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Show THE PAGE EIGHT. The HERALD-JOURNA- FRIDAY, AUGUST LOGAN, UTAH, L, 1934. 24, Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Newspaper Co., at 78 West Center street, Lcgan, Utah. Telephone 50. Valley Price 5 cents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, $2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5.00 a yea r. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3 50 a year. matter at the postoffice Entered as second-clas- s "Proclaim at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March 3, liberty thru 1879. oil the iamT Member United Press, N E A Service. Western The Liberty BclL Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. Miscellaneous WANT AD RATES WANTED Unfurnished 3 or 4 room house or apt. Box A24. X or phone 837-- For each Insertion on cent per word; for one week, five cents oer word; lor one month, 15 Minimum cents per word. charge for first insertion 15 cents. All want ads must be paid in advance. Call 50 and a messenger will come and get and reyour advertisement mittance. ivuv.sD TRIP Salt Lake every Saturday, can take three. Phone A24 0 I during noon hour. WHAT have jou to trade for a good 320 acre ranch in Idaho, l n proven, equipped, stocked, Fred Hognson, 61 W eat B irst South, A24 MILITIA USE IN STRIKE TAKE NOTICE paid for useless and freshly dead horses and cat. 11R-2, Hyrum Exchange Call tie D1 Paradise Fish Hatchery. the full history of use of the National Guard in lalior disputes is ever written, not the least interesting chapter will he the one furnished by recent events in Minnesota. The National Guard is ce.lleil out ni strikes, generally, to preserve the peace. his usually takes the form of camping out around the plant which is the center of industrial disturbance and presenting a hedge of bayonets to all who try to get at the machinery. Since the strikers, in the very nature of things, are on the outside looking in, this usually niean3 that use of the guard cramps the strikers plans. Picket lines and the like do not thrive under military rule. A factory which is protected by the guaid can go on with its production in spite of the angry cries of the mob outside. cow. ing. ',y O' Tne man who made it possible for the great philosopher, Herbei i to publish his ten volSpencer, umes of Synthetic Philosophy was Edward L. Youmans, pioneer of the Popfounder naturalist, ular Science Monthly and one of in this the foremost lecturers country Spencer at the time wai trying to get a publisher for his book with little success. Youmara went among his friends, the amount needed and the books were published -- a milestone in philosophy. dinner to At a testimonial visited New Spencer, when be York in 1881, Youmans said: Sir Humphrey Davy discovered, and possibly evolved Micnael but I didn't evolve Herbert Spencer any more than Balboa evolved the Pacific Ocean" Far-oda- The greatest iui nr any political office. A local swimming instructor to try only low dives at first. Another good way is to start out by eating water- s beginners melons. This is Herman J. the College who h to be the only husband in America who has never said to hi'i wife: "1 wish tn heaven we could have some dein cent coffee tht house! Elbow, of J Joe Bungstarter hates radios so has five of them ir. so that he car. keep all of them shut off all the time. much that he his apartment SUMMER COMPLAINT Its easy enough to be pleasant When you slumber gently in bed; But the man worth while Is the man who can smile When the skeeters buzz round his head! Lil Gee Gee is the luckiest person in restaurants. She says she is always finding money under plates. 4 pfct-lo- ABIGAIL 1936-193- AFFLESAICE hKZ: clever man tells a w oman hr understands her ; A a stupid one tries to prove it. The baby girl in the cradle L kissed by a lot of folks who 11 never get the chance after she gets to be 18. POLITICAL NOTE The straw hut season will soon he over, gnu candidates (or office are preparing to have their old straw' hate rolled into campaign cigars. About .700 of members and resources of more than $65,000,000. those are among postal employes, who have $7,000,000 in them. by common occupation or ANY seven persons associated together can delegate one of their number to write to the Credit Union Section of FCA here, which will tell them what to do to get