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Show - ' ' '' ' - ' '' ' - - ' ' -- ''''' -- -- - low - ""--''''-- - - '77 'r ."-- ,7: - - ', " '' " '," 0 ow d N. -- 10, . - - -- . ""' ' 4 '''' ' ,THE VS DESERL1', SALT - , art LUZ . SATURDAY NOVEMBER, 8 . 1 937 . , . 7 . .. . -.. ow - I 7:"TAW . ! -f- - ' , 1 - 4.- - I , -' E,,-- -- mtvitte. go olk .? - .' ill Sympathy ' , , --- - . li T ', , tr. I ' ., .1Nc:( or-T - , Forensics At U. OF - 'earth. Homer God," said Hewitt. Choice wortis and 'pleasant and measured phrase Is a delight both to mind and ear. We learn that in the University of Utah some sixtlit people are active tir debating, The peaking. oratory and extemporary speech department is prepared to take care 00111 additional sixty lit udents in this activ ity and the University men and women should take full advani,age of this oppor, "I' n man speaks I 1 :, : .,,: I , ' I , exprev-e- - 1 - . ; - ! ; t - , , ' - ' , i - - , , - .. , ... , - .., - aped slowly. There are some choke spirits today, however, who are beginning to feel that there is scrmething larger and finer than ate 'beginning to feel that patribtism, while a virtue within certain limits, may be less than a virtue when carried too fat Rut the larger international. .intiversalandhuman life has not yet dawned - on tile hbrizon of thousands and thousands Waihall he nearer civilized when we can say with Titomais Paine, and Mean '"rhe- world Is anti in-A- u good'is my religion." It might he interesting to call attention 'briefly to some of the things that stand in the. waty of sympathy. ,,.f,:a.turatists tell. us that among the 1nwerforms of life there is an aritagonistp between ereatutes that differ from one ;mothe. Ants fight ants of other It is species. Thirt is atr:kingiy human. hard for us to aympathize Ivith people who differ it;m us. It is hard for someef us to feel, that a man with a black skin is really a'man. We pity a mail who is blind- - deaf or !lune; why should we not pity a than who is intellectUally, merally, ithysicrilly . or in some other way, afflicteir One of thegreatT has always ben dividing lines of the that of race, and yet as Thomas Carlyle says "Of a truth, men are mystically united: a mystic bond of brotherhood makes all men one: There is another thing that stands in the way' of comprehension and svmpathr, and that la the difference of .1anzuae 'nits has heart one of the groat liarr..ers of the .wilrik and strange trt say relizion ,a another. Ite lonon has led to heararte; and ,nateri. tazonisms and bloodshed. perse,:-.iii6and Nvart. This comes !roil the fact that in the old days race hatra,k. ;Ind 13,.. AiTr..1 were perpetuated as ttr,-- Tif .1P!Zir,11 Still aenther thing tint at.ittric in the way of find, an ion in the -war now going on in .the rir Eact. Men, atemen and children arr, 'av the thousands:- suffering from Utilizer. &snail; and every conceivable torture. Att,1 vet., because, )t is far away we take litV.e n7,:itre of it. But, If we are by and tly to de eliin a eivilizatam that ineludes humanity we inust learn for these"suffering people lust as if they. were ou own. When we do this we will. put .a stop. to the horrors and the hells7. ; I . .. - - . - L llk4'' I., re ,, I, ',A I 1. , , v , & , ,,,.' 4 : , 1 )., t. , ''."....7-1-.-4, i ...A, - p, , '4' 1 ' .. '"e41 ,, - Writer Tells How To Increase Wages , , 1001 , Sooligc:IPts.w . slight reduction for commuters. ' As a result, the ferries are doing a land office business hauling automobiles, and the bridge revenues are not what they should be. So the six counties that guarantee the bridge which means that they have to Make up any deficit in paying operating charges and interest on the bonds are alarmed. They are appealing to the State Railroad Commission to reopen the case What they want of course, is to force the ferries to charge just as much as the bridges. Boiled down, if they get what they want, the ferries might as well go out of business. Now let's go hack a few yearsin other words, use hindsightand Imagine a situaLion. Let's suppose that when the bridge was first proposed the ferry owners had reduced rates- sharply, instead of first wafting in the vain hope that-thbridges would never be built, and then seen the inevitable happen. Obviously, a ferr7 cannot compete with a bridge, once a bridge is built. If the bridge management is permitted, it can make any rates it pleases, - Germany And- Her,Colonies advances the friendship M USSOLINI tween Italy and Germany through his be- - - -- A -- - s 50-ce- is. front ment:rapital forestPri in thattomiorv makea Namibia inerratimi pro. dliction, and , , aee the - aThe 1037) built.--(Copyr- ight ..,:.