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Show p ifwiiiimri TIIE PAGE TWO. HERALD-JOURNA- WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY LOGAN, UTAH, L, 1 4, 1934. Anthracite Coal Reported Found in Nova Scotia WELL, OF ALL THINGS! , The HERALD-JOURNA- L MONTREAL Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 centa a copy. By mail. In Cache Valley, $2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $3.00 a year. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3.50 a year. Proclaim matter at the postofflce Entered as second-clas- s Liberty thru at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March 3, all the land J879, The Lib- Member United Press, NEA Service, Western erty Bell Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. s -- 1 has celebrated his 32nd CHARLES A. LINDBERGH it just seems rather odd odd, be and somehow cause it is hard to realize that this world figure is still so youthful. By R. E. Peat It is no exaggeration at all to say that this aviator is men in the world; and one of the eight or ten homebody has his wires twisted, few men in American history ever have had more of ad- folks! No sooner do Dot. Bern hisel apd I get our little argu miration and honest liking from their fellow countrymen. nient over the juvenile probtion His exploits already are a part of American tradition. officer smoothed out than along he made time since comes that a B. H. Robinson, secretary It seems long, long dazzling flight the juvenile court commission, to Paris and stepped into the position ofAmericas foremost of, and everything goes blooey once airman. more. And he is still only 32 years old! It hardly seems posRecently, I quoted to show and this Judge sible. He has a record of fame and achievement such as where rolunui agreed in that regular biw usually is won by no one except those who have grown enforcement agencies have no problem. place In the Juvpnilo gray with years. Then See. Robinson simils our n He says that: Briefly, our atti which, in one tude the juvenile will be inter- court has been thatdoes not con organisation btitute a Krasnogowski, separate juvenile police set up for the purbrain needs to constabulary enof the To be sure, most people who have enjoyed the feeling of mental lassitude that follows a good dinner always have suspected this. But the Russian doctor made laboratory tests to prove his point. Nerve reactions are definitely slower after one has eaten, and usually about an hour elapses before they attain normal speed again. And the worker profitably might take heed of this fact when he goes to lunch. If the brain loafs after a meal, it logically follows that it loafs more after a heavy meal than after a light one. who does anything resembling brain The work will find his efficiency badly impaired if he stuffs a big feed into himself every day at the noon hour. wage-earn- i er i Behind the Scenes in Nations Capital 1 had Shoemaker What, "of our inunoral shouted, BY RODNEY DUTCHER AKA Service Staff Correapoadeat The role of a WASHINGTON minority political party In this era la that of a hungry shark hanging around a leaky lifeboat. Essentially, that was the position of the Democrats during most of the Hoover admlnistra-- , tion, just as It's the Republican though position now. Democrats noisily scornful as depression deepened had no party program. Nor have the Republlcan8 today. Current Republican moves have no signlfletaee except as they mean a party can't let congressional elections go by default. The time to get interested In Ogden Mills speeches, Hoovers visits east, and G. O. P. congressional attacks will come if and when the New Deal begins to dis- appoint people. Republicans in Congress know that. dead? pURIOSITY la doomed forever to bite Jack Garper, the vice president, and Senator Joe Robin-- ! ' son, the majority leader. If Gov- ernor Pinchot of Pennsylvania doesn't do something about it. Mystery still shrouds the con- tents of a letter which Pinchot sent to the Senate last year, when he forwarded the credentials of Senator "Banjo Jim Davis, for- mer secretary of labor. Pinchot stipulated that It mustnt be opened until conclusion of Jims trialjn New York on the Moose lottery charges. The was plastered with envelope Pennsylvania state seals. So the thing stayed in a safe while the special session adjourned and a Jury decided Davis should stay out of prison. It still was hers when Congress reassembled last month. Garner and Robinson went into a perplexed huddle. Presumably the letter said some nasty things about Davis. Presumably Davis would love to open It In privacy. But, as an official document, It shouldn't be opened without being made public. Jack and Joe agreed they shouldnt have received such a missive in the first place. Joe asked some newspapermen what they thought should be done. They advised returning the letter unopened to Pinchot, whereafter the governor could me his So the letter own Judgment. went back. And those who knew about It are still wondering. (OnpvrlrM. J1SI. NJCA Service Inc , at- tacks never brought such bales of denunciatory mail from