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Show irfWri. Hnrm 6ifa ttk TIIE PA HIT TWO. Published i Vi v.'ilc!y West Center tire- - t, Log-in- . f'i rriiO Valley, 5 rents n roj,v. $5 1)0 a year. By ErtcreU as I. i!x rty all the tii. o'';' 1) I llliiU." Liberty Br!! I S'cond- - ! i rn.r.n-h- It fi5). in CaiV earner, 4) tents a m 3, Member UnitcJ Br, Li iguo of New , papers. .ss, J , r.iattir (t the ,s net of congress, March i val ( 'Im I'l'.'i. , , nion-h- ' 1 a 1 171. ::r A 1933. G. Smithfield News A no host party was hld at J. ltd! (he home of Mi-- . A Thursday afternoon. Bunco enjoyed d'inng the afternoon after which a dainty lunc-Thc-- e wa.; served pnent ware: Mesdames George Heaps, James Forrester, Joseph Forrester, MyrV. tle Pitcher, Sarah Wood. J. Wickham. Vv. R. Dtppe, M.iry Hjdeu, Welter Read, Dun C.- - n. D. J. Newbold, Laura Gylienokcg, Vane Raymond, William B. ard Mrs. P,ot,e H.ll High scoie prizes were awarded Mrs. Dan Cash and Mrs. Myrtle Pitcher. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Alder and Mr and Mrs. Lavon Fuhnraan ot of Mr. and Providence were gu.-rtMis. Homer Dames, Friday evening. Mrs. Pjchard Raskeliey entertained at a delightful afternoon In honor party Thui-sdrof her daughter, birthday aiimvct jury. The afternoon was spent i a mu.,ic mid games after which dainty refreshments weie served to twelve guests, Mrs. T. B. Fan- was Ho So' is to members of the Women's Literary club at ner home Thursday afternoon. The program w.u. given by Miss Gwendella Thornley, vv ho reviewed the hook. "Fountain, by Chiles Mugani. Four gui ts were present. Mrs. Hazen Dninc.i cnlertained the members of her bnd(,o club Fnday afterroon at her unrae. High score prize was awarded to Mis. Lenard S. Miles. Delicious refreshments were served to twelve members. The Just A Mere bridge club met at the homo of Mrs. Leo Nelson Friday afternoon. The guests were seated at small tables. The appointments and favoi.s were in Valentine design. Covers wti-- laid for twelve guests. High score was awarded to Mrs. Floyd Thornle and Mrs. George Rasmussen the high cut prize. Luncheon was ' s a year. $3 Vi 'oftne a. Login, P- I outside Cache yr-ir- FEBRUARY MONDAY. Cites Need For Long-Rang- e Farm Aid Nexrifripfr Co, at ' UTAH, LOGAN, L, ournal TTie Herald-- J I'-- IIERALD-JOURNA- 'teen lV.itaii Utah, indr the nnj The Siripps i R-.- SETTLING THE WAR DLiLF PUZZLE It ii oV.i nie tliiu,r ; linr lie ,tnK. voom l'llf ,v';t ( id ,, ( , i: is, tin , Still iii .. nll'i . iv fif i y i tli!'.;' th,)'r, VI .MS i Ihiit niadv i lioulil,' Of couf.-- , if Km it. r.i ke h r. W.-r'I his no v. ,s i,m vi' 1, T relax, Iluvuly s.t :i luMiit hint, the finder in the holloa at our nrek, mus- the huk of i;c it nt l . Another wi ifc hit v inn s If ixiiiit of the chin uook r. f i lotla'i' f i' tn si v. ill n pt rout a sled;-- h y lo nl.tK is to refill v;.' , report lor l')J3; won't get y.ni down, noth-- j win-- Ids uL K nevor worry callouMti about lurnth on their frm: Housework, but. till SO IHjllliU x i i worry Women ,ivi m fro mi lUhui' .a-ji-- w h.iM'c I lu.! v. ill A nAsfc USING the woro: NEVADA Hoover nevada chance to win. to ",ere in favor of militarism ANTICIPATION By eyes is rudd.g by pour oue head is humming boa i dude cure. I in hubby I ur I ileO luad spr.g is cabbing. tear-drop- s, vv, tj teut out the "obey" iLu i m tiie miuriuge vow is to Ore wear to cotton hiions.ifuivl I'li'L, uhi.ii tMinl t;L pHijivi-it Will, cheer up! G is a man who nJvocule higher appropriations and lower taxation and keep a straight face while uoiug it. A politician i. t Lady who died In Des Moines heavUni a medium that recently en is just like earth. You made a muAuae in your destination, lady! A good is a wife who has a yen to run eveiything but the furnace. home-nmang- er OPTIMISTIC The American be family may getting smaller, it is rising ta the intellectual scale. Newspa-pe- r editorial. pifity, nvvfr p.ii.lc is svttleil. . Sail ruling aiioi.t the farm home of CVctt Kest ner near Deshler, O., farmers eondueted another ami h mg lit for S3 U farm implements and lueskick im.it guged for $330. The ny am buyers then leased them all back to Kestner for i'l!) , ears' at a e tiny a year. Three thousand neighbor ing fanners, some perched in tree,, the murtgage holders representative from bidding. This ii the in.it of three stones, by Rtp. Marvin Jones of Texas on the farm allotment" bill now IS HELD before congress which reflects President elect Roosevelts views on farm relief. Siluk miriinodity pt'iu,., uo.'