| OCR Text |
Show THE hc DiCll 'Kcms NEWS Long roots go deep into the earth, and in a year they begin to be both pleasing to the eye and a support for the unstable soil. Afternoons Ezeapt Sunday Published DESERET SALT LAKE CITY -- THURSDAY POLITICAL MAY 24 1931 SPRING SONG CHARACTER 'TODtY SUBSCRIPTION -- RATES On Wssk One Month - ? Z Ons Tear - T.sO cants Ons Tear (If paid in advance) Single Copts ;Z The a bora rntaa apply to Utah. Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming. Orfon, Washington. Oolo- rado, Montana, New Maxleo. California and Z Arisons: othar states by mall par moith II. - - , - : 4 - Rothanburg A Jann. Inc. IS totb street New fork Oltyw. 8( North Michigan Avanua Chicago dcneral Motor Bullying Detroit Glann Building Atlanta lid West 10th Straat Kansas City Sit California Straat Sin Pranelsoo Z r tiyes ' Noaa, r ; r REPRESENTA- - ADVERTISING NATIONAL , Et Sand remittances and bnalnaaa eommonlea-- ; tlon to The Deaeret News Salt Lakt City Utah. Addraa oorraapondene for publication te the Editor. Entered at th postofflc at Sait Lake Cl'y as second class matter according to Act of Congress March 1. H7S. The Associated Press Is exclusively anUtled to th use (or rapublloation of all nawa die-patches credited to it or not otherwlelocalcredited nw In this newepeper and also th published herein. All right for repubilcatlon reeented. are alto her ef special dlapstehe gALT LAKE CITY, SCHOOL GHH.DREN MAY 21 i. SLNG Tabwisi last THOSE aho filled the great to hear fifteen hundred school children aing sere well repaid. The vital and appealing voices of the young give a peculiar motional effect. Filling the choir seats and half the gallery, the multitude sang as with one childish voice. Those who conceived and carried out the Cornwall, Miss Charlotte plan. Mr. Stewart and the school authorities, doubtless had in mind far more the education of the children than the entertainment of the public. For the boys and girla themselves, it is a delightrul occasion. There is glsmor in appearing in the Tabernacle under such condition. The actual effect of the melodies and tableaux grave indelible memories that will affect their lives. Months of preparation have preceded the concerts. Moreover, it stirs the desire of those who did nob take part to learn to sing so that they msy be chosen future members of the great chorua. Singing ii ao suitable a part of education, for Jt la responsible for perhaps more happiness than any other single habit. It marvelously restores the emotional balance and stimulates hope and joy. Armies Song is the mother of courage. are stirred to emotion when their national airs are played, but when an army tings it Is hardly conquerable. This writer will never forget being waked at sunrise in Dresden by the marching song of German soldiers as a regiment passed down the street. It was the song of fighting men. A classical example of the power ol music is in the history of the Utah pioneers. When the people were discouraged and their spirits east down by what they had left and by what they went forward uncertainly to meet, Brigham Young called Wiiligm Clayton to. him and asked him to write a song, words that would bring back the spirit to the weary exiles. The result was that wonderful hymn, Come, come, ye saints, no toil nor labor fear, but with joy wend your way." The very songs, sung in the Tabernacle this week, within a few ahort yeara the girls as mothers will be singing to their children and the boys as doers of the world's work will be singing at their tasks. ,'. ACORNS in San Iranciseo a man indicted by the giand jury wiU go before the criminal court and plead to the- - charge of, murder Whether he u convicted of the horrible deed, he must at least bear responsibility for the violation and death of a beautiful young woman who had been his guest. No --man worthy of the name would have permitted her to go out from his home alone in the middle of the night in a strange city without protection. 4 wnnJ hould be said about the victim of ihe tragedy An imtusU iou giu oX, unbieniuhed character left her home in Ogden to visit San trannsro m the hope of bettering her situation being bd a. so by a strong desire for travel, the normal craving of adventurous youth, she established friendships there end naturally sought that ef persons who could help her in securing the position aboard That ship she wished so much to obtain explains the company of the man whom sbe expected to help ber secure the work. Besides the grace and beauty of her person and chara'ter. there are two things that should be remembered about her. She was devoted to her widowed mother and turned over to her each week almost her entire earnings, and had done so regularly for years. And she gave up her life for her virtue. Her lorn body bore mute but eloquent evidence that she had resisted its loss to the death. ve.mave nearer to the AS tem(5)of It has aet up a national sysemployment exchange. It become dally mor (6) It ha, to soma degraa, lightof the discussion that important ened the debt load on farmers and New Deal be divested of shoddy home owner. .