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Show PAGE TIIR two. The nERALD-JOUR- A L, N Behind the Scenes HERALD-JOURNA- L in afternoon by the Published every week-da- y Cai:b' Vuliey Newspaper Co., 75 West Ceut vt Street. I ngsn, Utah. Telephone V), Price 6 rents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, $4 00 a year; uotside Cache Valley, $5.00 a year. By carrier, 45 cents a month, $5.00 a year. Washington 5-- The other utterance in Washington. signed As President Roosevelt a proclamation reducing the posfor rate to the books tal rate on he ovserved; "i heyre binning boons over in But as they burn them, Europe. we will extend the use of them." formerly Postage on books was from eight to 26 cents a pound, based on regional zones, it now becomes 1 tents a pound, lioosi 0 It was Odd that book sales would be increased by the lower rote and that half the population lived an average of 30 miles from any bookstore. James Mead of Congressman New York, chairman of the house and Atpost office committee, torney Morris I,. Ernst of New Yoik are ehtefiy lespolisihie for the i eduction. would according to the old WHOM the gods makedestroy, and the madness which mad; they first descended on Kaiser Wilhelm's Germany during the World War days seems to he placing a return engagement with the Germany of Adolf Hitler. The kaiser's Germany had everything to gain by remaining on friendly terms wit It the United States. The job wasnt easy; the agents of the allies were flooding the United States with their propaganda, there was a strong sentimental leaning toward England and Franee anyway, and things like tin invasion of Belgium and the toredoing of the Lusitania had made an extremely had impression. job might have been done, just the same, if it BUT the been handled right. With fathomless stupidity, the kaisers henchmen proceeded to handle it wrong in every particular. The sent spies across the country, concocted clumsy plots to sabotage American industrial production, did the whole business so ineptly that men like Von Japen and were presently revealed before the whole country for what they were; and in the course ol' time so was aroused and so many Amermuch American icans learned to look at Germany as an enemy that President Wilson had little trouble getting a declaration of war. More than 20 years have passed since then. Having lost the World War because it permitted its own stupidity to turn the United States into an enemy, the German government might have been exacted to learn. Hut the same sorry story is being related as witness the spy trial in New York. Once more German spies are operating in the United States. As of old, their capacity for making blunders seems to exceed tueir capacity for helping the father-lanand as a result the beans have been thoroughly spilled and the whole mess is out in the open. Boy-L- d ill-w- ill d; TIIKI'.F TIMES AM) OUT One of the most gracious ladever knew has ies Washington left government service with the retirement ot Miss Mary M. O Reihy, assistant clireitor of the mint since 1924. She is 73 years old anil the only reason anyone knows that fact is that her third extension of service beyond retirement age has just run out. Three time - an almost unprenumber a presidential cedented order extending her term was granted on Secretary Morgpn-thau- in-s insistence that she was dispensable Various political appointees have had the title and emolument of mint director. Miss Mary, however. has run the mint for more CGiTespondeiits than 20 years. and others who wauled to know about coinage always were sent to her. Foreign governments ofHer ability, ten consulted her. poise and charm made her a of high treasury officials . I CAMPAIGN (XX, OMEN Among candidates for the Nevada state legislature this year is one H. E. Hazard, nic knamed "Hap. His friends think he should have been long ago in Vash- ington, where his name could have been appropriately tagged on many acts of congress. war-tim- dnt worry so long as it stayed in Europe. But here we have nazism in our own front yard; nazi agents promoting subversive movements on our own soil, j tampering with our military forces and acting with all finesse of 1916. Could anything be betthe left-hand- ed ter calculated to destroy that post-wa- r American sympathy or to persuade Americans that Hitlers Germany is once more a potential enemy? The monumental stupidity which did Germany so much damage in 1916 seems to have taken hold once again. HUNGAki HORIZONTAL resent ot 1,8 The 14 Hungary, Strong vegetable. $5 Vigor. 