Show J THE SALT LAKE 2 C alt Cake tribune ISSUXD EVERY MORNING BY THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE PUBUSBING Salt Lake City Utah Sunday Morning July 7 Light Summer Reading! Affairs in The Nation CO 1935 said and reiterated in his proverbs that “a good better than precious ointment also that “a good ' name is rather to be chosen than great rjehts"’ The reputation of a man or woman rests upon the value of the name that either bears in the community But another ancient proverb states that reputation is often got without merit and lost without crim" “The purest treasure mortal times afford” said Shakespeare “is spotless reputation” And elsewhere he made the idea clear by saying “He who steals my purse steals trash ’tis something nothing ’twas mine ’tis his and has been slave to thousands but he that filches from me my good name robs me of that which not enriches him and makes me poor indeed” Sometimes a man loses his standing his credit his reputation through no wilfulness nor evil intent He may be lax in moral stamina or careless with responsibilities or overor even simple to the point of confident and pathetic gullibility Public office and positions of trust are pitfalls for suclv a person He is not the prudent individual hiding from temptation whom Solomon commended Rather does he come within another category handed down by the wise man of ancient Israel “Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? There is more hope of a fool than of him” Such a custodian of public funds isbften so sure of himself that he feels nothing can happen to mar his record He cultivates an asinine assurance of being favored by fate and guided by divine solicitude This confidence he sometimes reposes In others “The simple believeth every word but the prudent man looketh well to his going” said Solomon m the fifteenth verse of the fourteenth chapter of the Book of Proverbs Good men go wrong when they venture beyond their depth in the sea of affairs “There is a way that seemelL right to a man but the end thereof is the way of death” said the same authority on fools careless of their reputation “See that ye walk circumspectly not as fools but as wise” wrote Paul to the Ephesians Who shall estimate the prifce of a reputation? What can be done to repair one that is injured? How can it be redeemed when lost? When it is gone gold has no value station no dignity beauty no charm age no reverence ability no use fame no foundation Those who have built up day by day and deed by deed reputations for honor and honesty should guard such priceless treasures against pretended friends and open foes alike Good names are rich inheritances fortunes within themselves to conserve as rewards of merit gems to wear as insignia of upof infinite satisfaction to the possessors right living-sou- rces end an inspiration to all their friends and associates Some philosopher has said that “reputation is what other people think of you but character is what you are” There is truth in that aphorism— truth comfort and encouragement No matter where folly may have led nor what pitfalls the tumbling feet of ignorance and egotism may have fallen through nor how the outer garments of pride and ambition may have been soiled in the mire of misfortune there is hope and double purpose ahead of the victim if he have character The foundation of manhood is character Every act of a Useful existence la a stone in that foundation Upon its solid footing are' raised the imposing structures of man’s achieve- ment the temples of learning and of worship' the palaces of the monument? of fame and nobility -- Success and distinction Let cyclones of circumstance fires of passion earthquakes of Intrigue destroy the edifice and leave no trace of former advantage or worth yet the foundation will remain for another effort and more stable construction Reputations may be rebuilt action by action with high resolve as the architect courage as the contractor determination and persistence as the workmen "There are always disheartening conditions disappoint-men- ts to brood over and wreckage to clear away But it has been done and it can be done No matter where a career iff the cradle or in trade in youth of maturity in private or In public there are obstacles to overcome plans to be outlined and work to be started “The man” said Disraeli “who does not look up will look down and the spirit that fears to soar may always groveL” “He that bears calamity boldly” said Massinger “is the one who wills to live and conquer1' There Is an old proverb reminding Us that “he Is a good man whom misfortune makes better” WASHINGTON July past two weeki or more must have made the country aware at least of par-”tial- condition at Washiafton once unwhich derstood explains much Politics become the art of causing the people to feel the way the politician them to wishes feel of starting waves of popular has Someemotion times as has hap- now pened in Washington when a wave gets started against the aril is to start a the politician “ counter wave Here are a hundred 'and twenty million people the game is to get a majority of them going the way the politician wants It is a game in which the emotional impression the superficial appearance counts everything principle very little More and more politics has come to be that It is not merely in the White House that the game is played that way It is played by the priest in Detroit and by the “King-fish- ” In New Orleans It is played in Europe even more successfully than in America for In Germany Russia