a union charter. They must, however, have a potential membership ot at least 50. An applicant for membership in a ciedit union must have a common bond or association with the group and lie elected bv the board of directors. He can then come In by subscribing to a $5 share which may be payable In instalments and becomes entitled to a loan approved by the credit committee, to dividends delated om e a year trom net earnings and to a vote equal to that ot any other 30-3- Funds saved by membeis mgy be lent to members for provident and productive purposes for not more than two years, unsecured loans being limited to $30 and secured loans to $200 unless unimpaired capital is less than $2000, in which case they can't run moie than 10 per cent of it. riglil, U5I, NLA Stole, lllC ) Back In LEST AT HERE TODAY e -- The Hills FOUR-SCOR- I am just a young fellow and If a plane expects to land on of Madam Ernestine Schuniann-Hem- k I know of no stage or my health habits are not tho water, it has pontoons If it ex pects to land in a field, it has screen personality that could leave that Doc Tilden would recomwheels. But a pedestrian nas only such a sense of personal loss to mend. EUT I know from personal most of us. the seat of his trousers. experience .that the human body Yet Marie Dressier died in her has plenty of endurance and pep at prime and not in her mutunty and cfiicieucy in it at fifty, HOMER BREWS DIARY Allow me to quote something sixty, at seventy, nt eighty and at from our old friend Doc ilden, of me round hundied, IF the dweller Ear lie up, waked by the clutter whom I nave in that bodv will treat that bouy spoken before: of tlie alarm rlocke, the mo- -t decency and "I have no personal acquaintance with one tenth the he liendish noise, betamas, ever 1 treats a that understanding beMarie but with she Dressier, heard. And so to the printer', flivver or a double bitted axe. me. to She me entertained of typewriters longed where the We are just dnnly beginning to doth assail my ears, together She played upon my emotions. I discover the marvels of the huwith the bawling of copy boys, have laughed and I have used my man body. What we know toHer success came the clank-clan- k of the linotypt handkerchief day about the excretions of the machines and the steady whir ot at an age which people generally glands of the body makes all in late life. Laurels call gained medicine of a dozen years hack tlie presses, but Lord! I minded them not, for 1 do place feet oi. before 60 are premature, unseason- barbarous. evanescent. ed That and is the i t fall oeake, and straightway dreaming of the pines that do irime of oura social system. We LIONESS BOliE Ql INTIT'LETS way that there are sway in Logan can on, the rain- live tn such bow' trout that do leap in th only a few people who live long TOLEDO, O. U P Toedo has to mature mentally Our shilling waters of tlie city darn, enough her reduces quintuplets. The proud mother of abominable living roam deer style and the beautiful that Belle, haughty lioness at W the mountain fastness, and the the power to live and builds disIark Zoo The fire comswift waters that do roar .thru eases. the canyon. And so, dozing pleasMiss Dressier in her last pic- prise the largest leonme litter ever horn at the zoo here Plans to antly, ao dream away the morn- tures has shown physical deteriing. She has been a pro- name the cubs after the sisters oration nouncedly salt woman to eyes Dionne arc being c .rsulered by Hoist the anchor! that have been educated to. or Curator Roger Conarit capable of, reading symptoms of LIONS PLANS SivI JUMP This tit VI ED PRIZED GIFT constitutional 1 R. RAEBURN, florid, bald, a derangement. AT( H good 10 years older than his state was allowed to run on and LYONS if Pi Winter sports bring her to this untimely end ife, muttred that Barbara was CLEVELAND Mrs Julnn lovers will be able to enjoy a It is painful to see such talent as OtiCM, searched irja ..ir eno'igb but he was g'ad to u. down ski jump in this, thr hers go down, because a woman t'wn stores untildo'cs she was ,ave Mother home again. chief city of the south, by Sept with her constitution, if she had f old an She s been on the go the live-onhunting yri15, or long before any of the Albeen properly cared for, would low grid wrist wnti h ;,ne had In. i time, no muttered, shaking Artificial just have begun to reap fame