Show 1 THE PMIMMMEMWIMMMMEaMUM be at gatii Vitnine Established April 15 1871 leaned every morning by Salt Lake Tribune Publishing Company TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 00 Daily and Sunday one month 1050 Daily and Sunday one year The above rates apply in Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming Elsewhere in the United States: $125 Daily and Sunday one month The Tribune is on sale in every Important city in the United States Readers may ascertain agents in any city br telephoning this office Salt Lakotity Utah Saturday Morning March 27 - Art in the Home THAT LIFE more than meat and the body more than raiment i s now an accepted axiom of all Christian and civilized peoples Civilizations differ however in the degree to which art is applied life It is now an accepted to the customs and practices of every-da- y 11 criterion that the higher the level of art appreciation of a people the richer and more enduring is their civilization There is a widespread belief however that to be artistic one must possess or covet expensive art treasures But it is neither tecessary nor possible for the average person or family to own an art collection Carried to its logical conclusion we see what an impossible situation it would produce How much better is it for the public collectively to own the great art treasures for the French people for instance to own the Mona Lisa and the Venus de Milo and for the Chicago citizens to own Stuart's Washington or the people of Boston to own Dallin's The GrearSPirit? To be truly artistic is to put art to Work art is a means as as each normal adult is or can well as an end Each home-makbe a creator within certain limits The need for the practical appli cation elf art in the home was never greater than today There never was a time when commercial and other institutions were in such keen and successful competition with the home as now The tremendous appeal of the public dance hall and the moving picture These theater is not due wholly to the craving for amusement the beautiful our It is for cater to craving institutions often are and restless that no wonder therefore young people ' dissatisfied with their homes The things we do so often such as eating for instance can and should be made equally satisfying on the spiritual level The same 'is true of dress and the way we spend our leisure The drabness of our daily lives and the unattractiveness of many e home is proof of an undeveloped sense of the beautiful A true story is told of a farmer who expressed great surprise when he learned that his wife had been taken to the mental hospital and said "I don't under stand it She has never failed to get ray breakfast or to look after my children or to mend my socks for over forty years!" Exactly It was just this monotony and strain over a long period of time that produced her mental breakdown In a rapidly changing world making tremendous inroads upon the sphere of the family and the home it is imperative that homemakers learn to apply the elemental principles of beauty harmony life Herein lie tin and design to the routine tasks of every-da- y dreamed-o- f possibilities for serviceand the happiness of every er woman' Informing'the Public public as to tlu1 control of cancer is a commendable step forward in the pre' tection of the health of the nation The cooperation of the many public spirited citizens and the medical profession in bringing these facts before the public will do much to eradicate the fear and despair that have been asaociated With the very mention of this disease In Salt Lake City and Utah this week public meetings have been held The thousands who attended these sessions received lessons that should help to save thousands of lives in the years to come They haverlearned that cancer is not incurable but an affliction that can be curbed and eliminated if treated in time Wise persons consult their family medical advisers when they are Ill They go to their doctors when they discover they are not welL This is a good policy to follow no matter how slight the ailment may appear tci be because early attention may save Untold suffering and even lives The medical profession Ls treating cancer with surgery and radium Doctors daily are 'learning more and more about the disease and the week dedicated to the control of cancer is MI to be commended by all people whp value the good health of themselvel and their families TNTELLIGENT and sensible education of the X-r- - - it Just When He Ttiought He Had Escaped ‘- The political managers of Mr Roosevelt's fight to control the court supreme - — t1- (:: :ele - r--- - '444p i :: 1 (s‘ Frank will R be a senate It and ': ItiveriA471:: it (i :-:- 07 y ift if -- ft w ''i'' 44'1'!! ::i: t fe I - ' 11- - '' ' 4 - I 4 '!'t ' - !':yr 0 '' "I 7 - t i't It now degree to which the people are stirred and of the basic nature of the issue presented It is ample proof of the truth of the statement that on a itetret ballot Mr Rooseveit's plan would not get 15 of the 98 votes in the senate hardly a hundred of the 435 in the house Yet Mr Farley claims a margin of 10 in the former and everybody