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Show r iL THE I AGE TWO. The IT c r a 1 d - J o u r n a 1 Published every week day afternoon by the Cache Val-e-y Newspaper Co., 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone ad departments 50. delivered by carrier 45 centa per The Herald-Journnonth. By muil, in Cache Valley, $4.00 per year, $2.25 for dx months, $1.25 for three months, 50 cents one month; llsewhere $5.00 per year. matter In the post office at LoEntered as second-clas- s S"WU gan, Utah, under the act of congress, March 4, 1879. "Proclaim Liberty through all the land. IJberty Belt. Mill not assume financial resjMinsibiUty foi The Herald-Journany errors which may appear la advertlHements published In Its columns. In those Instance where the paer Is at fault, It will reprint that part uf the advertisement In which the typographiml mistake occurs. lovo.- - Goethe. WHEN THE REASONABLE IS UNREASONABLE When a man owns projierty, the presumption is that he need part with it only on terms which he believes reasonable in view of his own needs and the inducement offered. The great resources of the worlds natural wealth are perhaps not quite on so simple a basis. Any reasonable person would agree that it is wrong for any people to sit on indispensable quantities of the worlds resources and to deny them to other peoples. One of the worlds needs is some means of better distributing and making available the raw materials of the world. The pitiful part of it is that the basis for such a reasonable solution has been destroyed, and destroyed by the very people who stand to profit most by such a solution. Japans demands on the Dutch East Indies for a share in the exploitation of the riches of that region are quite reasonable on their face. They want to provide entry of Japanese into the islands for commercial work, entry of Japanese ships to East Indies ports, coastwise navigation privileges, fishing privileges, and the like. Entirely reasonable, but Unfortunately, over the past 10 years Japan has destroyed the reputation of her jteople as willing to confine themselves to these legitimate and reasonable objectives. Does not the world know what Japanese business men do in a strange country beside business? Does it not know what Japanese ships and fishing vessels do in strange waters beside fish? Is anyone ignorant of what citizens of Hitler Germany do in foreign lands beside what the rest of the world considers legitimate business? When every drummer, every fisherman, every consul, every traveler, is an agent for international revolution, for government spying, for domestic intrigue and the sowing of dissension, then business is no longer business. BE ALIVE I man, ANCIENT ASTRONOMER Astronomer of ancient times. 1 He was a 1 0!P scientific eitDhE student of the NA;T;EU0B oTWrOs 12 To peruse. Fern seed. Gnawed. To press. 13 15 16 17 Yields. 18 Regrets. u 20 Fiber knots. 21 Regions. 22 Flat plate. 23 Mineral spring 24 Possessions. 26 Exclamation. 29 You and L 30 Artless. 31 To remark. Form of a. Iris plant. 35 Right (abbr.). 36 To do wrong. 38 Animal pests. 32 33 Ff A 0C1P1AL jNjQp UiPiPlEjRlSDRUA B'l jBl RE' c 10 42 Workers guild 45 Wagers. 48 Black haw. '49 Earth. 50 Death notice. 51 Beer. 52 Olive shrubs. 53 To cut off. 54 The peoples prejudices or held up his work. urQ a n yj VERTICAL 2 Lund measure. 3 Fold of thread 4 Small hotels. 5 Delivei ance Golf devices. 14 Poem. 16 He was the ' 11 of a telescope (pi.). 19 He ranks as a. . great 23 Cubic meter. 25 Capuchin monkey. 26 Sesame. 27 Farewell! 28 Cereal grass., 29 Strife. 31 Biown animals. 34,SpeUker. Harem. Cry of sorrow. 40 Balsam. 41 To percolate. from injury: 43 Weight C Musical diania allowance, 44 To enduie. "Given to 45 Knife. preaching. 8 Not as much. 46 Black. 47 Waiters 9 Matgrass. 10 Toilet box. gratuities. 37 29 well-know- N fear the manufactur- ers who aren't directly tied up with some big chain or tor-p- o ration, or who c a nt get a piece of the Dig corpora tions business thru At a conference of field officers of the Defense Contract Service held in Washington the other day, Peter R. Nehemkis, Jr., one of the OPM brass hats, went so far as to say that 10 entire industries whose supplies have been curtailed must either close down or enter a new line of production. For a time, as the wartime economy gains momentum, sma,l businesses will be hit to such sn extent that unemployment may actually go up and the number of idle machines actually increase, he aaid. Mr Nehemkis has been picking un dead cats ever since, for many men in the of the