Italy the player who Is at tha head of state has the immense advantage of controlling the radio and the press and of being able to exclude his critics us Glenn R Bothwell We ' at Washington began with Mr Roosevelt's irritation against the supreme court decision which killed the blue eagle and the one that deprived the preeident of the right to remove at will members of such commissions as the federal trade the federal reserve board and the like thereby making it impossible to pack such commissions with new dealers (until the statutory terms of the preient members expire) I think-- pi say “I think” because in all this one must depend In part on inference about what Is in the president’s mind— I think there ie no doubt the president was so serenely confident of his power with the country that he took it completely for granted he could start a wave of public feeling adverse to the supreme court that as between him and the supreme court he had only to apeak to win the country to him and set it against the court It was only a question of whether to make his speech over the radio or to use his familiar device of giving out his views indirectly through the newspaper conferences Because politics has come to be the art of starting waves of public emotion Mr Roosevelt it is apparent regards his newspaper conferences as on of the most important details of his technique Except when he ie away from Washington he never cancels one The period assigned to them is a half hour sometimes the president continues them much longer on the occasion of his criticism of the supreme court he kept talking for nearly an hour and a half and stopped only when one of his sscretaries reminded him it was 1:1 daylight saving time and therefore getting late for the correspondents to get what he was saytngjnto the evening newspapers Magazine Gives View Of what went on In the president’s inner circle of Intimates after the supreme court decision when he was deciding just how to start the wave of public feeling he de sired there is an account in the Literary Digest an account coming obviously from ons who was close to the inside and agreeing wholly with what was seen from the out-aiThis account Is a most illuminating glimpse behind the scenes a picturs of the degree to which the technique of moving the crowd figures In present day politics “Presidential confidantes realized that the criticism of the supreme court was a tremendously important move for Mr Roosevelt to make Once tha president had decided to make it the only question that remained was whether to express himself by radio or through the presa There had been'growing criticism in the press that the president has been leaning too strongly toward the radio Members of his own sacra tarlat Joined In the effort to convince him that he could get better results in the case in point by stating his case to the press denomi-hation- hey-knew ’ - v-f- e - y collective hiccup The same broker to scratch is tickled these days around in his jeans and find subway fare But yachting folk are hopeful In enough great depressions strangely to s it's one of the first make a comeback super-luxurie- Tpyoiogy is an interesting stihlv typewriter users Tin re are people who put spaces after peThui Or those who don't riods those who make a hyphen serve as I’m for a a dash a thing I hate also for pen good strong dash There pie who indent paragraphs is as much character in typing as in handwriting One can always tell the stingy person by the brightness or faded condition of the ribbon Sometimes of course it is laziness But generally stinginess to chronic -- He was very young very earnest Said he: "My father had practically no education — he is a successful man Here I am with an expensive education and can't get the most trivial sort of job" He realized that When perhaps he should have been learning to work he was learning to loaf It has been no surprise to his friends that Clay Morgan was hailed in editorials as the logical successor to the greatest of all super-pres- s agents Ivy Lee This distinction came to Morgan for his grand jpurnalistic splash on the first arrival of the Normandie some weeks ago He is the French Line press agent and of a sudden the metropolitan editors seem to feel a twinge of guiltiness l e that Morgan inspired them to oodles more Pel (Continued on Following rip'EnCH Point in Utah Idaho and Nevada & -hi 11 Mine Wasatch FREE CITY DELIVERY 00 DELICIOUS --BY OUR READERS— Writer Tells History Of National Bank Act Editor Tribune: Irvan Robinson holds me unjust in saying that "Washington was hoodwinked and Jefferson outgeneraled by Hamilton’’ since both of them later fought the national bank True but at the time Washington was convinced by the arguments of Jefferson and Madison that the bill was unconstitutional and its beneficiaries thinking they were beaten blackguarded Washington as a bribe-takand betrayer of the reer public But they were not beaten Washington signed their bank bill and the Federalists held a series of bancelebrations in quets bonfires which rejoicings mingled with jests so blasphemous and obscene that Claude Bowers (see “Jeffersonian Democracy") found tOem unpr’y’-abl- e Afterward when Washington complained that Hamilton had dehim ceived Jefferson stopped thinking about democracy and began working for it and then as Mr Robinson lays they defeated a extension of the bank charter which congress renewed however in 1816 leading to Jackson’s final overthrow of it despite the edict of the supreme court in its favor In Washington’s time