.gn. Uvil all make moricy. So we oujfhl lint to bo i.hout duhts. We oujfht to stand firmly for our liylits, and for justice. liut vve should be reasonabl?; talk thing3 over; voik oid the t soiu'lo.n we cu o nmi:.!. Our mahi. is to pel bum, i, . la EienUiino oJ;.- o'.iii f o e .id rdi'iuled lo th-- t. VOlilM , I'.'i-i-tle- pl'i-(l- , d . i FUNERAL FOR OLD PIONEER HEP. MARVIN JONES Chairman of the Committee on Agriculture, House of Representatives Written for Herald-Journand Fact Taken From Official Records) , ! NEA Service We, as Americans, are unwilling victims of the strangest famine SENATORIAL HIGH LIVING ever recorded in the annals of Three senators Liftman of Nevada, Swanson of civilization. Barns are bursting with plenty, and yet millions of Virginia and Shipstead of Minnesota recently visited hungry people are walking the the Pacific coast on a junket and how the taxpayers streets of our cities. The farmer ! cannot sell at a living price and paid in many instances the man in the They stayed at the Olvmpic hotel in Seattle for a city cannot purchase at any price. week. Bill: $1370.92. It is clear that something must in at San the Fairmount Francisco be done. They stayed t Tne National Emergency Act i for two weeks: Bill: $l()K5.9r. or "farm allotment plan, which I in Ambassador at the Uis They stayed Angeles for have already described, is wholly two weeks. Bill: $2221.32. an emergency measure designed to meet the present crisis. Under the How one senator could consume more than $400 terms of the bill this plan would worth of hotel in a week hasnt been explained. run for one year and could be extended to two years by proclamation of the- president. Tins measure is by no means the 32le remedy needed for the present situation. Not only must the farmers buying power be increasThats the Only Way to Build Up Our Foreign Trade ed immediately to a ratio com-- 1 mensurate with his pre-wand Prosperity buying ' power, but this ratio of fair ex-- 1 A noose of hemp dangled change must be continued perraan-- I from thn barn rafters' r, ently. fr ot Cecil peer o Further legislation of a e (., asin neighbors gathered and CHAPTER SIX is nothing difficult or nature is needed to remove "bid ins foreclosed tools Although onr hopo, as a nation, plicated about it. We have many an the discriminations from which stock for him. Tli noose farmer now suffers and place and ies to a very great extent in other industries that should re- drew joshing and hilarity from of protection in agriculture on ft stable basis. building foreign trade and in find- - rtlYc n the fanners, but the finance ing more and better markets for th'dr Lglit for the home market, ITTIEJS i ompany these the bolding the mortgage our suiplps goods, we cannot nor taiiff, business UNFAIR TAXES Ini not bid. should we undertake to go on a should stop. There are several contributing AH movements whuh have as ,ee nlle )asls at this tune. Certain American industries need their god the closing of our ports the farmers.0 he 1 ,0,OT;tc to should have it crimination through unfair trade :V; ,s foreign commerce are both protection. They Kr pounds; the key induitry of the .sound and dangerous. barriers, discrimination in our for "n , shipment structure, a medium Norljlwt, must be pioteeted. For, Hemembei, vw must 'Soli Ameri freight-rat- e 1S 011,X cents, of exchange that doesnt truly T1 oa just aeioss the Canadian border can f,lrra miplemem, snipped from measure values and a tax system Tno End) are competitors that throa'cn our ta New Orleans for do- as lumher prothat bears too heavily on the farm, Chicago very existence niestie use, the rate is 85 cents ducer.'