OCR Text |
Show r THE PAGE TWO. The nEEALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, L, SATURDAY, OCTOEEE UTAn, OLI) MACDONALD HAD A FARM, HERALD-JOURNA- L I E--I- -E OOOO 193 j. 10, Envoy of Mercy -- GO- ! (Continued from page one) afternoon by the Cache Published every week-daValley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center Street, '.open, Utah Telephone 50. y An 5 cents a copy. By mall, In Cache Valley, a year; outside Cache Valley, 55.00 a year. By arrier, 40 cents a month, $3.50 a year. Member United Press, NEA Service, Western Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. matter at the postoffice Entered as second-clas- s at Logan, Utah, under the Act of Congress, March appropriation of $150.w0 to make the survey was contemplatbut ed, Huey Long's filibuster of the deficiency bill prevented the After several months ot grant searching the Budget Bureau found a way to make STo.omi tT'ce 12 50 ''Proclaim Liberty thru all the The land. Liher'y Bell 4, 3, 1879. to the FTC, available Copyr.ht, 1935, by Uu.Ld Fi tures Syndicate, I03.) plight of the Simple Simon vs ho wants to eat his t ithe have it too is as nothing compared to the difficulties besetting a nation which wants to have both war profits and neutrality. President Roosevelts neutrality stand has already nas come brought some anguished squawks. The loude-trom the Conference on Port Development of the City of New York, Inc., an organization of shipping and exporting firms which has protested vehemently against the trade restriction as harty and This organization declares that American trade witli Italy has given jobs to thousands of citizens, especially in the New York area, through which 90 per cent of our exports to Italy flowr. After asserting that the neutrality proclamation virtually abandons Americas traditional insistence on neutral trading rights and freedom of the seas, it adds; Our exports to Italy have exceeded those of other nations, and are now at stake unnecessarily . . . Italy offeis us a market lor our surplus and she buys more' than she sells us on balance. tine and it just ALL this is probably quite us that peace, like every other blessing attainable by man, 1ms its price. For .the one tiling that ought to be clear, in any discussion of neutrality legislation, is thi: we can keep our skirts clear and afoid Ihe danger of being drawn into a foreign war, or we can make hay while the sun shines and cash in on war orders but we cannot possibly do both. Living up to i!j!o;arms embargo will be costly; make no mistake about that. I It will prevent us from selling many a bill of goods. If The present war spreads and involves such nations as. England and France, our loss will be even n d .... long-distan- gu.a full-pag- fa' Nations at war need many things, and they are things which we 'are peculiarly well equipped to sell them. 7 of that kind is, the price bf peace. If we are $ BUT ''? not to get drawn into another European y:.v :. war, our one hope is to forget about the profits. IN The lesson of 1917 is unmistakable. When you set yourself up as warehouse and granary for a warring nation, you By United Press are simply leading with your chin; sooner or later you find NEW YORK, Oct. 19 H P) Seaof gulls and clams are making a your own fortunes inextricably tied up with the fortunes whole community of motorists fit the army of .Vour chief customer. to be tied. The gulls congregate Some folks! of those The anguish of these New York exporters is natural Howdy, in great numbers along East could countries make European Inlet to dine on clams. They and understandable. Our embargo, even though it is inup with each other if they break clams open by carrying complete, is costing them money. What we need to keep werent trying to make off with them aloft and dropping them on Carter in mind is that any sound neutrality program is bound each other. the Atlantic Beach bridge. Motorginias Glass, is a bronze bust of Carists dont like to have clams to be expensive. The nations of the world, It apHomer Price ter Glass breaking on polished hoods and But you might remember that the profits we would have pears, are not so much interested fenders. Rainey, New Deal's latest brain In swords into a was lost if we had refused to sell goods to England and France s truster, professional ball beating plowshares "PALK of the return of the as they are in beating competitors before he became President 1 Pi player Kans to , Oct 19 from TOPEKA, amounted never to World War have would the Austria, resulting during Since into oil fields. university. The illness of Felix Ernest, the Austrian governments restora of Bucknell a tenth of the money we actually did lose by going to war the Texas league, Rainey the best man, did not stop the of that family's crown prop- quitting tion has gone in for tennis and yocal on their side. wedding, nor prevent Ernest to Archduke Otto, includes touy iclie or self-deni- Oddities & AM! c aero-nautic- ... 