pine resorts are .ready It isnt valuable, she said, mi ait Ina piper and settling down snow and transplanted fir trees THE TIME WILL COME WHEN lit was the fust rav (hild-,r(preant will make up for the I lack of OUR BEST ARTISTS WILL NOT lamp. I h.iv had it .3", lii'ler tlie gave me i lri- new w litre she vn after uoicr Lyons being but a few CRT RESULTS BEFORE years and d means r very thing ' fhuudied feet above sea level. Rimer. YEARS OK AGE AND THE mi." She didn t find it. half-alou- -- 1 rat-a-t- g Haiiy S. Till man An out and out battle on Roosevelt policies is assured Missouri in the November election when U. S. Senator Roscoe Patterson, Republican Incumbent from Springfield, sharp critic of the New Dial, will be opposed by Harry S. Truman, who won the Uemo-rBat- ic nomination with the support of the powerful Tom J Pen-detga- st machine of Kansas City. Patterson was uiiappcs-- - ... . recent primary. 300-ya- 0, 25-3- 1) 30-4- 5. each Club Girl Non-rus- member. is dead Outside (A-3- 100 bicycles and rifles. We will pay cash for old bicycle 0 32 Win., bike frames and rifles Crag. ALS BIKE & SPORTING GOODS CO. S2. USGIX others, are limited to ono per FEDERAL Credit Unions, like most balances. cent a interest on unpaid Strangely enough, 'no federal money goes Into this scheme. All the capital is provided by members who may become members for as little as $5, subscribed for a share in tlio bank. Credit unions are really old stuff. There are about 2300 chartered credit unions in the United States today, with about 500.000 Dressier PAfER HANGING. DECORATING, WANTED SYLVIA RIVERS rules (he t of Larchnerk, buh founder losnble Nrn York suburb. She dislikes BOOM U A FBI It whose family has little moYej, One sight at the Yacht Clob Bools Is tut In an embarrassing situation by I14KUY MUJlMOHK, our of isia's guests, n ho had bera drinking Sylvia maliciously contrives to force Boots reatjesa tion from the Juniors- - Humlli ted. Boots withdraws from the crowd she froes about with BISS the st Ituming Instructor. iilM), falls in love with her and Buss announces he's (coins; array. He beu Boots to elope with him and over. 9 she asks for time to think It Mrs Raeburn returns from u visit ond Boots dreads having her mother hear about her resignation from the club. KOW GO 0 WITH THB STORY CHAPTER XIV YYF course it was madness, Boots told herself as she slipped out of the halt-we- t bathing suit and nervously began to dress. Why, It was just a game they were playing. Girls and boys talked as she and Russ bad all the time and It meant precisely nothing. Johnny had been shouting to Geraldine that very day on the raft, Be mine, darling. Be 1 cant live without you! And everyone had simply screamed with laughter. It had been the moot priceless comedy line. Yes. she and Russ Lund were lust playing at being tn love. It didnt mean a thing. It was exciting. like being tn a drama the mateur Group, ot the Juniors might give. She laced her white sandals and ran a comb through her unruly urls. The memory of Russs grave, unm!ling face as he bad said. Tomorrow. stayed with her. It was all nonsense and ahe nas a fool ever to have let him ay such things to her! Tonight mother would come home; everything would go back Into Its proper place, like the pieces of a Jigsaw puzzle. Russ would take the cattle boat or the fruit boat for Chile. She would have one letter from hun maybe two. This time next ear she might not even remember us name. "Thats how serious it Is," she aid to convince herself. All through the evening, as she eried Jellied soup and broiled chops and salad to her father, as 'he washed dishes and brushed up the kitchen floor with a worn room the thought stayed with her. t was not serious she would not !tt It be. Tomorrow she would 'inploy Just the right blend of gravity and humor In her farewells o the beach-cluguard. He would ee, he would understand that ahe nas a woman of the world for all ner 18 years. She flushed at tho memory of her scarlet cheeks and itarry ees. Why, he must think me a fool! she told herself IndigHe probably says that to nantly. some girl every place he goes and "xpects me to know that. In the flurry of her mother's ar-al she almost forgot Russ. The familiar thin face and spare in fashionable figure. The unpack-nof the shabby bags somehow lie evening flew by. And how did she take care of ou. Daddy? by-la- Mari