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Show THE PAGE TEX. The Herald-Journa- HERALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, L, THURSDAY, NO VEMBER UTAH, New Deal Liberals Protest BY BRUCE UATTON She Experienced Friendship Drouth al of life. She wanted friends more than and anything else in the world, was the fact that she had few warping her personality and outlook on life. She was just about ready to call it quits, crawl into some sort of stuffy cocoon, and renounce all relationship with the Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God eannot be tempted with evil neither tempteth he any man. Janies 1:13. world around her. Her entire trouble was tliut she prepared in her life to lie a triend. rdie hadnt route to the realization that if one In to have happiness and success he must have friends, for they are so neceslife. A failsary to a ure of even the nest opportunities Is often made if there are no true friends In the picture. hadnt resisting a temptation to evil than IViin. HERE TO STAY The newspaper isnt quite wiiat it w'as in the London coffee-shodays of the 18th century, but its a jiermanent institution that can never be replaced by any substitute. Thats the way Simeon Strunsky looks at the picture in his book, "The Living Tradition. Strunsky doesnt deny, for instance, that the radio has made some changes in the general press scene. But the newspaper will always have certain primary functions that not even the radio or television can take away. Strunsky gives this example: When youre listening to a speech over the radio, you take it as it comes. You cant check back and compare statements, digest and mull. You can when you read an account of the talk in a newspaper. You can read sentences four times if you like and extract every possible ounce of meaning. Newspaper readers today are getting a good deal more than their moneys worth. Like everything else, the press hn3 progressed, adapted itself, met the challenges it found along the way. If you dont believe it, wander over to the nearest museum and take a look at the copy of the paper that reported Lincolns assassination. She wanted friends, but wasnt one, and therefore she didn't draw any to her. A typical experience in her life was to dub makeup on her face, put on her best clothes and stroll along the street with a stilted step. From the way she acted it was obvious that she expected (or at least hoped) some dashing Lochintar would ride out from somewhere, swoop her up, and carry her off to a place of dreams. Such actions and expectations got her few friends. Or she might have an occasional date, only to spoil the whole aftair oy trying to overdo tne allure. Reenacting her favorite movie scene, she would nestle down in the seat, try to look romantic and tantalizing, and so, so hard to get. All she ever drew were sighs of loneliness. p PAUSE IN EUROPE The Washington Merry - Go -Round By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN For a Week between Christmas and New Years Day, the guns of Europe, which havent been booming very much anyway, may cease to sputter altogether, providing all hands agree to a proposed holiday truce. The French newspaper LOeuvre, speaking for the allies, says France and Britain are willing. The neutral nations of Belgium, Spain, Holland, Italy and the Vatican, which have been informally invited to make such an offer, will undoubtedly be happy to do their part.. It remains, now; for Hitler to assert himself and there isnt much doubt that Hitler will agree if everything is handled right. When a couple of pugnacious urchins tear into each other in the aley, they usually fight until one is sent heme with a bloody nose. If they agree to stop the mauling to grab a sandwich, the chances are that the scrap wont be resumed. If the Christmas truce could be arranged, the people on both sides might become sd fond of brightly lighted streets again that they wont want to pull the switch on Jan. 2. r In a cident deaths period, there were 45,000 more auto nine-yea- ac- at night than during the daytime, despite the fact that as that at night. day-lig- traffic is three times as heavy ht Ninety-nin- e out of every 100 automobiles stolen in London are recovered by police. HORNED ANIMAL HORIZONTAL 1 Animal allied to the sheep. 3 The male animal is or whiskered. 12 Reverberated sound. 13 To deprive of force. than. Pig pen. 16 Eternity. 14 Sooner 15 17 19 20 21 22 24 27 23 29 31 Answer to Previous Puzzle 5i-- i Aft Pronoun. To query. Light blows. Meditates. Goddess of discord. Falsifier. Box. Sloths. It belongs to the genus 22 f ace bearer. 23 Blemishes. 25 Roll of film. 26 South America 30 To confide. 33 Disease. 