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Show TI1E rAGE TWO IlEltALD-JOURNA- SATLliDAV, UTAH, LOGAN, L, N O V KM 1 K Ii 19 20, 3 7. HITLER AS iMEDIATOR BETWEEN JAPAN AND CHINA? The 1ubIislwHl every week-da- y Cm be alley Newspaper Co, 75 Lou in, Utah Telephone 5U Pi odUim Liberty Thru afternoon et Center by (XI 5 post-offi- March 3, 1879 WORKBENCH GLAMOR FOR CLASS MISFITS iaft thinker have id high school lads fault. We have IT isnt the ambitious glorified the white coilarman; a5 Mr. Feather remarks, we have taught the young chap to look forward to a career rather than a job. He feels that it would somehow be disgraceful for him to wear overalls. The result of all of this is that the swollen middle class is jammed with people who simply cant make a decent living in their chosen occupations. We have penniless young lawyers who wait with desperate anxiety for the practice that never materializes; hopeful young dentists who can find no teeth to fill; salesmen by the score and the gross who skimp along on a hand to mouth basis, a scant jump ahead of the sheriff; clerks who get along on day laborers pay; and a whole army of luckless mortals who try half a dozen jobs in the course of a decade- succeeding in none of them and eternally driven by the haunting fear of poverty. Vet all the while the skilled trades lack men, and the skilled worker goes along happily and comfortably on an income that would look like very heaven to these harassed white collar misfits. BY KAV NELSON She wasnt paid a very compliment by her employer when, he said "So far as the methan-iiof secretarial sclent e are concerned, she is superb But she has one fault. She is clock-eyeShe is clock-eyePerhaps she never comes late to work; neither does she come early. And when the clock chimes quitting time, her chair can always be found vacant, and her desk neat and tidy She anticipated quitting time, she had been assiduously watching foi it Hut she is You nuiy say: lured for only so many hours. Why should she do work for which she isn't paid? The usrun true ual line of to tills vein, anyway: 1I at first would be pleased at her overwork, later cxM'ot it, and still later demand it. - Mr. Feather suggests, simply, that WHATS the answer? uniforms to take the place of overalls; and aefore you start laughing, just consider the prestige which a neat uniform gives to the job it goes with. We have an abundance of good technical high schools to prepare boys for skilled trades. It would be a fine thing if we could find some way whether Mr. Feathers, or some other to show young men that the white collar is not the only badge of distinction in this country. Maybe the uniforms would do it. Maybe a universal would. Whatever the solution, it return to common is high time we found it. And in most professions is the above principle applicable I like to think of the ideal employee being he who does just a little more than he figures he is getting paid for. If a man never does any more than he gets paid for, he never will get paid for anymore than he does. cent of United States voters fear a new That's not as many as feared the Democrats - depression. in '32 and 36. to be a "VVhyi not A is simply an who works for the institution of which he is a part, not against it. not wear rubber "He does boots and stand on glass when he gets orders from the boss he is a good conductor, and through him plays the policy of the house. The interests of the house are his he is the business and he never separates himself from the concern, swabbing the greased chute, on the place oi by knocking management. individual - A pen- this say: never says outwardly, 'I er inwardly, Only 26 has or wasnt hired to do that, nor does he figure to work exactly eight hours and wear the face off the clock. "He works until the work is done and docs not leave his desk looking like a map of San Fran. He cisco after the shake-uprizes his health more than he does a good time, so he has a good time all the time. and belliakcs are "Soreheads usually suffering from overeating, lack of oxygen, and lack of good sense. If you want to be a beware of the poker piochvity and the destiny has you on his list." "If you work for a man, in heaven's name work for hnn' "If he pays you wages that supply you your bread and butter, work for him speak think well of well of him, him, stand by him and stand by the institution he reprep. Goin Fishing? F-- t Jrff r, pool-roo- h; . : ' 'S r' 7 MfesY : ' I : ' y ALASKAN sents I "If put to the pinch, an ounce of loyalty is worth a pound of cleverness." WATERS l HQ FISHING 7 w Shall we cut our Mona Liza" from the frame, keep the frame that is gilded with the very hours our employer exacts, and paste the smile on the face of a clock? U-S-- 13NMSHEU- --.T- A n iiy Several months