OCR Text |
Show TfV ' ' I ; V1 f Leisure for Asa h ome and I Opportunity i Encouragement for Youth Conservation of Human Resources More Attention to Making Life And Happiness iTHE HUMAN WELFARE ADVOCATE ill No. 38 Address, 217 David Keith Bldg smithy is run ii by eighth in line i Where Ancestor Built It 250 Years Ago. Conn. When John Pratt, kii wife and children and his hold ood. moved to thia vll-- n n, 1678 and (et himself up as cksmith, he scarcely would Imagined that 250 years later would still be a blacksmith In operation on the same spot lat the proprietor would be his descendant. drcdi of persons stop every er to ssk ebout what is said he oldest business in the coun-ihas always been in the of one family and to talk to I Lord Pratt, the present own-- j eighth generation from the 1 at sure how many used in Hi's the family ha ci.ng the smithy business for Pralt 4 fi I The pres-mhe knows, was built by umlfather eighty years ago to t,rc of un iron business ex-i- g with the building of dip-lip- s on the Connecticut river id a half centuries. a shop which ii and light," said that John It shall have many win-an- d large one. It ihall be Ik and it shall be large enough ir forges." a building was put up, and till sound. It had window! i to permit work from day-t- o dusk. It was large enough 1 the years supply of iron, it in by bout in the autumn, ice it did have four forges, was used for horse and ox p, one for wagon repairing ro for making iron mast bands her ship fittings, modem machinery has been ed. An electric blower is con-i-n the forge in place of the Hows, and the smith uses a hammer more often than the si ii rsf y 01 i t( rs p, shall have s B is not $u n viL five or six is last horse, years aince ha and it is a quar-- a century since oxen were the shop. a rious Cow Barn Lets nimals Recline to Eat Icld, N. Y. Nothirtg done to provide the omfort in a huge latest in concrete ig that looks more like an led bungalow than an eddied bam. Its 28,800 feet of ipace makes it one of the cowbaras in New York itate, c(;!U OTHi ASK ? THE ; hai been ing to the owner, G. Sherwin i, CE MW 4 Rochester and Oakfleld ity men will bus-na- n. tend the wants cows in a specially with Individual Italia :h cow. in each stall la a iron drinking fountain. The te floor it well cushioned with r sleeping purposes and the troughs are so low that each n recline in indolent ease and I drink at the same time, e a day a short walk will the monotony of the cow's 1 4 a. m. and 4 p. m. she will rough a long concrete chute washing room. Her attend-U- 1 give her a fine spray bath parstion for milking. Both ted, a door will open and rill walk Into a I room, step into an iron stall mechanical milker will send Ik spinning upwards through urn system to a storage tank, to a pasteurizing unit and to cans. umsn hands will touch the route from cow to bottle. completed. Bossy can step er stall and return to her is via the chute. Jg the summer, the stalls are d and in the winter, fans d "arm sir through the 300 za ven-roo- m glass-inclos- Pie New Orleans. The pupils in seven New Orleans public schools this fall will learn their lessons by a scientific paper-dol-l game. Miss Ruth Proctor, who teaches handicapped pupils from six years old to high school age, will illustrate a new lecture on how Jennie Germ can creep into milk and transmit tuberculosis. In'thegime will be the milk sprites Pat Protein, Sherman Sugar, Fred Phosphorus and Walter Water who fight against Jennie Germ. The children will watch the teacher's lips as she tells the story and will watch the paper dolls enact a play. The children also will see how the lighthouse of heslth is built, progressively, by the Exercise Rock, the Sunshine Stone, the d Pebble and other components. Getting germs into the Body Castle is part of the progressive game. Only two gates of entry are open to the germ the Nose and Mouth Gates. Each child will have a germ which will try to get by the gate. But the owner of the Body Castle can foil the germs, when carried in by the hand, by washing the hands I Another germ hidden in milk can be stopped by having the milk pasteurized, and so on. Pictures will be used almost exclusively at first. The teacher will form the syllables of simple words with her lips, encouraging pupils to do likewise. $1,000,000 Trust Fund Given to Fight Diabetes Pittsburgh, Pa. A woman who nursed brother afflicted with diabetes for 20 years gave $1,000,000 medrecently for a "never-endinical war" against the disease In children. g Miss Emelie Renziehausen placed the money in an irrevocable trust fund aa a memorial to two dead bachelor brothers, Frederick C., who once owned the Large Distilling company, and Henry, dealer in suburban McKeesport The income win be used by the Children's hospital of Pittsburgh for establishment of a "Renziehausen memorial ward and clinic" and for perpetual research into the disease. Miss Renziehausen also gave an tract of land to be used as a site for a home for convalescent dry-goo- re children. - Emeralds to Be Mined in Salzburg Mountains Vienna, Austria. Europes only emerald mine, Habachtal, 7,000 feet high up In the Salzburg mountains, win be put in operation again soon. Its owners, Schafihausen ft Co., have engaged ten workers to drive a new gallery into the mountain. If pure emerald crystals are found in the gallery, work will be resumed on a large scale. Habachtal was operated during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries