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Show .A THE &k3 Nms ehe - - FuMwMd AJUefojmi Sail Lai. Ltiy, bun. La mi or . t - Ow Hmmm. Lt Wtt TU Audit Bureau of OichIuIm of BufcoOUPTlON RATES Hli Has On . - ft xctH ounday M tJ u tear 1M (if paid advaac),.. - (Mu hum ux la Utah. The bov raus apply to Utah, Idaho. Nevada, K grooving, Oregon. Washington. Cam ratio. Montana bw Mexico, Caluonua aod ; Artzona; MMr cutas by Mad par mootn. REPRESENTS NATIONAL ADVERTISING) ' TIVES Non, Botbeaburg ' A Jana IK -- t 10 Kart Mill New fort City.... MO Norik Mien nan Avenue Quetf . Detroit Goral Maura Building GJaaa Building , AUaau 114 lotk ftnei ... Hum City Ml Caidarai Btrwtt Baa kTaaciM Tb Aaaodaud Pros H axeiuairHy otitlM all saw das to tb un tar rcpublieauoa CTMliUd U H or sot Otbvrwit credited , patch la Una newspaper aod ala tb local aewa ' published AU right for republic uo of spacial diapatcbM bar ar la raaerved. " Sand ramluaoee aod business eommuwc tlom U Tb Deseret New. Salt Lab City. Utah. I'll t AddrM oorrrpowdnca for pubbration M : tba Editor. Eatarad at tb poatoffic at Salt Lake City aecood ciaa matter anrnrdtag W Act i Congrew. Marc X XKX SALTLAKE CITIT-- - NOVEMBER!!, IMS. On Si lUt I Su-w- ............... Wt d brta . Cuowi f B Unwed Ban fe flmm Sw Jtrd; it 1i liwlil rB TB tvdai f Cat D it amu ti B Barty B it a tU iBm hA B it, Barnaul, four) eighteenth anniversary of the close of World War Armistice Day was celebrated today by the citizen of Salt Lake, the organizations of the city cooperated with Fort Douglas in fitting commemoration of this historic event. be glad. All the 'world over, , there will ness and rejoicing this Armistice Day anniversary over the cessation of hostilities to the World War, and also from the fact that thert is peace now to the countries that were then engaged in that sanguinary struggle. .The call on November 11th, 1818, for the world armies to cease fighting was an event big enough to warrant the setting aside by law of one day a year to com me mom e iL The day will be more important than now in the years to come when new generations will be forgetting or knowing only by reference to history of the momentous significance of that compact, signed to the French woods, bringing to an end a conflict that had raged for four years and came closer to toppling civilization than any other event to modem history. The natural Impulse on Armistice Day is to enshrine deeper in the affection and admiration of the people the services rendered by the men and women w ho bore their parts so heroically to the grim struggle. There cannot be too much gratitude or admiration for those who suffered, bled and died in the great cause. To forget the sacrifice would be the basest ingratitude. People may lose patience with the war veterans for this, that or the other thing, but as a body these veterans hold notes against the public which can never be paid in fuIL it is impossible to call back the dead or to restore the severely injured to full and selfsame bodily vigor. Nothing can wholly wipe from memory the terror of the vermin infested trench, the madness of the barrage, the cries and torture of the wounded.. These things were endured beyond hope of adequate repayment; therefore, it is the nations duly, as it is its desire, to show to every reasonableway its boundless gratitude. But that gratitude cannot confine itself to mere words, parade and flag waving; for w'hiie the veterans may appreciate this recognition of their services, what they most -- desire is for their countr men to establish In practice and principle what the fighting men went to the camp and the trench to uphold. If you break faith with u who die," said one of them, we shall not sleep, though poppies blow on Flanders Fie,l " . The principles for which these valiant men fought and died envisage democracy, with all that It implies.' The right of the people to rule, the sanctity of the ballot box, the free exercise of religious convictions, the preservation of the home and the happiness and contentment of a free, enlightened people over whom the banner of peace waves. That is the vision of the Armistice Day : 4 tf h i ? ? r V1' k -- ' - I . !