concedes there will be no effective opposition Ikthe latter This situation does not at all mean that the fight against the plan to pack the court will stlacken or that there is not hope It can be beaten The leaders engaged in it believe the principle Involved so vital that it would be unthinkable to weaken even In the face of far greater odds than now confront them It is the sort of fight in which it is much better to be beaten than to compromise d However the more of the senators do not delude themselves as to the facts and consider the consequences of both victory and defeat For example they say there is no real possibility they can muster a majority in the senate They have now 42 of the 96 votes and probably can hold them all That is not enough to prevent passage of the bill on a- voter but It is enough to block cloture and kill the bill through an Indefinite filibuster which could be made by reading supreme court decisions and the hundreds of thousands of letters received by senators protesting the president's e'r 0"r01 f'?70 l''''1! -"'' "I' clear-heade- 141 CS0:1liti TKftE 17 A9 PC ) 0 4N 0 Cr J lb i — it ' '114'"411--117- 1 i I ( 1 t! s it '‘ Sr HICr ' : al: 4I : Ar' comME cofwearmT 1 A -political on magnificent musical com- t 4" 41 12) -- 4bo A WY' ' -- 4114t:Irt 1110191" It) cn"""" :r)"' t I dollar-watchsiz- tn tight-collar- By Our Readers' ette appearing omit do not xpreee the views of The Trthune They are the opinlone Of cimbrihntors with which The Tribune may or may not stow The rules govern contribm following buttons: 1 Lettere IImlt4 tn 300 weeds rtP1141111041 given to short commu9 Write legibly and nications clearly on ono side of the paper only p ligione and racial discussions barred Partloan comment can be printed Only with true name of 441140r leortional asperitions pro $ Poetical contributions ft Letters may be not wanted barred for obvious misstatements of lect or for etatements which are not in seeord with 'fair play and good tostre0 7 The Forum is not 1111 advertising medium 0 Writers must sign true names and addresses in Ink lAttlerti unions partisan will be tarried over sesunied name if In all CARPS writet so reorient however true name and address must b istinehed to communication 0 The Forum eannot consider more than one letter from the same writer at One time Highway as Real Menace to Travelers Sees Editor Tribune: Your article regard to the testimony in the New London tragedy la worth a lot of study by our officials in the state of Utah I and others wonder if they are or have given a little thought to the condition of some of the roads which are used daily by our school buses carrying children to in echool Hive our commissioners ever given any thought to road over Bear River hill which students front Deweyville travel almost daily to attend Bear River high school? There is a good chance of one of those buses going to oblivion on this road Or are they waiting until such a shock log thing occurs? I can tell you those of us who have to travel along that route have been lucky up to the present time that we are here to complain I consider this road one of the biggest hazards in the state of Utah and I think it unfair to our children to send them over that route to school I would like to hear from some of you parents pcmitions Foreigner Shakespetre I on literature and drama Foreignr Marconi on radio and numer- We even patterned oils others Too our ballots after Australia Christianity is a foreigrLphiloeophy but of course America does plan not follow that at the hands of the numerous Filibuster Considered England has better police and house men mail France is more demThere are several flaws in this ocraticservice I was under the impression that 'Holland and Scandinavia program One is that it would are more equitable and cooperathe Salt Lake City women's clubs play into the president's hands dehad with the cooperation of the Even On so immense an issue as tive Russia has eradicated and povpolice force put a stop to gamunemployment pressions this a prolonged filibuster against erty bling but after losing $50 and rea clear majority no matter how so unthinkable to is it ceiving a thorough beating at the Why secured and extending over adopt hands of its house men I have any foreign ideas on govmonths as it must might dilute ernment or economics? Have we come to the conclusion their efregarding this situation public sentiment against the presiM W FEARSON forts were in vain monopoly on all that la good? dent The people would become aPlease BOB TAYLOR remember that notwithDeweyville Time would operate in bored suneriority and his favor The facts of what his standing America's democracy and impeccableness proposal really means would beehe has had wars and depressions come "blurred The whole busl- -' Crime and ness dimmed by delay would at regular Intervale corruption beyond all seem less shocking It is true political By Ham Park others Poverty unemployment too that a number of senators for disease excessive poor housing We are always happy in the with imaginative buttons for a most strongly opposed to th for farmers workers but still there is a certain