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Show 'V .STV---. sfefe s yi'a TIIE HERALD - JOURNAL, LOGAN. UTAH, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25. 1D32. PAGE TWO. The A Herald-Journ- al orns - DRIVING THE DESERT They tell me that In California, Nevada and Southern Oregon hundred! of geld panners are making wages. So far as I can discover K done in Idaho. U not being Ia cloae to thousand miles I saw bat one prospector. He was setting out with two fat mules aed heading across a sagebrush flat with the thermometer at 103; headed for the bare rock hills, ! there to hole up width the porkys, tbe Jack rabbits, the rattle snakes wand the coyotes. I This district, the Boise region, was very well combed years and 'years ago. When a Chinaman gets .through with a country there is ot much loft for the individual ospector, certainly not for tha amateur - gold pannes or even luice box worker. I In the old days hundreds of im migrants starved to death, perish, d for lack of water too, on the desert; reaches of Idaho and Utah. I wonder that somo do not perish today. There is a stretch of washboard, desert driving between Boise And Salt Lake, taking the southern that ties many tourists up ate, the road I saw car after for tiro rsnairs and his included not only the rubber gamps of which there are bar. but prosperous hlions abroad rs; big cars all sluay and every-hlngt Some folks Just can't learn that riving around town is one thing lid driving at 50 miles an hour fier rough, loose rock at more inn MO us- - the shade L some-kint- g else. years of grief I have yarned to start on long trips nth good, preferably new rubber h all four wheels, a couple extra kner tubes and a good spars, jounted. Also I start out with a ymplete lubrication, never let the Ink get under half full: watch jy water and on rough, loose tad cut my speed to 3ft miles r hour. On the highway I hit lom 4ft to 45. Usually I get there I quickly as the e boy I put In ten to a dozen Airs and bold her to the keb always drive right with the bid throttle on long trips. Four-- , to five hundred miles of kert driving in a light car in a p means that you must be pre-re- I After, e d before you start if you wish avoid grief. And what a lot of lef a fellow can get with two Vwouls forty miles from a water at midnight. Strelow put $50(10 into the Ford company when it was founded. In 19)d he sold out for $45,000 which, to put it mildly, was a very fair return on his Investment. Dut that profit becomes insignificant by comparison with what it would have been if lie had held on. His $5000 would luie grown, ultimately, to a great many million dollars. He would have become one of the liuiext men in the middle Went. Of eouise, he had no way of knowing that; no waj of knowing that that thriving little business was to break every record and dazzle the whole world. JL acted prudently in selling out when he did. The only trouble was that he happened to be in a spot where prudence was a worthless virture And that, piobably, is why th liatiou never grows tired of hearing about the rise of Henry Ford. The whole utory is really a frontier story; the story of the lone prospector who stumbled across a gold mine. In it,, rashness gets rewarded and caution is left holding OMViVlM t; POETS ed "Western Autos" ... -. Buy NOW tp Save1 GET EM IN NOW By planting madonna lilies nov. the bulbs will get a good supply of foliage ready to tuft, them rver tho winter and prepare them for errly acpvity next spring. Don't be stubborn, you big fat off jour fat before your fat throws you into the discard Do as Mr. S. A Lanier if Sawtel'e, Calif, did read his letter: "I hue used two reducing Mis in no benefit but since using kruM-hrSails euch morning in m coffee 1 have taken off 7 Ibis in a week and eat most g I like. I weighed 243 lbs. 8 months ago and now I weigh 190 lbs. Take one half teaspoonful of Kruscben Salts in a