dollar-a-yeOffice of Production Management are don t think things going to be hat bad, and they started thtowing things at the colleague who spoke out of turn. Nehem-ki- s he did put the finger on of companies critical condition making aluminum products, for instance, or the companies dung nickel and chrome plating. With their material supplies cut off work, they're up by defense against it. Plants in the New YfSfV City area have been particularly inconvenienced this way. ar Princess Stefanie D Lon-jdo- THINGS Safety Plea - DEAR DRIVER I am always pleased to receive contributions for this column lrnm my tnends. Superintendent J. W. Kirkbride pushed an envelope across bis desk yesterday os I entered his office, and ottered a clipping that is especially significant as America approaches weekend. the Fourth of July It has ic !', ... ur law. . . . The govern-nirn- 2500 purchasing agents but 300.000 Jiffer-- nt items. f . And your government's legal staff now numbers 6000. . . . National Resource Planning Board estimates that in all cities of 10,000 or more there should be one acre of park space for each 100 inhabitants. Famous sayings of great living statesmen:: The continuous attacks on the communists appear to me to be hnuch ado about nothing." Rep. Adolph J. Sabatn of Chicago. RIG ROYS GOT THERE EARLY Attention has already been called to concentration of defense orders placed with major manufacturing companies. In the rush to get defense started, it was perhaps natural to turn to the companies with the biggest plants. Alsr, If the major industrialists had the best organization to get the business, it was natural to them to get the orders. If. however, this combinat'on of circumstances, plus monopolistic practices, is used to freeze the independent manufacturer out of the defense effort, then the economic balance is thrown out of gear. Thurman W. Arnold, assistant attorney geneal in charge of division, sees four the anti-truto the little man ltom dangers set-usuch a First, the system of priorities control may be used to nrevent the small manufacturer from getting supplies. Second, the small manufacturer may not be allowed to share Sin the national defense production, to the detriment of both the little man and defense. Third, the indenendents may be caught by artificially fixed intrices the and distribution costs as Roc lay Mountain region lumber and cement cases where little men not belonging to the poll-dering and following Its tould not get a foothold In bu tineas. Fourth, the threats from lne labor a few of the unions which like big business combines, dictate the amount of labor, materials and tools that the small must use. i st rx-ev- c Vienna born, is about 45 years old, a woniun of great culture and charm, who attracts many admirers. She has friends in almost every capital of Europe, once was called leading Nazi hostess." Tb i late Lord Rothermere, just before By war broke, cooperated with the Princess in an appeasement proRay Nell ton gram. When she came to the United States, one of her close friends was Captain Wiedemann, former commander of Adolf Hitler when der Fuehrer was a corporal in the last war. Both lived in San Francisco. Both motored extensively There are two births: the one when around California, frequently stopping at tourist camps in the Calilight First strikes the new awakend fornia mountains. The Princess lived at the Mark sense; The other when two souls unite; Hopkins Hotel in Sr.n Francisco, And we must count our life from where Captain Wiedemann was a thence. frequent caller. And it was at this When you loved me and I loved you hotel in November of last year Then both of us were born anew.that Princes Hohenlohe received an William Cartwright. interesting British visitor. to do with safe driving; holidays in America always taka a terrific toll in human Uvea uid i suffering. It is entitled You Guys Wouldn't the of Hurt Her, Would Your . That Is the predicament small businesses squeezed out by another is there Dear but Driver: priorities, Today my daughter, who is seven angle that has attracted attention of the justice department anti- years old, started to school as trust division the cases of small usual. She wore a dark blue dress with a white collar. She had on businesses squeezed out oy competition from big black shoes and wore blue socks. Her cocker spaniel, whose name is business. Scoot, sat on the front porch and whined his canine belief in the folly of education as she waved goodby WASHINGTON to and CHIPS Burbank, f'aili., adults going to school than children, all because of the defense industry training program. The score is lk.l)0 children to 8000 adults and most of the adults are studying aviation subjects. thousand Twenty-fiv- e letters pour into Washington every year asking ior Interpretations of the w age-ho- ts WASHINGTON Today the famous Princes Hohenlohe no longer faces deportation back to Germany, while the German consul general in San Francisco, Captain Fritz Wiedemann, does. But what not known alniut either of them that at one time they hatched up a Uerman-Britis- h peace plan between them, after n conferences with a Britisher in the United State. 