medium stout lady" plan have a deep distaste for fill- - and farm mortgagee spring do not that equal prices "Just walk this way" she said bust ering of sadness It looks as if feeling increascost of and production going into a rhumba or someThere is also the argument that exall debts were for back and taxes ing everything coming even if the bill is thus beaten and thing Let us say for the moment that I followed aa best I could Mr Roosevelt thwarted in his atcept us—Milwaukee Journal we and resent foreign tempt to seize the court it would ideas of government systems then "For buttons S he said opening What I Cover the' Fashion Front do two things for him One is it Mr American is your American a large showcase "you can have one-hawould provide him with an alibi of the that )3elieving solution ? What are you going to ram Skinny Parelli's for all the untoward events which how the other world doesn't-knoor butterflies adopt to prevent future depreanow loom on the national horizon half dresses I decided to make a heads mermaids flower-potunTo SiOnl eliminate wars? s and or He can—and would—assert that tour of the shops to see what Patwh oozis' if given The kind of court he employment? To give farmer milord and milady were wearing Roaches' open books Which do To cost of proproduction plus? you think she'd prefer?" wanted he could have prevented this Easter 1 did and migosh! American stand"I can't imagine buttoning anythe financial collapse which his vide all a proper and of available ard make thing with any of them" I readvisers are beginning to publicly to all livingbenefits Ay own apparel being obviousmascience the plied "and particularly with a admit now threatens and he could ly makeshift mule it a little diffihave at cult flower-pbook Anyor an have averted various other tragic chinery and medicine me to get proper attenfor to of hand? and I beg you tell ins - tion at the better salons How way I was only open looking" things which are at Mast possible IA the the readers—what then so"Oh she maid disappointed Another is that the defeat of his around and We have waited seven-lonlike as I beat a hasty retreat plan might easily provide him lution? a hers and few up things picked to for you years speak Please with an issue for a third-terthere but they took them away us now I waa In—a sort of a daze when fight which is what a good thany tell ROLLO from me before I left ENRICO I found myself in the millinery MILAN observers are convinced he wants Color ladies and gentlemen Is department All the clerks were What Victory Means THE thing this year "Color" busy so I meanedered around Tells of Gambling The more I looked the more maid the saleslady to me "this On the other hand should he Places In Salt Lake dazed I became I thought of season is courageous!" win through the brutal power of Gilbert and Sullivan and began "You mean by that" I aaked tho Farley machine (which is the Editor Tribune: I thought that "The flowers that humming only way he can win) if there is the citAzens of Salt lAke City had' "that it won't run?" bloom on spring hats tra la have Sho looked at me as though a spark of rebellion left among the stopped gambling in the city but were some strange kind of a bug something to do with surrealism" people it would be- - kindled into a coming to Salt Lake for a few A salesgirl approached flame by the "ensuing measures and continued: hours of recreation I stopped at a "What's that?" I asked pointwi:h an litquiescent court "For color—something in gan'downtown card club where at $5 Mr Roosevelt proposes tci enact ing to what looked like a museum or more a seat can be bought in grenepink (that can't be right No secret is made that these inpiece but that is the way it sounded) either a fantan or poker game I "That's & 'name' hat a black clude a revival of 'both N R A soon found that if you do not bosa hyacinth heliotrope bread-baskfilled and A A A which will mean a at the games you are sure to lose porridge mustard tomato honey lacquered more complete regimentation than or butter is do rigeur The suits with cherry blossoms and cellohave intricate pockets and imphane butterflies" she said yet has been dreamed of Foldeath which it can be "And that?" pointing "to anbuttons" lowing that the revolt at the next by resignation gotten—by aginative by election would sweep the entire It indicates a belief compromise I told her that the men might other in the that Roosevelt regime out It would "That's rough sailor with a adopt the intricate pocket Med end ultimate recovery of national take a generation but eventually but the imaginative button thing veil" balance may be faciliand sanity the nation would regain its feet "That's all Z wanted to know" was an old story with us particutated by not giving him the issue the married ones and we I said and beat it Victoryin this fight may be more a prolonged larly filibuster would pro at fatal to Me Roosevelt than leaned strongly to'zippers vide A psychiatric clinic at Bellevue Feeling the need of nouriah"So nice to have met you" she announces boldly that hospital and into Cesare's merit went I All this coming from men who said