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Show THE PAGE TWO. The HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, L, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER THE SPIRIT OF 36 1, 1934. Classified Ads Herald-Journ-al HERALD-JOURNA- L Published every weekday afternoon by the 'Cache Valley Newspaper Co., at 75 West Center street, Lcg&n, Utah. Telephone 50. WANT AD RATES Price 5 cents a copy. By mall, tn Cache Valley, $2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5 00 a year. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $350 a year. matter at the postoffice Entered as second-clas- s Proclaim at Logan, Utah, under the act ot congress, March S, Liberty thru 1879. Member United Press, N E A Service, Western and The Scripps League of Newspapers. Features BcU, erty For each Insertion one cent per word; for one week, five cents per word; tor 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 eU HERALD-J011RNA- DEPfj INFORMATION L TYPEWRITER REPAIRING We furnish Parts and Repair All Makes of Typewriters. Guaranteed. GEO. B. Expert Sen ice, Satisfaction EVERTON at Everton &. Sons, or 126 E. 2nd South. LEGAL RATE fen cents per line per Insertion. TRIBULATIONS IN TENNESSEE - residents of the Tennessee ALTHOUGH the fortunate a fedeial water power scheme, are to be booned with electric ret rigerators, ranges, cooling systems and furnaces, they are not going to be allowed to own electric washing machines. It semis they WERE to be allowed to purchase these machines, but the Laundry Owners National association heard about it. The association went to the 'iennessee valThe authority thereupon ley authority and complained. promised it would not sell washing machines. This idea seems to possess large possibilities. The icemens national association probably will protest against sale by the government of mechanical refigerators ; and the wood and coal merchants will surely protest against electric ranges. In fact, the coa men ate already making the welkin rihg about the federal hydroelectric development The program, they point out, will result in people , using less coal. In the Tennessee valley, farmers' are to be encouraged to use electric machinery, too. So far, no one has complained of about this, but it is about time the America took action.- If the farmer gets all his work done for him by machinery, what will become of the patent with which he has wont exercisers and spring dumb-bell- s to build up his biceps against the work of pumping the full of . . . And what will become of who taufeht his listeners to the matutinal while enlarging the arm, leg and count stomach muscles? Tutting a nation on an electrical basis has, it seems, its difficulties. FOR SALE WILL radio-announc- NINE HUNDRED acre wheat farm, fully equipped at Blue Creek. Inquire at 723 E. CenS6. ter. FRESH Jersey cows Must John Pfeuti. Providence. 775-- WASHINGTON A DEPRESSION WROUGHT is easy to he glib about the victims of the depression; easy to say airily that jobless men can live on their savings if they have been prudent, can get help from relatives, and can, all in all, get along somehow. But it is a little different v. hen you take a close-u- p look J 4 Howdy, folks! Why spend hours in the broiling sun eoat of trying to acquire tun, when you can obtain the swue results by turning a bias torch on yourself? Guaranteed to raise blisters on the most leathery skin. sbeop-killm- . - ax you would display a scrap book or the family album, but that is not so safe a practice these days. I note that Jim Farley has mana fairly good job aged to of perforating on this National also Parks issue, that is a fine bit of engraving and it also la all hokum about that being intended for a profile of FDR. on the two cent Grand canyon stamp; Roosevelt is not the sort of a fellow who would pull a Hoover dam on the proletariat Yet he is the best DAM president we have had, I hope he gets everybody DAM conscious. gt te i I -BRIGHT MOMENTS i During the life of Frederick the the Prince of Prussia, who Great, succeeded friend had a trusted nim, and favorite. Captain For-cad- e When he mounted the throne, the glamour of the court, of higher officials than those with whom he had mingled as pnnee, caused the king to neglect his old friends He was reminded that Chptain FGreade would like to asl- - a fa-l- , , . , . ; What inspired the pioneers to set forth their covered in wagons? queries an editorial. WeU, they didnt want to wait 100 yeara for a train. CLUB NEWS This Lulu is Miss Lollipop of the president Logan Dumbbell Club. Miss Lollipop Is the girl who thinks strum rollers are used to roil strem. Modern Fable: Once upon a time there were three bears and they caused the stock market to drop 20 points. The original the goldfish. I globe-trotte- r: One of the pleasures of a night club is sitting around watching the entertainers make lots of youi money. ABIGAIL APPLESAUCE SEZ. 