!. aud ranch. TIim - real protection, t'mi ouvhly justilied by the i Nobody realizes any better than per hundred pounds; when intendthe farmer that the American dol- ed for export to Europe, tiie rate r,f the win Id. It is ju d we Americans CN bei au-The word. Effei Vesoc. lar today docs not truly measure is reduced to cents. Trans- WHY AUf Wh.tl it means: To hubhlo and the value of commodities. buy nud absoib our lumber surited into farm production, the COTTON? plus. hiss, ius fermented liquors, water or limestone on armers dollar will buy now only The fishing industry, too. ni 1st Cotton is the greatest export be protected to tiie point whom it v.htih i i id is poured; hence, to ialf of what it would buy a few commodity in America. It is ret ears ago. It is manifestly im-- 1 liveliness or exhilaration; i un compete for the American em-nfor to he gay, r.ieity, misi hievous or aossihle for the farmer to pay sponsibleIf it ishalf our balance of Wc.CAN buy and trade. to encourage right ..cots that were created over the the exportation of steel and iron oui sui rills' of Catnnd fi ,h. boistrous. T'hese tariffs, hov.iver, imi ,t be Wheie it came Irom: The "ast few years with dollars carved by reducing the railroad rates, our present economic struc--ur.t of .s. and honestly ar- - Latin, cffervcaecre, from ex plus The obligation to pay these why' would it not also be rignt to ranged so that they do NOT opor- - fiivcsnie, to bigin boiling, 'e theje reductions apply td debts with dollars ate against us This can he dune. Inmi.iineed: Kfer-ve- s farm prod- cotton and wheat? gained from ucts is respcnsible for a great Unwise relief measures nave ag eat ol the trouble from which gravated the situations that exist this country is suffering. today. Artificial measure shuuiu GLANCES Every thinking person believes be of a temporary nature only, in a sound currency. But there and even then th-- y must be caremust be a sound way to stabilize fully workd out and analyzed. the value of our medium ot ex- They may be nectssary in great change so that it will not produce emergencies, but can never take the wreckage of values ail over the place of fundamentals. l lie country. Such a program O ir farm situation cannot be should be worked out by those healed by a system of credit. It who have studied our money sysr , is mo.c fundamental than that. tem. Tne necessity of refinancing Proper cicd:t is necessary, but this does not pay debts; it tends .arm generally is recogFuirer price nized by all. A rcamortization of to incieaso them. uicsc farm mortgages on the basis levels p.e necessary r o debts may be paid and so farmers can buy payments with low ,i long-tim- e s- -u ia.es of interest must be accom- the products of our iaiils and plished before there is complete factories. When agriculture languishes, our leccvery. factories close and our BALLS TARIFFS IN EQUAL rusts. Wuen agriculture n.uehinety prospers, Taxes bear too heavily on the the country prospers. farm and ranch. In many sections during the past few years the return from the farm has not been sufficient to pay the artual tax .evy on the property itself. A jhu.ing of these burdens, as well ,.3 a reduction of governmental expenses and levies national, state and local is very much to be desired. For Many years tbe manufacturing intere- ts of America have been working under a banner of tariff Behind the tariff wall protection. they have prospered through the medium of increased prices, wwde the farmer has had very little protection. The farmer has been obliged to buy in a protected market, while at the same time he has had to sol! largely in a free world market. Long-tim- e application of this discrimination has resulted in an CONSTIPATION 6 YEARS, r ftv-alPB- s unbalanced condition which thioat-en- s ' A TROUPLE N0,V CONE 5 1 Z the entire economic structure. John J. Davis had chronic Another discrimination is the six yeais By using! of n du.vd Adhni.a for cr praitiee allowing pfj fce fre:;-h- t sjon f,ot rid of iti raeu on many nianuf.ic-turv- d Hhi iefls like a new pert.on. 8rtules when tney are to I lYt'i temiiL al.i.ut tin.