(7) It has struck a staggering and cord id economic propaganda designed primarily to fur- blow at Child tibor. As s (SI It has acknowledged responsibility on the part of th federal to I want therefore, begin today; government to protect the conoum-a- n against poor and dangerous attempt objectively and lmpar-e- r ,tiaU to atrlka a balance sheet on goods, even If the Food and Drug the New Deal, listing some of Its Act has had a stormy career. .achievements and some of the unIt has recognized the responfin, shed business on its desk of the federal government Here are some things that must, sibility j to protect the investor against unregardless of one's party affilia-lion- sound securities Issues, even If (he be set down as New Deal Securities Act may have Included achievements: at the outset certain unwise and (1) It has remade the psychology unworkable provisions. ,of the American people. suppUnt-un(10) It has made a beginning of despair with some measure, at th public development of power of leas', hope. resources as pace setter and yardIt) It has stepped up direct and stick for private enterprise in th Indirect relief of the unemployed. utilities fiald (1) It has dramatized and fixed be Ol) ItInhas made measure enin the popular mind the notion of headway stimulating private a comprehensive national policy ofterpr through nubile Investment minimum wages and maximum ja public works hours hjfh is a vrv nnpoitantj ll2) It has solidified popular cam ern if the minimum aconfidm'e In the banking rvstem 's still too low and the maximum hv a limited deposit insurance U hours still too long (4) It has definitely recogmzed a dozen deflr, Here ar( h to ugh federal legislation labor s, achievements of the New Deal The iright to collective bargaining. evendetalied legislation and administra-l- f the detailed execution of the pol- - lion of any one of them may be ilcv leaves much to be desired open to correction In Ihe lighl o experience, but thev do eifahllsh u Mo., with Its private system and a parts of national policy basic as principles that would eeern to be great. population three times stones of a sounder so- foundation 3 The average domestic rate is cents per kwh and the power rate rial order (Copyright, McClure rune from .4 to 1.7 cent per kwh. Newspaper Syndicate ) The city hall has free light and power and the school have a rate 25 per cent under the regular sche-- j ther pertonal and partisan -- () s, g ' j dule. . How is it administered? A BT LESLIE EICHEL hoard o' 'ive elected at large at a salary 'of $100 per year controls the water (Central Brew Su.lt Writer! NEW YORK According to word coming to New York. France will reconsider and offer a payment on its war debt. In fact, President Roosevelt may get well along during the summer on settlement of the disturbing debt problem. Victory or Defeat? The debate continues to rage whether Governor Gifford Pmchot'a defeat by Senator David A. Reed for the Republican senatorial nomination in Pennsylvania was a blow to the Roosevelt administration, or not. Administration supporters are confident, simply rather, that the Pinebot defeat means Roosevelt supporters went over to th Demthe either vote for ocrat ticket and did not progressive or the conservative Republican. Joseph F. Guffey, who bagged the Democratic senatorial nomination, hadas his camRoosevelt. paign slogan. "I m for From Readers Our readers once more call matters to our attention. Says a resident. of a Jargq .city; Owing to the continued strikes and demands of labor, the I) -- s had to liquidate . their pi baking business 4nd now Mr. B at middle age. will need to seek some other Una" Another person writing from an Indiana factory town says: the NRA is a joke in the big factory of auto plant. Men are pu;hed (hi. town-- an harder than ever because costs have gone No man dares stop up. that - the excuse. dares during the days furious pace, no man I does. complain. He is blacklisted if he have seen meu in tured. and get no compensation. because or threats and fear. The man with mouths to feed is a worse slave than ever. Compel ition and mass production are the altar on which we are being sacrificed King Corn Corn i; likely to be kin this year. Much But has been made of the wheat failure. corn is growing with increased vigor. Scientists atilt have not learned a'! th u;es to which evidently corn can be put The cotton crop. too. is large enough to cause price to drop later. ;and power plants and are Indepe- ndent of the rltv commission Think five efficient board members 'cr of managing these plant, for a whole i XeeYalFJ prducm j annually. year for a fraction of the monthly In 1912 th total capital struc salary of some of our local man ture as $8,234,276 with a bonded agem of utilities, indebtedness of only $1,650 7 ' 0.