--- -- tot-the- . as 7 or, not raise the S250 to- SUM down saa wawa It not cream a , pita no' 'vmsoderful building boom and tn. - emus. Moro' of till". ir a to eitate etimpany acid them a hrmui---- 7 .ant .. without a down. payment.' If thry, .. ... ;. -. CLATIDs DOutigo the ... thought tiwy set .. ' . ;...-........ Ipptt ,' a is fly opinion that title eta plus le rausing.most of our Think It over end let me' know ' . trti-ubl- watt-ya- - ealak., ,..- - ' ' . , if... - S - I P ck . NEILS rETERson, , BY FRANK WINN During the performance of the first abelom. Mal operation in medical hisum7, a mob welted outside with rope swung over s tree that they might iose no Um, lir hanging the surgeon when the patientAled. and this in N pit of the fact that. doomed to death unless the khile the WOMM-WM- I were applied, itccortling to the account in thug volume detding with doctors in the 'lady days of America. Mt book is filled with fascinating sithrniore-draw- n S. historY is far too often overlooked. for hers- in Ameries was deveitrped the technique of surgery which has saved thousands of lives. and also the use of general anaesthetila for the avoidance of pain Both of these great to medical science brought only ropnoach tor their originators, and the battle of the new discoveries against Ignorarice, prejudice and trosepplied religion is fully revealed in this de- lighttul book. The volume covers the blegraphies of xis pioneer doctors who mond out prominent in the developnwrit of the 'science. The first is John Morgan. physitlan for the Cordinental dui. - big the Revolutionerv.War; a man whoArmy gave his ail to the cause of healing and was repaid by thsgrace, and' poverty,. Then is taken up- the Bush, the young signet-- of the Deci"rviarlti: of independence and breaker of but meaningless medical trwlitions. sacred, in Ephraim McDowell who .defied death on a woman who was doomed on exciting story. of man and persecuted for living-aheaof hil time. -Daniel Drake. famed in Medical hiss .... La,. Beaumont 'rho fought. hie way frompoyerty to One, ,d1 the leading phyalélans of' all times are the subjeCts of other chapters and finally- the Voiles of Crawford W. Long. discoverer dL the effects of ether on paid rod William T. G. Mor. ennui-?asthm- ' , -k - ,z frnurn-pitaserir-U. - , tilefir-Wen- '- DOCTORS ON Ii011SEIIArK, by James Thorn Flxnr, The Viking Press, New York. 270 , pale-dile- (voilal. thth .then drive the raise its rates again. The case is strikingly eimilar to a goveminent hydroelectric project. The projeet may be uneconomic, but once the dam is built and the power plant installed the current The mere fact that it loses money,ohat it costs the latpayers---moneyvibeside the point If those ferries had reduced rates before the bridges were authorized, it would have been eeceesary, in all computations, as to whetherconstrattion ot wucluhrittges-was--economically sound; to figure tolls on the basis of ferry rates. This sort of figuring was done, but it wan on the basis of a ferry charge, hence a toll. on the bridge. On that basis calculations were made showing that the bridges would pay. Had those calculations been made on a straight toll, 50- cent round trip, which the ferries are now Charging, the bridges might never have be'en - , coo-war- to I . . able than when the first night's reports were available. The Republicans in a state-wid- e test captured from 92 to 95 of the delegates to the coming constitutional eonveetion, including eight of the fifteen delegates at large. In the legislature contest, the results are-just as significant, for instead of 76 Repub. Ticansarid- 74 Democrats, as the figures have been, the new legislature is to he composed of '85 Republicans and 61 Deniocrats and 4 American ILabor representatives. Even In the mayoralty contests In both New Jersey and 'New York0 the candidates using the Republican label Avo n more victories than the Democrats. Thus, out of 39 contests in New York state, 27 Republican mayors were elected to 12 Democrats, while, In New Jersey, out of 19 contests, 13 Republicans were elected to 6 Democrats. In nearby Pennsylvania, the Republican drift was particularly noticeable in the defeat administered to four constitutional amendments sponsored by Governor Earle, Democrat. In the city of Philadelphia, which was won by 200,000 by the Democrats a year ago, the margin of the local candidates el ecied by the Democrats thiettiated this time between 1,700 .andl18.700 and it is stated that more than an per cent of the registered voters went to the polls. The actual majority by which the Re- publicans beat the Democrats In Now York state will not be available for some time with rexpect to the legislature contests.liut The total of 1.3ao,M4 for the Republicans as against 1,33a,606 for the bemocrats on the vote for delegates to the Constitutional convention would seem to indicate that the RePublicans will