1 ily mean small. The units tncy ... - Answer to Previous Puzzle by foe are the i n d e p e ndents, DREW 1 small,necessarthey ON THE FIFTH The glorious Fourth is also the careless Fourth, and the national safety council draws on long past experience when it launches a slogan for this years Independence Day celebrations: Be Alive on the Fifth ! Averages indicate that unless we take unusual care, 475- people are doomed to die in holiday accidents this Fourth of July. It need not be. Make it a real patriotic holiday not just an annual deadly jamboree of carelessness. HORIZONTAL ind don't That is the tragedy. Representatives of totalitarian powers have long since proved that no one can trust them to be what they seem to be, to carry on simply the business they say they wish to carry on. Thrt is why den inds, reasonable on their face, are not really reasonable or even tolerable, and must be ref sed. i THOUGHTS Correspondent WASHINGTON, July tain sections of the government are beginning to wo-ragiin about whats happening to tne business small 1, 1941. The Washington Re BY PKTFIt KDSON lferald Journal Washington Those who are governed least are governed best. THOMAS JEFFERSON. We are shajitnl and fashioned by what we LOGAN, UTAH, TUESDAY, JULY L, SQUEEZE ON LITTLE BUSINESS A BIG WORRY "The power to tax is the power to destroy. Lord, I have loved the habitation of thy house, and the place where thine honor dwelleth. Pslams 26:8. HERALD-JOURNA- started off ns Merry-Go-Rou- PEARSON and - dallied over . her future. Finally Lemuel Schofield, chief of the Im- migration and Naturalization Service, went to San Francisco and spent several days interviewing the lady. In the end, he wrote a long report on her activities, and the order for her deportation was rescinded. tield has never However, shown his report to members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Although they are under the same roof, and both are bossed by the Attorney General, Schofield operates his own investigation service and makes little effort to correlate his activities with the streamlined organization of J. Edgar Hoover. Whenever Hoovers men ask for the report on Princess Hohenlohe, they get the reply, "It hasn't been transcribed yet. Today, the Princess, recovered in health immediately after the deportation order was dropped, is BRITISH SECRET SERVICE free to do whatever she pleases in He was Sir William Wiseman, California. Despite her past, the head of. the British Intelligence Immigration Service is keeping no Service in the United States during special eye on her. the World War, and now a member of the banking firm of Kubn Loeb Lord Halifax knows his way in New York. around at a fox hunt, but he will Sir William flew to San Francis- never win any prizes as a dynamic co, where he storped at the Mark executive. The high-bor- n Briton Hopkins Hotel and immediately dislikes telephones so much that he went into huddle with Princess rarely uses them to transact even Hohenlohe and the German Consul urgent business, sending instead General. The huddle lasted three written memos and letters. Matters days. that have to pass through bis During it, a peace plan was hands proceed at a snail's pace. . It worked out a plan not unlike was an ironic spectable when Conmany such plans previously hatchgress barred Benjamin Lasser, ed, by which Germany would keep former head of the Workers Allithe entire continent of Europe. ance, from te WPA rolls on the With her huge army this would ground that he was a leftist. Lasser make it possible for her to attack quit the Alliance because he was unable to wrest it from Red conEngland at any time. Sir William Wisemans part was trol, and Kommies were in the to arrange with Viscount Halifax, galleries applauding the legislative then Foreign Minister, to permit ban against him. . . .Two o&nthe Princess Hohenlohe to return to most influential England with her peace proposals. labor advisers in Defease are Sir William flew back to New F. McGradv, .Brilliant