glass of hot water every morning -- cut down on fatty meats, potatoes and sweets -- now you know the safe Way to lose unsightly fat. For a trifling sum you can get a jar of Kruschen Salts that lasts 4 weeks at any drugstore in the world - but be sure and get Kruschen -- your health comes first (Advertisement! men-thr- ow 3 rk erja jl lifuU I O cubricafrng tail-en- Udl. REDUCED Long Run IT Gee Gee will now sing the Carom Me Back to include! the 4 rewpermtendent of billiard song schools. nor clerk of th board of Old Virginia. education. This political bug jou hear so 'U"b ahnnt must be the fabled RAMaKB'B BLUFF y straddle btig PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. 26 Pfii Mack Hail, forest lookout on the top of snow clad Mount Hood, A F DIARY iokingly told climbers ha would Bl petrol buggv home, and t gladly pay 35 cents, a dozen for on (v greats stark of Goldeggs, delivered, although the mar- dining ket price was 20 oerko. Barnev en Bantam corn, which do bo the Young. 20. bank clerk, climbed noblest footle ever I atedo inbe this be. Mount Hood, presented Hall with ljfe, especially uhi'ifeit a dozen eggs, collected the 35 smeared with ! melted butter and s I do laird a'lpreciate it dt; and cents, and- - descended again tha. Im more for dinner inasmuch aa night. e it doth keen Dame Brew and Brew, those giggling madcap, from nicking idle e litter chatter, STARTS 48th TERM SHAMOKIN. Pa.. Aug 25 (V Miss so busy do they be devouring the Edith Startzel will start her savori i corn 48th successive term as a public school teacher when Shamokin Y6u can say this for weeds' borough schools reopen in Septem- They never know when they're ber Most of her teaching has been licked. .done Jn the Steyenq gliding, here wntf hei 'wont has been main ;ly ia Hitch up the team, Jake, were the first grade. going home. With Every Western Giant Tire . and Remember Our Tire Prices HAVE NOT BEEN RAISED A guaranteed new Blue Ribbon Tube of corresponding size absolutely FREE with every'4 or 6 Fly Ba-bi- 1 vk) on Sate Besides Those Listed Below! Maty I TODAY'S DEFINITION baseball club is one where two victories in uicaession are referred to an a winning streak. A . Cache county schools paid out in salaries to principals, teachers and one supervisor 3169.256 during 1931-3This is shown by a compilation of Supt. J. W. Kirkbnde. As part of his annual report of the Cache county school district during the operating year 1931-3J. W. Kirkbride Superintendent has made a tabular summary called 'Distribution of Teachers and Salaries. He will submit his annual report soon to the county board of education. The list is divided Into elementary and high school teachers, and a separate space is provided for principals and the primary suner visor. The 'table is segregated as to the number of men an women in each class. 8169.256 GOES IN TEACHER SALARIES Thq punclpals, supervisors and teachers received an aggregate of 5169.256 ia salary during the year. In the elementary school division the table shows lue following facts and figures: One man teacher in a one room schoolhouse at an aggregate salary of 31080, leaving his average salary the same figure. For tbe schoolbouses, there were T male and 3 female teachers. For seven men ln. .tractors an aggregate wagr of 37360 was paid, leaving the average yearly pay check, 31051. The nine women received an aggregate wage of 36320, or an average wage ai 3702 per person. In schools of three or more teachers there were 11 men who drew an aggregate of 1 1,310, or an average wage of 31028. Tbe women instructors in these schools numbered 63, earned an aggregate of 350.320 or an average wage ' ol Boy! anj-thin- NEWPORT, I. A ug. 25 URi Russell N Dana, 60, Pawtucket cotton manufacturer, recently com pleted in the Newport Casino ten ms tournament for the 42ud sue cessive year He was eliminated in the first round. In 1900 and in 1920 he was state champion