ago this paper pointed out that, if agreement was not reached, dividing with Japan the fishing waters of the Pacific, serious international difference- - would deevlop. some woihing This week, such international differences are beginning. as various Pad lie coast groups plan a boycott against Japanese goods in piotest against vvhut they term infringement on American fishing rights. Senatots Homer T. Pone and Lewis Schwellenbaeh, set ing the gravity of the situation, are doing everything in their power to awaken congre-- s to the need for some fiieiully settlement of this disputed issue. Let us hope that this coming congress will pave the way for such an international agreement to settle once and for all a question which has arisen because of modern methods of world-widfishing. e long-herald- Gceyiicnt ilMXiftMsHiiiftftM' Our CACHE I of HUMOR ii'M'i'M mi Howdy, folks! Joe Bungstart-e- r has two tickets for the turkey game. He says he doesn't know where they are, but he thinks they nius he dose to the line. flfty-doll- ar The experts who puked the Giants to defeat the Yankees m the world series aie now a few sure-fir- e football winners GRIDIRON NOTE Another triple-threman is the gink who sits behind you at the football game and drops peanut shells down your neck, bellows in your ear and smashes you over the head with a folded newspaper. i In some homes the sound oi scorched toast being scraped is the signal that breakfast is ready. v Our lives are interwoven With camouflage ami bluff We talk about Beethoven And like the jazzy stuff. . WASHINGTON On a recent day when many dispatches were repotting that the president of the United States was thinking to placate business, up ways Roosevelt was toying with an idea which had little in common with such a trend of thought. Perhaps nothing more will be heard about this, but the idea was that for about $500,000,000, the government could buy control of the Publlc utility industry in the United States. common stocks Dy condemning of holding companies at present market values, certain of his experts told Roosevelt, that sum could be made to purchase control of more than $13,000,000,000 of public utility value. And then the government could operate the electnc power business to suit itself. The president, furthermore, seemed to think this bold move might be a good plan. But it may end in mere thinking. Congress would have to approve it and Roosevelt has troubles enough. At any rate, the fact that Roosevelt should even be thinking of such a thing is significant in its indication of his present atttude in the face of a business recession and loud demands from business for less reform. The president, according to some of his intimates, considers the UNCLE present situation somewhat Biaiis president has just told r the othcis hill have a term the I mted States is just about the only place left where the voters do the telling Eleanor Holm and Belly Rose are engaged to be married just the nunute their present husband and wife get divorces That is technically a previous leave jail to go to prison Offhand, it looks like a case of out of the consomme into the soup. Forty-tw- o men anala-gou- s Li'I Gee Gee .says she is 19 to the one 100 years ago years old Well, it must be uuc when Andrew Jackson had his Shes stuck to the same story all historic battle with the Bank of the years wove known her United States and Nicholas Biddle promoted a panic to help the "money power" discredit Jackson YYHAr WOULD ini'. with the people. Roosevelt NEEDS read the new biography of don't take Fireplugs that Jackson by Marquis James. pp so much parking space. The power front in the New Deal's battle with economic royThe height of sop ething or other alists is the one on which Rooseis scratching yotu match on the velt never has weakened or compromised appreciably and power "No Smoking' sign is the one field in which there v whose legalized monopoly We like to write a poem like this is have possibilities of exploitation It's such a cinch to do it, A word or two. and then were been demonstrated in past years. The "power trust" and financial through interests behind it are regarded There's really nothing to it; d by New Dealers as a spearhead the attack on the New Deal. Beauty Item Fainting the fa e in New Dealers have been looking never fools Father Time or ket ps to public purchase of forward the creaks out of the joints laige piivtYe power companies and insist that some companies are anxious to sell in certain areas, E DIARY but at 'watered prices." But the Supreme Court soon Thys evening, Lf.tle Homer be- will have a lot to say about the ing saucy, 1 do resolve to larrup power fight-an- d Roosevelt will the lad, and tell him so, saying; have a lot more to say about the This punishment I am going