-- , Helen, I inusta been is, quick Biting safe. City be i hipped abroad. For instance, P1 il Corjpany m Richmond by somewhere tonight. whn niarmf Lrtured iron And feel Prcvoript i n Di'iig C ). ad. SELL AMERICAN! ke-tii- yi DIARY tfs a!i-e:- 1 .''irn out lights i. c. when not in NATURELAND At the present time the name basilisk is applied to a lizaid Ve--- j found in Central and Smi-i live ypncrsllv i - biph overhang the water, which they plunge at the slightest sign of danger. ' ui n t i" iv v. ge- b iv-'- iji no one I,,. But the basilisk" of the until r,::' n .,jvh i bin'.' ever existed, v ..a quit. another thing. According to Plinv, it was a kind of found on African a Its pane, besiliskos. meant little king because its body was rviked with bright spots, those cn the head having the appearance of ! or diadem. Ai other srakes were raid to fly from the sound of its hissing, making it the terror of the desert. Tt was able to kill herbs and finds bv its touch sometimes even Jts breath " Yet weasels cei'M destroy this monster. NatumV-now believe that this basilisk was purely a creature of fiction. i I -- - I des-er- - - 1 i The jobs. more Uxci. tiie - introducing Mr. Rex Packard Mrs. Fay Fulkcrscn is the gues. of her daughter, Mrs. Ron Hendricks at Sait Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ceorgo P. Tooison end son, Grant, left recently Idaho, where they will spend a mont-- i with their son, Dr. Gi orge l Toolsou, Mis. Andiew Garnet entertained at an attractively arranged dinner Monday evening at her home in honor of her birthday anniverThose present were: Mr. sary. and Mrs. T. H. Chambers, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pitcher, Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Monk, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wright, . Cl ward. Burial was in the Logan city etmetcrv where the grave v.as dedicated by Orson Smith. COUGHS Dont let. them- - get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion combine the 7 be9t helps known to modern science. Powerful hut harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotic. Your druggist will refund your money if any cough or cold no matter how long standing is not lieved by CieomuNom New Appointed Manager Of Conoco & Para mou lt Service Station Located cn First South & Main St. Mr. Packard will distri- bute Conoco and mount Gasoline, Process Motor Greasing And General Service First South And Main Street '(adyj Dc-hle- . ' ''Jeo rt l''' Vi: TALKIE TRIPS ilj e. ienti-iea".- 1 high-price- low-pric- SIDE By George Clark mort-gage- s f ri,.'C mm: mtii tmi i 1 - $m Now we can advertise it Products are nearly always put on the market before they are advertised. Quite frequently, changes have to be made in an article before the public generally will accept it. Color, design, flavor those are some of the things the public has to be consulted about. Sometimes a product wont sell at all and simply has to be discontinued. As soon as people show that they welcome an article, and as soon as all refinements and improvements have been added, then you could hear the manufacturer say, Now we can advertise. When you buy advertised goods, you may know they have gone through the experimental stages. You may be sure that the manufacturer knows they are right and that he is willing to stake his reputation on them. You may be confident that you are buying goods that have sold and that would continue to sell without any advertising at all. For advertising merely lets all of the people know now what considerable numbers would find out by word of mouth ten years from now. Of course, advertising goes a step farther. Word of mouth hardly ever tells all the uses of a product. It often doesnt give the real reasons for its superiority. Advertis-intells people all about a product and the numerous ways in which they can use it. g Let the advertisements be your guide. When the r says, Now we can advertise it, you know that you can safely say, Now we can buy it. manu-facture- -- - '-- vf i? Ad-Lr.