34 Artist o? ft AIT TSjl. smETAi Tins m ARSiT SOL. great skill. TWT 36 Coin. 37 Cotton nO-V- 41 Thing. 42 Container 51 weights. To submerge. Curse. Shoves. Snaky type fish. Newspaper paragraph. 53 Long poem. 55 It js a or ng 39 56 Badgerhke animals. drilling. Female VERTICAL relative. 1 Drivers order 40 To mock. 2 Plant part. 43 Measure of Huddled together. Forward. 5 Four pecks area. Electrical term. 46 Prickly cover for a nut. pl). 6 Grafted. 47 Four plus six 7 Some. 48 Mineral 8 Musical note. spring. 9 Gown. 50 Circular 3 . 44 4 10 To summon beast. songs. Spheres of action. d. It frequents or HJJST 45 46 47 49 Gold-colore- mountainous To gl aze. 32 The deep. 34 Encountered. 35 Warbles 38 20 21 CiR'Ol I st -- in in many formal prayers. -- st Unfortunately she had received her social education through radio crooners and movie scenes, rather than by the home, school and church. She had a most unreal view Those who are governed least are governed best. THOMAS JEFFERSON. lxiter served 11 forth. Beasts bed. 18Muscid flies. fortification. 52 Note in scale. 54 Washington Correspondent The 30 Nov. WASHINGTON, American Federation of Labor is not the only important group that has tried to call off Assistant AtArnolds torney General Thurman law vioinvestigation of anti-trulations by the building trades unions. Some of the heaviest pressure has come from within the New Deal itself. A considerable portion of the liberal wing in and close to the government is very much opposed to the line Arnold's investigation has taken, and Arnold and his assistants have been urged to call a halt. This group's, objection is based on the fear that prosecuting labor laws unions under the anti-truwill in the long run tend to destroy which the legislative safeguards have been built around labors rights in the last few years. In effect, they fear, it will increase the extent to which individual judges may determine what acts are and are not legal for labor unions not only in connection with the antitrust laws, but in other fields. As a matter of fact, the whole question of whether the unions may be prosecuted under the antiHerald-Journ- The power to tax is the power to destroy. Ciod is Labor Anti-Tru- st ulll not assume financial responsibility for any errors uhicb may apear In advertisements published in Its columns. In those instances where the paper Is at fault, It will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical mistake occurs. Ihr.ild-Journ- 19 39. OH, BOY! SANTA CLAUS! l afternoon by the Cache Valley Published every week-da- y Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone all departments 50. delivered by carrier 45 cents per The Herald-Journmonth, $5.00 per year. By mail, In Cache Valley, $4.00 per year, elsewhere $5.00 per year. Entered as second-clas- s matter In the post office at Lo gun, Utah, under the act of congress, March 3, 1879. Proclaim lJberty through all the land Liberty Bell. The 3 0, Neuter pronoun. WASHINGTON It la supposed to be a diplomatic secret, but when the British mission was in Moscow, Stalin gave them an explanation of why- Russia was taking over strategic points in Latvia, Estonia arid Finland. He explained that Russia feared an eventual attack from Germany, therefor was building up a Baltic barrier against such attack. Later Foreign Minister Molotoff gave the same explanation to the Finns. He pointed out that Russia would be foolish if she did not seize the present moment, with Germany engaged in war, to build up a defense against Hitler. That was why Russia must insist on taking certain key islands from Finland. Whether this explanation is true, only time will tell. But French and British diplomats are extremely skeptical. They think Germany has more to fear from Russia than vice versa. This is particularly true among the British. Censors are not letting it out, but the greatest bugaboo inside the British Cabinet today Is the fear, not of German submarines, but of Communism let loose in What worries British Germany. Tories is that starvation in Gerwill many encourage Communism, and that Stalin, instead of needing a bulwark against Germany, will actually engulf Germany. This is why powerful influences in the British Government are working right now for the end of the war through some internal Nazi explosion which would get rid of Hitler. NO. NAZI And the man they place confidence in is Field Marshal Hermann Goering, head of the air force, economic boss of Germany, and No. 2 Nazi. Goering had a lot of contacts with the British before war broke. Sir Nevile Henderson, British Ambassador, used to go at Goerings country estate. British bankers were in contact with Goering regarding the billion-poun- d