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Show u THE PAGE TEN The Herald-Journa- l n, The lii Me In occurs. is least are governed best. TIIOMAS. I KKKEKSON. When New WPA Law W as Debated Tasted A They BY Herald "..A manhood, was lying on a morgue i rushed. We write this, hoping it will not im rea.se the anguish of the parents ami sister; hoping, ruth-e- r, it will help children to more fully realize their responsibilities to their parents, and the debt of gratitude they owe them fur life and sustenance. It is written in the hope that children will see how thankless and cruel It is to deal such crushing blows to tiio.se wlio care for them, who love them, and who have hopes of seeing their ambitions fulfilled in them. flih, K J 7, Iad.ay Iowdle was killed shortly befoie midnight on his birthday his twenty-firs- t birthday. Death .strut k on the Igan canyon highway. in a speeding automobile that swerved dizzily around a curve for an instant, and then with ter-- l a suddenness, rammed dying f boulder. 'I here are several things that can happen when a siieediiig automobile strikes a solid rock a boul- der that has weathered the element for ages. Hut the most probably oiitoome of sueh a erash is that the driver is thrown forward against the steering column amt dish hoard with sickening suddenness and a dull thud. When the driver is thus lurehed, his chest Is most usually crushed and broken, and his skull fractured, and the pressure is so great that the eyes pop from their sockets. H. W. (Bunny) Austin, famous tennis player, and a leader in the moral rearmament forces, said recently: The trouble in the world must lie in jreople. If people could be different, the world would be different. Fear, in individuals lead to the hate, greed and same evils in nations. These are the things against which the world needs to rearm. This moral rearmament is a colossal race against time and the forces of destruction. If ever the bitterly disillusioned world needed a great moral rearmament, it is now. The thought back of the moral rearmament movement is that since Man has failed to find the way to peace, perhaps the way of Cod may do so. A long, long time ago that militant, old Christian, St. Paul, wrote in a letter to the Ephesians the exact theory of moral rearmament. Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day This nation, which is dedicated to the ways of jieace, will sincerely hoe that these men and women, meeting in the name of Christ and moral rearmament, may be able to kindle some torch that will shed the light of Old World. peace over the self-seekin- He was killed g SIDEGLANCES r4 5. ' 1 Vr yi J444 ,4y vvi ; u rmfc V a hz '.im h, . !- - v COpg imBVNf,MftVlCt Its "A y&'Ak, NC T M BtC V 3 FAT midnight. ff broad-gauge- ot THIS CURIOUS WORLD Off. daddy lie wants to know if the hens have eleaiad - out so he cun come home for supper. Vrlov left Sunday Ferguson - IF VOU LEARNED V1 TWENTY-F- I N1VXJ INSECTS EVERY DAY, IT WOULD TAKE about sxrry TO MEMORIZE the NAMES OF ALL Mr. nml Mrs. Percy Larsen in company with Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Lai sen of Preston and their to Blackfoot, motored families Idaho Sat ui day where they spent the day visiting with their brother Mr. aiid Mrs. Arlamj Larsen and family. Mr and Mrs Island L. Auger and daughter Uledu and son Yeloy in loirpnnv with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Houslcv of Dayton, Idaho, snout Thursday in Pocatello, and Idaho Falls. Idaho. Mr. and Mrs Guy C. Petorhorg motored to Ru htnond Saturday whue thev spent, toe afternoon visiting relatives nnd friends and thev also attended a reunion. Eulalia Larsen spent u Mrs few da vs this week in Downey, visi'im; with Mrs Alice Auger. Miss Ailalui Webster is visiting with her sister Mrs. Maude Me-- i ham and f tmily in Firth, Idaho Mr. and Mrs. Christian J. Larson 8 pent the week end in Huntsville where they visited with Mrs Larson's parents, Mr. and Mrs John Jorgensen and other tives and friends. By William THE NAMES OF LELAND AUGER, Reporter .... ALLEN to heat GDI plans by is no chance of any action this engineering new deal health pro- year. That is exactly whore McNutt gram; his job to institute social medicine project for Democrat enters the picture. He will drive to prepare the boust reviews shows Hull lost chance year ago to amend neu- ground for the enactment of legtrality bill; Long's law partner islation next year. Wtiat form this legislation will drew up Incorporation pallets of take is something McNutt will Smith broker. WASHINGTON There wan a wotk out with medical leaders reason why Paul McNutt took his and experts. The Wagner bill oath in the office of Dr. Thomas will be the starting point. It is Pnrran, head of the Public TTFhlth the result of a year's study by appointed by Service, and also will huve his a special committeeheaded the President and by Miss headquarters there. Josephine Rocne, former assistant to his real secretary of the Treasury. That is the tip-ojob as chief of the new Federal TWO REASONS Security Agency. There are two reasons behind The platinum blond Indianan this undercover strategy: will give little time to the SoFirst D the 1940 presidential cial Security Board, CCC, NaThe administration Youth tional Administration, campaign. d public Public Health Service or the wants a Each is health program to its credit on Office of Education. 