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Show PAGE TWO. The THE lain MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1 9 3 6. THE SPRING THAW Humor United Press, NEA Service, Western Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. Member llnwdy, folks! Some of the old highways looke like they were laid with permanent waving instead of permanent paving. Liberty ihr mutter at the postoffice Entered as second-clasall the Land." The at Logan, Utah, under the Ai t of Congress, March s Liberty Bell. UTAH, (Gcich e Published every week-da- y afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co., at 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, J2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5 00 a year. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3 50 a year. Trot LOGAN, L, Our HERALD-JOURNA- L vmiik lAguJ nERALD-JOURNA- 3, 1879. A room downtown is a place where you are glad when the trucks roar by to drown out the The power to tax is the power to destroy. NUMBER noise. Those who are governed least are governed Lest. Thomas Jefferson. BACK TO SCHOOL - Make a sentence using the word canoes. "If you've got a spare dollar, I canoes it. AMERICAN SPIRIT NOT DEAD urge for independence that is the basis for Needed Inventions: Parachutes THAT terrific we like to call the American spirit, is far from for use of travelers descending from upier berths. dead. Dole and compulsory relief jobs may have deadened it to a very small degree, but given half a chance it would e HOROSCOPE re-vi- itself even beyond the point of its previous manifesta- will be unfortunate for eating pickles and ice cream at the same meal, or failto remember the wife's birthTo prove this statement, just suppose that you were able ing The stars fortell a day. to open up another west, another California, another Klon- deal of talk in congress and great warn eating blueberry pie unless dike gold field, to the rush of the pioneers of 1936 who against dressed in blue serge. Babies born are jobless all over the United States. this day are lucky it will be yet before they realize the How many of the families represented by the 19,000,000 years tax burden we've saddled them with. unemployed Americans do you suppose would fail to respond Today persons tions. to such an opening, whether getting to the new land of independence meant thousands of miles by oxcart or on foot? Very few, we fancy. The greatest waste in the world today is the energy pent up behind that same American spirit that cries out for a chance to earn its way, to hold its head high with the pride of achievement, pride of work well done. Since there is not new land where these millions of unemployed can go with a hope of establishing themselves by their labors, the work that they must have remains as it will remain until solved the greatest problem that has jet confronted this n tion. All other problems that have confronted the United States had a solution in sight. There was a this way or a that way choice leading to an answer. Only this one problem in the nations history seems opaque, lightless, impossible of solution within the bounds of any plan of action that the majority of citiens is willing to consider. We are still muddling through, trying this device and that with desperate hope. The first man or the first group of men to see and chart a way through this problem should take a place with George Washington and Abraham Lincoln in the nations esteem. For the continuing problem of what to do to earn a living is as important to this nation today as were the quesabolition of tions of taxation without representation slavery in their day. Possibly even more important. I .. Bright Moments In Great Lives Staying up too lute, says a woman's page note, makes circles under the eyes. Also in the bank account. A IRI.E I BESTS Little businessmen who, to impress you with their importance, have their secretaries call you up and say: "Hola YVira minnit, pliz! Mr, Glotx wishes to talk to you. dont know whos back of colonies but theres a pretty big crowd in front of them generally. We nudist 1W6. FAMOUS SYMPHONY TO PLAY IN S. L. CITY, March LAKE musics major event 4 falls on Tuesday evening, May 5, A woman who publicly deplores the new styles in evening gowns at 8:15 p m. when the Philadelis a woman with a knobby back- phia Symphony Orchestra plays at the Salt Lake Tabernacle under bone and not very good legs. s the direction of the American optimism is what Leopold Stokowsky. makes the country provide less This is to be the only concert in than 1,000,000 hospital beds for the intermountain area of the orthe in motorists the 25,000,000 chestra of 105 musicians on its Union. tour transcontinental reaching from West to East coast and from Canada to Mexico, sponsored by YE DIARY the Manufacturing Company. sur-tonew In my new shoon and By many critics, the Ihiladel- and beaver hat, to the print-erand my guidwyffe maketh me carry an umbrella, saying it one of the latest finds, It imprinted looked like rain. But I hide the the picture of a man, a woman and umbrella In the shrubbery and a serpent. believe Archeologists know better, and lo! it raineth them to be the representatives of cats and dogs and I come home our Biblical Adam Eve. The and all bedraggled, and my wyffe bawl estimated age of the tablet is 6000 me out for a ninny, but saying years. It would, therefore, seem naught to the baggage, a murrain that this story was passed down on her foresight among ancient peoples long bej fore our Bible was written. world-famou- RCA-Vict- ut y, Post no bills! "Jumbo in the rejuvenated theater in New York, has been the brunt of many gags, altho none can deny the success of his venture at this date. Just hefo-- e the play opened he was Showing some friends thru the uieaiA-c- . his menagerie was housed in the basement,, and among the lot of animals were a herd of elephants. The hour was 4 a. m. to keep a flock of animals all during