loan proposal to rehabilitate Germany. And Sir Horace Wilson, right hand of Prime Minister Chamberlain, took several trips to Berlin to talk with Goering. So today, the British are figuring that if Goering were running Germany, they could work out a peace which would stick. The Field Marshal, they know, has the confidence of the German Army. He is an aristocrat, a professional soldier, had a great record as an during the World War; and although the Army is not keen about many of the Nazis around Hitler, it would welcome Goering as its chief. GERMAN ARMY The British know that any peace in Germany must take into consideration the German Army, for it can be, and some diplomats believe already is, more powerful than Hitler. Weighing all these factors, the British appeasement clique in the Cabinet would be willing to negotiate a peace with Goering which would give Germany most of what she wants. She could keep the Polish Corridor and Danzig. Poland would be recreated only as a very small state on the order of Luxemburg. The British would even go out of their way to aid Germany with colonies and loans. Such a pace, British Tories believe, would be boar-hunti- more, a woman is at the bottom of it all. The woman is Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the third term issue arises because of her dress the one she wore at her husband's first inauguration. The Smithsonian has a wax figure all ready for Mrs. Roosevelt's dress as part of its exhibit of gowns worn by President's wives, from Martha Washington to Mrs. Herbert Hoover. But and this is the rub there is a rule that a garment cannot be displayed until the First Lady has left the White House. So the curators are dankling on dilemthe horns of the third-terma and asking themselves, "Will he run again? Next to Lindberghs plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, the exhibit of gowns of First Ladies is the most popular in the Museum. After them in popularity are an Egyptian demmummy; also a onstration of the mechanical processes of a telephone call. NOTE The Smithsonian is one of the few places in Washington which seeks no publicity, yet it holds its own with the White House and Capitol in attracting sightseers. More than 2,500, OOu visitors a year go through the red brick, museum built with a $500,000 bequest left by John Smithson, an Englishman, as a token of his admiration for American democracy. NORRIS S. GREEN A. F. of L.'s William Green has in his files an exchange of letters on labor peace which would make juicy reading if he would release them to the public. The letters are between Green and Senator George Norris of Nebraska. Green began the exchange by taking Norris to task after the veteran liberal criticized the warring labor chiefs for not getting together. Norris replied as only he can reply, and is perfectly willing glass-encas- d, to make the correspondence public. But since Green initiated the exchange, Norris feels it is his privilege to release or suppress the letters. NOTE Norris received hundreds of letters and telegrams congratulating him on his demand that the AFL and CIO bury the hatchet Many of the communications were lrom unions and individual members. The only hostile letter was Greens. MERRY-GO-ROUN- D When Congressman Dies stamped around his office last week comJ. Edgar plaining that Super-Sleut- h Hoover would not cooperate, he was chiefly sore because he had wanted Hoover to serve a subpoena on an alleged Communist named Mink. Hoover told Dies (1st) that were not authorized to serve subpoenas; (2nd) that he didnt know where Mink was and couldn't waste the time of his staff looking for him. . . .Believe it or not, but Governor Lloyd Stark of Missouri has been discouraging friends from urging his appointment as Secretary of the Navy. He is more anxious to be elected Senator from Missouri, replacing Senator Truman. . . Charming Mrs. Bob Taft, wife of the Ohio presidential candidate, is accompanying him on his western speaking tour. Politicos rate her a more effective campaigner than the Senator. (Copyright, 1939, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) SUGAR PRICE DuelS SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 30 (LPi Sugar price reductions of 10 cents per hundredweight were announced today by the western sugar refinery. The new price was $4.70 per hundred for cane and $4.60 for beet cane sugar in the west; $4.70 for and $4.50 for beet in the cast. SJDEGLANCES far better than German says that nothing in the antitrust laws shall be construed to forbid the existence and operation of labor organizations, or to forbid or restrain individual members of such organizations from lawfully carrying