INFORMATION DEPT L PAINTING, Phone 350. A25. & - HILL BILLY 4 18 orretondRt The Forgotten Man is being invited to become lus own banker. The government will tell liim if lies interested how to become a stockholder, depositor, and borrower in a type of hank which experienced viitually no lailutes in the yeais when 14,000 commercial banks were folding up like trampled eggshells. Through Federal Credit Unions the fellow who wants to borrow from $6 to $200 for useful purposes may now do so without falling Into the hands of the loan sharks who would soak him for interest running from 30 to 100 per cent or moie. These unions sometimes called baby hunks are designed for those whose credit needs aro too small to interest the regular banks. Congress, thanks to Senator Morris Sheppard of Texas, passed a bill for a national sjstcm of credit, providing for federal charfor credit unions. ters, regulations, and It gave the job ot fostering and encouraging these unions to the Farm Credit Administration, which is establishing a Credit Union Section and preparing booklets which will tell all about the Idea. A credit union is a association Into which members put their savings and from which only members may obtain loans. It is adaptable for a community, church, factory, department store, neighborhood, fraternal organization, or any group of 50 or more people. R PHONE LEONARD MATHEWS Jersey cows, fresh-i- n Dunbar, 207 South 210. F7ASHINGTON folks! There Is a rumor going around town that there is a man in Logan who is not a candidate tor Howdy, wild fi 1 HERALD-JOURNA- EXTRA strong 32x6 truck chains, Cost $25 00. Crorne Vanadium steel. Will sell cheap. Are pracPhone 123 or tically new. A25 call 123 South Mam. NEW English brick home. Phone BY RODNEY DITCHER KrrvJre ftfnff Geo West the tuetfth and last of a .senes of uiluhs on me.iuoiv new government agencies under the Xetc Veal. J. W. AULT & SON A28. soon LETTER FOUND & LOST Lady's valuable white handbag, containing keys and letters. Reward. Return to 67 A24. South Fifth West. 350 A25. 70 acres at 50 cents Larsen, Newton. Phone J TWO WASHINGTON dls-Me- living exponent of theory, Captain Thomas J. J. See, astronomer and of the United mathematician States Navy, has predicted the end of the yearly droughts that have caused so much suffering rnd financial loss throughout the world in the past three year. Pointing out that the cause of the sun spots is unknown, Captain Sec says that they are of the greatest benefit to mankind. These and sun spots return regularly iast 11 1 years. Their return ha.--, not varied from the year 328 B. C. up to 1927. cause of the The present drought. Captain See points ou. was the decrease in spots on the Nov sun, which began in 1928. they are coming back, and with more be will rainfall their return and an abundance of water in arid lands in the United States and other countries. The sun spot! d will reach their peak in the and in th; between latter year rainfall will be at its heaviest. With a weather eye on the See heavens. Captain predicts heavy floods in the southern rivers. notably the Mississippi m 1938, and suggests that measures lowlands to protect be taken there He says that these floods be. as heavy as those of will 1927 which occurred the when sun spots were most numerous during their last regular the "sun spot Call at LOST n. STRAW Salt Lake to Logan Call the reliable transfer men1 A29. 682-J- STRANGER THAN FICTION 1 A2. l. 5i two. BARTLETT PEARS. J. E. Han--eProvidence. Phone 798R2. SI. J ed SCIENCE NEWS V" twrjLcc er Con-gre- hens. North Second West. to settle the truckmens strike is proposed, accepted by labor and rejected by the employers. The latter naturally enough, having rejected the offer, seek to run their trucks as usual. Rut at this point the guardsmen, called out to maintain public order and keep the peace, begin doing precisely what the union jackets would do if the militia had stayed at home: they reluse to let trucks run at all unless they are operated under terms of the c.ffer of settlement. Now the use of the guardsmen is always, in theory, impartial. They are not sujiposod to take sides; they are to keep property from being destroyed and to keep heads from lieing cracked. A plan Keeping Up To Date Call 62L 100 because of the circumstances in which they are USUALLY, serve, this has the effect of breaking the