have a substantial margin, especially since the unreported districts are in Repub. liain territory. -National ragnificanre can be attached to the fact that the .RepubliCansboth houses of the legislatures of New Jersey and Neiv York liecautt it will tend to bring out into. the open the conflict between state - and national policits. The tendency of local legislators on the Democratic side has been to accept blindly The laws written for their respective states by the bureaucrats in to surrender-thei- r state rights. Thinsrtenapapenad of Republican majorities may cause the clash between federal and state prerogatives to become more pronounced' in the ecacing two years, perhaps even fUrnishing the outlines of the 1910 campalin issues. - -- , if he'd been ,11& deal. whether or Writer Says Govs,rnment might stay in the home until the Work Is Harmful law put them out at considerable Relief Walls Is right in saving-- that lo.fm to the seller. 'economic an la Newirt unemployment But lets suppose that after this - Editor Deseret wait; The goods that might he tiave saidra munber of times U. S. census shortly tO he talten;, yorodured by fifteen mi1Hn unern wotdd he a sizeable addition that the Government's 'policy of that they could Include photograph plord toZthe notionaL wealth. However - giving Putting4nti fiogri- print- - identification for St is deflation, and not machinerv benefit to thk honest citizen. This circulation was, only nioney,into that caused most recent linemplov,s would pmtect, the business man s shot Jo the like Firing merit There 114.110t room here to aramst those who beat hills by discuss that at greater length. artM It helps until the effects die mroving about without registration, ind and then conditions are perand it would also be a benefit to RICHARD S. MORRISON. than before. The re, the consumer who has to pay a - haps worse on Delta. cent the stock exchange slump higher price. and other indications show plainly Now if such things were dons that the Government is withdrawPlan Suggested For and a man could not twat his hoot' ing from the field and that private est obligations without leaving. the take up the business cannot Building Of Homes 17nited States.: ibe government slack becatuse there is nothing done would take little chance in initninir of are Unit.el nPre Wilma toitelp it do $o. identified 'Citizens $25,0 to,,P20 to States citizens who are honelit Jr y The Government oponding start, make a down payment on a home ad the mill going but the supply 'with Is Pledge Oven to,The govene they had a Ithignee ttelbe and nth ' not made permanent- and so millions who wouMn't steal he muent that any empigyer could de. ' soon as the supply is withdrawn 5 per cent or 10 IW'r rem fromomido.ver' s atilloPa if Oar had to The mill stops. That twinge up this his solar:IT-decided upon... until f account:for each ono used. Many the loan was NIA. question: isn't it better to IncreaseSixes and perpetuate a. prognati-who formerly paid tht.tr honest He Iscruld ha obtlaili te re7 ffill ,which will give every citixem.1 a loan regarditis of whether the real hills are now on the had credit chance to work and thus keep the nnntPanY and no disagreed list bonus of Unemployment and- - - estate on the true value of the home- - He - money circulating than to stop the,' adventitiee 1,4Vond their flow of money, throw people out nettA make his firrestigations tint kt' .. Mfllioflt of : ,,.. 4h,n ottett to , ,..:,...-,....,,7 nestinteettn. - Editor, Deseret NPAA411 C. C. inil .cote that he would like to hear more about wager. I die want h.,- enter the general cutatan ofthe. aubiettTh ere are some very important point Whieh the are often overlooked when subject of wages is discussed. First.1here is an eccammic puneiple that the wages' of lab& 'are of labor. Wages are. not paid by emplovere from a reser e fund of capital. On the 'both wages anti profits come from the product created by The joint free will. cooperative of. forts of labor and capital workinif . .. together. Since the weget of labor art the prodoete of --labor. if labor productively can be tneraised. tre,1411. wages cart be Labor eying machinery and tech the mnns nologicalpiogreso provide of increasing the productivity ()X tabor. and thereby make higher There is he other wages wav Praising wages. Profits do not represent grime; qiinfrintbrratited froM what might . ., . ,. ., resent a part of the gain that etnnea .11 at just as dead - had The Democrats and Republicans been tied with a 19 to 10 vote in the state. Senate, but now the election has given the 13 to the Democrats' S. Republicans Likewise, in the assembly, Where the Democrats had 39 and the.Republicans only 20, the new, lineup is 41 Republicans to only 19 Democrats. Over in New York state, the Republican gains appear to be even more consider. one-wa- y vm, declaration to the world In support of the principle "that a great nation. the German people, once more shall have the Oar, to whieh they are entitled and which they once posses.ged in the African sun.'1 Eventually, Germany's demand for col. ()flies or for additional territory on the colt,: tinent of Europe' will find decisive expres iion, either in the form 'of war or through some other dramatic' means not yet revealed by Herr Hitler, with his capacity for aut.