out the legitimate objects thereof. The department of justice bases its present building trades investigation on the assertion that the restraint-o- f trade operations it complains of do not carry out the legitimate objects of trade unions and that the members engaging in them are not "lawfully" carrying them out in any case. The next clause of Section Six, -- She is only one type of indiadds: vidual who is suffering for want however, Nor shall such organizations or of a normal social life. A study at one of the nations large colleges showed that 10 per cent of the students had more social life than was good for them; 50 per cent had a fair to average amount, while 40 per cent had virtually none at all. Those who were deprived of social life of (This is the sixth in a series activities with members of both of 14 articles by Dr. Fishbein on sexes weren't leading happy and the nine principal causes of adjusted lives. They werent death in the United States.) growing up emotionally, and were acquiring serious handicaps that BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN would stay with them throughout Editor Journal of the American life. Medical Association, and of To them who hare discovered how to be a friend to serve, and Hygeia, the Health Magazine be democratic and pleasant there A few years ago, physicians ia no drought of friendships. confronted with pneumonia stood in dread because there wax so lit- -i A LA FARM There was turkey, mashed pota- tie medicine could do specifically toes, brown gravy, salad, sauer- to control this condition. Now there kraut, two kinds of pie and a vege- are so many methods and measures table. The dinner was served hot, that the utmost skill is needed by and you had to be a big eater to the doctor to determine just what is to be used and how it should empty the dish. be given. One of those good d More than 30 different kinds of dinners such as you see in pictures Thanksgiving day pneumococci the germ that causes pneumonia have been isolated. at Grandmas. Providence First ward served The majority of pneumonia cases can be grouped according to a upwards of 400 people last evefew types. We now have specific ning at the Pavilion with a turkey dinner. The entire layout cost serums for each of these types, in35 cents, and when Mrs. Lee cluding horse and rabbit serums. Zollinger handed me my plate When the pneumonia germ gets inYou can have to the body, the blood begins buildshe whispered: more if you can eat it The ing resisting substances. Serums waitresses. I believe, told that to are made by inoculating animals all the diners, because they were with the germs so the bloods of reasonably certain no one could these animals build up the resisting eat more. substances to be injected into the In talking to Lloyd Theurer af- human body when they are needter dinner, we found out that all ed. produce and meal constituents were contributed by ward memIn addition to the serums, howbers. Farmers gave grain, pigs, ever, we now have sulfapyridine turkeys, potatoes all types of and sulfanilamide. The former is articles, and then the lot was potent against the auctioned off in the the after- particularly The studies that germ. pneumonia noon. A bazaar of household have been made so far indicate that in held was the evening, sulfapyridine, when put into the articles along with the dinner. A drama body of a pneumonia patient, holds and dance also added to the ward income. The collected sum, expected to reach six or seven hundred dollars, will be put into the ward budget to pay for expenses during the year. Through such a project, the leveling of fees is abolished. 1 never have liked sauerkraut last night, but that in Providence was different. the members thereof i,e construed to be illegal eomk tions In restraint ot nade laws. the anti-truCONFLICT C Elt INTKRPUETA1 ION This, according tu the u group, means that the antwr laws just don't applv to k unions no matter what they a how they do it, The department replies that' final clause doesn't refer to" acts of the unions or their m,! bers, and that if it grants full! munity the preceding clause is ' necessary. Sf ice there is an biguity, it is proper to g0 the law and study its history. When this section of the Clav act was before Congress, the' partment continues, its 'sp denied that it was intended to, ply exemption from all angle, laws. Furthent. the anti-trust st it is pointed out, an amends, which would flatly have nj that nothing in the anti trust should apply to any labor ornL Zation was voted down Henctl is argued that the intent ofcfj gresa was to provide a very la,, exemption. PROTECTED LABOR AGAINST DISSOM TION What that exemption tended