-- 4 1 )' 4 !! i ' " i of.. Our Electoral Formula I : V a FTER the overw helming victory of Pres--. Went Franklin Ik Roosevelt at the polls, what remains to be done In order to declare ... him officially, elected Is oot perhapa. readily, understood by the average citizen. . ' On January 8, 1937. the Senate and House will solemnly meet in Joint session and open x the electoral ballots, says a Washington criterion: .ll ... Even though the choice of a President grid Vice President la actually made by the ' 'i ' I peepis.Totlng- - throogh-- l AtotstmiU, - N - X IVV V- - X JBtX '191Slrmtiiiee Day-19- 36 1 a- - yf Thini A confident no confident himaelf. man naturally has in any man hul In the successful matrimonial firm the husband isn't a - full Editor Deseret New partner. In jour isiuc of Kofwwf 7th. of Don't forget that an insurant 1938, you published a statement Mr. Cilleapie s which we consider policy has kindled morn than ana We k that full of conflagration. publicity laig you give this letter equalstatement to" that of Mr. Gillespie' A woman has a queer way f Mr. Gillespie sav: "The strike a man took down updo her was Called for October 12th. This letting weakness that makes him took for called was strike The is untrue. to her. Midnight. Oct 8dv (Friday). This can be confirmed by notices posted soon cure a man at la Park City, alao by statements theMarriage flattery habit. published to the daily pres. The Park Mr. Gillespie state: A good roadbed is the bast place Utah Mm wa not picketed." This for lh tired wheel. is untrue. Park Utah night shift Some heads ar mad to carry employes picketed the evening of October 10th and the President of brains, while others merely serve M No. Union local the Park City as wa among these picket. Mr. Gillespie states: Park Utah A legal light is usually Club is a company union." Thu is wily chap whoae client are in fifalse. Mine officials had nothing to nancial gloom. do whatever in forming this Club. It was a voluntary action on our A woman may listen to the adpro- vice of her husband, hut ah inpart for our own welfare and tection and for the purpose of try- variably does as she pleases Just ing to right a great wrong the the same. Union officials have done to us in Mans greatest responsibility on calling this strike. Further, the first move of the this mundane sphere is woman and and she never lets his forget iL professional labor agnation present strike leaders was to pre- either. vent the majority of the men work A woman never tires of shoping In the' mines of Utah from expressing thffr View, by refusing ping as long as her hair stays is to meet with the Governor, mine op- curL erators, and representatives of nonunion men. The second move wa to disfranchise I hew own union members by getting the local unions to vote all negotiating power to the State .Committee of the strike. Now we have the Jobs of 3 Odd workers upon what depending THREE profemtonal labor leaders IS NOT SOLD ON PRICI in Salt lake City are fit to do. to Cat attwa bm cat As yet our communication Kla HaaSat Caal b aaU,a the Governor asking for a conferan Mvdai at ence with the operators and himaaT. vlljll self remains unanswered. WESTERN FUEL CO. -- hat-rack- EHTJG COAZi is a typical -- tha : old record book ASState University to the 'archives of the tells u that on lh 11th of November, 1850, the Parent School, or University of Deseret, was opened to the home of John Pack in the Seventeenth Ward of this city. The University, therefore, is old today. Among it year seventy-sialumni are many of the most noted sons and daughters of the state. A one studies its history, one is impressed by the truth that it was not only founded by the pioneers who settled in this wilderness to 1847, but that it was created to consecration to an purpose. Their ideal, and had a lives were devoted to an ardent spiritual faith and was the result of a glowing re- ligious experience. The University sprang from the soil, for it was the people who were conquering the soil who gave it life. Its foundation was therefor secure, it did not have