by various companies. Including a British firm, which is said to have exported most of the gems to India. Crystals with a diameter of up to one inch were found in They were at beautiful dark green color, but lacked $150 Bed Is Ordered ed for Woman's Pet Dog Dupre, S. D. Visitors viewed a bed ordered from Jake Macs, local cabinet-make- r, by a Black Hills woman. The visitors thought it was a "beautiful piece of work but a bit small for a bed." The cabinet-makexplained the woman had ordered the bed matg complete with tress and springs for her pet bulldog. It is valued at $150. er inner-sprin- h portarit Announcement SNP ou take a life membership in the Cooperative Association on or before November 10th, 1937, you nter-Sta- te l eceive: rs subscription to this paper, eight ounce bottle high grade vanilla , four orange, almond, .. dutiful extra heavy colored glass dinner-- a kfe, and orgement coupon. 8e , , advertise . Cooperative ln tW paper bargains for their members, which are of interest, also will be made known, where to purchase Hccause of the Inter-Stat- e Associations buying power, Rft wholesale prices on practically everything bought mimed. Thia will be the bear investment you ever made C08'ng you nothing, because you receive more value for ttnt you pay, but act before Nov. 10th 1937. rite or call at room 217, David Keith Bldg., Salt Lake. Inter-Stat-e Association will SALT LAKE CITY Ukf&. tiSil Editorial Game With Paper Dolls Will Teach Deaf Pupils Plenty-of-Foo- ir. (T. SUG ARHOUSE, fateredu Second Osm Matters! the Poiom. at Mdl liKiss MhZ, 19S7 Published Weekly by C. N. Lund 1ST! AMY JOHNSON WILL Progressive & Cooperative QUIT FLYING GAME THE ELECTION RESULT. Thcfeditor of this paper hereby congratulates the winners No More Airways to Conin the primary election contest and thanks every friend who quer, Declares Aviatrix. voted for him. While he did not win he is well satisfied. lie London, Amy Johnson, received some very good advertising, renewed many a fine heroine of England. the first solo flight by a friendship, and learned a great deal that helpfully adds to his woman from England to Austrastore of experience. Absolutely without money and without lia, has decided to give up flying. Knowing that Empire air linen organisation his showing was not at all bad. Heres a heartfelt and the royal air force are better thank you to each of the fourteen hundred. able to make record dashea to South DONT CHEAT THE YOUNQ A poet, looking following verse: larly situated. on an boy, wrote the meaning, of course, all children simi under-nourish- ed It is the starkest tragedy that he Should grow less sturdily thru want, and loi.e One atom of the vigor that might be. He is the last that dogging fate should choose To eat the scanty food of charity. And walk Gods shinning earth in broken shoes. A MORAL THUNDERBOLT George C. Christensen Searching For Parity Africa and Australia, and seeing the Russian! flying over the pole, she believes there is nowhere in the One of the both serious and world to fly to and set up new records except with the backing of comical aspects of our present government finances. Fly? she said. It is the last day civilisation is the searching I would of dream thing doing now. for parity within a scarcity If I saw any prospects of doing anything by flying again I would go systcm'of the various economic ahead. No, I am just going around now wondering what on earth I am intersts of this scarcity system. to do with life. We recall in our esrlicJ days "But I am not going to fly, I dont know what I'm going to do. In the old days it was my business to a picture of four snakes arranged be photographed and interviewed in a circle with each snake with Jim, my husband. For me all endeavoring to Bwallow whole that terrific publicity is now ended. Hae Earned Thousand. the snake before him and the Miss Johnson has been a good business woman. In ten years of querry below the picture, What spectacular flying, with half a dozen will happen as the snakcB great flights to her credit, she has many thousands of dollars. proceed. What a moral thunderbolt the mayor of Hurricane ,Utah, made She has lived in fashionable hotels What happens in a scarcity hurled against the liquor commission and the liquor traffic and saved enough to buy a fine house in London end expensive economic system when each when he sent his letter of Oct. 13. The little town is literal- cars. Ever since that memorable day in in the circle ly debauched by liquor and all that its schools and churches 1928 when Amy Johnson first took economic interest her young sister, Mollie, for a circus flight over Hull, England, she knew she wanted to fly. Five years later, twenty-aeve- n years old and a stenographer in Fleet street, she to close the liquor store, but the commission refused. The made e a hop from Croydon airport to Port Darwin, Austraasks How the much of this $1000 per lia. No one dared mayor question, hope that this month liquor business from our town was sold to men inexperienced aviatrix, with not more than 90 hours in the air to her on relief? How much was paid for by hungry and suffering credit, could perform such a feat A newspaper scoffed when Amy ofchildren? That question Bhould be asked in every town and fered to write a story of her trip (if she completed It). Later that same city in tones that would shake the state. No living man who newspaper had to pay