R. dip them into her coffee. . SCHOOL HEAD E I EAR Pounds--0- h 1 'Wait no longer . . in just a few more days, this great Midsummer Sale with all its 4 sensational bargains will be history ys Our liberal Free Tube Offer , . . greater Battery Trade-i- n Allowances...savings on Lubricating Oil . . . and scores of greater. Cam p Goods Bargains ...all say CORNER Ll'l Gee Gee is just crazy over demitasses She says she loves to the-wildern- ess. miEDBY ES-- II 53 njCC3TP fully glad we met you. Drop in and see us sometime were always at home. , WAGE SURVEY SI (X 4 2nd Fat Man Reduces ? For she was a telephone girl. which cuts squarely across all maxims. For prudence and caution arent,. after, all. deeply rooted in American life,. The nation was developed by men who lacked those qualities ; men who could risk all they had on a plunge into Well always have a warn spot in our hearts far the man who strikes it rich and confounds the experts. - finance an answer. a whirl. But I pleaded in vain for an . , - More money is lost on cinch bets than on any other when you are utterly certain something will happen it seldom does when "everybody knows" the stock market is going down you can make money by betting "ev er body ' is wrong about it nine limes out of ten -- AND, LISTEN: Well believe what a man tells us until he starts to say he's absolutely sura he's right and then we begin to copper all bets - I pleaded with her for My brain was all in maxims about prudence, caution and the that it is extremely comforting to find a case s o 1 hard-heade- .. A anc J.i Gee Gee savs that her home town Is so law abiding that dum my In the police s.ation game of bridge has been able to hand'c all the trouble calls In the past two years Those bankers who refused to finance Henry Fords d busifledgling company acted wisely. The ness men who him did just what hard-headbusiness men ought to do. The men who risked their. little savings with him ought, by all the rules, to have lost everything. It just happened that Fords concern was the excepton to ali rules. And it' is probable that Americans will always take a keen delight in tho whole story. We get so many k - every these certainties is wrong jeer : like in -- - -o iThis Is Abner J. Oaaplpc, sensational Ming bus. Inn1ha promoter, amavaed whs a f npltknn during the past exporting o I d automobile to tires Africa, when they are Used as teething for baby ring-elephant p -- the bag. copy-boo- there are leaders but mop up on to . of course In the' first place alcohol isn't poisonous unless taken in huj;e when it becomes as quantities WITH JIM MARSHALL poisonous as coffee, in huge quantities ' I'm sure I'm right about that" sej enin the second plate - said the visitor being sure h title proves that investigation was right about something -- and moderate live longer tinan ao ws knew he was wrong teetotalers we have seldom known any in the third .place no law one bure about something that ever stopped anyone taking a the something didn't turn out to drink and never will be haywire and in the fourth place we a has perfect genius presume to doubt humanity that anyone for being wrong about things of was ever divinely appointed to with other people jwhuh its "absolutely certain" and contrariwise its usually Science -- which is uiaially right right about things of whu h it is -- is seldom sure about in doubt anything it searches for the truth As an example -- take a It and when discovers it it ad dry" mits that thats the truth m so org.im.ation . . . ' all its members are convinced far as science knows -- buc adds of four things: that new knowledge that aicohol is poisonou- discovered tomorrow -- may alter - (B) that indulgence in alcohol things completely and so jnake shortens hfe truth into tomorrow's todays (Cl that drinking tan be myth abolished bv laws and It used to be "true" that the , (Di that they are divinely SMS was the center of the