wealth in troublesome times, but it did the eBrly-dahave manhood. In the pioneer days of the institution, there was a seriousness of purpose and kn earnestness of endeavor which was fundamental to it greatness today. It was religion that gave place within the school to the spirit of fine endeavor, which led to reverence and humility. The men and women who taught consecrated personal ambition to the interests of th common com- munity. Students were drawn to that early day not by solicitation, but by affinity. They went to college to learn; to contribute something to the lovelineaa and happiness of the world. Though it was a school to the wilderness, it abided by the word of an anHim that cient prophet when he wrote: awaketh and him that anawereth." .Means for toe support of toe University were not always available, but the regents of the institution carried on Just toe same, and fine scholars became members of the faculty to teach the youth for the love of teaching. Its Alumni have taken honored places in toe world, for even in the day when the University found shelter to the desert, the spirit of toe institution jrmt one of learning and culture. There was always an awakened consciousness tn the' pioneer universities of America. So It was with UTAH. The boy and girl saw the world in which they were living, and became interested in its opportunities and responsibilities. Their powers were led out They were led to think. - The University today ha its boundaries are various. A invisible; its better standard of scholarship is maintained than ever before to it history and it stands for Meal interests on!y. It hss no corporate selfishness; and wields no power of corrupIts president is to be congratulated tion. on the high purpose that has been behind his administration. Hi faculty baa given him unstinted" support. The University began w ith a noble ideal of scholarship and moral culture. Those ideals remain. Today every teacher on the campus realizes the divine truth which Ralph Waldo Emerson J 6hce ei pi eased In his address entitled THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR, when he said: The teacher stands for a nation of mn, because each believes himself inspired by the Divine ' Soul which also inspire other men. inter-relatio- God always has an angel of help for thooe who are willing to do their duty. Guyler. The population of toe United States was set October 30th' by' he Census Bureau at' .42M28JOOOU, -- mittenent. fml!. J. L an so. Mam Phone Wat. JOHNSON, Chairman. ORVAL CUMMINGS. 2667 Secertary. Park Utah Club. Lawrence Cites Reason Minority For World War Failure Party Change THIS IS NATIONAL FUR WEEK Declared Need BY DAVID LAWRENCE (Copyright, 1936, by The Deseret News) BY CARTER FIELD Nov. 11 When, eighteen years ago, the WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 It Is WASHINGTON, guns on the western front were silenced and the celebrations not unusual after ,tndsllf)e f of peace began round the world, there was little thought given ml obseert of effect the The war. economic dict lhat the terrible to the aftermath of dead party buned convulsions caused by the World War of 1914 were as little forever lhat n eh party 'are coming. But this time there visualized then as they were after the Napoleonic war. tn mor logic in the pre-- , ; T For nearly 20 years after the much America it diction than at any tune since the today ingUme operation. Napoleonic 'wars, for Uivil War. Great Britain did not return to,mor m ,nood, ,o Th Republican Party and the 'roPfn ibe cokt standard. Economic cqui- n librium and trade rewal were not fairs than it tb as in il9on , thehen the Democratic Party have both league fered terrific defeats. In 1912 Pres- fought blushed tor almost a quarter of rmPIKn of nations iMie and when even lient Wiliam ll. Tafi won a century. only who sup Republican ume number of states, two. have maay Today, an eighteen his believed Mr. P01 Harding game number of electoral the tne Armistice. favor some pjed since American nation stands alongside administration would association votet lhat Governor Atf M. La s received this year of Great