'Young men of today respect old age only when it comes in bottles. players: chip. motto for poker Dont give up the j SCIENCE NEWS Keeping Up To Date Irarsing from (be clab. Boots sues to New York ea a shopping trip and oa the train encounters Hnsa who begs ber to marry him next day. She agrees. Russ goes to spend the night with his family. leaving liuuto at a hotel. X hey sre married and Ross takes his bride to his brother's npartmeot. It Is a cheap aad sordid place and Haosa brother and his wife. GLORIA, are disappolst-la- g. NOW CO ON WITH THE STORY j for In these days if a movie star marries a man three times she milk. It is now used as a raw gets him for keeps. material for paint. For years Li'l Gee Gee baa been playing curdled milk has been used to golf for 10 years, but she still make a wide variety of moulded thinks that foursomes are the in- articles, but the announcement struments dentists use when ex- that it can and has been used in tracting teeth. paint, comes as a surprise. . Manufacturers are now making It up in powder form, using the HOMER BREWS DIARY It can very finest of pigments. be mixed for use in a few minutes. By petrol buggy to visiting the The paint dries rapidly, and is ranch of Squire L. Wiley, and we do place Balne Brew on the- broad entirely flat, without gloss. Paint made from milk is not bade of Dolly, the old brown mare, and Ruble Brew doth squeal good for outdoor painting, since with excitement, and Milord Wiley it is porus and admits water. doth Imitate a radio announcer, However, it can be. and is, used as Aa the horses sweep a covering for freshly plastered bawling, down the borne stretch. Jockey walls. It may be applied while tha walls are still wet, and the plaster Liz, sporting the spinach-gree- n color of the Brew stable, takes will dry out despte the fact that the lead! Watch that wonder it has been painted Another adhorse go! Look at that little vantage is that this paint is highjockey ride! Now they're acroes ly resistant to lime and may be the finishing line! They win! applied over cement or lime morand we do dash out and place a tar wreath ot clover around Dolly's This paint is highly decorative, It can be the and neck, which doth please patient old steed mightily, for in applied by brush or spray, andlt want as a coatail truth she be mighty tired, It fills a long-feSO feet. ing particularly suitable for celharing walked And so to dinner. lars, warehouses and factories. well-nig- Weather clear; track fast. ONE MAN BAND EXPLOITED OLYMPIA, Wash QlliCX , (f Pi Not State Engineers Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 14, 1934. Notice is hereby given that the Town of Hyde Park, Utah, a municipal corporation, has made application in accordance with the Laws of Utah to appropriate 0 75 sec. ft. of water from an unnamed spring in Cache County, Utah. Said water will be diverted from Jan. 1st. to Dec. 31st inclusive of each year at the point of issuance of said snrtng, which bears E. 11851 ft and S. 138 8 ft. from the NE cor. Sec. 24, T. 13 N R. 1 E, S. L. B. & M. and conveyed by pipe line 9000 ft to ppplicants existing water system and used for domestic and mum-cdipurposes This application is designated in the' State Engineers Office as File No 11616. All protests against the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be by affidavit In duplicate, accompanied 1 0(1 with a fee of and filed In this office withm thirty (30 days after the completion of the publication of this notice T. H. liUMPHERYS, State Engineer Date of first publication, Aug al 18, 1934 Date MIRRIF.D IN MORGIE Art KEEDSBURG, Wis., (I Pi what he wishes. Reedsburg's exploited was the reply of the monarch Werner, one man band," claims to be the Foroadc requested the happiness person who can play three of b ig one of