to Supreme Court if the decisions give you, my boy, is going to hurt don't come his way me more than it will you. And he The Duke Power c ise, involving doth reply: "Well, Iop, dont he PWA's right to award too rough on yourself." But Lord: for local public power plants, is I have not the heart to larrup the about to be argued before the leczany, but, do give him a long court. The company act, ture instead, to which he doth pay unanimously holding unheld by the Cirif little, any, attention. cuit Court of Appeals in New At ChattaYork, will follow it Another word out qf you mv nooga nearly a store power comson and hv 53 lawpanies, represented yers, aie ( hullengmg TVAs constitutionality in a suit whuh is expected to be appealed directly to the Supreme (curt at its present term BY UNITED PRE.--S Copvnght 1937, NEA Suvnc Ine SAN HlVNtTSl'O, Nov 2u U " hu-Mrs Dorothy Barry Nam hez s (.(HIDING MW DIES jbind liked marriage fine, became he i ould tell his otnei guls that a couldnt marry "He even hoi GOODING Idaho Nov to it p a date with a not hi r f,:tl on ou she m o0 J H Evans. 75. pioneer Gooding testified wedding night ousmessman died Ft .day after a laming i divorce months illness LOS ANGELES Nev 2o Two Lion-- , toanil ,n Mi, Mi'v McMillans ba kv ml toil tv vvb'li out a Ik him Muj uulinanilv her North HolUvvood thu lion's are firm mils neighbor, glared The ne'ghhois hiougb. Tftuny us aiml 20 and Tunis is 17 into court on i rhuree Neither siu mid eer has bit of keeping fcio, ions vmm.ils with ly ODDITIES IH'DLKY h cide the open golf championship after besting the nation's best veteran pros. mid-sout- NEW PROS MEET FOR GOLF TITLE PINEHURST, N. C.. Nov 20 if Hi Henry C. Poe, Durham, N. C., and E. J. Harrison, Little Rock, Ark , both making their debut as professionals, faced each other toplayoff to de- day In an I First-da- y sales at Honolulu and Washington of the Hawaiian btamp appioximated $47,-00- 0 for 1,560,000 copies. The stamp was criticized in Hawaii, pait'cularly on the grounds that the figure "Kamehameha I was not a likeness of the real king, but modeled after a young Hawaiian native. The real portrait appears on a $1 Hawaiian revenue stamp. (Copy right-- . 19S7, NEA Service, Ine.) Rodney US'? wsrnuss i37 MA Behind the Scenes in Washington loan-gran- ts BY i.-- Under orders of the Crown Agents, the new regular issues of Great Britain and British colonies me reported in pi epp ration, all to be in issue by Jan, 1. 1938. InSeycluded is the chelles set. I Hubbard , Tentative lineup of the 1938 U. S. stamp piogram indicates issuance of at least two commemora-tive- s, one to mark ratification of the Constitution, a second to commemorate the 300th anniversary of the founding of Delaware Since only 17 of our deceased Presidents have been nonoieu im sunup, a pew piesidential series probably will be rssued in 1938. The piincipal of a prominent Utah hieh school said last spring' There have been two superinother tendents from districts of teachlooking over my line-u- p ers today. Their needs seem to be identical and they are both considering the two men in ray school m that certain field. The one I'd be glad to get rid of. Yes, he knows hi subject well, goes over well in the classroom, hut that's all I can say for him, and that isn't enough for me. Id rather not have in my school a teacher who comes in the morning four minutes before the first bell rings and leaves In the afternoon five minutes after the lust bell rings. I cant see how he can truly teach in that fashion-can't ace that he could get and advantageously personally acquainted with his students and his problems. "X wish one of the superintendents would take him off my hands,. But I hope neither take3 the other teacher in that field. I want him left The other instructor he was afraid of losing considered the day as young when formal school closed. He worked overtime. Poe, former collegiate golfer at Duke University, finished the regular tournament route with 147, posting a par 72 Wednesday and a 70 in the ram yesterday. Hairison went around in Four veteran tournament players were in the group gracketed at 144 Four veteran tournament players were in the group bracketed at 144 They were Jimmy Thomson, Lawson Little, Harry Cooper and Tony Manero, along with Toney QUESTIONS THAT ARE 'Tis well tnat the tastis u; world do not follow mine in n,L. matter of precious stones i'or I would not trade a pretty ins., for the diann nd agate tor my own enjoyment and i,se I mean. A moonstone found on the m beach gives my simple s, , more satisfaction than a vindo. ful of the gleaming gerns ()f raibon that come pure Africa's diamond mines. As a kid I used to hoaid da'i marbles flints, we sonatinas called them and cornelian mu, fresh from the gravel beds, and Indian arrow