Britain and France as the form of international Xow uVeeV only democracies left among the ' to Republican Partv has tense the Kellogg- - nolhln ,h lo compare with what the larger powers. A war that was war outtaw was ing 1912 after Taft's desafe to for world the had make in party LA"'; fought feat. In the first place, every one democracy has failed, for the time , .hiph aut not being, to win Its objective. The P"re"'v leader were really anxious to get reason i clear to those of us who Th- thwl tori k ba. Bari the mto conferthe Republican Party peace climb on the and yield- 'ZL to that ewential ap.m of m7kmocr7tic in the there w as a pUc: privilege, reaction against accommodation and conciliation smt are the Wilson speedy ... of ,he .Spren administration, a re-which recognize how the army ' ct'on which would of a nation might be beaten bu't undoubtedly, ternationalm. bow Its people can never be van- l r wha-eta going to be achieved 'V fF for world peace in the immediate l(aJ u out of war" FaB To Apprerfote Minority issue. future will depend upon how far Failure to underatAid the view- Thl are ,,me 'here no auch hrad4 of governments will be' of the minority ha been th, plain tight, rractieatly abe to associate themselve to- -- emeni in the the ultimate undoing of many a tariff Becommon epeaking, issue, which interesL gether in the majority. The spirit of the allied, tbe elect tons, Arthur brock, caused the reaction against one of extracting from correspondent of the row Wilson up Jo 191b. or at least the defeated all the cost of the Washjhgton the important factors, olw w yorg Times, after a visit to war. even though. Irora an eco- Hyde Paik, wrote a dispatch pre- - doe not exist today, nomic viewpoint, ueh an indem- - dieting a conference between Pres- - Obviously this election decided, of the ident Roosevelt and the head of for some time u come, that the nity meant destruction economy of central Europe various government, tariff policy of this country i the But. orse than that, inability This wa European robeequentty given a reciprocal treaty plan including the tufopean countri from iorm of official denial due to the the "most favored nation, clause an voitoiHic standpoint to meet niwinterpretation that One o(Ui most important prompt- - which debt they incurred m )y planed upon the contemplated features. the v, Tb. , Dominates line-up- s JwKn,ment LEEDS' Display Fur of Coats suf-es- ta - (Bi ?auty e n-.- Wraps Qtself tn cFur Elegance LJl lnllf,r"" ltd hLond Economy fr (hi kind LEEDS, skew hi ki4 t these prices . fe Wood-victo- rs and just femember: ' m PAY 1 the democracies 1' of . eiv-mie- ONLY nk. Undoubtedly Mr Roevelt ha chum-tlMa So Jr the thought again and aga.n of what thrre at p.m some basis for 0,81 countoe what thl argument lhat ,wars WdariraVam!lhrh,n common Ame;"C contribute to world peace. Mrtv u Bolshev im and Faacsm The example of Pan- - 7w new jeaaera, and no pecful Something more than the America is. of course. Important f Nation tovenam grew weaker and a.qnificant, and the presidents antina,hv ln ,h. tfUlh lo onDose H end weaker in tne year following v wit to Argentina to the conference the war. Jt wa the solidarity of of nations there may prove the (Copyright, 1936) nation, the community of interest . first in a aeries ot steps that will ithat caused America to send 2000. (produce an atmosphere conducive rn , once more to thought of interna-- . 1 WdllV jtriO men oversea because of C3TS AffO t o principle deemed prec iou to the 1 tonal cooperation. very existence of free government Hatnrday, Kv. 11, 191E Certainly Secretary Hull' pro-it Theory MM World s of reciprocity, with of the University of no auch army would be 'gram f irations, of course, to meet some first Utah, according not because sent, there is of" the valid objections raised merely monthly report of Registrar an abhorrence of war. but because against th method or nature of the of th Elbert D. Thomas, the theory of world unity has re- - negotiating machinery, is a step in school, average higher in scho. eeived a damaging blow from the the direction of better Intercourse; lastie standing than th men very nations which originally car- - of nation and toward an improved of the institution. ed so much for international co international economy. 