whisky mixed with the sur face water formed the drink of most of the common people so the champagne-drinkin- g gentry in control of congress passed a whisky tax which led to Shay’s rebellion and other open revolts that received Jefferson’s praise for the day of reckoning was at hand Burr sent his young men Inspired by Jefferson’s appeals into the towns and villages of New York state then ruled by the Federalists under Hamilton Utilising as nucleus a private philanthropic organisation Tammany Hall— heard of ever since— he united the people and outvoted the Federalists throwing them out of their chief citadel of power J H PAUL germ-poison- Writer Demands Profit Cuts to Halt Next War Editor Tribune: The next war not around the corner but fronting us on the world’s open road will call for our boys— your boy and mine and all tha boys we know to become targets for its terrible destructive agencies Is there anything we can do about It? Yes We can use our Influence to curb profiteering munition makers and to take the profit out of war That would indeed be patriotism for humanity It is said there is documentary evidence in the patent offices of all leading nations that fifty men control the munition! industry actually create conditions which lead to war and in fact directly set themselves tq the business of making war In order to make profits Just prior to the World war a board of munition makers aat around a table" with a map beTorethem7 where poetically every detail of the coming conflict was worked out They set the time that the war should run missing it only by a year They are said to have voted to make all the bids noncompetitive and to clear tha bids for war supplies through Switzerland which they knew would be neutral They also voted their influence to both aides of the conflict for the preservation of the great steel coal and copper plants and the oil fields which wsre never molested One iOonUaued ea FoUewine Pm) Let the world slide Let the world go — A fig for care A fig for woe — Selected LES MISERABLES Perhaps you’ve seen ‘The Think- er" FOODS COOLING Special Values AH Week Beginning Monday The Forum The Senator from Sandpit ar Behind-Scen- e private capacity without asking for official honors or other public recognition of his worth When Glenn R Bothwell came to Utah In 1883 he observed natural resources that required attention industrial possibilities that needed direction potential wealth lying dormant but ready to be turned into the channels of commerce by effort and enterprise Knowing that nothing is accomplished by passive contemplation of opportunities or by patiently waiting for someone else to make the beginning or by telling others what might be done with courage and capital he went to work with brain and hand with intelligence and energy with vision and confidence soon to become a dominant figure in some of the lead- President Believes Ing industries of Utah and Idaho In putting dumber and building materials on the local Direct Appeal Best market in thf reclamation of arid lands and the salt marsh on the“Mr Roosevelt decided In favor of press and has been quite unWhich the city airport is located in the construction of dams happy about the result Now there irrigation canals of the Snake River valley in the devel- - is a controversy whether the fault jnd th pwsident OT of the opment of mining properties that added substwtially to the The president feels that if press and Utah Glenn R Bothwell was the he had gone on the growth prosperity of sort of public benefactor who attended strictly to his own busistatement of views it would have been in the evening He would have ness and let hi achievements speak for him He helped many a young man to get a start in life and talked direct to the nation and the people would have begun to form asked few questions when an appeal for assistance was made their own conclualona their But he was Interested in knowing whether the applicant was morning papers arrivedbefore with their editorial reaction connected with some religious organization Although a mem“In the president’s view the presber of the Congregational church himself he drew no al sure of a public' opinion f&yorsble lines but was tolerant of the opinions of other and to a continuance of the new deal charitable without confining his benefactions to any class or would have been on the newspapers before creed ltr Ho believes in turn would have temHe Was a useful citizen of the state for more than a half that this pered the natural tendency of news— centuryAl though past the allotted apart of life his vision was paper editors to take an antagonot dimmed nor the force of his diligence abated As an indi- - nistic view As It was the presication of hi tireless energy and unflagging faith in the future dent had hli ‘background talk with the in the morning The pubhe had made arrangement only a week before his demise to lic presasnatches of It in the aftergot reopen a mine in Mercur that might have revived the camp noon newspapers and tha full reh6 was instrumental in founding over forty years ago port in the morning papers wrapped up in the same bundle i Glenn R Bothwell was one of those men who act while with a vigdrous editorial attack other are pondering who build while others are looking for throughout the country To the a rite who find in their work the aatisfaetion that other preeident it was like starting off enjoy on ' the wrong foot with a proposal in applause': (Continued mi roUowtn Pm) ’ - The recent series of events air-with- ' mid-mg- New Even Series