ur.i- i We ate now waiting for An heuser Bunch to declare a dividend of 10 pints of Bud we i so r, and for Mr Pabst to announce a special dividend of three stems of Pil saner icas greatest indusViaf bonanm. ed d n great financial Amerind! Tbu recent death in Detroit of Albert Strelow, who wad one of the original ktotklioiiiers in the Ford Motor company, revives once more the gaudy story of Amer- And so because he wanted to live he sold pencils. The fact that he wanted to live is not strange so do we all. The fact that he sold pencils is also not strange- - many people do. Neither did this seller of pencils exhibit any seeming strangeness in dress or manner over any other pencil seller: He wore his clothes like one emerging from a bramble thicket in great haste; they were dirty He was unshaven, walked too with a cane, and moved in nervous The lining halting ambulations. of his coat hung down behind and each Jerking step flapped with He knocked on my door. He spoke in a thin high pitched, unpleasant voice. I am a very poor man. Would you buy a pencil for five 7"cents, or six pencils for a quarter I bought one. He had red ones and black ones. They were regu- 1 lar penny pencils dipt in dye. told him they were penny pencils. He shuffled his cane and coughed two high nasal coughs. ' It costs something to color em; and a poor man must live, mister." He bad the look of a hunted animal in his eyes. A poor mao must live, mister," be repeated. He may have been a genius, but he needed bread. And so he colored penny pencils and sold them for a nickle. year-ol- . . , he-k- And yet they sav WHO STRIKES IT RICH A POOR MAN MIST Lit E! BY GRANT BEDFORD tho I.) - - Ilimdi, folks! The president Notsonul DistiUer Products corporation ban declared a epeei-t- l dividend for tick balden of 12 qunrto of of THE ROMANCE OF THE ItlCIl MAN SHAVINGS N BY E TINGLES! BY BAY B. WEST, JR. , Certain emotions never can be The inward tingling expressed: of the first view of Bear Lake light from Logan canyen . . . The and shadow of a sudden flash of Words are inadequate lightning. There must be also a brisk tinglines that awaken ling within the memories of such sensations. Rockwell Kent has come nearest the story to it in N by E. It of a trip to Greenland in a small boat , . . a shipwreck . . . remainto paint pictures. ing . It is not a story. It Is a senes Not woodcuts el sketches. of thouah the hook is full of them. Wore sketches. His woodcuts are supreme. His wordcuta full of artistic daintiness that defy description. A feeling that we are tasting the fragrance of the first epriag flowers. He does not interpret nature That is superfluous. The sea, the sky, the green hllis, tbe mountains All have dropped inof ice. to his book.- - They do not taste of ink. They are crystal-lik- 2S7E2B3B9 "Proclaim Liberty throughout the iaad" Rum Sitting Atop the World (Cache mlmi mi m Humor Newspaper Scripps-Canfiel- d appointed Our Afternoon Every Week-da- y Published at To West Center street, Logan, Utah, by Cache Vailey Newspaper matter at tbe Co, N. Gunner Raarnuson, president. Entered as second-clas- s poatotflca, Logan, Utah, under tbe act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price in Cache Valley by mall, (2 50 the year in advance, by carrier 33.50 a year in or 40c tbe month. Outside Cache Valley, by mail 35 00 tbe year. Saa Franaisco, Chicago, Gilman, Nicoli & Ruthman, Special Representatives New York. Boston and Detroit , R. W. MARTIN, Ads. Mgr. PETERSON, Managing Editor I y" p JVestern Giant Center Traction Tire . . . and a Jumbo Extra Heavy Tube to fit FREE with every De Luxe Double Duty, Super Whipcord, or Western Giant High Pressure Tire. (Wear-wel- l tires, not included in this offer.) Pi-- - At These Low Tax Free Prices You Save up to 40 AUTUMN ST YLE CREATIONS 46c ! up-At these reduced Midsummer Sale Prices every motorist can now afford to use the finest oils made . . our genuine Long Run western -' . Oil ... or ourPureguaran teed 100 Penn sylvania Oils of unsurpassed quality Buy New to Save Last day, ISepvember 3rd. Long Kim Oil in BULK and Sealed Cans Other Oils in Sealed Cans only! 100 Pure In Bulk gallon 46c I Pennsylvania Oil 1. set'ed I can gal 6t 2 gal. sealed can.... $1.48 5 gal . seJod can $2.62 a 5 gal. sealed can....