( a telling answer to the oft iTh net income that year e.terln- - Ths and threadbare claim that repeattd S'! ,had. that municipal plant, ere not efficiently d.TY.V, deducted mgna(td, are not sound economy !Ut.h.J0W"llePreM0n ycar snCe,fr consumers, and do not gtv good peak year. ervca 81nce 1428 they have invented' The question is- Was thla a good over $2,500,000 in the plant which investment for Kansas City. Kan. in ha come out of revenu. alone 'U12 and is it still a good invest-an- d that at rates only two thirds ment? as high as those of Kansas Cly, Silver Bloc Split by Strategy of Roosevelt IB Working Self Out of Difficult Dilemma - PreiJenl Roosevelt skill in handling superior knowledge of strategy wa never illustrated more forcetully than m his message on silver The president succeeded in reaffirming his position that thp regulation of monetary matters shall for the present he left to the!, discretion of the execuive, but he also did not fail to go as far in the direction f the advofatet as is eeonemtraHy sound i at the moment. Unquestionably, silver is one of :hc most controveisial questions In and force America to accept a mod-all American history. I ndoubtedly. ified gold standard In an Interna-topreconceived In th prejudices have tlonal sens there Is much to do with th casual way legislation that wouldnothing prevent tb that s.lver remonetization Is re-- 1 United States from agreeing to Jected from time to time on the such a program Incidentally, ground that, because it did not America can use a large amount Iwork In the past, it will not work In I reserve for currency Irrea-nojpectlv of what the outside world Mr Rooseveit la a courageous'oee about it who .reailst ms.sts that circum-- l WM Test Faith h aa th. preaident ha. not' A, impossible a few generations A asked lop, for a revival of th ancient may be entirely chang'd today ratio, whereby gold and silver were to be maintained by governTerror Gone ment flat at a fixed ratio of value Thus the uee of silver as a the one to whilst world talllc reserve for the issuance of .conditions the other changed ths same values, can currency have the hardly is really little danger of Infla- -' rors It had fifty- vears ago when'tlon or currency embaras'tnonts ln nowadays the federal Reserve the proposals laid before Congress.! banks issue currency on So far aa the silver crowd is con,'commerclal or commod ty transac- cerned. the message makes It postions sible to test th rood faith of th The real difficulty, of course. sponsors. Fifty cent, an ounce is a i that there has been no rate for sliver and there will over the quantity of alher controlhlgh In the;be unquestionably an economic Ira-world and that price f.uctuat'on piovement in the silver producing1, Moley have In the past b'n impowutde state. Aa for th speculators, they Raymond Moley, nut Rexford Tugwell, to hold In Una with gold value. (have to pay & 50 per cent tax en again is Brain Truster No I. New York The president promises tha and he,thelr profit besides the usual piIt is rumored both m rn do to possible everything bring, come, taxes Small wonder that the Washington that Moley' s word is going a long ,aiout an international control ofiprice of silver didn't skyrocket on silver way at the White House these days whereas .world production and he the announcement that silver was Tugwell seldom is at the White House ipo.nts to the achievements s.nce U be definitely taken Into th rold, 'the London economic con'rrence as hereafter In a large way In the' Moley is said to realize he was somewhat a sign that something can be done. Imetallic reserve of the United' headstrong on the London trip last year. Obviously, there can be no final State He is likely to have a guiding voire when government Mr. Roosevelt, of th silver prob.-solution htniself got out a ef an awkward, Congress adjourns. til all the world agrees or at least P1 Meal delemma and. while the, until there Is e stabiliz'd relationiXhl is hy no means over the pres- -' between countri.s gold and,ldent has split th sliver bloc and sllve, imiiiirKs or thos' u ng both 'rendered It less dangerous at this .session metals. (Copypright. 1S4). I nits on Paid Whatever kind of world s .ndard 'there may h' In store for Mr. MAY It (Roosevelt Is emphatic th .t must Tabbe the result of an int'i rational At regular service in th Bait Lake I- -t the stvc- - advoernacle, Elder B H. Roberta of the First Seven agreement. cate this as Jmt an exon eddresa an regird President of Seventies delivered loiter go Oils column mast cuse er an al'ht the president not be longer than 00 words: th office end functions of the Holy Ghost. Presto take 'pledge hlms'lf ertalni most bear lbs name and adservice over the ident Anthon II. Lund presided ts'.f p nationally whih r hemdress of the ' writer, although elvet mav have an effr Inter-- ! these will not nercsanrilf be Howard H Snelgrova, for 13 years a draftsnationally. and must not be onblislied, man in th office of I. C. Thoresen, United The legislation proposed docs not of a defamatory Or libelous Jn waa for of say what, Utah, i tine States auryeypr general length th appointnature. Only excerpts of let-- I American government must buy (ere over SOO word will be ed chief draftsman, and H. R. Atkinson was enough s Ivtr ao that 25 per cent printed. Ideas and opinion transfcired to the agricultural department of our currency reserves shall be expressed In tM column are 75 gold reand ,s her It not do's those of coniribatora and FORTY YEARS AGO quire the government