the rehearsals, enumerating how much they added to expense. Just before they walked into the basement. Rose turned to his friends, put his finger to his lips, and cautioned: Everyone looked amazed. "I dont want to wake the elephants, he explained, because when theyre awake theyre always eating. h. BEHIND THE SCENES -- BY RODNEY DUTCHER- - gresS unconstitutional (rr,iiiift KSC ftervlee VfTASHINGTON. Lawyers may differ among themselves as to Che breadth or narrowness of the TVA decision, but almost any one of them will atill teU you he would give his right eye or. at least, a couple of minor toes to know just what went on In the secret U. S. Supreme Court ' conferences which produced the opinion. Only nine men know. But the deduction of those who best know the court and Us ways is that there was more tnrmoil among the black-robegentlemen than at any time previously in this generation. Their idea is that a court which eo frequently has whacked at New Deal legislation must have been forced into a bit of a dither, before tt handed down a decision. favorable to the New Deal. The administrations lawyers. Including some of the most clearheaded ones, have it all figured out that a conservative majority of justices originally wrote an opinion which declared TVA and the sale of power unconstitutional and that In the 60 days elapsing before the decision the majority was persuaded to change its attitude with the exception of Justice MoReyn-olds- , who opined TVA was accomplishing unconstitutional pur, poses, seemed to indicate & presupposition that the , majority had declared an act tin-constitutional In. this case. In the subsequent legal gossip, Hughes has been given credit the light and persuading Sutherland. Butler. Rml VanDevau-te- r to go along with hint. g H' up In the administration HIGH believed that certain exteris nal facts also finally influenced the court: 1 The definite romantic pops-laritof TVA, Including common belief in Its reasonableness, and the fact that to ruin it would be even more unpopular than the decision against AAA. 2The storm over the AAA and the danger to the courts prestige Inherent in cumulative effect of a scries of opinions .arousing mass resentment. 3 obvious Intention of the administration to mske use of divisions of the court to and of Infallibility. lack charge attack on the AAA deci- The city is laid out in squares or blocks as they call them, each containing ten acres and divided into eight lots, each lot having a house. I stood and looked and looked I could hardly give expression of my feelings but I think my prevailing ones were joy and gratitude for Gods protecting care over me and, mine during our long and perilous journey. We started at 11 oclock and drove to the home of Mrs. WalPARADISE lace, having a letter of introduction to her from her husband who Miss Maud Miller, a nurse at is in England filling a mission. the Budge Memorial hospital was She received us most kindly and to have my wagon a guest of Mr and Mrs. Harry desired usinside her enclosure, at brought L. Welch, Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Theo Geary of the same time offering us any Smithfield were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Welch. Mrs. Gladys Christensen and sary of her son Keith. Games - ere Mr. and Mrs George Austin of played and dainty refreshments Logan spent Friday visiting rela- served to nine small guests. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Williams antives. Mr and Mra. .John J. .Roberts nounce the birth of a baby boy of Logan and Mr. and Mrs Joseph born during the week at their Roberts of Ogden spent Wednes- home. Mrs. Clara Pearce and Mrs. day evening with their mother, Mrs. John T. Roberts, who is ill Margret Danielson were guests of honor at a primary class party, at her home. Mrs. Marie Hirst was hostess at Monday afternoon given by mema childrens party at her home bers of Seagull class. Games were Friday afternoon, the occasion be- enjoyed and refreshments served ing the eighth birthday anniver- - to eleven guests. brought to life. Here gathered the poor and the oppressed of other lands and they budded far better than they knew. There is much more of this dairy, relating their experiences in Utah covering a number of years, but this completes the journey of eighteen hundred and QUAKE HITS CHINA SHANGHAI, March 2 (U.R) Forty-persons were reported killed today and scores injured in an earthquake at Kanglo, in Kansu Province. More than 1,000 houses were reported destroyed. six COMMON colds; Relieve the distressing symptoms by a pply ing Mentholatum in nostrils and rubbing on chest. MENTHOLATUM tCiwtiCOMrOIIT Dilym If you prefer nose drops, or throat spray, call for the NEW MEMTH0UTUM LIQUID In handy bottle with dropper From the Hills $ Numerous wise lads thru the years have been having lots of fun taking wallops at Hank Ford's smart the public statements, crackers admitted that Ford had created more wealth than any other man in human history, but as a philosopher, economist, student Hank was just another dumb. The recent staement by Henry Ford as published, of all places in the Saturday Evening Post will give the wise lads pause; we have to reestimate the innate genius of Hank's mental processes. What Ford said was what many of us have been sayiug for many years, but all of us who said these things were small, unimportant fellows who not only had never created any wealth, but who had not even managed to make money, we were merely carping critics of a system that we had failed, or refused, to conquer. But when the richest man in the world says that government and money changers bankers, brokers, the entire tube of those who make money by using public credit are both parasites, and equally to be suspicioned by good men everywhere, then history is in the making. When the biggest business man earth casually remarks that the only final function of business is service and that the only excuse for