was Eli Whitney? kind of genie this? Will it avilm- - house and see the old famil.ar nee with Canada Dry? Does the things, so glad to revel in the good old bath-tu- b and sleep, In the goo4 admixture rate a padlock? What Is the uneerlying principle old bed, so glad they won't have for another Of the Inertial combusion engine to take a vacate-i''A vacation" afer a heavy meal? year. says Our "is likes the fie People may have Imagined that cynical nelghbon, the Gann incident, or the Chino- - or a forelge mIssiona good thee; Russian controverey . or the evacu- - to have had." aeon of the . Rhineland. or the is war-de"That'll he a dollar and a belf.' arguments or the tale about disarmament, or all of them- said the grocer at Skaggly-Wagtogether would get Secretary Stitn- - glY's. With a significant expression son's goat. If the secretary hadn't hacRsufficient foresight and age- - whatever that isthe customer famous eepecially for the handed him one large ityhe's Gann keep his goat towel dollar bill and one effeminate away from 'Weehington. doubtless viated, eee or all of the above troubles! dollar.. wilheimina and 'proceeded Ito walk out without waiting- for Would have VA 'It But he's had it roaming on a change. ranch down at an Angelo, Texas. The grocer etarted to call him where it liceied every other angora back, hesitated, and leoked at the within reach. Texas. however. is two certlfleates rattly. nGuers that's no safe place for a goat, especial-- . bunt right," he soliloquized, shale-fwe might have The Texas climate t log his head, ly In mummer. would get anybody's goat. So the known When we pet a Scotchman wily secretary sent for his during In there OS eerretary of the a temporary lull between scraps sury- that he'd find some wile to scrapping cruisers and then scrap-- 1 trim .us, even at tradirg (teller . pine forelen powersbrought hie hills." e goat to Washington, where the O was as is weather Andthen thcre that Seoteh. delightful end cool as end of Hades; and man who failed in het claeses Mete et d. the poor creature in the cause he wouldn't g:ve attentkot. Zoo. And who climbed ow of the win. So, after- all. the Zoo. and OOt dow of hie automobile so as to :Stec Gann. got Stimson's goat. It save the hingcs on the door. And immediately crept out under the wouldn't wear rubber heels be- ranee and...tried to get back to cause they give. THE amolomomsoomoseilionnows Henry By de , WmaArtilmDfbalGri.021,31. DowC; Ataznirtut. alta. ids oat pillar "al; dallutpastr:aetindRZIan'er Utah els the Tabernacle organ, wee family, en route to Germany. called at Washington last weeit, paid. his respects to Senator Smoot and spent one evening with former Governor Wells and family., Ed and lit, retinue sailed Saturday, on the Leviathan.. flag ship of the American Merchant. Marine. .They will disemberk &et Bremeft and bead- proceed by rail to Dnesden, n quarters- of the W Seller Published Not of the princes and prelates with peri7Kigged charioteers Riding triumphantly laurelled to lap the fat of the years, Rather the scornedthe rejectedthe men hemmed in with the spears; 4 wBsrlu roa 1 -- ,e Mits AROUND WASHINGTON I HI . , I German-Austria- mission. ' ' 'gratifying to ,the Vnited States Lines. Inc.. present Owners and operators of the Leviathan, George Wasnington. America, Roe public, President Herding. President Roosevelt and other transatlantic vessel. that an ever in creasing number of Utah people are patronizing these great American ships. Hon. T. V. O'Connor. chairman of the United States hipping board well aye : " There Is but one true measure of American tnterest in American ships. That measure is not found or In editorials or In spoken printed worout' It Is found in the own patronage of extent our own ships. Every time an Am-- erican citizen buys a ticket on an American ship for overseas travel. to just that extent the cause of our merchant marine is advancee and every tan an Atnerican citizen tows a ticket on. a. foreign ship tu just that extent. the progress of our American merchant marine is re tardeak .. It Le 1 ' s, .- is , ,, -o - . The time has oorne.". the Walrus said. To talk of many things; Of shoesamid shipsand' 'Keane - wax. Of cabbagesand kings. And why the sea Is boiling hot And whether pigs have wings!' In other words the Senate le in eession today and the talk on the tariff in open committee has begun. Pity the poor committee-men- ! It is not often a plain spoken organ Of the opposition to the ad- ministration in pewer at Washing- ton inclines to unstinted praise of the President. 'Yet such an anom- New York a aly appeared-iWorld editorial.of recent date, containing these words: eulogbeic -Washington Is a center of news a becaues a quick witted ana aggressive executive Is plainly on theelob."a as newspapers of both po- litical persuasions. reviewing Mr. Hoover's first six months in the White .HOUS3. give him credit for many accomplishments emphasiz- tog a few SA follows: Abolition of the Official Spokes- man; withdrawal of C. S. oil lands conservation; for In- .come tax refunds; publicity a federal farm loan law and a federal farm beard . functioning; a cemmission making a study of law enforce- ment; a, reorganized G. O. P. South: designation of the General Staff of the Army to report on curtailment-omilitate costs; pro., to eliminate postal deficits; a conference on child welfare, immediate improvement of Ce. S. poscriso an aggressive start tb. wards tariff revision; study'. of poesible tax reduction; steps to- ward limitation of armament by,l, tentative agreement with Great.'" Britain; nrorrolgation of the Ke1-- 1 to g peace picleoutlawing war. ..