his attendants, only instruments simultaneously and In he had been during days gone perfect harmony Werner strums a guitar with his feet, saws i by To this request, the king, Fred- violin with his and blows erick II, sent the following tact- a harmonica all hands at the same time less, curt and cutting answer: He has special toe with atI have no need for useless offi tached picks for the rings and a guitar, cers, they onlv serve to ,h!co a wire neck piece to hold the hur 1 ude ker mother's dreads about ber withdrawal NOTICE TO WATER USERS A new use has been founc - or wbeu Bt.M.X IIEKE TO DAK SYLVIA KIVER4. rlcheal Rlrl fan-lRM-fashionable New York auliurb. dixlikn BOOTS lUEBUU.V. Due to Sflrlar mnll-clo- ua (towel p. Uoota Is asked to reftlfca (root Iho Juniors. Dart nnd reckless, (tools acthe sttestloss of RLSS cept LLND, ivtlmniiHK Instructor. lie asks her to marry him hut Boots wants time to think It over. When Mn. Rue bo rs returns front a oat of town Booto le-su- lt An excellent I 1, 1934. of last publication, Sept. ex- CALL FOR BIDS actly the most cheerful place for a wedding, but O, H Mittcistadt, Notice is hereby given that the mortician, . and Miss Dorothy of Educ t,on. Cache County Thomson, both of Seattle, were Board chuol district will accept bids up married in a local morgue to 12 o'dotk noon on Thursday, September 6 on the old horse shea OLD on the school grounds at Ru Utah O. (U FiST. CLAIRSVILLE, BOARD OF EDUCATION. . ji mong the personal effects of the By Lloyd M Theurer. late Mrs Clara Tomlinson, millinClc rk er. was found a century-ol$5 of Dites pubtieat on- Aug 22. gold piece It was minted in 1834. 25, Sept. 1, 1931. GOLD pJuskw PIECE 100 I EARS - d A NS e S2. ff' Beach a of him "Let him write uust Into the sepal ate legal status of goveriinit ut empluves. They read and Beatrice Webb and WASHINGTON Well, Hie John Sidney labor authorities. other Donovan cate finally made 'they finally concluded (here all the front pages because it en- Just wasn't any law on the isabled tire National Labor Rela- sue. so the wjsii t question tions Roa.d to exhibit its strength , 1d figu)5 nnd integi it v by socking General i,,.. NLRB decision Johnson In the eye while he wat Theie aie two ngaged m a running battle with "unions" of fedeial woikeis the the rest of the administration National Federation of Fedeial over the future of MIA and him- Employes and the younger, moie self ion oi militant American Aiound town, howerer. the Government The litannv of 90.000 government woi k ter is affiliatedEmplnves with the A F. of era t3 wondering whether to rec- I, and is the patent of the NRA reinstatement Ionoran'8 ognize local as iudualing a futuie change tn boss Uncle the with iclatlonship Sa m vpifE federal civil emplnves inr Washington present somethin. Do they have a right to organ Ire and protest bad working con- of a problem to local merchants they are all paid twue a ditions, discriminations, and other because time The eilcranres? Apparently they do month at the same rush on the 1st and is a 1 tiion organization among them 15th of great each month to hanks, is now taking a spurt. stores, and other places wlieir No question, federal employes checks be cashed and money me a privileged class in certain handed may out. important respects. Civil service The Board of Trade has just still protects most of them .Pay protested this schedule, urging ruts and raises are rare and that paydays be staggered so tlic Some have clerks can get rid of their money not very drastic. sinecures and others are over- in more orderly fashion. worked. But the toeneral accounting ofOn the other hand, they are up fice feels the mechanical bother against the petty Intrigues and of changing the system would be jealousies of small bureaucrats, enormous and many new sets of the stifling of initiative and imag- complicated regulations would ination. the stagnation of promo- have to be Issued. The GAO tion and similar handicaps. There work already Is two or three Is no genuine protection against months behind, what with all this long, grueling overtime work New Deal spending. such as most NRA codes and But it's interesting to observe union organization provide in pri- that officials have informally left vate Industry. the question up to employes themselves. And the tjvo federal lV'RA attorneys, trying to find employe unions, after