1940 approaches. well manned and operates under the law books as it enacted specific statutory powers. There In the sphng of 1936, Act and made Social is room for a certain amount the Security of correlation of their activities, big capital of it among voters. Second reason is that the new but that will be a secondary dealers have learned that Dr. concern of McNutt, Ills interest will lie centered Glenn Frank, chairman of the on the new deal's social medicine Kepuhliean program committee, is mbllr secretly formulating a program. Senator Bob Wagner, father of health plan for use as GOP lail-llure. the Social Security Ait. Intioduc-e- d Exact nature and extent of a bill at the opining of this session for an Jxon.nououo public Frank's Republican program is health plan, ranging from free not known, but inside informa medical service for the needy to turn in the hands of the White the construction of hospitals and House group indicates that he establishment of government dis- aims to have the GOP offet the ability insurance. The Sena'e La- plan as a concrete illustration ac-of bor Committee nns held a number the constructive things it will of hearings on the measure and complish if elected, as compared plans to make a report before ad- with the Democratic lack of acjournment. But beyond that there complishment. Glendale C. a McNutt ' - V) By DREW IF. ARSON and ROBERT I'Ray could have saved his folks that anguish and sorow. In the first pluee, anyone who drives at an excessive speed is enlife and the dangering his own isn't fair to lives of others. It himself, his folks, or his follow citizens. In the second place, a young man's responsibility to his father includes the observance of the countrys laws. A son's responsibility to his parents includes, too, a serious attempt to reach the high objectives his parents have set up before him, and to fulfill their hopes and dreams. war-madden- , The Washington Merry - Go - Round step-mothe- ..." . -f Consider the bitter cup that was passed to the lips of John E. Dowdle, father; Bauline Dowdle, sister; and r. Blanche Anderson For 21 years Dowdle, Mr. Dowdle had built his hopes in his only son. His boy had graduated from high school, attended college a year, and was preparing to enter a music college. He was an accomplished musician. Then, in an evening death crushed the father's hopes by crushing the life from Lcdtay, ins only son. hard-boile- d rp--- - v e at " , s A V Today morticians have mended and expertly prepared BeRay Dowdle's body for burial so that his father and sister and stepmother can have a last picture in their minds that is not so terrible. He'lics in a morgue. Yesterday, the for piesents his folks had bought his birthday were unoened on the front room table, lie h;dt left on the afternoon of his birth anniversary. They hail expected him to the oien them that evening, butwrap-ping day after Ids birthday, the them. paer was still around . ' f. umbillam e. (Kiuroiu i.) ' f. LcRay Dowdle. Ros-co- Death seemed inescapable. Harris was riding with him, but sometimes one sitting beside the driver can escape death's swoop, can come out of such an Occident, with broken bones, torn flesh, and bruised brains. The car bounced to a stop across the highway without overturning. For a minute it sat hideous in the night, while the driver's body was flung against the dashboard, and the passenger was raving unconsciously. Then someone came upon the scene, halted traffic, and sent for the From all parts of the world men and women are going to the Hollywood Bowl in California on July 19 for a moral rearmament conference. great world-wid- e This move toward the simple tenets of Christianity, stripped of all dogma and creed, may well be the answer to the weary worlds plea for j reave. Because men have searched the world over for the past 20 years, and can find no reave ; only wars, and threats of war. rj.i ' K7'7 INSECTS KNOWN TO SCIENCE CUP WJ Br MA ROSE:-PIN- INv.. klw M PAf U OFF K CORAL ONCE SOLD FOR. Administration masterminds are out to beat the Republicans to the punch and it will be McNutt's goal to steal their thunder by putting over a Democratic health program. Note Among APPROXIMATELY" 500. Rs F. D. Choice As R. F. C. Head RIGHTERONG, THE FOOD EATEN BV on a n w AnswerRigid. buds v. Im. Canaries c Iiatlnis BIRDS AFFECTS THEIR