- e. old-fa- o I or ly , , s VERNACULAR VERSES .. I -- . To these may be added the elimination of Pestiferous propa- gandists seeking to use the White. House as ,a catapult for publicity of their notions or their wares. er I Ai , t. &Libre-Oth- 1 ,,,,,,aaaaaaa., - I . By Alfred Osmond. -- EP TO DATE. A lot of things. are up to date t hatshould bs in discard. We like Too long has this condition been cordin to this bard. Nobody now allowed to continue uncorrected. some things we ought to ha l giVe a tal k who does ndt tell a Joke. The best of us will tildora You know. there are those who fun The the balk at action which a picture shows if. It poke. speakers imagine that the President of I it up to date. is cruder than a crazy crow and falser far than fate. these to solve The is but thin go. radio mighty fine. they put across have lost the all the e" rible solitude, unassisted and silver of their shine and multiplied the dress. Rel.gion Is not up to alone. This Is as far from the date as once it used to be, for many now desire to wait untilthey and see truth as a weather forecast. with, d,te jilt what there is behind the veil before they take a all due respect t o J. Cecil Alter. hand to play the game of seek and sell, up in' the ,spirit land. The strong. and it has come to etay, except the parZ Many a patriotic citizen travels ' up to date is goin no matter. what .we say. The up to date is going'" still is Tong. al l the way to Washington 'at' that to beat. It toots its horn while whillin" past and hard fast, mighty great personal sacrifice" In or. on feet. It doeinft give a tinkers .darn what people of wings flyin' to der give the Chief Executive used to do. It weaves the web (stile from yarn that is insanely the benefit Of friendly counsel. new. on riclin We're a whirligig, to find the thrills flay. Our fath. These visitors assure the President to delve and dig, but now the modern boy hes got to own a, that he Mustn't feet shy nor era used x and bem kind of tough.' Unless he gets us in a Vac. he isn't backward about consulting them euper-sito I want be to and .iser now. but, lands of goodness sake, at any time with relation to those. uri betsnuff. Ford mein' a cow that somethin' has to break. I want to my complex matters to which his Ill an be now. leer but I'd still like to be a man that has to keep big not Is All thoir mind puny equal. brains are at his disposal. except work with his integrity. I'd rather be a Hottentot and come a little be late I than would a Walter Scott that's always up to date. for use as sweetbreads. They make It perfectly clear to him that while . they may at ttmes seem indiffer- -i cot and possibly cold and unap- ' feel not Proachable, yet he must backward about asking advice, for ..: their hearts are really warm and responsive as a woman,. They would never think of leaving Mr. , . Hoover in the lurch. to mull over clum things these problems in' his own s By. groping w ay. .ounsee thhingTead;coiuhe., tci 1 P Another little Item that these to get relief. faithful little helpmeets are al- VI-,- i , Et et e'Vepn is art absolute ways willing to take off the Prest; i I an dents busyt bands, is that of tell- - efor-sut- h T 4kler., hat be thinkt.They the-int. the ptiti. Keep it ,...,, will step right out of a office. Have it ' in the handy ate "conference" with him and , home. Those subject to giVe the newspaper bey the "low , ',,' frequent Jc down" on his innermost thoughts ...0 - , 4,044 or sudden headaches should ..;, ,...., which he has girlishly confided to , ' i them. Compared to them. Dorothy carry Bayer Aspirin in the . t, Df x is a rank tyro at Raining con- frdsnces and Mary Moore is a pocket tin. Until you have used J ,, ,,,, it for neuritis, neuralgia, or dud. . . r some other deep-seatpain, of - If they are unable to come t toi ', ? Washington in person. they write! youve no idea how marvelously, ' the White House long letters' effective ' . , Bayer Aspirin i s. It which are duly released In ad- - i of the Illtalta quick, complete reief to , Ivoacnacieprfoess.r , lb: hoeadslines millions of men and women , .'t ,'.. P , e Mr- - Hooter Is now ungratefullY Doctors everywhere ' - .5','.' ,',' - . ,.. He every year. dodging these ,v has ordere,d, them diverted Into, ,declare it does not depress the , t', ,; ',,i HEAD ACHE 9 , A different . - . ;W,' a two-mi- . , - alr t -- t,,e ' , st) i - . --, , ' II - i. - ed - , --,---- huls. tt hh :7 owuoi eat t ornu t;seitd we merrtioldr(3trlits , wnehwerss I papermen. And he bites to be the first to read his own mail. This may be a mere idiosyncrasy. but re's issued orders that if a letter ir broadcasted throurh the Papers before it's sent to him. It is not to be sent to him It wilt probably be routed to the Instead of the White House. Pug-Hou- heart. Arty drugstore. Horn and there appear Of press ths Fresideura courso ,,; ' 1 V; ,, tr ,1" ,), , , v iiteRA him-iluiet- ly crlaa 5 -- tr 44,,,mmusums spil IR A iss,ar LINN,. nark A kaist Maiatactun ad lloweatticacidestst of guiglkacki I '6. ,
Reference URL https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s65f3ppx/25341661