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Show THE LOGAN, UTAH, HERALD-JOURNAL- ), OCTOBER 19, 1939. THURSDAY, How Many Miles to the Peck of Oats? Ham and Egg Army Drives for Voles as Business Frets; Plan California Bookies Split on $30-Every-Thursd- 3-- 3-- SAN FRANCISCO. Oct 19 In California today, behe tting odds are Ham and Eggs plan docs not pass. And, the opinions of southern California notwithstanding, there is no "Ham and Egg" money in sight on local betting boards. But the California business world and state officials are worried. Financial chaos and ruin of the state's credit structure is predicted should the measure become law. 3-- WORK The $80 every Thursday pension plan to he decided by Calipro- vides for payment to persons over 50 who have been in the .... state for five years and are neither employers nor employes, on the following basis: Payment of $30 to be made weekly in the form of retirement life payment warrants. Each warrant, on its back, to have dated spaces for 52 warrant redemption stamps one eent stamp, bought with cash, to be pasted on the warrant by the holder each Thursday. At the end of a year, each $1 warrant would bear $1.04 in stamps, of which $1 theoretically would be used to redeem the warrant, with all stamps attached, and the other 4 cents would defray administrative expenses. 'ny to argue against anything that promises security and comfort for old folks without setting yourself Were trying up as an arch-fiento explain that the scheme simply cannot work, but in a short fight d. established business. know were way ahead said George H. McLain, now, organization manager for the Los Angeles area. All we must do is hold our lead until the polls open. After we were beaten last year, the opposition relaxed and underestimated us. They didnt wake up until we had a big head start in his new campaign. "An official of the centralized organization called California Citito We ad- mitted: v It looks ' pretty bad. This sort of scrap needs time and delicacy, and we waited too long. Its hard 7-- 5. non-leg- al Wards In Franklin Smith field Stake Plan Meets Ward conferences for three wards in Franklin stake have been planresidents ned for next Sunday evening, Oc- the Smithfield Salt Lake City over the in end were: cashing pension warrants. Next, with promises of a vast spread of employment and prosperity, the pensioners went after labor support. And they claim to have got it. common sense is a poor weapon Then came the expansion of what the Ham and Eggers call against emotionalism." When 1,143,000 California vot- their militant body." It was exers went to the polls last year for plained by McLain, who also is a regular election, they defeated chairman of the Democratic State the pension plan amendment about Central Committee: Last year we had only about 400 trained workers. Now there LABOR AND OLDSTERS are 8678 in Los Angeles County HELD TO BLAME alone, and about 62,000 in the state. Analyzing the result, the He showed lists thick books. leaders decided they had been beaten by the vote of employ- The militant body is regimented ed labor and by lack of confidence like an army. on the part of the oldsters who In 24 hours, said McLain, our were convinced that California militant body can establish direct banks wouldn't have anything to contact with every voter in the do with the warrants admittedly state. tender in which the penCENT A DAY DI ES sions were to he paid. was DEFRAY EXPENSES FirstT, 2rnew amen31HFlTt I was shown around Hollywood written a document which still seems to defy the full under- headquarters, largest in the state,, Clearly, of the Retirement Life Payments standing of experts. though, it does provide for the Association. About 150 people, mostly young establishment of a special state bank for handling and eventually women, were opening mail, ex tober week- Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kirkbride, Mrs. Rinda Chambers, Jay Knudson, Mr. and Mrs. Glen R. Winn, Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson, Homer Dames, Miss Rhonda Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Allen, Miss Violet Peterson, Miss Ludella Jensen, Miss Lea Hale, Mr. and Mrs. George Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Calder Smith, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Perkins. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Raymond, Miss Gwen- della Thornlev, Mrs. Julia Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Timmons, Mr. I and Mrs. Elliot Thorn-leMr. and Mrs. James Thomley and Miss Cherrile Thornley. The Smithfield Kawanis club held their regular business meeting Monday evening in the Smith-fiel- d junior high school with president. Dr. R. V. Larson in charge. The district Lieutenant Governor, Ray Ashworth of Salt Lake City, made his regular yearly visit to the club during the meeting. Dr. and Mrs. O. S. Daines and family of Ogden, Walter Law, of Long Beach, California, and Mrs. Joseph Richardson of Salt Lake City were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Nielson. Mr. and Mrs. Max and Mr and Mrs. John Toolson, Toolson left Eriday for a visit in Idaho Falls with Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Cook. A- W. Chambers, of the Smithfield stakepresident has been ill with a throat infection for the past week. His condition is reported to be improving. Mrs- Jack Dangerfield, has been yefy ill for the past few weeks. HST. condition is reported better. The Smithfield Second ward Eleanor girls held a party Tuesday evening in the Second ward recreation halL The evening was Pent playing a parlor games, Program presented, and lunch to tht8. 