heads. Was quite successful at u, io0, in a dumb, unmethodical w..y if my tastes had ever swung m(r to diamonds, rubies and emu t,ds and the knack of collecting tin in had swung over also, todav might have a corner on the stone market. r In that respect, however, I grew up. A good collection of Indian arrow heads never fails L() excite my imagination and dexue My own collection, when I had one, was housed in a denim sai k with a puckering string. I could teach a hand in and pull out the ones I prized the most. Agate marbles still get a tumble from me when they are fla li.ng on the vacant lots in the spring time. And a bit of cornelian or a piece of translucent stone of uny kind will stop me for a gize and a feel. My hoards of agate taws, pebbles and blocks of cornelian and the arrowhead collection gathered in several states have been gone these many years parceled out to kids who had the same leanings, partly by myself, partly bv a mother who never tired of having them around the house when I was young I was still a green young sapling when the tragedy of mv Ai collecting years occurred. I think it broke me of continuing as a collector. I found the perfect arrowhi id It was on an Indian reservation m South Dakota. The arrowhead was of purest milky wh.ie flint, and the most flawless one I have ever seen ,No diamond-cutte- r could have made a more d perfectly-lacetestone with all his modern toe's. I kept this dream stone in my bunk in a surveying crew tent. One dav while I was gone it The loss stopped me as vanished. a collector and seriously damaged my faith in human nature Koh-i-No- the series. be-s- es Elbert .. MAKING action after publishers of the Scotts general catalog refused official recognition of the scries, the Cuban postal administration has- - rescinded its former order and now declares the Association of American Writers and Aitisls stamps valid for postage at any time. Originally the issue was good only on Oct. 13, 14 and 15, which led to a chaige of "exploitation. Comprising 23 stamps, the issue is of special importance to American collectois since the designs symbolize tributes to all American republics and Canadj. Lincoln appears on one stamp. It is now believed that the standard catalogs will lecognize Clock-Eye- d d lieen rtioknifr their late and trying that the great American middle cIumi is being squet.ed almost to death hy the pressure of hard times. What they lad to add is that the great middle (lass ha just been asking lor it by taking unto its hiMini a gnat mans people who would he happier and moie piospcioiis This fait was neatly touched on recently by the publicist, William Feather, in an article in Nations Cusinoss. In spite of unemployment, says Mr. Feather, the nation today suffers fiom an acute shortage of skilled workers, slid the shortage is going to be oven more acuteam-in the near future. And why? Because the average bitious high school lad of today has his heart set on a the 'prospect of dignified white collar job, and scorns first-class pattern being an expert turret lathe operator, a else that requires or machinist skilled a anything maker, manual labor. SERIOUS Glances At Our World ft Entered as second di.ss matter at the at Logan, Utah, under the Act of Congress, the Land '' The l.ibcrty Bell ter the of Newspapers. Ail X-Repor- Street, tents a t opy Hy mail, m Cat he Valley, year; outside Cat he Valley, $5 00 a year. By carrier, 45 cents a month $5Hj a year. Member United Buss Anient an Wire, NEA Service, Western Features and J he Scripps League True $4 Stamp Now HERALD-JOURNA- L s i,Lv-c- Penna of Dayton, O. Tommy Ar- mour, Horton Smith and Frank Moore, tied at ABOUT ASKED of Mamaroneck, 145. BANKING 1 a BauJ ')MLLuceu- (L H TAHIS question can best be answered by an illustration. Suppose you receive from John Jones a check for $io written on a bank in another city. You bring the check to us, endorse it, and deposit it in your checking account here. Your account is credited with $io on our books. This $io then becomes uncollected funds until we send the check to the bank on which it was drawn and receive the money or equivalent credit. You do not have the money in your account to draw upon until we collect it. The money belongs to John Jones until the check is presented to his hank for collection. Through the American system of correspondent banking we arc able to handle the collection of checks from one city to another with case and rapidity lor the convenience ol our customers. CACHE VALLEY CLEARINGHOUSE ASSOCIATION COM IOSEI) OF First Security Hank Logon Bram'h FOLLOWING BANKS- Commercial Natl. Bank First National Hank Logan, Utah ! Cache Valley Hanking Co. Logan, Utah Siuithficld, Utah Lewiston State Bank Lewiston, Utah First Security Bank Rirhniond Branch N. X, |