languidly— "Goodbye"o Copyright 1937 by The Baltimore was a sissy thus clinchDillinger where Ed met Frank's I most deeply see the dangers of place be As there was nothing's-cSun ing the March medal for fearless his plan would seem to indicate gained by staying longer I went and Mts Singleton of Ogden and ness of L their Herbert Parker a weakening in their 'determinaQualified guest Fully to look elsewhere First St Louis Mo They Invited me tion That is not the case There shopwalker—Poor old In the days when a woodshed Perkins' has completely lost his "I know I'm a little late" I to join them will be no 'weakening so far as stood between the American home lose to afraid he'll his "You sales I'm Mrs worn" the vivacious said concerned said it look What are hearing young does they a of school children as Indicate is a belief (which may job person who greeted me smilingly Singleton at Akron could have been painful: Second Shopwalker—Nonsense "I am" I replied "shopworn" not be correct) that one'way or et the next place "but it'll probr Ed and another Mr Roosevelt is botind to He's to be transferred to the comThe Maine legislature votes solably snow on Easter so it won't 'Well here's how-ai- d Club matter I'd like to see something Mr Parker plaint get the power he seeks There bidly"to relaih the September elecdepartment—City lA a suit courageously: colored are other ways than this bill by Lit "And bow" mid 1 gratefully tion Vaudeville is planning a — The Senator From Sandpit — — il fox-hea- ot g m pink-cheek- ed moon-streame- - lime-yello- w et s Off the Record (le-fe- aft-do- ' " ) ed cuff-shooti- IIlimp Loiters of the university profeesors of science and economics the newspaper editora politicians or any learned person would give us a solution for or counsel how to solve our economic ills We are told we must not taint America and democracy with foreign ideas But we benefited from Foreigner Pasteur regarding bacterial dieeoveries Foreigner Curie on radium foreign compos- 149 1110C Forum Rules in this Economic Tangle Editor Tribune: I wish some Of Qij ca The Public Forum — Asks Solution II 1' Al '"'''VOISPZbttt 17""144Spol - 1 4 44' 1 ' 4‘04-- ors 0 i l' 4' 1 N:'W0AP'LN6"Ecl' Reader i 0 4 k -1 awsas lre 4 1 1 6 ' so many of them are doing is the best evidence of the i 11 i Attitude Shown That f 4( 3 ' ' —b - At"111V fg ‘ 1 v 7-- ' 4 I' 1 0 a V f iftith!Ess lo 2 Y- i - 1 A?2t e1 ' japm : 1:7 I 4 ''''''IrrPi'V ' ii ' : I'll 441t1 ! ' v 1' ) 11141 r od't i aiAgi 1:t k if i t "I' :4'1 -4 riLl'i t A ke l''i t' - 7E:::01:::1:11" 4- - i: ' I 'i t '1 e - '- it " ' !Sportsmanship' k 1 mei tyre By o NEW YORK March 26—It's stimu1tii fireside duffers to step-u- p their dreamy gazing now and then to blink at the gay realities To sock themselves to the Adam's apple with white tie splendor go places do things Indeed to raise the Very Old Dickens I'm back in the carpet slippers Criticized and the frayed Burlington Arcade robe today nibbling at the southon east corner of a graham cracker arid sipping diluted orange juice You know pale but interesting! By Jay Franklin Either my eyes are fever bright of the this liberal some time By with recollection or I have the hots newspapers have doubtless given Mr Juetice McReynolds a ebNot that I cut into the grape or rhumbaed myself into a setting bing for hie speech about "good of lumbago but I did have a mid- sportsmanship" in accepting sui preme court decisions His gruff rarebitniett' fhaei ewd tahr oau nbs babtl y2 ae lamh and inflammatory remarks in the In a waltz and joined a group at minority decision on the gold eases ("The constitution is gone" the piano to blend my slow alto "Thls is the end" "The impending In a rendition of ''I Adore You" The comfort of splitting the legal and moral chaos is appalling" etc) suggest that good town wide open at intervals la to sportsmanship like other fine see for yourself how goofy it is Now utterly asinine It is incredqualities seldom begins at home ible that I used to think that sort Greater public interest will attach to his honorable avowal that of capering was the life and to be recognizes no distinction bestay at home an evening with a book was almply a blackout to a tween the rich and the poor in the administration of justice Mr Jusday of real living tice McReynolds' attitude in this Yet withal it was fun—for the sense recalls the famous incione evening! If there is a snore dent described by Dean Roscoe beautiful lass than the cigaret girl Pound in "The Spirit of the Comat El Morocco I haven't seen her Dean Pound menM011 Law" tioned an English judge who in There is tragedy too in her dark humorous eyes One wonders just the old days before the divorce story And there court was instituted was called on what is her was that furred-mi- nx in a high to sentence a workingman conbar chair at the Stork club who victed of bigamy could show some of the boys who think they are rounders a few Told Moving Story tricks For the jtalf hour I "On being asked what he fad to watched her she must have say why sentence should not be smoked chain fashion at least 20 pronounced the accused told a cigarets and downed also