'i THE NEWS Mumor GdmebacksThe Wapsburgs .... Rock-awa- y Senator-journali- st .... Dr. Arthur Torrance, famed California scientist, adventurer and authority on tropical diseases, is organizing Red Cross activities In n Ethiopia. war-tor- American Legion, bears a striking facial and tonsorial resemblance to Big Jim Farley, frequent.y is mistaken for him. Murphy says that when he was in Washington la-- t spring, "I was so pestered with job hunters who thought I was Fariey that to get rid of them I almost had to make appointments to see them later." . . . t laude Bowers, noted historian, orator and American Ambassador to Spain, is President Roosevelts choice for keynoter at the DemoSilY K3 next cratic conventual has accepted the invitation TIRE Memto make this speech bers of the congressional party BEFORE en route to the Phillippines as SEE guests of the insular government put up a vitrolic srap over asA IKI3 signments of ship quarters. So hot became the row, that forme. Senator Harry Hawes, in charge of arrangements, finally appealed to the Protocol Division of the State Department not only to de- fiLL-WEATH- ER cide seniority rights but to handle the distribution of cabins . . . . Miss Bertha O. Sherfcy, keeneyed chief of the Treasurys CurSection, can rency Identification identify fragmentary bits of federal money in 135 denominations. James M. Beck, one of the LibDeal lawerty League's anti-Ncyers, has just entered the lists spring-Bower- .... tm NEWS OF LOGAN CLUBS "Vanitas, vamtatla," they give up humanity as a had job and retire to their mossy shell. I am not pessimistic as to human progress. Indeed I feel that we have gone a long way in this country m matter of social and understanding common justice tiwtha,, hapless was T.ethae lad. a I since quoti from a fellow who says it very joyed the sight of hungry lions clawing, biting and crushing the in victims life out of helpless the arena, and nowadays his heart goes out in pity and sympathy for a suffering dog. "Almost yesterday he was a fanatic, religious heretics on the torture wheel, and today he is so refined and tolerant that he lives in perfect peace with atheists and sceptics. g was For ages the the common practice, even statutes of civil codes permitting the beating, provided it was done with a stick the size p of a finger, and now the be horsewhipped would by his neighbors if the merciful If law did not put him in jail. all this is not real progress I know what this term do not means. from Science, Trutn, by Harry Religion and Ethics, Mann Gordon; one of the books that I find joy in keeping near at hand for reg- when she mystery babbles : who sees novel, so Oh, youve just begun to read that perfa sc fectly 1 i i ? Youll tor Jpiyvtrry never guess (how the plot turn out! It fooled me completely. Of course the butler committed the murder, altho youll ll probably think the nephew did it. But, there, I wont tell you any more. I dont want to spoil the surprise for you! Photo by Jose Osier ' ne'er-do-we- wire-beate- The. Office Cynic observes: What a woman doesn't know about driving an automobile will fill almost any street. r Here lies a -- the Is that you have just started to read a thrilling wife-beatin- WASHINGTON LETTER : ihine woman quartering well, Indeed 7 , lias not man changed from a beast, with his snout to the intelligent ground, to a highly being, rapturously gazing into infinite space? "Once he was a cannibal, ferociously and with relish devouring his fellow man, and d so now he has become that he deplores the killing of animals for food Not so very long ago he en ular kind-hearte- Mrs. Cyrus W'. Shoes hine has just been elected president of the ladies auxiliary of the Poison Ivy . dub. Mrs. Shoe- - The : EPITAPH skies, same as -- lawyer in neath the AViiliam R. from serving. Rhea and Mrs. Laverne Smith, bride and groom, went to the hospital and had the knot recollection of a powerful empire that rose from a humble beginning in the little town of Habichtsburg at the junction of the Aar and tlic tied there. Rhine, some 900 years ago. Quickly the Hapsburg power grew, mostly EL PASO, Tex., Uct 19 if R Somewhere between here and Linby marriage into other ruling fam Ruth coln, Neb, Bryan Owen, ilies, until, in 1699. at the peak of U. S. Minister to Denmark, was their power, the Hapsbuigs influ traveling today with two dressed enred the greater part of Europe fleas. She purchased them in and most of South and Central Juarez, Mexican town across the Amerira. border, and said she would take Then came decline until in 1919 them to her grandchildren in revolution ended the family rule. Lincoln. Failure of Emperor Karl, father of hastened CHICAGO, Oct. 19 (U.Rl Identi- Otto, to regain the throne now- - the fied by his victim, Raymond his death in 1922, and heir may resume the famVteavej, 35, was in jail today on a charge of borrowing a fountain ily power over a greatly reduced en from E. N. Bergman, store territory. owner, writing and cashing a bad The stamp shown here is the last cheek and walking out wtyli the of the Haps- v , pen burg empire. It pictures the CHICAGO, Oct. 19 (I P Arraign-o- n unfort u n a t e a disorderly conduct charge. Emperor Karl Martin Reich, 28. told municipal and was used Judge N. J Boneli he was a during the two communist and wished he were years he was in Russia. "That s fine," said on the throne, the judge, announcing he would turn Reich over to immigration from 1916 to 1918. officials, "I know of no better way to serve America." (t'cpj right, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) life he lies and lies. Gee (after the football were horrible game): I think they not to cheer the fellow with the white pants; he carried the ball more than anyone else. erty USAC GLEE CLUB : AVliat country has a free postal system? at L151 Gee BY RODNEY BUTCHER MA iirnlre Slnff Crrrioilrwl Scads of New YffASHINGTON Dealers have been out around the country lately and many of them are now back on their jobs reA symposium of oft ports trom these fellows shows they're distinctly more optimistic about the 193G election than they were one month or two months ago. They agree Roosevelt will have a "fight and most of them Insist it will be the "dirtiest fight" ever seen in an election campaign. They are just as bitter about the millions they expect big business to raise to defeat the president as Republicans have been about the .billions of money which the G. O. P. terms a "campaign fund" Most New Dealers to regard f the money as a sort of But now campaign fund, too. theyTc worried over the extent to which the WPA progiant may also become a liability. ' d work-relie- f work-relie- epHE stronger belief here in the- Inevitability of Roosevelt's reelection has been partly due to the "good popular reception F. D. y had on his trip. But it's much more due to the fact that the traveling observers find, as they found a year ago, that neither Republican candidates nor isaues are stirring up popular enthusiasm. Which perhaps is a for Democrats, beluqky thin cause these observers also found almost universally; cross-countr- 1. General resentment about the looseness of relief evien(ll-tu- r. irarry !eiliiiu ran rc- - ply that responsibility for this rests with local administration, s any attention, but noboilv (.raft, inefficiency and odocous politics are all charged up to Used Cars A L L Roosevelt. 2. The d titles are still that A A t's slaughter of little pigs" is to blame for the high price of meat-- And most people in the cities judge AAA on the basis of that. 3. People arc bewildered as to where we're going from here and joung people, especially, wonder what theyre going to do for a living. And, in vast numbers, administration men atmit, citizens are where all the worrying as to money Is coming from. eon-time- after another. one slate IN Democratic politicians have reverted to type and are engaged in vicious factional battles. This is going to weaken the national ticket to a degree and wilt certainly result in some Republican victories in state elections where control , is now held by Democrats. (Ohio and Iowa, for instance, seem fairly certain to elect Republican governors.) Despite all that, returning political correspondents as well at Joe Bungstarter That was a rather stupid caddy you had this afternoon Li Gee Gee I should say so: He could be turned upside down and used for a No. 3 hon! For genuine obscurity, there were a Italy interested adminictratlonists are of voters impressed sy the failure to demonstrate any love tion for the Republican Indicate any desire to the good old days. or particularly steamed up thing Republicans are ing. Copvioiiit I9.J5 X and affecparty, to return to now offer- Inc.. of my foot cloth press doun an imagdo inary brake, and every time we imround a corner I do sound an YE DIARY aginary horn, so that when we do home, I do be mighty wearie Thj dav to driving In petrol reach the coaching. But anon buggy hither and yon about the from countryside. Dame Brew being at we, merrie enough, to dinner. the wheel, but I do take naught of Look out, that driver ahed of 1' ne in the journey, for Lord! cv.r turn' we do go down a hill. you is slowing up! I O D E L S 31 ! 0LDSM0BILE BUICK CHRYSLER ! GRAHAM FORD TRUCK DESOTO ! ! ! ! ! WHIPPET .... PRICED ! CLEAR! TO 3 , ncer Motor Co. Logan - Utah Senator Hiram Johnson's . LmirrfW frrfF L',ri'rrr RUNNING Tht failure to call or communicate with Roosevelt while he was m California is causing considerable onjecture. Johnson was scheduled to be present at the Boulder Dam ceremonies, but wired that he was ill The President's entourage ex- peeted a vis c or some weleomin , message w' en P.oosevelt got to California. But nothing was heard from Johnson, t, 230 pound Ray Murphy, 'new National Commander of the NEWHOUSE HOTEL Salt Lake City, Utah six-foo- Mrs. J. H. Waters President Si Ra' Sf Vl V y BEDS from $2 00 from $1.50 GARAGE SERVICE AT DOOR HARVEY M. TOY, MANAGING-OVY- r jjvuj POWELL II Rooms THE MOST convenient THE BEST accommodation THE FINEST meal FAMOUSLY SOFT With Bath Attractive Cheerful K ICE WATER J 350 1 IN ALL ROOMS Without Bath - so Deserving Its Popularity das to become over any- iCA 5'eivice. suppose been set. At the present time Professor Welti is making a study of a number of light operas of Gilbert and Sullivan and Victor Herbert also classical operas from which he wi select one for the annual college produet.on during the winter-qu.ute- r. "Kigoletto." "Faust and "11 Trovatore' have been presen.