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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER Publiihed Every Friday at Hyrum, Cache County, Utah. Enter at the Postoffice, Hyrum, Utah, as second class mail matter, under the act of March 3, 1879. Von Wahlen, Manager Subscription Rates: Per Year $1.00 Payable in Advance. fACE THE fACtS-E- IX THE PUMP i After five years of pump priming', but the prospect of profit is virtually the water seems to haVe gone back gone. In addition to necessity for into the well. It doesnt do much correcting such a killing tax system. good to prime a pump unless the mech- Air. Lippman adds that "business will anism is right to hold the water have to be assured that the We might as well face the fact that strike is not going to be permitted and it looks as if too much political meddis going to be an end of there that ling with business has about sit-do- just tolerated violence and of government wrecked the pump. Walter Lippmann, one of the most favoritism in collective bargaining. fearless and realistic writers in the There will have to be peace with the nation, in a recent syndicated article, utilities . There will have to be peace shows that mere government spending with the railroads an some end to the will never solve the question of de- arrangement by which rates are fixed pression as long as business incentive by one government board and wages And he might have Is discouraged. Easy credit will only by another. of legislative processation a business added, unless in the hole, put deeper it is permitted to make a profit. On posals in Congress to destroy business the possiblity of business expansion and drive up the cost of living. under such conditions, Mr. Lippman IIow can pump priming do any says: good with rotten valves to "With capital gains and undistrib- permanent uted profits taxes piled on top of enor- hold the water after it is raised from the bottom of the well? mous all surtaxes, Youll Like The Difference In Our Cleaning and Pressing the risks remain SCHEBY CLEANERS & TAILORS Phones Hyrum 109 Logan 926 Mothers Day Sunday, May 8 Say '''Iteila" by telephone if you can't be with hen, Long distance rates are reduced all day Sundays and every night from 7 p.m. to 4:30 a.m.' BIRTH OF A SONG -- Massachusetts boy, born in Somerville. His family moved to Cambridge, but still Harry wouldnt play the piano. Or when he did, he ragged the music, which hurt his other ear. s UARRY ARMSTRONG i : : is a From ASCAP Fites Paul Carruth and Joseph R. By "SWEET ADELINE" By Harry Armstrong and R. H. Gerard Armstrong went to Boston and became a the corner he formed, part of a wish-Fo- r conspiracy to collect old shoes, tin cans, etc. pugilist, perhaps in preparation for a who fellow fulfillment campaign against the bait they used the old songs of the day. threw the No. 12 shoe. Down on PI ie sis After catching gloves for about a yef York larry caught the Fall River Line to New career dth $2.65, the fruits of his pugilistic i his jeans. In his inside pocket was a sonj e had written at the age of seventeen, ailed "My Old New England Home". . MYWIFE.BUTCIH KID, NELLIE 1 LOVE rou DEAN," BABY DOLL, THE FRI RAG, Prizefighters were a dime a dozen in New York, so Harry went back to music, performing in beer gardens and music halls. But there was that song in the breast pocket of his heart and it had to come out. He played his song for Charles Lawlor, author of "Sidewalks Of New York" and for Jimmie Walker, future Lord Mayor of those sidewalks, but no lyrics came. A poster of Adelina Patti gave inspiration and a new title, "Sweet Adeline", to the New England melody. Dick Gerard supplied the lyrics. By his membership in the American Society The song lay dormant until the Quaker Arm City Quartette performed it. It became the of Composers, Authors and Publishers, cow to licensed close harmony song of the world. While strong's melodies have been fof Armstrong toured in vaudeville, his songs mercial users, and he derives payment were performed without payment, in hotels, the performance of his works. cabarets, theatres and other places of public amusement - ; ; -- - j |