chain moving tory of bow his wife had fashion six whisky sours—and run away with another Man and she hopped off the chair and left him with a number of small walked out as straight as a string children to look after while barestopping at a hail mirror to rubrily earning a flying by hard labor cate inviting lips and give that After waiting several years he recertain do to a married in order to provide a chapeau And those proper home for the children Mr boys with Justice Maule shook his head green-gra- y slightly furtive eyes " 'My good man' said he 'the soaring with the balloon emptiness law did not in any wise leave you of phoneys—and looking for some without a sufficient remedy You foolish" widow trying to be so should first have brought an acmaidenly again Also the collegiate-lotion in her majesty's court of comoking orchestras jumping up mons pleas against this man with at intervals to huddle at the miwhom as you say your wife went crophone like puppets moved by away In that action after two or strings three years and the expenditure of two or three hundred pounds Then the inevitable old fool in the paper hat at the Penalise you would have obtained a judglikement against him which very He was swashed to the armpits and pounded the out of ly would have been uncollectible You should then have brought a the tablecloth with a soup spoon ecWhen the cuties in scanty decor suit against your wife in the clesiastical court for a divorce paraded by In the musical numbers he reached out to pinch or from bed and board which you tickle them and the poor dears might have obtained in two or three years after expenditure of coyly giggled—they had to do it as a part of their job During the two or three hundred pounds You would then have been able to apevening it was announced that Pig Jowls was giving a birthday ply to parliament for an absolute divorce which you might have party and when the orchestra obtained in four or five years played "Happy Birthday to You" he stoodon his chair and led the more after spending four or five orchestra with a beer bottle—that hundred pounds " 'And' be continued for he saw type Terrible if one is cold sober and not so hot if plastered the accused impatiently seeking to Interpose and to say something A phase of Cafe life one cannot 'if you will tell me that you never help noticing these days in the had and never in your life exbetter places Is the cleanliness of pect to have so many pennies at the Waiters employes—especially one time my answir must be that captains and barmen All tuff it hath ever been the glory of Enfreshly barbered neatly manigland not to have one law for the cured hair trimmed to a feather' rich and another for the poor' " edge and uniforms snowily spotThere is no doubt that the suless They almost suggest the preme court would show equal ensemble of chorus zeal to protect my right to set up a used to collect to Ziegfeld boys billion-dolla- r in the corporation Miller around so Marilyn swing of to to Delaware or state work go airily for sweatshop wages' In its decision on the New York state minToo there were the dancing imum wage law the supreme drunks They never It at a table court was a Jealous guardian of but weave trom bar to dance floor the constitutional right of women in alcoholic blur Holding to each and children to sell thmselves into other) they go into a clinch on the hiNrfereconomic slavry without floor edge and do a sort of draggy ence by the state legislature And around the room bumping droop in one of its famous power deciinto this one and that and exsions in the 1920s the supreme pressing the vacuity of a dog court did what God Himself is unscratching for en ear flea lie able to do: To insert "in judicial has a Dick Powell mustache and will be saying to the boys at the contemplation" an interval between the production and distrioffice'next morning: Was I jinbution of electric current in order gled last night?" And one canto free a utility from federal regnot help but wince at the thought ulation under the commerce of her clause of the constitution wilt her night on the loos be a Now Cropping Up prelude to a layoff or perhaps a notice in the glove department? This attitude of judicial "imwere partiality" is now cropping pp in Or the they married folk indulging chicanery Broadway conservative discussions of the knows as cheating? AnYway nationallabor relations act which the tories complain is entirely they were a mess Finally two attendants scooped them oyster onesided in favor of labor The white out to the taxi—sickening fact that the situation with which I think my dog asleep in various it deals is also'onesided is ignored hat checkrooms probably had the On the side of the employee' are dandiest time of all money the police physical pos session the courts lawyers and an Anyway I had my fun and am inside track to the organs of pubp looking forward when dusk whorls lie opinion On the other side are its arabesques to a drive that will merely large masses of necessid wind up at a hatous men who must liveon what ven In the country for a different they earn from their dakly toil A sort of night In an entirely