Amy, always the business $50,000 to go on drinks hard liquor should be permitted to reach his hand a flying tourwoman, for it. year July, 1831 Amy into the relief funds. His wife and children should be pro setTheoff next o for a flight vided for but he should not be permitted to handle a single with her tutor, C. S. Humphreys. They made this run in the record dollar. Let Mr. Gilman take notice of this. time of 10tt days. Broke Three Record. The liquor traffic has taken a foul hold on the soul of this In 1938 Mias Johnson succeeded in state. Because of the profits in the business we have be- smashing three records from England to Cape Town, Cape Town to come, too many of us, blind and deaf to the moral breakEngland and for the round trip. On landed in Cape down that has come because we have let the bars down May 7, 1936, she Town, Africa, from England In S and flooded our fair communities with this destroyer of daysthe6 hours and 29 minutes, shavrecord set by Tommy Rose ing bodies and souls. by 11 hours 9 minutes. She completed the homeward journey In 4 days 16 hours and 16 minutes. Rose took 6 days 6 hours and 57 minutes to make thia trip. Her round-tri- p flight took her 7 days 22 hours and A TIMELY . PROGRAM 42 minutes, aa against Roses 10 days 24 minutes. Here is a human welfare program which the president, Four years ago Amy Johnson and the governor, and all public men should take note of. It is her husband, CapL James A. made a transatlantic hop timely, pcartical, and as close to them as their hands and Their feet. They always ask, Where can we get the money 7 In from Wales to wasAmerica. wrecked when plane. Seafarer, this plan the money is provided freely. they tried to land at Bridgeport, of modern business goes searching for parity through legisla-tio-n and through trade and homes can do is made negative by this unholy business. 89 per cent of the citizens petitioned the liquor commission agreements. The producers 9,900-mil- All they have to do is to take the $3,000,000,000 dollars spent yearly for liquor and use it in this manner: Build one Million $3,000 homes for working families. Give each of 12,000,000 families a $250 vacation, which they have never had. Buy a $30.00 suit for every man and woman and boy and girl in the country. Give every American home a new coat of paint. Provide 6,000,000 families with a new $500 automobile. Put a new electric refrigerator into every one of the 30,000,000 homes. Provide every American family with 600 loaves of bread and 600 quarts of milk annually. Bring light and power to the seven per cent of farm homes which do not have it. Any one of these items might be had and more, instead of the drunkenness, death, prisons crime, broken lives and broken homes, which result from the liquor traffic. HUMAN CULTURE 10 Dr. John T. Miller Editor of the Character Builder It is evident to all who study human problems that some decided social adjustments need to be made to give to all humanity the environment needed for right relationships and to build life as the Creator designed. There is only a small fraction of the happiness in the world today that would be That if cooperation would displace selfish competition. seems to be the remedy for many of the Bocial ills of today. How can individual lives be sweet and wholesome and generous in the midst of the cruel war that is being waged between capital and labor? Conn., for fuel. They were within 60 miles of their goal Floyd Bennett airport, when they ran out of gasoline. Arctic Growing Warmer With Aid of Tropic Air Professor V. Vise, Arctic scientist and explorer, has completed a study dealing with the change of climate In the Arctic. According to his studies, the mean annual temperature In the Arctic In the regions adjoining the Atlantic ocean has risen by two degrees during the last 17 years. During the winter the rise of temperature as compared with 17 years ago Is up to five degrees. On Frans Jose! Land the temperature rise reaches Moscow. seven degrees. A noticeable recession of the glaciers covering the Arctic islands and a decrease in the quantities of ice floating in the Arctic seal is observed together with the warmer temperature. Considerable thawing of ice is taking place in Spitsbergen. The change in elimate occurring not only in the Arctic, but also in the temperate climate zone of the U. S. S. R. is explained by more intensive interchange of efr between the polar and equatorial regions. Skin of "Human Slate" Twenty years ago we went to war to make the world safe Is Sensitive to Writing for Democracy and to forever abolish war from the earth. Camden, N. J. Stephen Kucinski, Did we do it ? As long as one country Bteals another country r yeare old, doesn't have and victimizes its people there can be no peace upon earth. twenty-fouhe uses to write It on the cuff breeds countries between jealas the relationships As long his skin. look to useless for is ousy, envy, hatred and revenge it Physicians say that Kucinski sufpeace, love, harmony and unity among the people of the fers from demography. Words world. A new civilization must be born from the present written on hia flesh with a heavy one but there will be many birth and growing pains before pointed instrument remain legible for several minutes. we get that new and better civilization. backs the Greek and Roman civilizations were built upon of chattel slaves. The civilization of the middle Ages, often Smoke as Ear a