16 Clearer. 17 Folding bed. 18 Small tumor. 19 Copal. 20 Convent woi ker. Answer la U f R N ol area. J5 Unopened Rower. 15 Coffee pots. 27 One plus one. 29 Color. 30 Clay lump. 21 Canopy. 32 Passage. 34 Tiny vegetables. 5S Pi ickly pears. I i JO N U f Tjy EJUiO'T ,TOHHflF JA N b eEJ i 4 I OF S sE'it 1q W SJeIY'R A J C3 ;ka aEyHoot iS Gpt n THA R rHLiO frlAtlN E'WS L I Ic o p R aHo'i North Africa. 4'J Beast of burden. 41 Jumbled tvpe. Si) 42 Eianli.iir Indian. 43 Pov.di r 43 47 48 4k 31 Ku.-.'ia- . E erh lk y i ERTICAL 1 Negative. 2 To become liable. V 3 Plant pait. 4 Opposed to told. 7 wedlock. Inner soles 20 He was a hero in the World War. " 21 To court. 2 God of lovfls 19 entered after th9 war. 25 Nut covering. 28 Moist. 29 Feminine pronoun. 30 Pci taming to the brain. 31 Timothy gras. 33 Dewood Leo. 34 Sanskrit dialect. To protest. Extraordinary 40 9 Expands. 10 join In 35 Company. 37 Paymaster 5 Onto. C Year. 18 To IV A If ra a!a TREE Ich ingredient. Hook eves. Expel t 11 Cl- Behold. Age. Cab) Ionian SSKerai god. 52 H's military pronoun. 37 Young salmon title. 53 Pco; i In 33 Household pert. 13 A era I 'fiicers. 14 Measure jk-- pv.i r II Non- commissioned .! O A 'JPV F oi 'ik; t E P j; T 0 O C (.. STATESMAN ! 1 Conosiun on metal. cn a boat, Chart. 41 1 old. 42 Coal dust 44 I .and measure. 46 Opposite e of three lines. young. 12 Roosters mate 50 Egyptian god. 11 Stanza 1 938. representative to a hat manufacturer. He never wears a hat , . Post Office inspectors have been checking the sour-- e of an ar.onry-mou- s "Message to the American (Continued From Page 1) People, 'mailed fioio San Fluneis-(- 0 to ail Congressmen. It accusts warm laudation, urging rc- Three groups are receiving the Roosevelt "under the ricthrx; F'rrt, destitute unerrp!ny-able- s domination"of ot being the Church or who huve no source of inSenator F, Ryan Duffy, Wisconsin Democrat; and adroit let- come of any kind; second, state ter which, while endorsing Duffy, relief recipients without jobs; also lossei) a posy at Wisconsin's third, WPA workers, and those e and movement". receiving pensions great progressive Roosevelt did not name names, unemployment insurance. The basic rule for all classes but he meant th .t LuFollette's L. candidate, Herman .kern, is that no attire be given anywould be entirely acceptable to one who can afford to buy. the White House. 4 XAUSTROPHOBIA Governor Earle and George British K Embassy officials tell A. Charles Jones, of Pennsylvania, one about the questionnaires Democratic senatorial and guber- this desent Britain by natorial candidates; a letter prais- fense throughout officials to learn the degree ing both and vigorously assailing of civilian preparation for air Republican claims that they did and whether bomb shelnot meet with White House favor. attack, adequate. Among the Governor Elmer Benson, Minns-sot- a ters wereasked one: "Do was D Rome and the Jewish Church. . Toe new Resident Commissioner X this a telegram questions you suffer from claustrophobia?" Officials were surprised to note that pracitcally all men answered No, but many women replied that they did suffer from claustrophobia. They decided to see if the question had been properly under- Farmer-Laborit- to the chairman of the Working Newspapermens Campaign Committee blessing Benson and expressing the hope that "liberal overnmental policies' would be continued in the State. Culbcrt Olson and Sheridan California I)owriey, Democrats, individual letters for each urging their election. Bltl'CE BARTON to Jed Kiley, "A Washington street already the of Interviewing a woman, they We notice you have indicated you suffer from Are you quite sure? "Oh yes, quite sure, came the answer. "But do you know what the word means? Yes. I looked it up In the dictionary. It means 'fear of-- confinement'. asked, has MER7:Y-G- O Administrator Elmer Andrew's have become the most popular in Washington. Reporters flock to them, bombard