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Show TIIE The fci.'' v';y "Proclaim Liberty thru ril the land" IIERALD-JOURNAL- LOGAN, UTAH, ', FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1934. THE BIG NEWS ON THE WORLD PEACE SITUATION Keeping Up To Date The old story that packing houses save everything but the pig's squeal has been properly true ith pigs, but with rhickens it has been a different story. In packing houses where thousands o chit kens have been killed daily the needless parts have been made into but the fertilizer, Luthers have remained a prob- Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center street, Lcgan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, $2.50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5.00 a year. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3.50 a year. Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Logan, Utah, under the act of congress, March 3, 1878. in a cur rent novel is described as a man who set out to compile his own Bible. This chap was an offshoot of the village atheist species, lie had no use for formal religion, but he did have a luiking belief in the divinity of mankind. So he got a big scrap-boo- k and went through the newspajters daily, collecting clippings which would support his thesis that humanity has within it the seeds of something very great and noble. And he got together quite an interesting book. On one page there would lie a newspaper photo of some such man as Marconi. Then there would be a clipping telling how' some phone girl in a town menaced by forest fire stuck to her post in spite of the danger, to warn others of the flames. tns about some country doctor who had rounded out half a century of underpaid service, pictures of such men as the Mayo brothers, and so on page after page of revelations that people can be far more unselfish and brave and devoted to the common good than anyone has a right to expect them to be. Now this fictional character he is to be found in Archie Binns novel Lightship, in case youre interested did no more than all of us must fee! like doing now and then. perative call to sacrifice. Usually we read them and then go on to something else; and since the daily grist of news about people contains much that is discouraging, much that has to do with stupidity and we are apt to forget greed and wilful about the brighter spots. Keeping a scrapbook of this kind might be a wholesome corrective. Whatever progress the race makes must depend, ultimately, on the resources that exist in the human heart. We cannot be reminded too often that these resources of hero ism, of unselfishness, and of intelligence are drawn from an inexhaustible reservoir. , wrong-headednes- Howdy, folks! The present political campaign, declares a candidate, will have a happy ending. will be Yeah, everybody happy when it is ended. OUTDOOR HINTS Todays outdoor hint, written b) Prof. Horace T. McGoofy, is how to enjoy all the of a pleasures dav at the beach without leaving your own home. Merely place a pan of dry sand in front of an fan, states Prof. Mo-and let Hoofy, the fan blow the sand in. your hair and eyes. Simple, isnt it? les, very. electric ' V Noted radio authority states Interesting Statistics; It is estiradio programs are mated that 43 per cent of hotel made to appeal to the intelligence quests take a bath just to get n TITISS ROOT will tell you almost anything you ask or refer you to the federal agency which can. Requests to locate missing husbands and wives are among tbe few for which there's no soap. And ladies who want government loans to start boarding houses must be told that nothing can be done about it. Nevertheless, on the desk was a request from a fellow who wanted to go into the bullfrog business and wouldnt the USIS please give him a picture or description of the Giant Tropical frog, which he said was the largest in the world. And when I laughed. Miss Root said: OGDEN LIVESTOCK "Tut-tut- ! That goes to the' Br reau of Fisheries. They know a about frogs down there Regularly d how-eve- r. (Copyright, 1931. NEA Service, Inc.) dona When LOUIS, Mo. U.Ri BIRTHDAY PARTY n of the Patti Sue. prize orang-utaSt. Louis Zoo celebrated her first birthday, attendants held a party for the animal. Patti Sue wore A cress and bonnet especially made for the occasion. GAE KILL 'rues.MosQurrots ,AH5 OTHE& INSCCIS if of . . Since using Clear Creek coal, I can forget about spending a lot of money to repair the old chimney. $3.50 e. Day may be shape. There us make jour take care of you with our Life seems easier since the stopped "crabbing" about excessive soot. ... I use Clear Creek coal now . . and always wife . will! ... Im not afraid of a baking failure in the old stove since I commenced using Cleur Creek. ... I'm not ashamed of my a week after any more I use nothing but Clear Creek coal now. curtains hbuse-:leani- Your Satisfaction GUARANTEED ! Seems as though old mother nature made special provisions for those people who somehow or other found themselves living in houses where the chimney was inadequate and the