- The cwei gafMrfrti riieMSMtPiiivgaaptwajura long-Tliti- . his dave, early up, and to reading in the histories alxiut the great! names of IMI8 and 1873, and lord! tunes do Is even harder then then now, but after awhile the times get batter and tiie peonil in ple forget thir trouble. d iv s. as in these, the bigwigs and king's ministers do promise to sae the. people, but when tl- - time for saving comes it is the rciiila thmuselves th it do it, t the bigwigs strut preud'y an beat their breasts and take !) credit. So, thinking, to the T chapel Friday. Bishop O. A. Ponnc was in charge of the rites. Mr. Ricks died of infirmities incident to his advanced age Mon-'l- y at his Logan home. Speakers who told of their long acquaintance with him and members of his famiiy and lauded him for his faith, integrity and ia- Hustry were Frank and Serge B. Benson, A. V. Reese of Benson lh ward. President E. Car-do- n of Cache stake, President Joseph R. Shepherd of the Logan temple," and Bishop Sonne, Many sprays of flowers as well as the large attendance 'bespoke the high esteem in which Mr. Rich was held in Logan aqd other roris of rsoohoovalle.v his pioneer home- Musical numbers comward prised selections by the choir, and- a vocal solo, Going Home, by Charles O. Peterson. Prayers were offered by Prebident Joseph Quinney of Logan stake presidency and Bishop Wil Burn Worley of the Logan First -- - no-ho- st com-Eang- cou-wir- anarchist, says is just a batik d dic tator." . . . Yes, and a dictator .s just a baffled anarchist. Associates of many years paid tribute to pioneer qualities of Ezra Ricks, one of the settlers of Logan oi 1850, at funeral rites held for him in the Fourth ward L.D.S. Jr-rf- M-- e -- d An s VIk... , t .0-- by Holmes jackson The homo brews still working. rroi Si I'll i..k it-- ar - ) - i this evteut: We wish children Waio iangpl in tuaouf to do K. B. IE p-- w ,(Eery StMTENCE I ir SQUANDERMANIA ure trying to , .mil '.l,i i,iu ..'Up has been i.i p fo is. ea weeKS. It is t,luOf lit he is trying to start bj Lj j AluC ICu muvemi wile v hi I BY ,i your i ) .. .a,., . j-- h thumb pultun;; 111111 tol . pav, ve can't ut pa.In or vvijpialanit it. p'O, c , Rc-- i.dioai . t stiif-nHs'ko- U ) r.oo.,1 it SAYS: KttUil; tho p, i.hivii. an . Scttll-m- AFKiAX ArXLK.sA(' I lit1 s can pay, and .should hut ,vt- - (Mat ; d'. t f . mi Hion by anny anil t ha i llcttci' tn ' thi n.u,, n.iv.v. sainiut more Mill tri fui.i iiioi. !im , in t Ji ii: So I lu Mr. U'io 't i j4 o, do ei -t d(-- i i.; n in to i n f friend- iu (lepll.v ,( i'ur u.; to t up vpv fnil ulk it f r. it on f high h is", hnv, i tli;,t tl.-.io arpuifu nt' :tui ' ' ktt is Ne'. ' i iiM.. f i fTri an.. i wilt ho starting to a ImisAoss mull run to t.ih ,i lu Hkr timoM koU return ujfh ( J.'iGUt 'Mini, . ihr on t iiM-- i i !' si ill, Faiinpc 'Vi' ; at she had to. i (M,wn. Min piU tin. a1 onr to pay. j;.. , 1 fnlks! to t I ri'ini r tip. wmM Skill slu i i.i'i'i'D l, nr win liln hi I'iii .ip;i ,tr, iii.ii:L'y m TL'tis; n , ( and Mrs. Ronald Iltxher, ir:. an.l Mrs. William flodridge. and Mrs. William Hyde of llydi Park and Mr. and Airs,. Langlou Chambers. Mrs. Len ir J S. Miles enter! lined at a party at he. home Wednesday afternoon u honor of the birthday an.iiveraiv of her son, Ned. Music and game, wire enioyed. Luncheon was spiv-e- d to Rut l MourUn'.on, Caroline Facet, Lui do Roylunee, Jenna Lou McCann. Maryim IJuirmtt, Bullard PiPhoi, Bud Raymond, Uco-d!- e Roskelley, and Hud Low. Mix Golden Reeder enter t.iincd tea at her home ct a Kcnsim-UThe following guest, reeently. weie present: Mrs. toy vi Mrs. Fd Nelson, Mrs. William Godridge, Mrs Loren Low Mis Mi's. Mr-rAnton Mr. and Mrs. li.ms, n ant Bounce the birth ot a ten p;uiil born son, Wednesday, Fcbrtnii y J Mis- - Cura Sparrow and Mi.. Ruby Tidwell i ntertuinect the Club at a liunco pun, Sewing ricentty. Light i rfrcsiim. m , n served to .axtecn guests. Mr. Herald-Journ- al sli&rt-ehan'.'e- , I'll PiPiiwiiiiiiH |