piehminary reasons why President Don checks wqh members, find no ovan or the NRA union shouldnt great enthusiasm for the cuange. get his job back, delved deeply (Copyright, 19.14. NEA Service. Inc ) national -- two-thir- The more you cut the boys off tike pocket on one graft the more they seek out new avenues of illicit profit. . Once a fellow gets the salty taste or easy money m his, mouth he is like a g hound, he is bloodthirsty nnd he would rather go out and kiH a' sheep than stay home and bite, on a dog biscuit and gnaw 'on a3 shank- - bone. I bad noticed that there was an increasing number of thefts of stamp collections, of a stamp dealers stock, but I had not known tnat it was beiommg a definite racket A stamp dealer told me this story the other day. A well dressed woman came to his shop- and asked him if be lad any Columbian issues m mint sheets in the higher values, as they run 50 to a sheet, or pane, end are worth from $15 up per stamp, the dealer wondered just what the lady knew about stamps Oq testing her out he discovered that she didn't know anything about stamps except that Columbians were worth a lot ot money,' so he informed the visitor that' he kept his valuable stes k m a "safely vault, that he nothing In his shop except the common run of cheap stamps and that he didn t carry any high powered philatelic exhibits on his iierson So the lady went away without even buying a four bit packet of Golden Mixture. Until very recently stamps have been a mystery to everyone except c alcxtois and dcaleis ami at any stamp - club meeting vou would fee collet turns worth $)ouo0 car- ried in brief casts and displayed NEW English brick home. Pho fttnlT CorrMVondfKt at things. titulars. Journal S-- BY RODNEY BUTCHER i FURNITURE OR PIANOS MOVED WANTED 210. Ir S4 West 1st North. Salt Lake, Salt Lake to Logan Call the reliable transfer men1 from Logan to j J. W. AULT & SON 1 LETTER IN HUMAN MISERY at year TRADE $50 00 credit at Baugh Motor Co. Call Parley . S5. TO BUY 514 common Savage shares stock in Hyrum Irrigation comAPPLES McIntosh Reds, pears, 9R-2 S14 pany Phone Hyrum prunes and peaches Bring your own container Cache Produce MECHANIC wants job in service station or garage Phone 1218 SI company. 375 N Main. Phone 90-SI BY SEPT 5th a furnished or un- furnished house, give full par-HOMES and store. Phone 881 W er w-- S4 J. OR r? JEALTH was negelected. In nearly a third of the 1000 fam-- I iliea one or more member required medical attention, but could not afford it. Teeth were badly neglected. Requests from Rchool authorities for dental or medical attention for children were repeatedly ignored. Lodge, club, and church memberships were dropped. In 135 families all subscriptions to newspapers and magazines had been canceled. Many of these people reported that they had not even seen a movie for years. As one man put it, when Sunday comes, just sit. This, then, is a picture of the human cost of the depression. It is worth remembering that these 1000 families were far better prepared than most to meet the depression, and suffered much less than the average. But the picture is, nevertheless, an appalling one. It is, as the labor department experts remark, a picture of a slow retreat from relative security toward destitution. S4 old work horse, Ed John-S- 1 ton Providence SILVER and Italian plums T L Grimand .east cemetery SI 3'6 tons first crop hay. Phone 59 or 769-- J S3. 8 rs many family burdens increased. Fully 200 MEANWHILE, workers took jobless friends or relatives into their homes. Many others made regular gifts of cash or groceries to needy families in their neighborhoods. So what happened? To begin with, savings vanished. Nearly all these 1000 families used up their bank accounts: half of them had to sacrifice their insurance policies. In 115 families, all with small children, the daily supply families cut off their milk of milk waj reduced. Thirty-tw- o entirely. Nearly all the families cut down drastically on their purchases of butter, meat, fresh fruits and vegetables. go TOMATOES and pickling cucum696 Canyon road. Phone bers , Such a look is provided in a study just completed by the U. .S. department of labor. The departments experts investigated the cases of 1000 representative railway employes to see what happens to a wage earner when hard times come. These workers took a general 10 per cent wage cut in February, 1932; but short time and loss of overtime work had already reduced their pay very materially, so that during the four years of the depression half of them had lost as much as 30 per cent of their incomes. of these 1000 men earnIn 1932, for instance, ed less than $1500; only 18 per cent got as much as $1750. Call S5 CHIFFONIER in birds-ey- e maple - 5 drawer, excellent bhape, $7 50 9s6-PI Phone cattle-t- well-wate- purebred S8 - rough or sell three-year-ol- household furniture GENERAL Good condition. 