draft poor. . . . Right in the middle of Carbon County, Utah, the worlds finest bituminous coal field is a seam of coal different from any other Utah coal Clear Creek. This distinctive fuel will provide a hot, clean burning fire with far less draft than any other Utah coal available in this community. AUTOMOTIVE . . . Lack of sufficient draft is the main cause of soot and because Clear Creek does not require the draft that other Utah coals do, it can be burned more successfully where chimneys are faulty. A trial will positively con- y Special ... What a relief! No more weekly cleanings of soot out of the old furnace. I cured that by using Clear Creek coal. tip-to- Sfl.S5 vince you. THIS. WEEK ONLY! ZT Firestone Auto Polish Reg. 75c Mon- tana Chrome, Inc. is preparing t tap a huge mountain of chrome and steel ore near here. Eugene O'Keefe, company secretary, announced that tunneiing nod other preliminary work has nearly been completed at the comclaim on Hell Roaring pany's Mountain. o With this work completed, tons of chrome are in sight end 2,000 tons already are above the ground, according to O'Keefe. The secretary said that recent tests showed the ore to run about 70 per cent chrome and pearly 20 per cent iron. IT RAN IN FAMILY It TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (l.Pi runs in the family. When Kappa national educational Delta Pi, fraternity, selected 19 new members at summer ceremonies here recently, among them were: Mrs. Janie Sullivan, Decatur, Ala.; her daughter, Grace Huff, Drew, Ala., and a son, Walter Sullivan, Denton, Mias. I have ST. Sim has been with me for 20 She Is years," she continued. housethe best and sweetest keeper Tve ever known. The police have asked us to move. But v. hy should we? The seat is for the public and we are entitled to part AY Montana Company Plans To Tap Mountain of Ore H'P) (ount, replied: "So? Well, what now? house Hitch up the team, Jake, we're going home. Whatever jour plans for Labor p you'll want your car to be in wont be time for trouble. Let Well trip safe and trouble-freeverything and save money for Labor Day Special-;- ! The closest thing to a reline you've ever had! check the features listed below only then will you realize how attractive this price really Is! 1 Pull all four wheels to inspect the lining. 2 Inspect complete brake mechanism for loose cotter pins, bolts, nuts, springs, etc. 3 Clean brake drums with special Firestone Cleaning Solution. 4 Clean brake lining removing . grease, dirt, etc. 5 Buff tips of brake shoes to and chatter." groan prevent 6 Inspect bearing to insure use of proper grease. 7 Replace four wheels. 8 --Set Anchor Pins Properly. 9 Equalize all brakes on Brake Machine to show proper foot pounds of pressure when lining is applied to drum. 10 Make 10 stop scientific road test. Elu-then- RED LODGE, Mont. Hogs Receipts, 1012; San Francisco pakers. 586; Pomona packers. 142; steady; early bids, $8.10, on best driveins; mixed butchers rated $7.758.80; few sows, $4.75. Cattle Receipts, 3688; included drouth directs, 190 cattle, 17 calves; San Francisco packers, 20; Los Angeies market, 185; drouths to Denver, 114 cattle; dcouths to San Francisco, 1673 cattle, 203 lots good calves; steady; odd slaughter steers. $3.50'&4.00; few lots medium and good cows, $2.00 2.50; other classes unsold early. St. 22,062; Receipts, Sheep Joseph market. 279; Chicago packers, 829; Kentucky feeders, 334; Iowa feeders, 898; Iowa packers, 618; Indiana feeders, 1331; Omaha market. 268; Chicago market, 1960; feeder lambs on Wednesday's late sales steady; load fleshy Idahos, 74 pounds, with freight benefit, Ida$5.50; two lots light hos, $5.00, with usual freight beneIdaho ewes. fit; Imd $2.20; 10 head out $1.00; today, 39 out $1.00. ewes. five drivein $2.00; Brakes Overhauled -- worst stickers, youd be to know, are queries about various New Deal boards, committees, and commissions. So many of these have been created and then dissolved, absorbed, or just naturally forgotten that poor Mr. Hoover, who appointed so many commissions that it got to be an international joke, seems to have been Just a Boy Scout. Theyre like the 'White House executive orders, so often here today and revoked tomorrow. Don't ask USIS how many new agencies there are. It has a list of 50 of the more important, d ... lLAffiE It YISS ROOT lifted a sheaf o'. other letters from, a basket and the letters turned out to be questions as to whos the Grand Coulee Dam under, how to get to be a school teacher in Alaska, what about tbe Credit Union law, how to get to be a citizen when you've taken out your first naturalization papers and can't afford your second papers, where 'the easiest divorce laws are, and a list of rich people to write to nothing doing on those last two. either. Then they want to know how to organize a program for a parent teacher meeting, what about the surveying " and future settlement of the Islands, about the Housing Program a lot of those where are the available homestead lands, is such and such a book kept in the Library of Congress and what's the cost of one of those