constituents. The weakness of the Mills speech under present political lumlittone is seen In the fact that his one positive stand which seemed to be for a reciprocal tariff policy deserted party tradition for a Roosevelt Idea and at once created Republican division. hate spoiled the effect of many a good rpONGl'E-KUP- S Congressman Franc Is Sch. 11. Minnesota Shoemaker, was making a dandy against the "big navy" bill, to the delight of pacifists in the gallery. Suddenly the House Inuglird. Farmer-Lahorlt- c, (Continued 1 from pag6 one) are agreed uoon the urgent But they need 0 investigation. All split over how to make it. One group, having in mind the n agnificent job of the Federal Trade Commission in its water power probe, wants It to handle tiie milk inquiry. Others favoi a congressional committee as speed iir and more spectacular. Representative Herman P. Connecticut Democrat, bar introduced a resolution giving tne Trade Commission jurisdiction. Senator Pat Nevadas bulky is lining up sentiment in for a favor of bis resolution special committee. A compromise is probable with the betting odds on Senator plan. n v i i ! PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Ambassador Former Walter Edges recent bashuinss about the Republican nomina accepting t.on for Governor of New Jersey should be taken with a grain of salt Several days after this public decimation, the politically ambitious Walter had a secret conference with state leaders. He told them he was willing turn provided they could L to pull out all other candidates hut one. The party leaders agreed to see what they could do. Edge, actually, Is not after the governorship. He served two terms as governor of New Jersey, has no desire to ahoulder the burdens of a financially harassed state. But he does have his eye on the 1936 G.O.P. presidential nomination. A Republican strong enough to entry the governorship of New Jersey m 1934 automatically would be skyrocketed into a vantage point as a Republican Presidential White hope. And that is the role tbi wealtny Walter fondly loves to contemplate ERRY-GO ROUND Th New National rx uncll soon will launchEmergency a nationwide publicity campa.gn on the activities and achievements of the New Deal , . . Lecturers moving tictures, newspaper articles, billboard posters, ail will be used in the drive . . Representative Louis McFadden, of Pen lsyivama, elected on both the Republican and Democratic tickets in 1932, recently told the House that ne had at last discovered what has happened to the Republican party. Said he: "It choked itself to death tiving to swallow the candidacy of Herbert Hoover for re election. . . One man is preventing repeal in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands He is Senator Tydings, chairman of the Insular Affairs committee. One month ago the House voted Repeal for these two irrular possessions, but Tydmgs bas pigeonholed the bill in -M- 1 . . pose peace, preserving forcing law and order, detecting crime or in apprehending the ot fending child. The regularly constituted peace officers are entrusted with this worn regardless ot whether Juveniles or adults arc implicated. It is in the manner of dealing vrith the offender after discovery of the offense and apprehension of the effender that the law makes a distinction between the adult and the juvenile. In handling the child offender ,the juvenile court replaces the criminal court and a sympathetic parental approach to the child's problem is substituted for the harsh, repressive machinery set up for dealing with the ai.ult criminal. of the The relatonship police and sheriff's offices with court may be the juvenile compared to that commonly prevailing with other courts. It is just as much a mistake to expect the juvenile court to do police work involving jnveniles as it would be to expect the district or justice courts to do the police work Involving adults t Concluding his article, Mr. Robinson says that' Person, ally I cannot see any justification for building up a separate police constabulary m the juvenile court to duplicate the work of the present peace officers in the juvenile field. Our police and sheriffs now have the entire field of preserving the peace, maintaining law and order, detecting crime and apprehending the offending parties. If a classification of that work is needed, it should be set up in the form of a department within the offices police and sheriff's rather than in the juvenile court. I believe our present and sheriff's departpolice ments are already handling this problem to good advantage and therefore, cannot see the need for such a classification in Cache county." If this Is correctly interpreted, means that the it apparently juvenile probation officer is nothmore less than an investior ing gating officer for the juvenile (curt, the police and sheriff's office taking over the full duties of rounding up the young criminals. This is exactly at mills with Dr. Rernhisel's staement and also mv own in which we contend that the police and sheriffs office, exand cept in most aggravated extreme eases, maintain a hands off policy. a suggestion, why not let the local juvenile court and the state department get to. gether and adopt a uniform As policy. Then, if they persist in bringing in the adult depart, meats, let the appropriation for a juvenile probation officer go to a special officer for the city and county law enforcement agencies. As Mr. Robinsuf. son says, there is not ficient juvenile delinquency for tame of. full a having such ficer. But if there isn't enough there for such an officer, certainly cannot be sufficient business for an investigation officer for afUs all arrests must be made and reports prepared before investigations can start. Interesting to watch is the bid for public approval between the great national air hero. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, and President Roosevelt, hero of the New Deal. President Roosevelt startled the nation by a sweeping cancellation of airmail contracts when senate indicated collusion in hearings cheating the government. His spectacular maneuver met unqualified approval from the man on the street although some higherups protested on the assumption that s man is innocent until proven guilty. Lindbergh, through his attCol. Breckenndge, orney, joined in the protests for a lair hearing in a long telegram to President Roosevelt House Sunday. The White immediately branded the telemove, gram as a publicity showing that it was released to the press before received by the president. General sentiment seems to Is merely be that Lindbergh a incurred debt paying through his Inclusion on the famous list" of "preferred Wall street and for the tre-- 4 eL other than t fee man she loves. and the one assigned by his government to put an end to her espionage activities. The Austrian captain has to choose between the arms of the spy and the arms of the firing squad, for the spys accomplice has already gone the way of all captured spies. The cast includes Edward Ellis, Sam Godfrey, Lueien Prival, Mischa Auer, Ben Hendricks, Jr Leonid Sncgoff, Evelyn Carter Carrington Jane Murfin and John Wray. wrote the original story. good intentions with an explanation of his own, distinctly opposite from ours. EATING AND WORKING to work for a living PEOPLE who have includes about all of us another, ested in the recent statement of Dr. N. I. famous Russian physician, that the human loaf for about an hour after one eats a meal.. of Discovery war-tim- LINDY STILL YOUTHFUL best-know- (REi has surrounded its huge deposits of anthracite coal Bennett, are reported in dispatches from blonde star, Constance with plenty of realistic atmosphere Kemptown, Nova Scotia, where as well as a strong supporting cast the only anthr .cue mines in Canheaded by Gilbert Roland, in its ada exist After Tonight new production New seams of such importance Elaborate and colorful setting! have been found, it is stated, that a in cafe Vienna, including a large it is expected the output may be complete Austrian village, a field sufficient to supply all of Canada's of station and the railway hospital demands. Luxembourg City provide the acDevelopment of the new seams tion backgrounds. will be undertaken by the I.eith The theme is the glorification Anthracite Coal company, organe of the spy, but the muck ized by Canadian and American and mud and harrowing scenes of actual combat are, thanks to Di- capital. rector George Archainbaucl, misAIRPLANE BRINGS FIRS It is a behind the scenes sing story, the war within a war. As Alberta EDMONTON, one of the most dependable mem- valued at $125,000, 47 bales(PPiFurs of bers of the Russian intelligence de- weighing about 1,400 pounds, thorn, were partment, Miss Bennett is on the landed at the airport here by Pilot Austrian front to gather informa- W. Leigh Brintncll in a big Fokker tion about troop movements and a plane. He had brought them from new type of warfare, liquid fire. trappers' posts in the Northern The action shifts from Luxem- Nahanni country, stopping on sigto across Austria Vienna, bourg nal to pick tip balea He reported then to the danger zone behind the extraordinary traping activity lines and, at the close of war, to the Far North, due to a peacetime railway coach crowded throughout Increased fur prices. with troops and citizens returning to their homes. an After Tonight- - presents dramatic unusual snd striking climax, with the beautiful Russian spy trapped by her enemy, none o RKO-Radi- Last Time Today IOSERT: MONTGOMERY Air Line Sets New Speed Marks in Southwest j mendous salary paid him by companies airplane through which he apparently amassed a comfortable fortune. DO YOU KNOW? These Curious Things Oai Even Will Rogers, Americas foremost humorist, has been forced to backtrack protests against Roosevelt. Monday, he protested the cancellation without a fair hearing and Tuesday, demanded the scalp of the higher ups in the scandal together with a declaration that he always paid his way whpn he traveled by air. The latter statement is explained by a common pratcioe of some nationally known columnists to heat their way over the nations tiansportaiton system through giving these roads free publicity in their columns. SCIENCE