him with pieries. and courteous. Andrews tries to answer all questions, but with a large sphere of bis authority still undecided he runs into frequent difficulties. At one conference a newsman, after unsuccessfully trying to obtain information, asked Andrews if he had heard that a Washington lawyer was advertising himself as an "evasion expert on circumventing the new law. "No, I havent heard about him, grinned Andrews, "but we might have a job for him here. I sure could use him at press confer- A ote For Hans Mikkelscn For Cuunt.v Treasurer TOMORROW! Bernice Christensen and trustworthy woman who deserves your support at the polls Tuesday a woman who has remained sweet and smiling in the midst of - - - is an efficient severe trials. i- - Cast Your Vote for Bernice Christensen tf Vf J $ for claus-tionhobi- a. been named after Bruce Barton, he advertising Congressman, It is Dumbarton Avenue. EVAMON EXPERT Next to the press conferences of the President, those of Wage-Ho- Don't Fnr,;et To M. four-brothe- j stood. Joaquin Ph.hppines, . Flizalde, had to give up polo to come to Washington. In Manila, brothers made he and his thr a crack polo team, one of the teams in the few world. i County Recorder (Political Adv. Paid for by Friends of Mrs. Christensen) - ROUND Tommy Corcoran, closest adviser to Roosevelt, once served as legal BALLOT d 1 1 Cache County, Utah General Election, Nov. 8, 1938 EYS RECORD Securities and Exchange Commission has an interesting case involving Tom Dewey, New York candidate for Governor, which indicates that despite his DEW The racket-bustin- fame, Tom still g munch apples HARASSED 1IOK.A.N Harold J. T. Horan, once an ace correspondent, in Europe and now stationed in Washington, has returned from a European vacation with word that the job of being an overseas correspondent has lost its glamor in most forwrites "unfriendly articles from Berlin is likely to have trouble getting who be- that a friend is a friend. The case of that of the Continental Securities Corporation, one of the smelliest cases before the SEC in some time so smelly that -- hen it came before Tom Dewey, he indicted all of the important figures in the case except two men at the top. They happened ,o be represented by his close friend George Z. Medalies law firm. Medalie, former U. S. District Attorney, is one of the chief backers of Tom Deweys Republican candidacy. The men Dewey did indict were Philip Frear, an trader; and four lawyers, S. Leo Solornont, Ralph H. Robb, Thomas W. Morris, Vincent Ferretti. The only two men Dewey did not indict were the two brokers, Sartell Prentiee and Jerome C. Brady, who executed the transactions under scrutiny. According to SIX' investigators, they were! as deeply involved as any of their But at the grand sutiordiniites. they were repjury proceedings, brother-in-laof resented hy the George Medalie, Deweys eanqiaign to ask for adviser. Dewey failed their indictment. Lamar S. U. Later. Attorney Hardy found the case so strong took it up, sehe himself that cured an indictment. FREE iLOi'HING The biggest mass distribution lieves through several administrations. "I am getting rid of 33 years' of useless papers,' accumulation Miss O'Reil said the white-hairely with a smile as she cleared her desk on the lust day. "I am now year and in my seventy-fourt- h when a woman gets to be that old, she shouldn't think or doing anything strenuous. My plans, therefore, are to read and knit and eign capitals. The newspaperman 7, ences." I d how dumb it all is! AND the war there was a great change of sentiment in the United States. People began to realize that the peace treaty was unjust, that the war itself had not leen e all Germanys fault and that most of the judgA real feeling of ments were hasty and sympathy for Germany prose. Even the excesses of the Hitler government didnt However much Amerentirely destroy this sympathy. icans may have disapproved of the ways of a dictatorship, they at least realized that the kind of government Germany chose to have was Germanys own business. Distrusting nazism profoundly, they felt that they nee- NOVEMBER old-ag- magazines, HISTORY AND STUPIDITY REPEAT TOETIIKR MONDAY, UTAH, MERRY-GO-ROUN- exWASHINGTON, Nov. tent to whleh tne European situbetween