-- . prising moves which have enabled him in the past td accomplish his purpose. When next he moves, presumably, it will be with the approval and support of Mussolini, eon. stituting a formidable alliance which will be, however, inferior in all respects to the fortes - first realize.d. ture. Out in San Francisco tka ferriees naturallY, suffered a, huge loss of business when the new bridges were opened up. To recoup some, they obtained permission to reduce their rates. So they made the rate. for a car 30 cents instead of 50 cents, and the round trip 50 cents Nkbereas the bridges 1,0, capibiggest sharp of the tal receives a smaller share in . i Thus, for instance, while Senator Moore. Democrat and personally popular with Repub. licaq. voters, ...managed to squeeze through with a margin of 46,000 as compared with hie 231,000 in 1934,- the fact is the Republicans achieved a subetantial victory in completely reversing the situation in the raate legisla- , WHAT READERS THINK .. I " at- Wrong." -----. Now 1 , shows that the voters supported the Repub. - r "But- he's Looking for presidential timber. -- - BY,DAVID LAWB,MNCE'' (Copyright, 1937, by The Deseret News) NewYorkvtAsiuwaToy; Nov. and New Jsrse:f turned from eratie to- - the Republican. eclump? Analysis of the latest rettirns of 'Tuesday's election - do well to consider whatecualuititavesppwe onutiad is happening, and prob. the San Francisco Bay ablyfeeriels, It might ixiduet them to exercise a Ilttle foresight Instead of waiting for hindsight to prove they are righttssuming that they are . pecause the trouble about waiting aisuming they !wear rill;;odemthonstraat atui will be in the position insisted on exercising his of the motorist-whtraffic under, regulatitms: sights -" Bs WAS right, dead right, as he drove along. T-- - . -, 4' - -- 1, ,,o. - Republican Support GUins By CARTER 'FIELD - - -------- -- ' - '' , - o ' i'.:1'.f , . ., t ti ,,,,,,,. ,,,. - II, (' ' 4., 6.., - ) S. . ' .of religion to elk terninon human life th , differences between the rich and the poor, y ' betweenemploym and employe,. betwee- n, will and day laborer, gradually' - ' capitalist disappear. Ms trouble is that: these people . ,,.:.",,, X,....... we-ca- n , ' ..' itctectirfargreateftatinthertthan-Wes----- ' ., , fr . - -- . - -- : mt d I - - 1 ne-ed- ti.,,- wo-rl- ot r , -, - UtillijExecutives ,Warned try to put themselves hi the place of the other and by sympathetic understand. ing seek to adjust .their difficulties. It is absoiutely necessary that there shall hesymtiathv if there is to be justice. --- an a thederrotratithations Irthey uhtte-Ievery way if we are going to be just to men, common cause. to an We must a ideal. cause, just to Just At one time Germany had her place in understand it: we must sympathize with iL the sun. also the possessioni both on the eon, Not only justice, but charity demands this. We need to utideratand' and sympat3ize.444.--- - ...tinerit of Europe and' the continent of Africa that were neceiii-rorder that,the great virtue of charity may But the demand for a larger.place in the sun be born and develop in our hea'rts. If we are led her to seek military glory. and. she lost. going to help ,people, we must sympathize Her present claim to the right to repossess with them. The motto of some of the finest her African colonies Is not yet fully con, work in the Work' for the poor and the ceded to by other European nations although Before We can is, "Not alms, bin a friend. there have been - favorable gestures to this understand them, -really help people we cncL Willlust stand side by side wilh'them, touch.hands with them, look out of aimilar eyes a similar world. Then help: Things Unseen Some one halt said that sympathy is the We do not need' more material- develop.