NEWS Keeping Up To Date One of the latest means by which scientists are outfitting Mother Nature is the forcing of growth of plants indoors, where no sunlight can reach them. Recently, in a large eastern city, a model house was installed in a skyscraper and plants and shrubbery planted around it to give it a natmal appearance. The plants refused to grow and in a few weeks died off. Experts diagnosed the troubleA illumination. as insuffic.ent was inbattery of floodlights stalled, producing four times as much illumination as the plants had been receiving. They were burned only during the daytime. v.ere almost Results magical. Within six weeks the flowers bloomed and the shrubbery grew steadily. This method has been found successfull in a number of cases, and provides a new step in the science of plant control. are some there However. plants which respond to treatment which consists of reducing the daylight hours instead of increasing them. Usually light, tight covers or boxes are used. 0ache Humor EST. BY HOMER BREW Hot and cold running water in etery room. Try our merchants' lunch. Board by day or week. No peddlers or agents allowed. Apply to the janitor, first door to your right Post no bills. Spring will Howdy, folks! soon be here and all the little flowerets and budlets will be coming out. Also Little Homers tonsils. a ROLL OF HONOR Today we take pleasure in intro. during R i Horace! of the c h ni mill din- - Bunion, BRIGHT MOMENTS In Great Lives IF THE TRUTH WERE TOLD FOR RENT: Three rm. apt; kitchenette, hathette and aleovette. fa Joseph Willard, long time clerk the superior court of Massachusetts, in Boston, relates an of Col. G Edward anecdote Parker, who was rather pedantic. Colonel Parker was writing a life of the estimable lawyer, Mr. Rufus In relating an incident Choate which happened in the third century before Christ, about the time of th" death of Ptolemy III, he appealed to John S. Holmes, who stood by "Didn't he die about that time, John "Who's that thats dead? asked Holmes. Ptolemy III said Parker hat! said Holmes, "What! stretching out his bands. "You don't say he's dead! STUDENTS TURN TABLES GREAT FALLS. Mont, q Pi ofGuy- Palagi, chief probation ficer, whose job Jt is to round up and girls who play truant boy from school, parked his car too lrng in front of Great Falls high school, and was arrested, tried and fined by the student body. . TOWN LIKED SCRIP RAYMOND, Alberta U Pi This town, which issued $20,000 worth of scrip money during the de liked it so well that, de. suite easier conditions, city of. finals are considering anothc. issue in 1934, THUR. - FRI. - SAT. Entrancing at an angel.. Dangerous as the devil! lured Her lip Dallas-Chicag- tvhok batallions to their doom! Worth-Oklaho- ht Tulsa-Kans- SHIRT IN MUSEUM BOSTON, (U.R) A mere shirt now has a place of honor at the Boston Musseum of Fine Arts. Found in the tomb of Giza by an expedition from the museum, the shirt is elaborately pleated and estimated to be at least 40 cen- turies old. 4 , New Deal for Coughs and Sore Throat medical The has profession found that a Cold is an interna) infection and must be treated internally. Thoxine, a doctor's prescription, for Coughs and Sore Throats, is based on this discovery. Unlike gargles, salves, and cough syrups, which touch only the surface, Thoxine goes directly to the internal cause, relieves reduces fever, and congestion, quickly brings you back to normal. Why take chances with a patent medicine when you can get this doctors prescription for 35c? Deat Prescription mand Thoxine Drug Co., and all other good drug stores. (adv.) CONSTANCE BENNETT . "3t AFTER QIUIRT tOlAND Directed Archeinbainl Cooper, B Cwp Mmrtn C fur. producer ( j j. -- ' 'j V .TiVlSl Jj W GIRARD THEATRE NOW PLAYING TODAY! Duck Jones in his Latest Feature a Real Show for Old and Young . hara desert. All nations possess rights except those who are guilty of the un speakable crime of having a small army and navy. of The custom of fasting, particularly the religious element of did not begin with the Christian era. In ancient India it was the custom of fakirs to starve themselves and to inflict upon themselves all sorts of punishment This fasting developed to such an extent that it became a sort of worship. Among the Eskimos, too, the custom of fasting is an ancient practice. At certain times of the year these people are forbidden by their religion to kill certain kinds of seals. Even though the community may be facing starvation, and seals be plentiful, no one will break the religious laws of the tribe In Dnmitive life, fasting was a means of magic persuasion when the gods had to be appeased. Out of this first custom of fasting to avoid danger grew the idea that fasung was good for the nerves and tne body. It was thus that the early Christians referred to fasting as "a means to prevent evil spirits entering the body. was once a district trat,lie vbi So'd' The Bronx several in towns to the iiwstj comprising fastidious man Westchester county, New York. about his appear- It received its name from an ance in t ache. early Dutch settler named Jonas In