strike. In this Minnesota case and it is hard to think of any other case quite like it things are reversed. The guardsactivities have the effect of helping mens the strikers. The whole method of me ting the problem of violence in labor disputes has been turned upside down. A precedent has been set. Herald-Journa- TO BUY shares common stock in Hyrum Irrigation company A25. Phone Hyrum 29-- 'MALL BRICK HOME, six room modern, l acre lot, adjoining church, A 28 ellsville. UT the .Minnesota case has provided a surprising sal of the usual procedure. Here we have had the guard, in effect, doing the jacket- suj-pos- Box B, FURNISHED PIANOS MOVED Jersey At the close of the Revolutionary war, the Continental Bennominated John Jay, jamin B'ranklin, Thordas Jefferson, John Adams and Laurens as peace commissioners to meet with His Majestys emissaries and decide on terms of peace. Jay and Franklin wtre the only diplomats available, and they alone stated the conditions of peace. Some time later John Adams arrived and in his diary, written during that time, is the following cryptic paragraph: The French rail me "Le Washington de la Negociation: a very fluttering compliment, to which I have no right, but sincerely think It belongs to Mr. Jay. 25-3- per lice per insertion. FURNITURE rever-- 1 1 3 FOR RENT " 6-- heated apartment for Second floor. Private bath, hot water at all hours, new BABY BUGGY. $5 00. 195 South electfic range, laundry, janitor MODERN furnished four or five 1 First West. service. Quiet, close in. Low room house or apartment. Phone rates by the year, 135 East A21. 33. TREE ripened pears and grapes A23. Center. A28 Now ready. Call 964-HIGHEST PRICE paid for veal S17. and nogs. Phone 890--J. 246 So. 1st. East. MODERN home. Bessie Pack APARTMENT. A25. 406 N. 1st. E. I 'hone 630-A25 232 South Main WHITE peaches T. L. Grimaud, APARTMENT. A29. OR A25 east of cemetery. GOOD used coal range, bargain UNFURNISHED Inquue Utah Power Light. A25 FOUR room modern house, full I LACK riding pony About 1100 basement, garage. Phone 1214 from Logan to Salt Lake, Will trade for good pounds A27. or 832-- FOR SALE rJ I A-- Call it housekeeper. Hyrum before 9 a.m. or write Box 132, Hyrura. 3 or 4 room house or apt- - Box X, A25. or phone 537-for SALESMAN Metropolitan Life Insurance company. Age iparried and one or more years college required. No others need A24. apply. 4 or 5 room modern home with furnace, close in, reliable party. GOOD LEGAL RATE Ten cents Highist price IF BRIGHT MOMENTS In Great Lives WANTED STEAM engine, 60 H P. or largi r. 155 Ed' t Carlyle Mu hat Ison, First South. IAUMLKS ROES INTO REVERSE j Classified Ads Herald-Journ-al HERALD-JOURNA- L foo-io- re g j n amber-shade- d Mrs. Raeburn beamed. Thats nice, ducky. Youve been having a good time. Inwardly Boots writhed at her mothers trust in her. Not, as she reminded herself, that she had done anything to be ashamed ot. On the contrary, her Journeyings with Russ had been of the most decorous nature. A ride in the a pboco-latsweet smelling lanes soda at the Sweet Shop . . . but would people believe that? A girl didnt usually spend so much time with one man unless the current of their affairs ran more deeply and swiftly than that of a platonic friendship. But it had been platonic. Boots told herself sturdily. After that first impulsive kiss weeks ago Russ had not laid a finger upon her. The memory of that kiss stayed with her , . . What did you say, darling? Her mother, straightening a stooped s back, lifting out a pile of layered in tissue paper, looked at her fondly. Nothing!" But the sound that had escaped her was almost a groan. Her carefully built up fabric of common sense crumpled and shattered at the thought of Russs kiss If she answered him coolly and distantly tomorrow he would go away to Chile. She would never see him again . . . Here, let me hang that up, she said at random, taking a brown crepe frock from her mother's fingers. She fairly flew at the rest of the unpacking and Mrs. Raeburn, who had been telling herself that the child was strange and silent and evidently had something on her mind, banished the Idea and reflected that Barbara was growing up to be a great help. Aunt Nedda wanted Boots to come and visit her In the autumn, Mrs. Raeburn said, with quiet satis faction. Youd like that, wouldnt you? ... e t TNWARDLY Boots shivered. The thought