to provide, the drpartir I spokesmen continue, was 'in protection ngainst outnght dm 4 tion of a labor union by 0. order. j The famous Standard Oil cJ in which a federal court had , dered Standard Oil dissolved ur c the anti-trulaws, was then (r in the public memory, and Sm t , Gompers was fearful that court might some day order a sri 1 ilar dissolution of a labor ui. That, the department holds, t t all this section of the Clayton was supposed to prevent. .1 Obviously, there is a good debatable ground here wc won't be cleared up until the preme Court has ruled. The h of the department's present ca: paign, then, as far as It applies the building trades unions, be settled until some test case other has been taken to the t. court for decision. ; THE FAMILY DOCTOR New Methods Help Doctors to Curb Death Toll Among Pneumonia Patients home-cooke- the germs in check until the b itself can develop enough of resisting substances to destroy u germs. In other words, the drug its does not destroy the germs. that reason physicians recop; the importance of giving sulfap ridine early and of continuing ti give it until the body has devr oped the necessary resistance, j Unfortunately, sulfapyridine t self is a toxic drug and must given under the most careful cor trols. The patient must be and carefully studied dv, ing tne time the drug is hen.rt given to avoid any dangerous actions. Usually when sulfapyridine given in a pneumonia case, h temperature drops almost The antibodies appear the fluid matter of the blood b the time the crisis would n mally occur, and it is these an'diJ bodies which eliminate the ease. Of course, the use of oxygr which permits the blood to cef tinue Its function during that pf riod when the lungs are inflarc4 by pneumonia and when it is ficult to get enough oxygen to the blood, is often a There are also drugs to susUi'i the heart and to control the digeq I tive processes. lien J Experts predict that the apr rr will tion of these new methods fleet a definite drop in the dea:'; rate from pneumonia within ting next few years. F c NEXT: Uanorr and By William Ferguson THIS CURIOUS WORLD CHRISTMAS other m- alignant tumors. SEAL SALE COMMENCES Christmas seal sale in Franklin county will begin on Friday, December 1, it has been announced by Mrs. J. J. Sanford, county chairassoman of the ciation. Mrs. Sanford lias announced that the following .persons have consented to serve on the executive committee in connection with conducting the 1939 drive; Mrs. Ila Dr. A. Olsen, secretary-treasureR Cutler; County Supt. Welland Spils-burR. E. F. Smith; City Supt. Mrs. O. P. Merrill, president of the Franklin stake Relief Society; and Mrs. Ora Packer of Riverdule. Local chairmen from avt-at- r; y; DAVID LIVINGSTOS1E., AFRICAN EXPLORED. AND AMSSIONARX ON RUNNING OUT OF WOOD, FUELED HIS P?IVER STEAMER on ELEPHAAJT 30A3SI AND FINISHED THE JOURNEY COP Let's ride around town once more deer in 10 years! lliis is my first tuberculosis test. Local doctors, assisted by Mrs. Clara P. Howard, school nurse, conducted the test Dr. Alan S. Hart, Idaho state medical board member and association executive, and Miss Margaret Thomas, state nurse of the association, were In Preston over the weekend giving y lectures and conducting tests. 1BYNIASfVICf. T. M the various wards throughout Franklin and Oneida stakes will be chosen and announced this week. Mrs. Sanford reports that from funds derived from the 1938 Christ-ma- s seal sale In the county a clinic was conducted this spring in all the schools of the county, with 700 students given thorough physical examination. During the past two weeks the Preston high school and high schools of the county, includClifton, Weston, ing Franklin, Whitney and Mink Creek, students and teachers have been given the Commun- ism. which might spiead to Britain. BUT this would take place only if Hitler were out of the way and Goering, a man they can trust, in power. So Field Marshal Goering unless he is bumped off by his rivals around Hitler is the man to watch in Germany today. MRS. ROOSEVELTS DRESS Scientific-minded curators of the famed Smithsonian Institution are the last persons you would expect ti worry about the third term. But they are worried. Further trust laws undoubtedly will have to be passed on In the end by the Supreme Court. The law admittedly is ambiguous. IA4V GRUNTS EXEMPTION TO LABOR Section Six of the Clayton Act Inquiry RiO. U. PAT. 0 INC , OkRa WE USE IN SOUP IS THE POtD SEED A. OF PLANT CLOSELV RELATED TO COTTON. ttP per cent is a GRADE HAVING A RISE OF TWO FEET IN FIFTV FEETp ANSWER: Cent of Four per cent. The per cent of a grade is the the nse as compared with the horLont.il distance r T pet |