Started by Decision de pEOPLE are prone to underestimate the civic value of an unpretentious citizen who work for a community in a o o McIntyre By gh of the A Day-by-Da- y fias been a NEW YORK-T- his bleak season for the yachtsmen The few who have-enoumoney rerun yachts are shy about exercising the It doesn't go well with privilege reduced dividends But the majority who managed to hold on to their skiffs haven't the funds to operate them There are any number too who would trade their yacht for a bright red necktie or a fancy skate sharpener— with love and kisses' I pass a yacht store frequently in midtown It is the loneliest looking enOutterprise in all the metropolis side the Empire building Most yachts these days are not owned by the capitalistic class They are commodored chiefly by high price night club singers —such as Harry Richman — and stars of the screen and radio Vincent Astor seems the only big shot millionaire to maintain the old time yachting splendor That is a full crew the year around John Barrymore of course has his yacht and so have several crooners Earl Carroll did have one but at the end of last season gave it to his crew Joe Penner and Amos 'n' Andy as I recall have yachts Also Bing Crosby and a few fancy figured scenario writers in Hollywood But the yachtsman of the prepanic days hasn't one yacht to rub against the other as Irvin Cobb observed I am told that maintaining a yacht such as Ed Hutton’s runs from 50000 to 250000 a year depending of course on the size and amount of entertainment aboard In the good old days the Wall street broker often gave an after-theatcruisflthat cost 10000 from untrkjlawn was hailed with a 1 Analyse Political Moves SOLOMON § New York -- L— By MARK SULLIVAN— Reputation and Character MORNING JULY 7 1933 TRIBUN&--SUNPA- Y White Star Tuna00 Cam 3 FORgjC Miracle Whip No 18c In those good old days house salesmen drew the lordly sum of from 50 to 75 a month You’ll imagine what I- a floor sweeper upper got Just to give you an idea I might say that with the exception of my first check as a columnist it was the lowest wage I've ever re- The man who aits and glowers— Or perhaps you’ve seen a lawyer ceived In meditation pace for hours My immediate superiors were— Or maybe a reporter getting nerve well as a matter of fact everyone up to aay in the was my superior "Boss howzabout that raise we —but department among them were William G mentioned— Patrick Sperry Lawson Wally Remember t’other day?" Bill But for that dumb despondent CastletonThornePoulton Bill Nesbit Joe Thomstorff Charley look Charley Brown Andy Lowe and the You ain’t seen nothing yet boss Robert Patrick Len HayUntil you've seen a columnist mond was in the wholesale grocery An Idea trying tp get! department and with him were August Thomstorff NOTES ON THE CUFF George Ambrey Nowell Ben and DEPARTMENT Someone just phoned to aay Roy Williams Clarence Hoagland anent Saturday's column “One’s Will Beatie and Ed Sudbury I was destined later to join their knowledge of love depends upon how one grasps the subject" I get-ch- a ranks but I didn’t know it then sister! But then even as now I had my Dropped in for a visit with Len dreams Mixed you know with an and Florence Haymond the other occasional nightmare I was taking culture" under an Englishday It brought back a lot of old “voice memories for Len recommended me man a remittance man who had for my first job as traveling sales- drifted into the city He was a man after I quit show business The periodical drunkard but a fine mufunny part of it was that I’d always sician just the same In his sober been scared to death of him because moments whe would coach me and of his gruff abrupt manner Yet grandly wave aside any offers of he was the first to lend 8 helping remuneration Then he’d go on a hand when I needed it I’ve found bender and would call up the store that stage managers aajes man- and ask for me When one of the agers and even editors are funny gang would yell “I say old top have you see ‘Pawk’ abaout?” I’d that way know what to do fl’d go to Will I’ll never forget my first steady Romney the cashier draw a couple job Gosh how I hated it I got of bucks and take it over so my it the day I expected to go on a bally old tutor wouldn’t get the fishing and camping trip up on the D Ts Weber Although born here in the One morning I didn’t show up for mountains City creek was the only canyon I'd been in and the Jordan work I couldn’t for the night bethe only river I’d aeen Life it fore I had joined an opera troupe seemed to me was one long series and was on my- way to see the of frustations and this doggoned world as a member of the chorus I never knew exactly until then job capped the climax just what a pariah was It's a I didn’t know what my duties chorus man Compared with him a were to be but I fondly imagined broom-wieldis an aristocrat It that I was to sell things and be wasn't long before I discovered that handsomely paid for it But as the Instead of being on the first rung old song goes "Es hat nich sollen of the ladder of success and headsein” (It was not so to be) I ed upward I wasn’t even on the didn't sell things — I swept them — darn thing but had been walking floors— literally acres of them I under it so to speak And it’s been 'think I have developed a broom that way with me all my life— complex for right today I’d as soon things will go on getting tougher take hold of a live snake as a broom and tougher and they they’ll sudhandle denly change and get worse! 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