4 The state, it was announced will on a work today, begin road about M miles long between Toquerville and the Mukuntuweap, Washington Co. enable Te ' I 1 ) la modi-Toda- Co-ed- to-t- he D O 17 rj , Encyclopedic Church Historj By Andrew Jenson KO. SIX WARIA LEWISVILLE Stake. Jefferson County. iconsista of the Latter-da- SfSLSL lc FORTY YEARS of the inhabitants are Latter-daSaints. Lewisville is- one of the original Idaho, i. . etlemrat in the ke baima Rlver vUcy. U was founded in by Richard Franklin Jardme. Edmund Ellsworth. Brigham Henry - En'wrh to tosLYe RivThWmltcYl JA.. afterwards icvilie contains 320 acres of n' la PPototed to , preside land. It is situated about fbur!JnUo eettlement; on Oct. 25, miles east of Snake River,, ii mile:'" north of Idaho Falls. 20 miles by ; '63. the Saint were organized as nearest road southwest of Rex burg. branch of th Church called the and sfx mile wrest of Rtgbr. the Lewisville Branch of the Bannock nearest rail road station and the i Ward of the Cache Stake of Zion. Rtgbv 9ake. 'he name LewisvMIe honoring Mvt headquarters e The town is surrotmded bf wane wether Lewis of the Leans and ezcaUrnt farming, land, and mrwi ,Qark.Xxj?c4iUn. Jtme 29. 1883. Richard F. of-th- . Wrdwroday, in AGO Jfv. II. I - Minr AEARA AGO fUlirday, Kov. II, 18TE "Dear Little Birdie." I the title of a wmg just completed. 4he word of which were writ- fori by George J. Taylor and the muaic by George "Careless. Select ANY Fur Coot in LEEDS fine stock and it's yourt to takejwith you for ONLY $5 Down with 12 F.2onths for the to Pay NO COST FOR CREDIT AT ALL tion .celebrating th marriage of Ueut. John Woodward of the Infantry and Mias Frances Harvey Judge. In Traverse City, Mich. 14 building were burned at a loss of more than 850,000. Tour Coat Zs Tours IKS Soon JLs ZfiloctofS For Coat of Your Choico 1SSC social, event Salt Lake City, was a recep- An outstanding A R -- X" Pointed Paragraphs lATRfADtRS Mr. Gilletpiet letter To Netct Questioned . X , "11..J938 WEDNESDAY- - NOVEMEER - -- f! - ' CITY Utah State University THE -- LAKE which Armistice Day 1 SALT example of the way in governmental machinery, set up a century and a half ago, has proved sufficiently flexible to serve the needs of the modern age, and proves anew the truth of the maxim: "The Founding Fathers build ed better than (hey knew." B pr . NEWS format procedure of an earlier day, la still ' closely followed. 'fa accord with tK twelfth amendment to the Constitution, the electors " wUi meet to their respective states on De- cember 11 Their ballots will be officially cast according to instructions received at' the polls, and, after sealing, will be forwarded to the President of the fenate. The procedure of choodng a President has Dot been changed to any vital respect sine the twelfth amendment was adopted to 1804. In practice the people have always made the choice by superimposing the ma-- . chinery of political parties upon that of tb electoral system. That is to no way forbidden by the Constitution. Indeed, the original provision on this subject is to the .. effect that 'Each state shall appoint. In such manner as the legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors, equal to lh whole number of senator and representatives to which the state may be entitled fn the Congress." When the electoral system was modified by the twelfth amendment, parties had already taken control of , our political machinery. If the practice of instructing electors to vote for designated candidates had . been inimical to the Constitution, Congress and the stale would doubtless hays forbidden it at that tfm., .InHead. thgy. ainipiy . laid down more specific rules for casting of electoral ballot after the electors had been This Mafia I aBadaa roeB in ad ttfrttlum$ mmmt of wiar aad iUrff BaJ It ar laBr par war, naafor aBrar B rtmektt mum raaa wary eBaar aa Be aBirtdad fraaa lB ktrmmg TB ray W B ran. flrepBrl iarrpB Smkk. . DESERET chosen. or grfaifegad wok iaB ; , ' |