folding boats the Germans use for river travel which Miss Root finds out from the National Geographic. rpHE ruler discard far the nobilitv. creating counts with reckless abandon, until the court simply reeked with commoners, who, for satisfying were some whim of the rulor, created counts. The situation so unbearable that General Moellendorf, one of the greatest of the of the military leaders that informed when empire, Frederick would make him a . Mighty earlie up, waked by a of the average most horrible nightmare, I dreamAll of any spirit at ing, as 1 do every year about this all should demand an apology. time, that vacation days do bn m it, and that 1 must return, Joe Bungstarter says he likes heaven help me, to the hated Lil Gee Gee's new swimming classroom and the loathsome s hiMile books of the 3rd grade, suit. It doesn't take much to please and Lord! all daye, as I do go 1 do Joe. lie about my business, haunted hy this terrible dream, and do exeet that, at any moGOLF NOTE ment, Mr, Anderson, the hookey Two slices make one drive. cop, will dap his hande on my One drive makes cne hunker. shoulder, and hustle me off to the One blinker makes three ap- T.T. Minor grammar M'lioole! proaches. Three approaches makes four ADDl.El) AXIOMS putts. Four putts make one dub. A tiling of beauty is annoyed A lecturer has ex- forever. Logan No brain is stronger than its pressed the opinion that funerals weakest think. are too expensive. This probably explains why peoAdvertising Ls so expert nowple rarely have them until the lait minute. Jk adays that a magazine reader lias to y change toothpaste every week. tUfiaillii Special 50c IFann (S, Principal Producers of Coal in Utah AWL W. SANEMEES Coal & Wood SERVICE STORE 3rd NORTH AND JFI 'ill mm IIHMII jffiw MAIN Phone 293 STREETS 801 N. Main Exclusive Clear Creek and Castle Gate Dealers 8 mfi I Wilhelm II, successor Your Neighbor Says that most Council. Miss Harriet Root, chief of a rtaff of ahont a doien, is a sort of New Deal traffic cop. She takes no end of pride in seeing that all questions get answered if theyre not Just too silly. You can write, telephone, or call in person with your question. Once somebody wrote to ask the color of the hair and eyes of Thor-steiVeblen. They wanted to paint a picture of him. Miss Root delivered the goods. She located a couple of fellows who had known the great economist. Pm) paper-covere- Frederick WHAT... good-natur- ed BY RODNEY DUTCHER Cormpvideit Lots of people 'WfASHnWON. would be finding their way around town more easily If they knew about the USIS. In case you don't know about the USIS your own self, it's the United States Information Service, w'hich Is the government's question and answer service, operating under the wing of NEC, which is the National Emergency I it. NEXT there would be a story of some youngster who lost life trying to save another from drowning; a picture of a traffic cop whose kindly, efficiency protected the lives of scores of school children daily, a story are full of such clippings ; stories of THE daily papers who use their intelligence to put new comforts or new tools into the hands of toiling men, stories of men and women who are willing to sacrifice their ease, their careers, or their very lives in obedience to some mysterious but im- t'nitet BRIGHT MOMENTS In Great Lives to Frederick the Great as of Prussia, had a wholesome LONDON An elderly spinster nd her cook live on an open-ai- r bench. In the daytime they sit 'on the bench. At night they Bleep on it. The woman. Miss Annie Sands, her cook, who is railed SIm, have led their present mode of existence for 12 months. Their only household effects, as well as their luggage, are contained in numerous parcels, surrounding their bench for two, in Ladbrokegrove, W. Miss Sands and Sun once lived in a large house, and the mistress tells of a great, estate which should be hers. Site says she is Just as happy now In her preseut less affluent condition. "I love the open atr, she said. "With the trees, birds and sunshine it is an ideal life. In wet or very cold weather Sim and I The softer feathers from the the wings least, back, under ami the stern of the chicken have betn used to stuff feather pillows .old feather beds, but the tail leathers, wing feathers and the coarser feathers from the neck have been a los. When burned they deteriorated to nothing. It remained for the research department of the State College ot Iowa to solve the Feathers may now come pioulem. to the market completely disguised as lountain iens, buttons, shoe buckles, belt buckles, insulators and other novelties. I nder this plan, feathers are d'ssolved in eaustic then soda, thrown out of solution tn a new form by the use of various adds. The new material is then moulded into the desired shape, and an pplication of formaldehyde hard- - A KEA Servian Staff (Be I MANS SUPPLY OF UOOI) CHARACTER IN OPEN AIR lem. Lib- IS INEXHAUSTIBLE SPINSTER LIVES SCIENCE NEWS HERALD-JOURNA- L Member United Press, N E A Service, Western erty Bell. Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. The TAGE THREE. 1 |