former D behind-the-scen- Ed-wa- rd Assistant Secretary of Labor, who is on the staff of Secretary Stim-soand Eli Oliver, former head of n Labor's League, who is a lieutenant of Associate OPM Director Sidney Hillman. HAM RADIO OPERATORS They may be just "hams" t the prof' J .nals, but to government offi. .a.., the nation's 56, (XX) amateur radio operators have assumed great importance in the job of patrolling the ether. Uncle Sam intends to use the "DX'crs" as auxiliary listening posts to identify and record foreign propaganda broadcasts. The amateur are constantly on the lookout for new invaders of the airwaves and have been quick to report suspicious broadcasts. They made an outstanding record for themselves when they maintained communications during flood and hurricane disasters and now the Federal Communications Commission to the is looking "hams for an important link in the defense of the country. n; Non-partisa- rs MAIL BAG J. S. C., Toledo, O. Present strength of the Army is much less than in World War I. The strength today is 1,400,000 compared to 4,000,000 at that time. Only half of the 4,000,000 (2,086,000) went overseas, and of these 1,390,000 v. i..t into battle. . . .F. A. L Pittsburgh The Department of Agriculture now has a pilot plant for prr or gasoline from crop residues such as cornstalks, corn cobs, oat hulls, c heat and barley straws. The laboratories are at Peoria, 111. . AV. L. F., Gainesville, Fla. President Roosevelts early requests for' a larger Navy were not to acn complish a navy", but to build the Navy up to treaty strength under the 5:5:3 ratio. During the economy decade, the Navy had fallen below treaty strength. . . Scribner's ComMadison, Wise. mentator, isolationist-appeasememonthlv, lias no connection with the publishing firm of, Charles Scribner's Sons. The company sold the magazine several years ago and is a strong supporter of the Presidents anti-Axpolicy. . . .F. ttq Montrose, CaL Neither of Colorados two senators has much influence at the White Hniisnr-SpnatfsJn"'7n?lmate of StaWheeler and follows his lead tor on all issues. Senator Adams is Deal on domestic bitterly anti-Nematters and generally hostile to the President on defense and foreign ( two-ocea- is wr ict-io- n DALLAS, Tex,, July 1 n Gov. W. Lee O'Daniel today fo. lead over Rep. 1. into a don Johnson, new deal favorite the special election to select a i i United States senator Johnson had lead in the nr since first returns were tabula Saturday night, but the rural gradually cut down the mar, and todays tabulations by Texas election board pi, a O'Daniel ahead. The election unoff,. , A New York agency selh a virlising space on girls k:n caps. Nothing like a nice in, ary ride in the subway tin days. H. B., Blrniingha is a man considerable wealth. He is a lar realty owner in Butte, Mont, eluding a big hotel. . . .W. Mi Cleveland Representative John of Columb Vorys, Republican was born in the U. S. He is one the leading appeasement advoca; in Congress. (Copyright, 1941, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) policies Ala, Senator Wheeler 6464646 46 T 00FOFOFI WHEN EXCESS STOMACH HELPS CAUSE ACID STOMACH ULCERS WHICH GIVE YOU PAIH MAKE THIS 25c PFUNDER TEST For Ktlitf of Exeat Stomach Acid 100 million PFUNDERS Tablets have been used for soothing relief of eceu stomach acid accompanying STOMACH ULCERS. If you suiter from conditions associated with hyperacidity such' as indigestion, sour stomach, as," bloating, heartburn and gnawing burning pains try PFUNDERS without delay. Only 25c w Modern Drug Co. the halls of u Princess Elizabeth (thats a doll) cuddled in her right arm. You guys wouldnt hurt her, would you? You see, Tm her daddy. When her doll is broken or her finger is cut or her head gets bumped, I can fix it but when she starts to school, when she walks across the straet, then shed in YOUR band3. Shes a nice kid. She can run like a deer and dart about like a chipmunk. She likes to ride horses and swim and hike with me on Sunday afti moons. But I cant be with her all the time; I have to work to pay for her clothes and her education. So please help me look out for her. Please drive carefully. Please drive slowly past the schools and intersections and please nciHiiwr that children run from behind parked car. Please dont run over my little girl! TID BITS Mark Twain suggests: I think a compliment should always precede a complaint, where one is possible because it softens resentment and insures for a com- plaint a gentle and courteous reception." Perhaps. But some people look upon such an act as a