to do any may or may not reflect the, . A hugs landslide- - occurred xl - J eb .Murin a given year bn leaves The of Deseret News, it a. to the execut.ve brnch of phy s place In Hill Creeks where the course of the Salt Luke and Jordan canal ran at (he ,the government. No sli er advo-'cwho really wants the Ameri-jea- n foot of a bluff The canal was filled with rock government not to become ao Kamos City Potter Plant and earlh causing an overflow, and serious damembarrad by silver purchase aa age was narrowly averted. Satisfactory Investment to ruin all chances of stiver re-- I a will want Congreae. monetization Announcement wa mad of the marriage .especially with dav hy di Editor Deseret News: hanges ceremony In the Salt Lake Temple of Alvin In world conditions, to have comIn 1113 Kansas City, Kan., built nd E. Beesbv Professor Beesley, son It Its first municipal power plant unit plete charge of Oliver buying Miss Ruby Pratt, a daughter or th late Eldct was lust such precise and specific nimltatione in th pest that led to Oraon Pratt, of the Council of th Twelve, a the breakdown in Ihe use of stiver. a a SIXTY-FIVYEARS AGO . Requires Control Under the heading. "Sabbath MeeUngs To accomplish Its maximum for Th News said thal, "Elder B Young. Jr. and monetary purpose, silver a governmental control of require several othera addressed the congregstlon In th oitput. nationalization of silver in tt In oc'a the afternoon the time was morning. Are Practical sense that the W. C. government Elder jsame cupied by Blaine. President George today owns the gold. .and a fixing. A.Smlth and Elder Joseph f. Smith." And Add of the price of sliver el a figure j 'that holds the value within reasA D. tlf" Washington. C, dispatch a) that onable limit. All this Mr Roosevelt Roof president had appointed James E, McLean, th' has sought id do nn hi message on silver end the only crlllcism that MORRISON-partner of Orville Gram, the presidents brother, " R.qn opponents from the silvsr point af collector of customs al Chicago. Edward MERRILL CO. A l view can make is the presisnceiwor of intei nal revenue in Washing411 dent has eskgd for permL ve but ton Turitory, and Charles H. Boyce, consul at iilot mandatory powers Prague. ' Bhuld world conditions chan. WASHINGTON, May 24. and especially his Akmgxe v 1 o, 5 Days to Decoration Day th Ca Still Memorial Output e 4 ELIAS MORRIS & SONS SI w EOT HOI TH TFWPI.E Matchless Beauty and Quality! Three - Piece Mohair Hiring Room Suite Complete with All the Matching Furnishing 10 Extra Fine Pieces SPECIALLY PRICED AT y 111 A FUTURE public work that will probably be carried out extensively is the beautification of the highway. A faderal proiect t now under way m Davis county for a stretch ef ten miles and a third along the new lower road. Green ah trees with their to saline soil have been planted, and the weeds are being cleared away to prevent their going to seed. Good work has been done, as every one of 600 trees and practically all of the 7,000 shrubs and 14,000 vines are alive and growing. Incidentally as you ride along this stretch of roadway, you should realize that the dollars being epent have come or will ultimately come from the pockets of Mellon. Ford and others, whose incomes are taxed by the government. At the north end of the beautification project, the slate bas done a fine experimental work. It 'has planted ecorns in the bate sandy banks of the cut. This is just beyond the 1 ER 4 camp for transients, north of Farmington. It Is not expected that mighty oaks will from these' little acorns grow. They are fh fruit of the scrub variety so familiar on our hillside. Nevertheless, they will be beautiful and useful. Nothing is a better preventive of erosion. And the thick shining foliage of the scrub oak in the growing season or the tangled purple brush when the leaves have gone, Js one of the beautiful things of the countryside. The suggestion of Mr. Grant Bowen, who bas been put in charge of this beautification work by the road commission, that there be t stale acorn day when the children will enthusiastically help, is n good one. The acorn; when they fall unless they are immediately plan ted by mature or human hands are sub- ject to one of three certain fates. Either the l squirrel-wilget them, the worms will perforate the shell, or the passing of lime will render them infertile, Within Ihirty dais llicy should be gathered and planted. Once in the ground they grow rematkably. m un-h- see les ire I We re ' T1IE , t' ' E - Asphalt Shingles see Color to Your i 1 W.la.lo. . live again! Haggler .re here, gee-a- T nllln eiue oren.tfce drprtMlow a a thing ( th Lets fwrset It eamplelely gaat. oat all th worn, frayed aad smtrhed fernllare. throwing Heglgr H with the aew. More comfortable aad vastly more livable alylea af today. This agerlal germlts yaw In ds If nllhnal sacrifice. at IO-PIE- CE Living Room Suites $88.00 Axminster Throw Rug $ 2M Magazine End Table $ 1.95 Table Lamp $ 1.19 We Value Out-of-To- Trade LIVING ROOM: Floor Lamp Occasional Table CoffeeTab!e 93.95 $4.45 $4,45 $2.28 Magazine Racks Shop by Mail With John West to Fill Your Order T. 7 |