ation and the eontliet democracy and fascism is on the official mind crops out in every Member United Press, American Wire, NT2A Proclaim Liberty Service, Western Features, The Srripps League of Thru All Newspapers, and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. the Land. matter In the postoffice at The Liberty Entered as second-clas- s Utah, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879. Bell. will not assume financial responsibility for The Herald-JournIn its any errors which may appear in advertisementsis published at fault, It will columns. In these instances where the paper reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical mistake occurs. LOGAN, o o For United States Senator For United States Senator O FRANKLIN S. HARRIS For Representative in Congress For Representative, in Congress LeROY B., YOUNG For Justice of the Supreme Court For Justice of the Supreme Court WILLIAM II. FOLLAND n For State Senator For State Senator LJ HEKSCIIEL BULLEN w For State Representative milk for his baby, let alone cial news, say Horan. Other forms Much of pressure are exerted. the same sort of thing applies in Rome and other capitals, except London and Paris. Correspondents who use the mail often found their letters were tampered with before they left the country. of clothing in peacetime history, now in progress, is being done so PRODIGAL quietly by state and UFA officials RETURNS that hardly a line has appeared Professor O. M. W. Sprague, in the press. who adviser early quit treasury The clothes are the 7,500,000 in the new deal on a violent disgarments for men, women surplus agreement over policy, is back ar.d children that the Government in the fold. He wus called in as bought from manufacturers at a a consultant by the temporary cost of $15,000,000 to provide a committee conduoting stimulus for employment. economic the monopoly investigation. SpraOf this, $8,500,000 went for 1,100,-00mens and boys suits and gue says the national debt ran rise from its present $38.000, 00V overcoats, $1,433,000 for 400,000 onO to 50 or 60 bill. on without diswomen's and children's garments, turbing government credit. But the remainder for hundreds of of knitted dresses, he warns that deficits can't go thousands on indefinitely. sweaters, mm kinaws, jackets and t Copyright. 1938, NEA Service, Inc.) raincoats. offi- TICKET REPUBLICAN For State Representative (I. Dist.) (1. Dist.) Mrs. SERGE B. BENSON For State Representative (2 Dist.) I REYNOLD C. MERRILL For State Representative For State Representative (2 Dist LJ ) I (3 Dist.) For State Representative 3 Dist.) WILLIAM P. LE ATI I AM For County Commissioner Term) W. For County Commissioner Term) II. GRIFFIN i .Term) Term) II. F. OLSEN O For County Cleik HAROLD G. WOOD For County Sheriff WILLIAM II. SHAW OH SUGAR AGAIN THANKS JAMES Thanks for checking me on sugar. You are right l:t,0O9 acres was allotted and some over 10,000 acres used. However, for 1949 an increase of only 800 acres is allotted over 1908 planted acres, just enough to give each one of our 20 districts 40 additional acres, and Wellsville alone wants 400 acres. Under modern methods farmers are getting their lands in better shape and are calling for more acres, hut 1909 is settled. No grower can plant beets without applying, and no new grower without application, examination and permission to plant. At Chicago recently, 200,000 extra acres were apS. with hut. 00, 000 to draw on, and plied for in the Secretary Wallace would not allow any more, anti he (Wallace) absolutely refuses any new factory bnild-in- I. For County Surveyor For Preeinet Justice For Precinct Constable For Precinct Constable For Precinct Constable g. PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION Notwithstanding we produce only about HOG of the sugar we consume, we have an oerhrd to tell us we can only plant so much. Further, the Nessa, Oregon plant with 17,000 acres for 1948 takes a .".000 acre cut for 19.19, and Snake Bier plant loses 1 0,000 acres. Verily James, it seems that your Dr. Wallaces Cuhamtes piescription is working for the Wall Street millionaires who hae their money invested in Cuban i NO aite. IIERSCIIEL (I id Politir.il Advertisement IllLl .F.N i .ir County r r- -' |