141 So , 3rd E " muscle-develope- bull, 1174-- J. pro-gia- . TRADE Jersey CHAPTER XXI the days melted Into weeks A Boots' realization ot what she had done, the seriousness of the step she bad taken that August morning .almost overwhelmed her. She would have died rather than admit that her marriage to Russ bad been a mistake; but there tt was. Nature, for her own purposes, had thrown a Yell of glamour over this particular young man. Moonlit nights, scent of roses In the hedges, the spell of physical nearness had blinded her to his imperfections. Now, quite suddenly, she saw him with clear eyes. He was a fine physical specimen, he was sunbrowned. he bad excellent teeth and an agreeable smila Beyond that, beyond the lovemaking which had already begun to pall a little there was simply nothing; no bond between them. They spoke different languages. She was not the first girl to come alive to this difference after marriage. But she was young and the lesson was a bitter one. Her stoic acceptance of the situation spoke volumes for her growing maturity. Although sbs celebrated her 19th birthday early In September she was years older or felt It In experience and wisdom. When she passed young girls on the street she glanced at them curiously. Was 1 really that stupid and unseeing last year? she often said to herself. After that black afternoon when she had received from her parents a strapped and neatly addressed trunk and a brief, cold note advising her that her father did not wish to hear from her again she had had no further word from Larehneek. She seldom went over to New York now. Slit had no money to spend and Gloria, discovering that Boots had a real talei for housework, was leaving more and more for her to do In the shabby fiat. IV hen questioned about their plans Russ usually mumbled something vague about starting for Florida a little later. Boots bad learned now that the car which he had driven about the village that summer was not really his. It had been taken back by the company because of defaulted payments. How they were to get to Florida she had no least Idea but for a long time she trusted la Russ to keep his word, against her better judgment and indeed her common sen be. COMET1MES, in the dead of U she thought of her mothernight. and her tears fell thick and f- - She uever let Russ see kjx cry. n nude Box IM, tare HIGHEST PRICE and hogs Phone Herald-- 1 St paid for veal 890-- PIIONE S17. J Club Girl j angry. He bated, be Bald, .squalling women." But usually he was kind. In a thoroughly unimaginative way. To this girl who bad been babied and petted all ber life the experience of living as a member ot this household was a devastating and maturing one. The old life, seen from this vantage, seemed now unbelievably soft and easy. What had she done with her lime, her money? Why, even her old scanty allowance now seemed prodhim igal. Weve got to get out of this Weve simply got to," she murmured one warm morning in late September. She was alone In the fiat Gloria had left the house a few moments before on one ot her periodical shopping orgies Gloria was perfectly happy strolling down Manhattan's Fourteenth street staring at the wax mannequins In tha windows, sipping a hot chocolate and swallowing a r sandwich at a crowded soda fountain counter. Lou and Gloria never managed to save a The Installment collector penny. was a familiar figure at the door of the fiat But Gloria came home from these expeditions triumphant in ber spoils a velvet hat just like the uptown shops. a sleazy pink silk vest, a pair of gloves which would shrink hopelessly in the first washing. Bargains were Glorias very breath of life. Her bureau drawers overflowed with lace trimmed nightgowns with frayed seama There were half a dozen shoddy pairs of shoes tumbling about In gray curls of dust on the