Show A vigorous man with gray hairs said that in Los Angeles it v-as v as most difficult for lor one to get employment who was over 40 1 The age limit was prescribed years ears ago when labor for the average crage man was heavy Y and exhausting Then em em- employers employers wanted the fellow who could stand up under fatiguing work They The picked the young But today much of the heavy Y toll tollof tollof tollof of the world Is performed by machin machin- ery cry Even Iven the laborers on the cement Jobs are c relieved of much of the rig rig- rigorous rigorous rigorouS orous work of the past When Washington avenue paving pining was was laid the concrete had to be mixed by hand Now a gasoline motor churns hums the cement and the aggregates and dumps the concrete into a II wagon wacon box which in turn dumps the concrete on the street All of the hard work Is not elim dim eliminated elimInated mated but much of it is and the strain on the muscles of the toilers has been reduced Therefore if It 30 years ears ago 40 was I the age limit then 50 or GO 60 should be acceptable today But there Is 1 a great bleat difference In men Chauncey M. M Depew says he has given his best service ice since he heras was ras 70 0 Some of the great achievements of human kind have been worked out by men well rell along alon in years rs Life Lile is being extended extend d and instead of the tho average man living to be only 39 NJ or 40 as in the years jears ears gone by he now lives to be Ie over 59 With life being prolonged the age must be lifted or industry will lose much of the man power that is available It Is a cold and calculating world which prohibits working a a. man or woman who is willing to work Organized society should find a away aWay away way to W prevent ent unemployment of old or young 10 In a great country like America no milling hands should be bo forced into idleness Idlene But Dut when there comes a period of reaction there is a slowing down big plants reduce their forces Then In Industrious in- in industrious Industrious people through no fault of their own are denied an opportunity to be useful i iThe The great machines which are idle must be cared for They represent an Investment and must not be allowed to rust out But men and an women arc are placed Pla In Inthe inthe the discard to be brought back if It wanted to remain on the waste heap if not called for Now the big employers are not to blame for that condition They must meet competition and are driven to every possible economy But organized society is at fault for railing falling to w find Und a better way out Our best minds have hare not been able ablo to solve e the problem The TIte dole system s offers fers relief reUf but I it has serious elements of weakness one of which is the creating of a mental attitude demanding pamper pamper- ing A developing and expanding coun coun- country country country try cannot escape from periods of reaction After it moves forward at a tremendous rate beyond normal ca capacity ca- ca capacity capacity there must come a II let down I. I In the time of let down Is when a away away away way must be found to tide over those unable to find employment A man in Washington after sleep sleep- sleeping ing In 87 hours died That Tha t is an easy exit To 10 drop to sleep and sleeping never ne wake is to be ushered hered u. u out in ina ina ina a manner not unacceptable It is when one is conscious of the going and does not want to go that the last hours arc are dreadfully sad But inasmuch as ns we all must go why not yield gracefully to the in In- In evitable The old man goes today tomorrow the boy of today will stand on the same brink bf of eternity The years slip sUp by Time cannot cannot cannot-be be halted and when the story is 15 all aU told it is as ns a 0 dream Old men think back to the days of childhood reviewing their lives and they invariably say it is 15 all like a and the one reality re lIty Is today So today Is 15 the time This is our day Let us make the most of It Tomorrow holds our hopes our ex CX- CX Therefore let us have faith Memory I today I hope hopel I faith That Tha constitutes life lite The former governor of Arkansas 1 IS Hillman Brough When he returned to Ogden to visit the scenes scene of hi his boyhood he came with a a. message me age o of lo e for Arkansas mingled led with fond fon recollections of Utah Ulah He lie was wu enthusiastic in his praise l CU Continued on n lage Two Tao t MORE FARMERS URGING LOWDEN OREGON TIt Ill Oct 13 By 13 DY By The Associated Press Press Another Another delegation dele delegation a- a atlon tion of middle Illinois farmers and business men came carne to Fran Fran- 0 O. Low- Low Lowden's Lowden's Lowden's dens den's front porch at his farm home near here Wednesday with wills an appeal to ta him to become a candidate for the Republican nomination for the dency Once more he voiced his now famous in I expression that tha t no man all our history ever er ran away from I the presidency and that no man manI with wills a a. realization of its supreme re responsibility re- re I I ever er ran after It This time 1000 persons carne came from War War- Warren Warren Warren ren and Knox counties NEWS AND VIEWS Continued from Page One of his southern home He lle told of f the Ule things In Jn which Arkansas excelled He had bad acquired that southern ac accent ac- ac accent accent cent so that he said Arkansas Arkansaw with witha a a. soft r and a drag to the saw They tell us that the western tongue Is slightly harsh Perhaps that thatis is why hy we enjoy the soft accent of the south However Howe Governor Brough drew a pleasing picture of the southland and he lie did not fall fail to put into it song sons songbIrds birds and moon beams When I read of the floods of Ar Ar- Arkansas Arkansas Arkansas kansas and then of the tornadoes which sweep seep over that region some of the artistic touches to that picture were nere marred I The birds flew away before the storm and the moon was as behind dark clouds Wednesday Arkansas had a second howling ho ripping roaring wind within a a. month Once more the people of that state stale are called upon to bury bary their dead I The dead rest In peace but the living can hear the screech creech of the I wind vind and every time it blows blos there must be nervous men women and I children down In Arkansaw I Utah enfolded In the arms of or the mountains never has bas had a tornado Utah never has had a great calamity other than of ot mans man's making In the coal mines tremendous explosions e have ha occurred but bu out in the open life Is Isas Isas isas as safe as In a garden of paradise Except that now and then a a. torrent rushes down a canyon or the snows of winter slip sUp down a mountain side aide But those dangers are well defined and are encountered only when pre pre- precautions cautions are thrown to the winds For Arkansas we have hate a profound sympathy For Its people we have much admiration because though they hue have misfortune they continue to praise the beautiful In their state But we prefer to live IIvo out where nature In Its worst mood snood Is gentle and kind |