COLORS exand parrots me change color with changes ill diets. well-kno- first. Harry had got there MERRY GO ROUND As one of (aB-18- ) e. session of congress. Some of his advisers now see that if they had changed one part of the neutrality Ithat regarding Spain) when the senate was ready for it last year, the precedent would have been fixed and the way paved for exactly what Hull wants now. For certain senators who were leading the fight against the Spanish embargo, such as Nye and Borah, are the ones whom Hull most wants to convert to his side now. LONG OF LOUISIANA Quiet research regarding the money maneuvering of Dr. James Monroe ("Jingle Money) Smith, former president of Louisiana State university, reveals an interesting angle regarding th new governor of Louisiana, Earl Long. It will be recalled that Doc Smith's account in wheat on the Board of Trade, was Chicago handled through J. M. Brown, of New Orleans, and Equities, Inc., of New Orleans, of which Biown is president. It now develops that tlie ntan who drew up the Incorporation papers for KquitieH, Ine was none other than ( km Sehert, ot New Orleans, law partner of Earl Long. In return for incorporating the company, Sehert is reported to have received $2 000 in stock in lieu of a fee. Since Bcown was president of Equities, Inc., and Doc Smith a director, it is highly likely that Governor Karl Long, partner of Sehert, knew at least something, if not all, about the operations of the Louisiana University president and any other high placed individuals operating with him. Ed Note -- Another column on the Louisiana political scandals follows tomorl BIRD UOODKING With the St.ue de; artment tak ing over the entire old State, War and Navv Building, temporary quarters wire ordered fixed up for the thieo top War department officials in the Munitions Eight rooms weie asBuilding signed for their use and the other day Assistant War Secre-- t try Lotus Johnson and Clref of Staff George C. Marshall went over to inspect them. This is what they found: One small office had been set aside for Johnson and Marshall. The other six of fires were reserved for diminutive Secretary of War KXKLY - Woodring. the big Army bombers was coming down over Bolling Field in YVashing-to- n a gunshot pierced her fusil-agSTATE DEPT. HINDSIGHT Investigation found that the Those few in the State depart- enemy, was no German, Italian ment who admit that it is pos- or Japanese, but two small boys sible to make mistakes now look practicing with a 22 rifle in near back on their Spanish embargo by woods . . . p. Howland Shaw stand of a year ago as the most is the State department official tragis mistake they could have who presided over the destinies made in their whole neutrality of young diplomats after they enter the foreign service. Shaw's fight. One year ago, a majority of other interest in life is criminolRelations ogy. He is a board member of the Senate Foreign committee, which has now voted the National Training (correction) down any change in neutrality, School for Boys . . . AAAdminis-trato- r was ready to amend the neutralR. M. ("Spike") Evans ity act by permitting arms to go bet. a friend the July wheat esto both sides in Spain. Senators timate would be not more than felt that the arms embargo was 700 million bushels. He lost the merely penalizing the loyalists. bet; the figure was 716 million. But Hull, in a crushing letter (Copyright, 1939, by United to the committee, demanded that Feature Syndicate, Inc.) no action be taken, said that the whole of neutrality question should be considered at the next row ea'Yi'. fore the house committee, and in the first hour of his testimony he recommended that the prevailing wage rule bo abolished. Then there were hearings before the senate committee. IO AND AFL STAIED AWAY Yet no representative of either the CIO or the AFL appeared before the bouse committee to One representative of protest. the CIO appeared before the senate eomimttee to read a prepared statement on the new WPA law, hich contained an objection to t lie prevailing wage change. But no organized campaign to save the privuiling wage section was made, and as far as the records of the house and senate show -- any member of congress might have been justified in supposing that the matter was one of comparative to the great labor indifference organizations. As a matter of fact, that is precisely what some of them did suppose. A senator who served on the committee which held hearings on the WPA law says: "The general talk and understanding around the table In the was that the latAir committee leaders didnt care much about it that they felt they had to go through the motions of making a protest in order to keep their rank and file satisfied, but that they really didn't worry much telegrams Merry-Go-Roun- d AN OUNCE amples or the received by McNutt congratulating him on