miserable form of hypocrisy. For instance, Im not sure I would appreciate a compliment given in this manner: I think you're doing a fine job I enjoy reuding your stuff. Bay, whyinhell dont you pay me that bill you owe me 7 A hero ha been defined as a man or woman who happened to lie there at the right time and nuule good. it Sears Easy Payment Plan! CHECK SAVINGS ON YOUR SIZE Buy Women are worse at teamwork than men. Several investigations show that women work more for individual glory rather than the glory of the team. List Mem Are Important the They are stick measuring Two short verses by H. M. S. mint we know is a storehouse Of precious metals and such. But what is the human heart Overflowing with loving too much A of quality in the in d u s try. However, they are not ne c e a sarily the prices at wh c h tires are regularly sold. 1 An st BUY ON SEARS EASY TERMS! SEARS ALLSTATE EMBLEM Thousands of miles in dependable service guaranteed a life time against defects. Deluxe Quality! NO FINER TIRE MADE st 29 600x16 And Okl Tire W Your extra dollar now buys an extra tire and a premium qualitynan the what new ALLSTATE PRESIDENT, just at that! Sears In America in the tire field'. SAFETY . . beca15 implies to stops 24.7 quicker than ordinary tires of conventional tread dcSlfp! LONG LIFE . . . tests prove it wears 19.8 longer than compare h makes! Select your first ALLSTATE PRESIDENT at our regular price . . pay but an extra dollar and drive awa.y with a second al STATE PRESIDENT! Doubly guaranteed, lifetime service. o Guaranteed 24 months against all road hazards! com-rhii.t- llftWfmHMll boards count gave ODaniel 173,674 v and Johnson 173,662 with count complete from 238 of states 254 counties. The board timated there are still about 2i votes to be counted. They chiefly from rural areas, wh O'Damel admittedly is strong. learning. Tonight we talked aLout school. She told me about the girl who sits in front of her the girl with the yellow curls and the boy across the aisle who makes funny faces. She told me about her teacher who has eyes in the back of her head, and about the trees in the schoolyard, and about the doesnt believe In big girl Santa Claus. We talked about a lot of things tremendously vital, unimportant things; and then we studied spelling, reading and arithmetic and then to bed. Shes back there now back in the nursery sound asleep with infatuation is a delirium. Thirsting for one's desire; GOOD MAN Once the fever is checked HARD TO FIND It Is to protect little business One wonders Where was the fire 7 from headship like these that division proposes to the anti-trunothing can be done, but out of set ud Its new section. A program the mass of correspondence "the of this kind has never been at- anti-trudivision does receive, it tempted before. Finding the right hopes to be able to find out what ma" to head it. an economist w'th the problems of the little biouuess contacts among the indeoendent mail are in this period. business men and the small busiWhen new organization is nessmen's associations, is one o set up, the Arnold the first problems. Them will lie will be a friend of hopes that itno. formula for o rations, and ines: man in thu the little buslong halls of whet al' on sneech-makin- g Big business has alcan he done, until the problems government. had its representatives in' of little business have oeen sur- ways Small business has Washington. veyed and studied. not. Anti-trudivision hope it To oget at the problem, A'n-cl- d can fill the gap. Its work in en- 8 is willing . to receive fonrrment of the Sherman antifrom small businessmen to trust law is now beginning to be been have gubietcd who known generally. It is in cisps squeeze plavs in the defen le ef- where violation of that law puts fort He admits frankly that he the little business man at a discannot begin to answer, individualadvantage that the atiti-- b uri di- ly ail complaints received. He ex- vision sizeable a to get proportion licks. will get in its first tml best pect" imaginary grievances about which a-- ut In Texas BaJlotiia ROBERT S. AILEN York. But after that nothing- happened; the peace proposals apparently fell flat. It was shortly after this that the Justice Department moved to deport Princess Hohenlohe. It was at that time also that she suddenly became ill. An overdose of sleeping powder was reported to be the reason, and Public Health Service doctors called it "hysteria. NO ONE WATCHES PRINCESS For some time. Immigration officials of the Justice Department MERRY-GO-ROUN- ODaniel Wins Favor I nd PIIOiVE 601 261 NORTH MAIN LOGAN UTAH |