3?rved approximately Dirty girls. They were visited by some of the Smithfield Stake board members. y, - 22, according to stake offi- cials. Special programs are being planned in Fairview, Preston Second and Preston Sixth wards where conferences are to take place. President L. V. Merrill and A. Willard Larsen, high council members, are scheduled to be present at the Sixth ward meet; Karl H. Cutler, second counselor to President Merrill, and W. A. Nash, state clerk, will visit the Second ward conference; and Henry PL Rawlings, first counselor in the stake presidency, and O. Preston Merrill, high council member, will attend the Fairview session. TAX RECEIPTS ARE DISTRIBUTED Distribution of third quarter tax receipts in Cache county was made Monday, it was announced by M. T. Beck, county treasurer. The distribution involved $14,392.41, and was made as follows: State and state schools, $2233.48; state- bounty. $4.38: state tubercular indemnity, $15.95; county roads, $2633.95: $698.71; Cache county, Cache county schools, $2599.32; Logan city- schools. $2168.88; Logan city, $1868.74; Clarkston, $16.15; Hyde Park, $46.81; Hyrum, $127.40; Lewiston, $251.43; Millville, $25.87; Newton, $34.63; North Logan, $89.15; Paradise, $32.83; Providence. $80.07; Richmond, $177.16; River Heights, $5.40; Smithfield, $366.78; Trenton, $16.87; Wcllsville, $201.53; Mendon. $5.29; Nibley, $17.18. conservation district, $282.06; Cache county No. 3, No. 6. $14; $207.28; drainage No. 6, $87.62; East Lewiston drainage district, $69.23; Smithfield city, special, $1.68; Logan city, special, $2.18; Cache county at 29 sales, 60 cents each, $14.50. Wellsville-Mendo- n Keith Hurren entertained n,uth p2fty givena in honor of Mrs. Benson, recent bride, at er home on Wednesday EUnch was served late toevening. twelve Kdests, tray style. Fall flowers been held lately. A long row of files contained a stated 300.000 formal applications for the pension, which the promoters have promised will toe' paid to all persons past 50 who are not employers or employes. Probably about 500,000 more such applications would be received in the event of a Ham and Eggs victory on Nov. 7. That .would mean the issuance, $1 of 1,248,000,000 warrants a year. If each warrant received its $1.04 worth of redemption stamps, bought with cash, the pensions would cost $1,297, 920,OtXP exclusive of a new 3 per cent gross income tax (above $3000) and an initial $20,000,000 bond issue which are provided for in the amendment to get the scheme into BY ALICIA HART too early to . Its not begin thinking about Christmas gifts for the beauty-minde- d women on your list. Start thinking in terms of holidays right now and you as well as the recipients of your gifts will remember 1939s Christmas especially pleasantly. For the friend who has confided that she no longer likes her dressing table, a present de luxe would be a new one. Less expensive, but sure to please, would be a new skirt for her present You cant go dressing table. wrong with organdy or net, reof the period in which gardless her bedroom is furnished. That disreis, unless you completely gard the room's present color scheme. Other sure - to - be - appreciated gifts in the beauty category in ANOTHER SPLENDID SHOWING Bipkir Friday, October 20, Saturday, October 21 Fin e Furs SN J clude jewelry and makeup cases which are even simpler to make than dressing table skirts. One reader reports that she is covering plain, inexpensive boxes with hinged lids with white leatherette, and some with pale blue satin. Between leatherette or satin she uses a thin padding of cotton. Cases of boxes of cleansing tisare a bright thought. For travelers, the unframed varieties which pack easily are welcome. To keep on dressing table or shelf, sturdy, framed ones are fine. With scraps of silk and satin from the rag bag, and a container of sachet, charming little sachet pillows or balls are quickly fashioned. When making handkerchief or larger lingerie cases, put sachet between lining and outer layer of fabric. sues nrmom-f.TQDW mm E t f II F i SEAL! Worth as PERSIAN! Mother Nature furnished material the ... and she certainly made CASTLE GATE wool and a yard wide." Coal all Mink-dye- d science adds the distinctive touch of perfection by combining careful preparation with natural quality . . . Sized to fit any fire. Order a ton today ! For Your out-and-o- ut Stoker UTAH FUEL CO. Sold in Logan Exclusively By Carl W. Sanders $145 MUSKRAT! sensations at $125! MagFur coats that are nificent styles in every important fashion of the new season ! Rich, lustrous skins featured in swaggers, boxies, fitted, draped jackets styles. See their new flattering accents shoulders, wide sleeves, back or front fullness, slender waists everyone softly draped in the new dressmaker fur treatment. Every coat bears the Dupler label for quality and Skunk Fox Chubbies Persian Paw Sable-dye- d Mined and Refined by Much as CARACUL! Modern Duspruf CREOMULSION States?" Other members of the Rocky Mountain league include Utah university, Brigham Young university. Colorado university, Colorado Agricultural college, Denver university, University of Wyoming, and Montana State college. Christmas Is Coming So Start Now to Make Gifts For Your Cough Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding that you are to like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. United operation. CASTLE GATE eorated the