of Aunt Nedda's cold, dour brownstone house near the Boston Common made her shiver. And where would Russ be by autumn? Making love to some beautiful Spanish senorita in an embroidered shawl? She could see herself, going to the library to change books for Aunt Nedda, going to symphony concerts, with pale, drab, decorous people all about them. No no never that! T think Ill have a job by fall, she said vaguely. A Job, darling! Her mother smiled indulgently. What could you do? Well, Mary Ollivant Is helping out in a dress shop in New Martin and she loves It And some of the other girls Helen and Louise and Sue are going to take a business course. But, my dear, began her mother tn the tone, the strain Boots so dreaded, after all they are newcomers here. They have no traditions to uphold. Why, your grandfather built the first Manor house, the one with the cupola, that the Westerlys live in now. I couldnt have you In a shop. dear. Daddy and I would never agree to that. . . Boots sat down on the bed, her eye3 glittering, her color high. But I've simply got to do someshe said feverishly. thing. I cant hang around here all my life, taking an allowance from Daddy, knowing that every new pair of shoes 1 get Is practically a family tragedy How you exaggerate!" Tlacldly - ... t Elli on Cowrs GT ISM & Hf A ! f V the older woman rolled stockings into neat balls and tucked them away In the drawer of a scarred mahogany bureau. Daddy and are perfectly willing to make sacrifices for you. keep you tn frock? and pin money until some fine man comes along . . There was a good deal more ot the same and finally Boots, weak and defeated, crept quietly away le her own room. The scene ban ended with a few mild tears and reproaches on her mothers part All right then, she wouldnt talk about working in a shop. All right then, she wouldn't mention bust ness course any more . . . If she finds out about my re signing from the Juniors Im sim ply through, Boots muttered to herself darkly, tossing on a hot pillow. And of course that revein tion was only a matter of time. 1 . under-thing- ... U NiiAI CLEEP not come. It was all wrong, the girl thought desperately, tossing in the darkness Everything was wrong her HR here, the narrowness and stupidity of it, the restrictions that bound her. With Russ and here her heart leaped everything would be different. He belonged to a different world. He was not bound by the age-oltaboos and conventions I must be mad." she said for the hundredth time, switching on her bedside lamp to peer at the clock. It was 3 o'clock. It was 4. At daybreak she cautiously put on her clothes and slipped out the side door. The world was dewy, silvered In the pure early morning light. Everything was deliciously cool and fresh. Clear drops of crystal hovered on the nasturtium leaves, and every delphinium spike was magically spangled with dew. , The girl, pale and strode across the grass to the gate which led into the Hartses garden. It was only a short walk from here to the blue stretch of the sound. Her head ached. She wanted to be alone to shake off the dark thoughts of the night. 1 ought to do tills more often." she told herself, striding down the empty path to the water. But the mood of exaltation quickly passed. She was, after all. little more than a child, with a womans problems laid before her Suddenly she put her shining fair head down into her hands and I dont know what to do." wept. she sobbed. If someone would only tell me what to do!" It seemed to her that every place she looked she met an Impasse. She had staved off thinking of the Inevitable scene which would ensue when her mother learned of the bitter snub administered by Mrs Fernells heavy hand. She had tried to hope tnat. with work to do in the world, the narrowness of her social life would not matter. But that gate was now closed. Mrs. Raeburn seemed unalterably opposed to any effort in that direction. And there was alwavs th restriction of money. "Weve never had enough, really, Boots thought angrily, almost scornfully. And it was no e saying money didnt matter. It mattered frightfully . . . I'm so sorry. Can I he of err help? The cultivated voice startled herj Looking up, touching her reddened eyes with a handkerchief, she smred stiaight at the tail dark young man she had met at Lol Hart's house. Denis Fenway. would d heavy-eyed- u-- (To Be Continued) |