difplant can be closed down for a ferent stratum of peace a world year but a stomach must be filled where trees and bushes are spanevery day gled with dew giving back to the The object of such measures as moon a responsive yellow gleam the national labor relations act is A world of foliage in hushed to offset the onesidedness of our whisper bathed in the aroma of economic institutions by creating clean winds a world' of measured for to in labor its effort rights beauty Give me one nightof it To with employers bargain apply and you can have your ten nights mildewed concepts of the law of in the barrooms with all the trimproperty to the necessities of hu- - mings Especially ho ho the man beings Is a parody of justice trimmings! Copyright Register andTrib une Copyright 1037 McNaught Syndicate Syndlcate Inc For Talk e f ) "4 ' 1''q w''' 4 ' w i 0- 171 - 1147-- 4 oi Highlights of New York As Seen by 001lcintyre Judge ' el C --- not to face the facts 7 t1:4 frpteril in the there is no use denying the odds favor the Farley prophecy The weight of the great federal machine tbe unscrupulous use of the White House patronage power over the states its vast propaganda facilities and the pressure from the labor groups constitute the most formidable organization of its kind ever known To stand firmly against it when led by a president who makes the kind of popular appeal Mr Roosevelt makes requires of a member of congress considerable fortitude and courage 7:CoACII(:-)- - 0--- tenured those with whom he talks that in the end there of 10 : - surprise Kent majority le stupid (ofr (6 the Farley prophet has " 69 I: ::: :: has one a None the less they are sure he will have Mr his way ---1 ) -- weohuonitor 1 iiiiii: 19 411' are completely confident that ha will win It Is true the re- volt among hi s I own f r 1 e n ds and the in -1 s ( Frank R Kent By By Orr ' Politics S British Lion Roars HARP differences of opinion on foreign policy mark the most clash in the British house of commons in which David Lloyd George emerges from temporary obscurity to take the spotlight again The fiery Welshman who once before challenged the ambitions of Itaiy charges "butchery" in Mussolini's Ethiopian campaign demands that Anthony Eden depart from his policy of 'pouring oil on troubled waters" and "stand up to il duce" Lloyd George isn't a stranger to Romans It was he and Clemenceau who supported Woodrow Wilson when the latter declined to let Italy have the port of Fiume in the post war peace settlement Fiume had not been promised to Italy but other concessions had been made in the London treaty It became necessary for the Romans to obtain most of Fiume by a separate arrangement with Jugoslavia Italy's bitterness toward the allies has been a festering ulcer since the war Italy entered the struggle by the terms of a secret treaty with Great Britain France and Russia She had been promised an extension of her northern frontier and also of her Adriatic boundaries If Great Britain and France expanded their coloniza tion in Africa Italy was to receive territorial compensation on the dark continent Still another treaty made in 1917 pledged Smyrna and other Turkish territory in the near east tallome The record reveals however that Italy suffered a series of disappointments by the refusal of more powerful nations to conform to the letter of the In short the prevailing official opinion in Rome is agreements that Italy was deceived and disappointed Two schools of thought prevail in British official circles The old school chooses to standon the power of Britain and the dignity There should be no wavering Anthony Eden of the empire of present day conditions in Europe and the comyouthful scholar London has skipped from capital to capital of muting diplomat with a fire extinguisher smothering the embers of international 'strife on thecontinent He has been accused of losing face for the British Lion He has been charged with making British diplomacy a wishy-wash- y substitute for the traditional firmness which Lloyd favors George While admiration is due the venerable statesman who courageously shouts to the house of commons: "Earn some respect for Britain I'd rather have Italy's anger than Italy's contempt" there is also much to be said in favor of Eden's calmness Lloyd George's attack may not create new resentment in Rome Diplomats hope renewed bitterness between the two nations will not result They recognize that tension is near the danger point now and added fuel to the flame is not helpful in the cause of peace Lloyd George has had his day in court again What he has accomplished remains to be seen In any event he has not made the trail that Anthony Eden is traveling any smoother 27 1937 c 1937 S recent SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING MARCH In Spotlight — of ---U - 4 - comeback and will need that joke Der Angriff of Berlin says Americans blow wads of chewing gum at the walls which is a nasty libel on a race that parks it neatly under chairs A bauble set with square-cu- t diamonds is offered In the smart ads for $17500 It is the little things like this that maks g covery seem to mi 4 I I |