house. The evening as spent playing parlor games. WM presented to Benson attending were: Mrs. Yance Petersen, Mrs. Theron Hansen, Mrs. Henry Benson, the guest of honor, Miss Cherrile Thornley, Miss Mariner Smith, Miss Vearl Nielson, Miss Alice Mather, Miss Arvella Watts, Miss Loa Chambers, Miss Blanch Bingham, and Miss Margaret Douglas. for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Mrs-Thos- tracting money (dues are 1 cent a day), typing letters, and making entries of receipts. I was shown a claimed total of 370,000 cards representing the present membership this against 264,000 last year. The head of the speakers division said that about 100 trained orators are busy. Approximately 600 public meetings a month have ief At Last Mrs. professor of English and director of de'jrt at Utah State Agricultural college. Pi Kappa Delta, national debate fraternity, chose the question for its pertinence, importance, and consequence to the American pubDr. lic, Vickers said. The announcement was accompanied by an invitation from Eg Ray Nickols, of University of Redwoods at Redwood, California, and chairman of western division of Pi Kappa Delta, to enter two different western division meets, the times and places of which are to he announced at a future date. Utah State Agricultural college debaters, at present, are planning1 to enter a team In the Rocky Mountain Forensic League convention In Denver, Colorado, on November 2, 3, and 4. The number and names of the students who are to attend this convention will he announced next week. The basic question to be discussed at the Denver meet is, what should be done concerning foreign ideologies and isms in the , Him mil crowd-swayin- scheme, which has brought a mirage of Utopia to elderly individuals and the specter of chaos Among "n g Against a background of slogans, counter slogans and oratory, California prepares to vote again on a pension scheme originated by Roy G. Owen, upper right, and Sherman Bainbridge, lower left. -- BETH EMMETT, Reporter While Italy campaigns to conserve gasoline, Signor Aehille Starace, of the Fascist Party, patriotically travels in a ponv cart. 11c is pictured stepping from it on recent visit to Milan. The San Francisco Stock Exchange announced that if the pot o' gold for the old folks becomes law they would forthwith move to pieces of paper giving the person nlity of the warrant issue; view Nevada. Articles of incorporation who holds them the privilege of with alarm a new monetary and were filed in Reno. paying a 2 per cent tax every banking system for the state; preIf the amendment measure be- week. dict a flight of liquid capital out comes law and pension warrants Proponents claim that warrants of the state; see the possibility of circulate, they will not be ac- possess certain advantages over lawful money shooting to a subceptable to regular banks, accord- private hank credits, among them stantial premium over warrants ing to A. R. Thomas, president of being freedom from 3 per cent the minute warrants are issued the California Bankers Associa- sales tak and income tax; point and predict hoarding ot lawful tion. He said: to a claimed eash reserve of 50 money "Banks cannot take the per cent at the end of the first warrants and pay cash for them; year; claim tradesmen will do two decannot receive to four times as much business as they them for The ancient Chinese, jealous of posit; they cannot buy them for at present, or about 40 billion do- their discovery of silk, imposed a death penalty investment; and they cannot make llars warrant business annually. upon anyone loans on them. These say bankruptcy of seeking to export the eggs, worms, Opponents warrants are not money. They are state and local governmental cocoons, or anything save the fabnot the equivalent of money or bodies is almost certain to result; ric woven from the fiber, which legal tender they are simply question the federal eonstiution- - brought its weight in gold. hard-heade- Against tl li'-ir- BY PAUL HARRISON NEA Service Staff Correspondent Oct. 19 South HOLLYWOOD, ern California's hordes of "$30 Every Thursday" pension proponents and their comparatively few actual aggressive enemies are in Unless agreement on one thing: shift in there is an eleventh-hou- r opinion, the "Ham and public Eggers behind the plan probably will win the special election called for Nov. 7. CalBetting odds in Southernd ifornia offered by bookmakers and not by partisans, are about 2 that next month this state will commit itself to the fornia voters next month, 1 Northerr with Southern California apparently on the band wagon backers with the Ham and Egg Califorof the plan. In the north, nians arent so sure they want the plan. Herewith are stories from both sections of the state. issue, zens Resolved, that the United States should follow t. policy of strict (economic and military) Isolation toward ail nations outside the western hemisphere engaged in armed international or civil conflict will be the 1939-4- 0 national collegiate debate question according to an announcement received Tuesday by Dr. Wallace J. Vickers, BY SHF.RMAN MONTROSE NEA Service Staff ('orresMiiiileiit California next month will vote again on a 30 weekly pension over plan for unemployed persons o The state is divided on the WOULD CHOSEN FOR YEAR But Northerners Wager On a Defeat Are 2 That Pension Wins PENSION DEBATE QUESTION ay Southern Odds HOW PLAN PAGE NINE. Ph. 293 . . $49.50 . 95.00 145.00 Natural Squirrel Mink Chevon Silver Muskrat MUSSER S $115.00 198.50 110.00 J r |