$3.57 ... -- 1 CR EATER BATTERY Atk for Prices on sixes not shown, and on our Super 1 Whipcords and High Pressure Tires ... TRADE-I- N ALLOWANCES two-roo- 3792 Superintendent Kirkbnde's rroort shows 14 men teaching principals in the elementary schools drawing an aggregate in pay checks at oe an average yearly - of 317.520, 31271. The one woman teaching principal in a similar school of three or more rooms drew last year an aggregate wage of 31160. For the Junior high school division the figures run: Nine teachers, male and female, not including principals, received aggregate salaries of $5860 for the men, and 33608 for the women, or an average of 31114 for each man teacher during the year, and 3962 for the average woman instructor. Two. male teacher principals of the Junior high schools received 31400 each during the vear. MUFF RENT F.N'DENT AND CLERK LEFT OUT In the two high schools main- tamed, in tbe county school ays- -' tern during 1931-3male teachers numbered 26 with salaries aggre- gating 337,585, which made an av- of $1445. erage per instructor Eighteen women instructors ia the some faculties drew an XFTegato of 317,337 which averaged 3963 per . teacher. Two principals drew in the high schools $5197, an average for each. I of 32598. One primary supervisor was paid j 31800 for the year. JbiA . partijuiat . report does not ! , j Super Values during this great Midsummer Sale. . . .These famous f Western Giant and Wizard Storage Bat- teries at sensationally LOW PRICES and a greater allowance for your old battery. Style has decreed the most beautiful shoes for women and the young miss. Midnight blue, black, ... and brown are the colors in ogue. The College Boot Shop has received its autumn stock. The most cut standing thrg in shoes this fall is These prices are net, WITH YOUR OLD BATTERY I , the improved quality at a much lower price . . . Shoes now priced at $2.93 .TO ILLUSTRATE: are comparable to t'noe sold last jear for $4.15. Shoes selling for $4.93 are Similar in quailty to those foimerly costing $3 95. THE NINETEEN' THIRTY-TW- O FALL MORE FOR YOUR SHOE SLOGAN IS: SHOE DOLLAR THAN EVER BEFORE 6-1- 4 and 6-P- Construction Iy " kd ,ul1 double-thic- , to bead . . . pim h, cushion strip and "breaker. v under the tread'' k or protection, tnp which makes them equal to imI vder Ht treed tires. t A" tl Camp Bed $4.98 Aluminum Kit, 5 Pieces $3.95 Camp Stoves Instant Light $3.95, $5.80 and $5 95 Vl Gallon Jug 89c Gallon Jugs ...$!. 1 4 and $1.49 Vacuum Bottles. 79c to $2.25 Stove Legs raise stove to height of 22 m. Fold compactly .$1.47 r- - t Camp Cots-...2.1- SWA!-- " 5 n 7 9 12-- 7 1 Hy. Dly 3 Wizard Hy. Dy. 11.95 Wizard Hy. Dy. 13 60 Wiz'd Dodge Sp. 9.3S Western Giant 3 85 Western Giant I0.4S D -- 30 folding styli to $2.6S 3ffc ; 24x24 inches regularly $2.69. Camp Table 32x3& $3.95 value. Sale Price $2.79 Reduced from $24.75 for this Sale $4.9 5 $445$ Standard 545 Hy. DfytfS 85 Hy. Dt7 95 Worlds Oldest and Largest Retailers of Auto Supplies " 170 Stores in theWest- - Only! S 7x7 Auto Tent, special at. Other tents. $7.25 and $12.95 1 6-- Defender, $3.45 Sensational Reductions on these and many more articles , Style at a Price 3 3 Wasco Wizard Wizard Wizard Wizard Camp Goods on SALE! 1 8x10 3 "6-pl- ' ly a No Shoes Over $4.95! . it 1 28 No. Main - 39c Touring Atlas Canvas Pail, with strainer 75c Tow Cables, steel 69c and $2.29 White Ray Gasoline Lantern $4.45 Camp Axes . 88c and $1.19 Carigas emergency gas can 63c Canteens several styles and trw 85e to $1.72 I MtaM 1.1 -- elaaeaaeiieiiiheaLei La |