-the' stream of means by which ment, we need More spiritual development; we do not need more intellectual power, we his mercies unto those who need the succor of their fellows. We are His agents and one need more-- moral power, we do not need more knowledge, we need more character: of the things We need to do is to cultivate: we do not need more law, we need more re- the flower of sympathy in our hearts. As Jesus- was touched with. the feeling of our ligion: we do not need. more of the things infirmities. so 'we ahould be touched by the that are seen, we need more of the things that are unseen.Calvin Coolidge. feeling of His great love and sympathy. will-n- of syrritalthyllas - , . has hy- thne, my he ' leerned to glow For othenk good, and melt at otheres :Yet, taught woe.": III k "Rhetoric," aeva Plato, "is the art of rid. ing the mind's of men.' Art is knowledge made efficient by skill. The Deseret Nem recommends to University students, the rut. tivation of this most useful art. The spoken word should be a atimulation, to the mind and music to the ear. Ability to make it such does not come without'study and train. ing. - - -- .11 " tunny. sympathy commort in his time when he said: than-W- I r1 Q. -- , - ', , 714, .1 - 1 - , - ' Duriog recent years, perhaps partly due ts'O''' u.,,,to the- development of' speech depart mettle in our eollegen and universities, debate;ora lo,,,11".42,4111' 'Ilirtivt trv,,drattlatita and other speech activitiee .4;004k.' have- - attreeted more students, and greater -- 4 fl public interest and appreciation. Rut not; - aco forenticIltfit felt it that this; is withstanding 1tivities at the University of Utah' are given ., 1 relatively too little attention as compared ., , i it with. athletics. t 11. There ii every reason why young men ii and women ahould find the field of oratory; - Q. of one and debate, rhetoric public speaking fascinating interest. To have the ability, by ,...4 the acquiring of knowledge and speech train . in ideas a and clear, ing, to express thoughts lk,,;.; persuasive and forceful manner is a rare accompilahment This is a convention I ril; when groups from the four corners of world gather to tliscuss ouestions that (1-cern every department of human life. The nTy7ror tor Zor- he . . - because an Interest is felt. in the of-ttribe- - As time gees on the tribe enlarges to he cityAthens and Sparta In tmcient Greece. They were all Greeks-- . but the Athenians eared little what became of Splits, and neither Athens nor Sparta was " ',greatly Interested in the fortunes of Mace don. farther along we find that Nations came into beingEnglish, Italian, French. r German; nationalities, and gradually the and understanding widened a little. but only; here and there wart there any appreciation of the true relationship that existed in hurtanity. Jesus taught something wider and letter than bad hitherto been taught. Paul speaks of,,God as having made of one blood men to dwell in all parts of the ' 1.,, , . Three '' 77 , extended members - U.-- t - - - ' Its Sef-The-ttnited-States--With:-- - Provo Thursday. Friday and Saturday of this week, representativee- - were in- - attendant's 1mm the Denver. Wycnning and Utah Uttiver. sities, from the ontatir State College. and from the Colorado State Collegft o - tau ton - -IN the eighth annual tournament of Abe 4 , ns. , " ' ............-....- , - , MAN lives within tile:Anse of his sym, pathies. He does not live beyond that arerange. Ernemon says: "The secrets otlife 11XentAmia to and excePt "'ildrittihwil syinpatiV flP1 A man is great. by en rdurh a thftv of the him in corning veloped pobility relation with the different as peels and phases of life, The t h.17' What do we mean' by, Fy word ,Ineans to suffer crieel moth It is it feeling corresponding to that which another feel& At first thought it wouM appear to be chiefly an emotional quality; and it is e& sentially emotional. But yet 11. is Not more than that; for ?Wore we can feel with a persem 8 situation, a thing, we intim; Intelleetually 'comprehend, the situatioo,, for the is Ihnited by out un4rstanding. One r, feeling , may we how true thia is by tracing for a mornent the growth of the race In relation to this matter of Sympathy. At the very beginnings of human life, blood relationship, confined-tas it WM understood. It wai a matter of the larnilyt ,Therf was no feeling, no care, prac tically none, far any one Who was beyond As the- - famiiy grew into that rtarmw-eircle-. a larger. asanciation the understanding and the sympathy- extended. By and by the lam - - ......,,k ... Forth, Each Departments Of Government , . Ons Full); Independent In Its Own Field . - A - he-a- Wi-Staiid---r-- ' , 41'lly and nee;1 fleshkm. 'There is no caste in Make all - blood."Edwin Arnokt. ' Nr1 V . ' ' ,.----- .. ' - . - " 'N .,.., . ...4, , - -- vcre4v..,4 . .., ira.:)...:,' . ,,,,,,... t DESEEIET NEW& EDITOnIAL-,,.....PAGE; -- . (I. ko),ty IT 7 Cor :: 9:717.711;''' , - ti Ifrtt - ,,F,7--.0- ,Lt ,-4,,,oegr ...,....' 6.400-. 4,,Alk,- (- .:1,,,- t ,,....- - .r- :101",' 0000P.'Le .13,404,00mp-.. ' . ,.!1:'.... 2;111WA:1 t - - .' SI 1.- ..,iii'.4-,- 7. 7 ......i.,..;,..., 4 4--. 1 ..14.- ' a - -- - - r erdlawhoertadiawasiurg"ht , z - whei Imeti ltsore Upottlherelurtant cal proleasitm ere told. - L - med1;;7- |