some sections the Mr. Bunion is ho Bronck old Dutch pronunciation is still fastidious that up in bed used. In 1898 the district known all night to pre- as the Bronx became one of the vent his pajamas five boroughs of New York City. from getting There are about 110,000 liairs baggy at the on the human head, about 1000 knees. to each square inch of scalp. Joe Bungstarter, who is an evo- Women have a greater number of lutionist, says that some of his hairs than men, and blondes have encestors hung by their tails from more than brunettes, because the hair is of finer texture. The avtrees. Yeah, Joe, and some of them er igo hairs on a redhead's pate ire but 90,000, although red hair hung by their nei ks. is but a form of blondeness. The brunette ordinarily has an aver-ag- o TOUGH JOBS of 105,000. Selling water wings in the Sa- The seeming uselessness of empty old tin cans is refuted in the practice of many firms in recovering copper. They aid in producing much of the world's supply of copper Waste water from a mine, containing dissolved copper salts, is pumped in troughs containing thousands of the discarded tin cans. The cans dissolve, and through a simple electrochemical reaction, a sludge of pure copper is left m their place. Legend has it that a Montana man accidentally discovered it when he tossed a few cans into mine water running through his backyard. Finding that they turned to copper, he acquired a year's rights to the water and became wealthy before his contract expired. j I fa KANSAS CITY, Mo. U.E) The records past year saw speed broken on all routes of the southwest division of United Air Lines, the company reported in a recent compilation. New records for the various routes: One Kansas City - Chicago hour, 52 minutes; 405 miles. o 8 Five hou:-- , minutes; 965 miles. Fort City Fifty-eigminutes; 182 miles. City One hour, M minutes; 214 miles. UTAHS NATURELAND T D ABIGAIL GOSHAWKS It fortunate for poultry ownoutlaw ers that this feathered spends most of its time m regions remote from man or farm flocks roaming in the fields would soon cease to exist. City flocks, if in open runs, would likewise suffer and it is likely the owner would have to do some careful watching to even see the raider so quickly docs he come, seize a victim, and go Grouse and song birds and also rabbits, squirrels, etc., furnish the regular bill of fare for these powerful, fearless birds. Even m their mountain retreats, however. Goshawks are not abundant The birds and rodents on which they feed are either killed or frightened away and this compels the Goshawks to cover much territory in order to live. The large size (over twice the length of the Sparrow hawk) long tail, rounded wings and blue-gra- y body enables one to recognize this species even when getting but a brief look as it darts away through the trees. On a farm among the foothills ia Sevier county, one was seen to scare a jackrabbit out of the brush, quickly overtake it as it dashed across the open field and sirtke it dead with a terrific blow with the feet. Goshawks also hunted dogs there as they emerged hungry in early spring. Th farm owner, however, with thoughts of his poultry n nning about the corrals set a trap on a high post and caught several of the big hawks. He solicit .every1 thrill that life tould hold is APPLESAIUE SEZ: According t o a Logan scientist we should use r h I o roform on blooming flowers. l hy not use it on blooming idiots ? A railroad e and a red headed girl are both subject to without notice. change time-tabl- Isn't there something Hubby wrong with this cake you baked, sweetheart? Wrfie No, it must be your taste; the cookbook says its delicious. Another sign of spring: Coly- n unists trying to think up signs of spring. HOMER BREWS DIARY Betimes up, and to the garage, where the petrol buggy doth start I do press the starting-button- , which doth surprise me vastly, and indeed it do be a In the even-- ' miracle! Create ing home, where Dame Brew doth si rve, as dessert, a doughnut sliced in two pieces with a slice ofi pineapple between, which she did' lei.rn from Milord Sinclair Lewiss latest bookc, and I do tell her it do be a toothsome pastie, which do be a black lie, for Lord! it do be the foulest coneoetinn that did ever stick in my gullet! when ... Road ends. NEW STEAMSHIP SERI It E STOCKHOLM (I - P.rect reg ular steamship service between Stockholm and Gdynia, Poland, vil! be inaugurated this spring by the Swedish Ameuutn line, it announced here. re i It is unfortunate that these hawks and related darters have brought all hawks into disrepute and doubly unfortunate that the big, useful, soaring hawks which live almost entirely upon rodents are the ones usually shot. but found the greatest thrill of ail in a woman's kisi I 'duck. ikimm HUNTER with Revicr Dorothy Directed a by A George B. Seitz Columbia Picture Roaring with action, gripping suspense and dynamite thrills I ALSO 2 REEL COMEDY, TEN BABY FINGERS AND ONE REEL, THE CLOWN DIES Special Midnight Preview Next Saturday Night at 12 P. M. on CONVENTION CITY With Joan Blundell, Dick Powell and All Star Cast 4 aaaMiiHHMmn f |