die called the Dark Ages, was built upon the Feudal System. Remedy Routs Insect That decayed and developed into the profiteering system of in been the has Ind. A large That weighed more Elwood, or 100 years. the past bug which had crawled scales of social justice and has been found wanting. It has Into the right ear of Jean Monadeveloped such a grossness in the lives of the people that han, age nine, aa aha ilept into something it will destroy itself if it is not soon changed emerged ln haste When her labetter. There is a civilization ahead where human lives ther, Tony Monahan, city patrolwill be" valued above money. Hasten the day when that civman, puffed cigarette smoke Into the eat. The patrolmen aought ilization will be here. hard-shelle- d to cure what he believed to bo a cast ot -- irache. of consumer goods, the producers of producer goods, the rentier of housing, and the rentier of capital all seek parity. And they seek this parity thru legislation and trade agreement makiqg their commodities profitably scarce in comparison to the commodities of the other London-to-Toky- Mol-liso- n, $1.50 PER YEAR three. The producers of consumer goods realize that their commodities are profitable only when they are scarce and unprofitable when there are plenty of them. Hence govern ments have favored agreements to restrict consumer goods. The producers of producer goods realize their businesses are unprofitable if the capital goods available for sale are abundant rather than scarce. Hence these producers favor trade agreements that narrow the field of this production. The rentiers of housing realize that an abundance of housing means a decrease in rents and a decrease in saleable values hence the rentiers of housing look with disfavor on slum clearance legislation and seek to restrict its operation within narrow limits. And the rentiers of capital seek to keep credit scarce in order to maintain an interat rate profitable to the rentiers of capital. And so have we traveled around this vicious circle of a scarcity economic order until PERSONAL arriving at the beginning we comment in conclusion. Why not reverse the process by expanding in proportion and through social agencies the needed activities within each field of endeavor and through a commonwealth of adequate purchasing power and production drive poverty from this Nation today. National Lecturrers to Speak in Salt Lake In the early days of November Salt La .e City will bo visited by two lecturers on economic topics of national reputation. Roy Burt, executive secretary of the Socialist Party will speak in the City on Nov .2 and Hilliad Bernstein of the Workers Alliance on the evening of Nov. 6. Mr. Bernstein is a member of ' a group of American volunteers fighting for the loya isl govern met in Spain and will bring to Salt Lake City first hand accounts of the conflict bet ween Fascism and the principles of republican government in the Spanish area. Mr. Burt is a graduate of a Methodist college, an accomplished public speaker, and a man who has been engaged in progressive political and economic activity for many years. o ope rat ion in England T oday Co-o- p. League Newsltem The twenty - eight poverty-strickRochdale weavers who p organized the first shop in an industrial suburs of Manchester 93 years ago would have gasped in wonder at statistics released today of the volume of business of several of England's largest retail cooperative. The LondonCo-op-crativ- e Society repotrd cash sales for the year of $70,000,000 Bristol cooperative did thirteen million, seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars worth of business and the Newcastle s pilled up twelve million, five hundred thousand dollars in duaineas during the year. en co-o- : ; co-op- i , Monetize Wealth A taxation and monetisation of wealth in broportion to the increase in wealth for social incomes for all over forty and for the publio employment unemployed is a progressive mtaaure furthering economic security and social progress. i i ! i Ill NOTICE NOTES i i The American Benefit Union at the present time haa its ofGive 'em the Flowers Now fice at 231-- 2 South State at. Ilyrum Hand, though far away, has not forgotten us. lie sends in his subscription from from California and his best wishes for our succpes. Ho is a good, sensible, mild- mannered man who sincerely believes that the world might be made a great deal better than it is. i (second floor) Office hours 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. Quincy K. Kimball LOCAL ITEMS The Peoples Open Forum meets every Sunday evening at 7 30 in the Council Chamber. Mrs. Elizabeth Robins of 291 Always a good program. Come Center St. has subscribed snd The local section of the g glad to get the paper. She tccnocrat organiiation meets was with tu In ths long ago whe in the County Jfe entin ths country wa good Monday evenings Commissioners room in the and free and the baldens did Building on not press down quite so heavily jCity County at 8 P. M. Mondays holds to who ia woman a She The Workers Alliance meets the idea that one should be alat City and County Bldg., first lowed to tliitk and believe aa and third Tuesday nights. ones judgment and conscience Townsend Club No. 1 meets dictate. Her heart goca out to Tuesday every night at 255 E. Jjumanity and ahe feels that life Broadway. Dancethere easievery might be made better and night. Friday er for all us. 1 i !i i ' , is i l ! I .. b |