-eunder the baton of Professo. Welti fiom the grand opera class-ic- t and 'Blossom Time was last year's choice from the light oper 1 group Due to a wave of renewed interest in compositions by Gilbert and Sullivan. Professor Welti is now leaning toward that source for material he said. In the spring term the choruses will combine in the presentation of a cantata. an oratorio, oc a LATE CHEVROLETS ! PLYMOUTHS nt . G- Company .... . KEW Blair Motor Booked for a part in virtuosity. he sang lustily The Messiah threugh an hour's rehearsal, directly after having cleaned up the Bucknell tennis championship. In Washington he will be another Revolt adviser on youth sales tax was against California's e would-hgovernor staged by her the other day. Upton Sinclair soda fifteen-cecream ice a had in a Pasadena drug store, refused to pay the extra penny, walked out sajing, The sales tax is illegal Reports reach Harry Hopkins' office from Miami that the new community building, a WPA project, is ready for the is roof though the cornerstone not yet laid. The formality of laying the cornerstone, scheduled originally for Labor Day, was rudely interrupted by the hurricane. STEADY JOB Captain Philip H. Crook, head of the Supreme Courts newly private police force, knows a good thing when he sees it. two young sons, he says of Father he hopes they will become jusCrook: Its a tices. Explain steady job, pays good, and jou certainly can't beat the hours . . . Owing to the limited wireless facilities in Addis Ababa it sometimes takes the State Dcpartmei t 18 to 20 hours to get a message through to the American Consi General in the Ethiopian capital . Some of the works thus PLANS BIG YEAR mass far presented are: "Loaves from John Stainer; Ossean, by Sir Increased interest in the vocal "The Passion by Ross.ni, and St. music department of the Utah Cecilia Mass," by Gonoud MenState Agricultural college has delssohn s Elijah will probably swelled the men's glee club to be the selection for the spring 100 and the womens club to 85 Professor Welti said singers according to Professor presentation, the superior musicanship Walter Welti, head of the depart- because choruses the in justifies such an ment Each Friday these two clubs meet in a combined rehearsal undertaking. for their annual fall concert Program of serious, harmonous and The date- - for classical numbers. this years presentation has not &zm G0BEAH Haps-burg- chirped, so - which will KHNG, GOING The inner circle is buzzing with a report that Madame Secretary Perkins soon may retire from the cabinet. Her absence from Washington for nearly two months is lending strong color to the whisper. Reports are that Miss Perkins is being tempted with a job of heading a nationally-knowcollege However the rumor should be taken with a grain of salt. Miss Perkins is ardently attached to her job and proud of her high official eminence . . . Employees of the Works Progress Administration have been mstructeJ never to refer to the McLean mansion, recently rented for office space by Harry Hopkins. Instead, they must use 1500 Eye Street." Even verbal use of McLean manA drive sion" 19 frowned on to line up the lawyers of the country against the Administration has been quietly launched by the Liberty League . The entire membership of the American Bar Asis being circularized sociation with application blanks to join the League's committee of lawyers which "handed" down an unofficial opinion holding the Wagner labor disputes act unconstitutional . . . . A snappy telephone call from the Federal Alcohol Administration the other day. caused to an eastern brewery hastily e advertisement withdraw a that carried a picture of the President and the line: "Mr. President we thank you RE SELLING HIGH 1'KK-vS- l D m Roper's Department of Commerce is staging a high pressure sales ait in the interest of U. S aircraft manufacturers. By inviting South American aviation to Washington, then alofficial lowing private companies to spirit them over the nation's airways, the idea of U. S. superiority in aircraft is being driven home. The act was timed to beat Europe to this new market. French. German, and Italian companies will try to sell their stuff at a conference in Lima, It is no Peru, next month. figure of speech to say that William Warner Durbin is the New D J's master of money magic. As Register of the Treasury, he h'ndles government securities. But in spare time he is an amateur magician, taking money out of the air and making it vanish He is President of the again. International Brotherhood of MaIn the main o.nce gicians of the Lynchburg. Virginia, News and Advooate, published by Vir- Tin: I discover numbers of fellows my age who with the years inAfter crease their pessimism. looking things over for half a century tnese chaps decide that was Solomon right when he f- - sufnee until Congress meets WE LOSE WAR PROFITS, IiUT GAIN PEACE! greater. probe of food prices e nation-wid- as an attorney for FrcJ Hunting leral warethe defendant m the At Be.ks reques, housing Case argument of the case was postponed one week bcfoie the U. S. Supreme Court. This is the case tuat New Deal law vets regard a, their best bet to get a more liberal interpretation of tne in instate commerce clause of me C, ER 4Wt 'Vp'ia M i'l . ; ill 0 s p I T A L J T Y An m OFARRELL - SAM FRANCISCO Offerin'! Individual rooms at a price that is exceedingly moderate. W E Sutton General Manager Chauneey W. West Assistant General Manager r&aafcw |