private capital is its ability to more cheaply produce not greater wealth for everybody to make money for itself then big business has something to ponder on, because it is not a soap box orator shouting, it i the old bell wether of the business flock, legs and arising on his lamb-lik- e evhowling like the danged wolf to ery little sheep was taught flee from. I hastily read Mr. Fords ments, looking for a joker somewhere, wasn't any joker; then sion. by Senator George W. Norris and there the article, and I slowly he digested it sentenoe by sentence, cannot explanations relaxed, Sl'Cll as gospel, and the court word by word, and thenembers In listened to the dying But well. enough let Now secrets said: and the guards its fireplace Justices have whispered to their thy servant depart in peace. secretaries In time past to make sometimes i plain that the court legible-- , fights and wrangles lke a majority opinttve body and that SCIENCE NEWS ASIDE from the long delay on ion may be drafted tea or a dozen from "evidence" enunciated is 4s the opinion, there times before, it jKeeping Up-to-Da- te that an original dissenting opinion the bench. was surh as to cause a change. The Dr. E. A. Speiser, of the UniPolitically, the visible effect you cf versity of Pennsylvania, who has opinion of Brandeis, can expect is a concurring Stone, Cardozo. and Roberts, agree-tai- criticism by members of the ad- been making excavations in the as to constitutionality, bore ministration itself such as Secre- great mound of Tepe Gawra in evidence that some of it had once taries likes and Wallace but a northern Iraq, has made a startThis mound is comling find. :heen part of a dissenting opinion. continuance of attack from of the ruins of a series of senators, whose words posed Emphasis by Brandeis, who deancient cities, built successively livered it. on historical evidence likely will have the administraone upon the other. His latest ithat in earlier years the court had tions secret approbation. find concerns the biblical story of beea loatti to declare acts of Con- - I (.Copyright, l'JJ6, NEA Service. Inc.) Adam and Eve. In a clay tablet. y d tributed to this but polyglot organization In Leopold the Stokowsky, Philadelphia Symphony has one of the world's most famous conductors. Out of a relatively unknown group, Stokowsky has forged an orchestra recognized the world over as one of the most expressive instruments of all time. This will probably be the last in the chance of music-lover- s west to hear the fiery Stokowsky, because at the end of the current season he retires as director of the Philadelphia Symphony to devote himself to research work. Sale for the conceit by mail order opens March 7 The Salt Lake concert is being given under the auspices of The Deseret News. conveniences her house affords. In the course of the afternoon we received calls from several of the neighbors who bade us welcome and gave us invitations to their homes. I hope in a day or two to be in a home of our own with a roof to cover us as we have been living in ur wagons twenty-fou- r weeks this day, where I can sit down and think over all that has taken place on this lengthened journey. This is tne end of the journey. Yes, this remarkable journey of Mrs. Joan Rio Baker and her family are at an end. No matter how often we read of such experiences it must each time take a fresh hold upon our imagination. After all the trials, hardships, heartaches they came to the end of the long long trial a winding. It was not only a journey to a land of hope and promise but a great moral adventure for religion and humanity. Here lay a great inland empire waiting to be touched by the hand of the husbandman and HILL BILLY! will IN WASHINGTON phia Symphony Orchestra is considered to be the foremost in the world. No expense has been spared to secure the finest instrumentalists. bn perhaps no country, except America, v here race prejudice only infrequently asserts could a body of musicians similar to that of the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra be brought together. From France, a nation for centhe turies supplying greatest been have woodwind players, gathered a number of players for the woodwind section; the Jews, universally recognized for their genius in the mastery of the violin, are represented; the Germans, who lead in the playing of brass Holland,' instruments; England, Spain, Russia, Italy, America, the Scandinavian countries have conit'-el- Billy Rose, who is successfully and Billy had just been telling staging the great circus drama, everyone what an expense it was travel. Thank God it is over now, and they tell that five miles tomorrow will bring us into the said Salt Lake City. This is the 29th of September 1851. We arose this morning with a thankful heart that our travels are nearly finished. After breakfast, and looking after my two patients who are doing even better under the circumstances than we could have expected and the babies first rate, we ascended the hill before us, and I had my first view of the city. SALT DEFINITION 37 Nearing Salt Lake in 1851 "On going only a little ways from this lovely spot we came upon seven wagons all in a row, every one of them with a broken wheel or axle. This sight made our company very careful for fear of being in the same fix. We had some trouble passing and soon came upon some more in like fix, making in all 17. We picked our way as well as we could and at about sunset we emerged from the canyon and caught a faint view of our destined home. We camped in a hollow just at the entrance to the valley and night came on before we could obtain a good look round about us. I then began to find that I was very tired, so went into the wr3gon had suffered and found Eliza much from the jolting of the days on 6-- 5-- 4 The re-re- Se-la- h. 1& (Q WEDNESDAY SATt SDAT g SOSA NINO EONSFILB MARTINI KOSTTLANFTZ OSTHFTRA 7 P. M. T.) AND COIL4BIA CHOBI S NETWORK. C Liccirr 6 My uu Tobacco Co |