the FSA appointment was one from Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the official magazine of the American Medical Association and a violent foe of social medicine. high-power- rela- Auger th the Preston Fourth ward trip Bov Scout troop to New Fork in Wyoming They will make the III) in a week. CATTf.V 130-ho- ve " BRICE Journal Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 19 One reason why leaders of organized labor are making such a vigorous fight against removal of the prevailing wage rule from the new WPA law may be the fact that they were asleep at the switch when the law was passed. The appropriation bill carrying funds for WPA for the fiscal year which began July 1 contained various provisions objectionable to that labor, including organized striking out the prevailing wage section and prescribing a month for relief workers. This bill went into the hopper during the spring, and came up for hearings before both house and senate committees in June. The fiist witness at the first hearing was Colonel Harrington, WPA administrator, who appeared be- Bitter Cup Ho it was witli COLUMN Labor Leaders Were Napping There was a father and in Ligan yesterday who l isted a bitter Cup. It was especially hitter to the father, because Ins only son, just grown to young the rower to destroy. TJioso wlio tire governed BRUCE CATTONS . step-luoth- ir to tax 1939. i'fj its in advertisements published any errors which mav apH-aIn those instances where the paHr Is at fault, it will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical mistake Kjvvor 19, WASHINGTON will not assumr' financial responsibility for r Thu JULY WEDNESDAY, UTAH, LOGAN, L, CHOOSING UP afternoon by the fueho Valley Published eviry wo 75 Center Co West , Stmt, Izigan, I 'tub. Newspaper 51). all Telephone departments delivered by carrier 45 cents per The Herald-Journa- l 00 $5 per year, By mail, in Cache Valley, $4 00 per month, year, elsewhere $5 00 pi r year. matter In the jrost office at Entered as second-clas- s Utah, under the act of congress, Mata h 3. 1879. Ins lalin I.ilicrty through all tlio land" Liberty Bell. Herald-Journ- HERALD-JOURNA- Great actress pictured here. 13 14 15 16 17 18 i Emil Schrain, above, a former director of the Reconsti in lion Coiporation, U.is bn n selected by Piesnlent ltmrew l! to succeed Jesse Jones as Rill chairman. about win tiler the prevailing section stayed in or nut." 35 Hurries. 38 3.1416. 39 Ore launder. 40 Two-wheel- ed vehicle. (1 Subsists. 42 Legal. 43 To cut off. 46 Biblical priest. e kind. Nor will it have any discretion on Sept. 1, when two far mote drastic provisions go into effeit fur the pnyless "holiday all reliefers who have been on the WPA roils for 18 months or more, and the proviso that wage between differentials northern and southern sections be abolmean will which ished, wage ruts for somewhut more than a million WPA workers. And the thing to remeber in all of this is that noth of the great labor organizations watch pending legislation here like a hawks. When pair of super-criticthey really want to put on a bill is up for on which a fight cons i d e r a ti o n, the committees which are holding hearings on the bill get plenty of testimony from them. In this case they got practically none. The protests came a good fortnight too late. -- 30-d- a native of is known as the father of scientific geography. He made a the remarkable calculation of earths circumference at a time a small portion of the when only globe was known to civilized man. Eratostnes, Jyoigi Cy-ren- e. 12 16 19 Instrument. To perplex. Odd clothing. Vessel of a certain rate. 20 To desert ones party. Knaves. Sooner than. Smooth. Legal claim. Voracious. Variety of smalt. 34 Marine fish. i late! Wrinkle. To mimic. 21 24 25 26 28 32 v TOO TOO LATE Now .of couise, a big campaiii is on, there have been strikes all iaeros3 the country, and bitter protests are being n.a le. But the fight comes too late. The law Inis been passed and is in effect-a- nd even if the WPA administration wanted to change oai k to the old rule on prevailing wages, it is powerless to do unytlnng of tiie Answer to. Previous Puzzle HORIZONTAL 1, 6 rESw) Elk. She was the - stage star of her time. She was eonsideied a or natural actress. 22 In any event, 23 Falsehood. 25 Opposed to stoss. 27 North 47 48 49 50 51 52 54 Three-toe- d sloth. Amphibians. Food container. Red Cross. Custom. Perfume. Circle part. 57 She appeared in the early pictures. VERTICAL 29 30 21 3 Corrosion on 33 36 metal. 37 4 Epoch. 40 5 Strong 42 aversion. 44 6 Perch (fish). 45 7 Long poem. 47 8 Royal. 52 9 Steeds. 53 lo Striped cloth. 54 11 Memorized 55 study. 2 Surface measure. Carolina. A glance. To piece out. To adjust. Roof finiaL To poison. Salt woiks. Sailors. Burdened. 60 minutes. Tranquility. The bow. Exdamaticn. Ream. Position attained. Rhode Island. |