floor of her place. double-decke- high-heele- d Clothes "I Boots closet cant lire this way. I wont, told herself, setting her lips stubbornly. This was the day Russ had gone over to Jersey to see some vague man "about a Job." Boots had rather lost faith In these nebulous Jobs. After she had bung towel beside the frayed cracked dishpan sbe spread the morning paper out on the drain-boaropen at the help wanted pages. Girl wanted . , . girl wanted - . , oh, there were 20 jobs open but she was eligible for none of them. Steno, college grad: dept store." Steno: some coll, operate slide rule." Switchbd. opr. mult exp. Alert capable woman, over 27; executive ability. CHE opened her purse, the dark bhie kldskin envelope she had bought so casually last spring. It was still smart looking but the change purse was limp; Bhe shook out its contents. Thirty cents. The quarter Russ bad given her yesterday. The nickel she had saved. Russ bad been shame-facebut blustering about It Stick with me, kid, and wear diamonds, he had said.youll Ue remembered hearing his father say that to his mother. Thirty cents. Five cents for subway fare to the city. Five cents back. She could have lunch at some counter. Maybe the basement or the dime store. Shed do it. Sbe wouldnt wait around tin Russ came home, till Gloria came dawdling In whh ber bargain of the day. Shed go oyer to New YoTk and Bee If there wasnt something anything she could do. If only she didnt meet anyone from home! That was the fear d Cortwf Or (A AM itfvfCt tNfr wbich plagued ber most of the time Would they cut ber, turn ana' their eyes? She put on her last year's fall tweed, still smart. She had pressed It herself. (How easy It had beea In the old days to telephone the tailor to come around') She darneo her gloves. On the street, her spirits 11 y ed. It was so bright aud blue a day; the air had a sort of toni in it. Sbe lifted her chin anti stepped along with animatluu She left the mean street with ti occasional pallid tree behind ner Ahead. In the dazzling clearness of the distant horizon, sbe coulc see the citys towers and spires New York! Sbe wasn't terrified by It, Us vastness and Indlffer ence, because sbe had known ;i all her life as a friendly place tr which one went on happy Jauni" to theater and shops and restau rants. Of course It was sot tin same now. She was one of a vasi army, struggling tor a footholil She stared out of the window train rushed over the bridge ber bands clenched in her mend ed gloves. I must find something. sbt I simply must. told herself. She had the newspaper warn ad column in her purse. Then, would be the agencies first. Ex No, she hadnt any perience? But werent there some thing" which didnt require experience s s woman behind the desk epHE shook her head pleasantly but firmly. The woods, she said to Boots, were full of college girls willing to do anything. Had sbe tried the department stores? She had heard it was possible to get in over at Lacys. 'Personally. sbe said, lowering her voice, we only handle clerical workblgb-clas- s stuff, you understand. But Lacys well, you might say you had a year of college. They like that. They wont investigate." Lacys was 10 blocks away. Ten long city blocks of crowds, of traffic lights, of milling taxis. Boots walked them briskly. Impelled by youth and a fervent hope and ambition. The personnel department of Lacys. Yon made out a long form, peppered by half s hundred questions, most of them sounding quite Irrelevant. You filed this. A serious young worn an with a deep voice talked to yon about the aims and Ideals of the big store and you went away buoyed up by a new hope. Mav-bthis time next week you would be behind one ot those busy coun ters. Lace or books or chintzes Part time at $2 90 a day. Four days of that. Boots thought ecstatically, would be almost $12 Sylvia Rivers paid $12 for ber sports shoes, but iat did thai signify? Lacys! She bad bought things here- - always. Blouses, gloves Now pretty tailored underlhings. ber highest hope was to be on the other side of the counter, a sale slip In her hand.. She pitted all her strength against the stubborn glass door which Bwung outward, colliding with a girl who was entering tbe store. Isabel!" The name tumbled out before she had time to tbluk. The other girl widened her did eyes. My dear, wherever you drop from? .(To He Continued) e |