Show e 14 1 11 t 1 I 1 i L I 1 4 I 1 dads I 1 I 1 k I 1 I 1 4 1 I 1 I 1 I 1 i 0 J ak wc I 1 11 t 4 1 I column r 0 i I 1 1 fill I 1 I 1 4 1 0 70 t I 1 1 I H im MM THE cainion co TOUCH THE LONELY roads ot of pride and pomp I 1 have n no a wish to fare give me the lanes 0 of f tolling folk and men anen who wake to care the little streets where shirt sleeved men make gardens after tea f or stand in friendly groups to chat are where I 1 choose to be 1 for life holds more than slik silk and wine I 1 and more than things to buy and they best understand its moods who do not climb too high book wisdom Is a haughty thing that draws itself apart and sometimes never sees or reads the lessons of the heart but on the humble streets dwell men and women very wise TS te all the pain and care and doubt and sorrow that arise there mere laughters ring Is genuine and pity Is expressed in kindly understanding deeds that soothe boothe the aching breast so I 1 would walk the lesser roads where many men abide who have not yet been lured away by place and pomp and pride tor for busy bury folk are friendly folk and quick their strength to share they know how heavy are the loads which most of us must bear since life Is more than silk and wine in I 1 touch with life id keep and understand the human heart and I 1 know why people weep I 1 edgar A guest a R afi a R RIGHT YOU ARE bil BH L DOWN IN provo prove there Is a correspondent tor for the provo herald who calls f himself bill the barber in a recent contribution contri bulon to that paper pape BLIP bill truth lully fully says I 1 there are some tine fine levelheaded level headed men in the legislature thank the good lord and its a good thing for the state that we haie hae them but there are a lot of ct em cm who he should never have been sent bent to le ie present us the trouble Is continued bill that some of them have no sense of humor they take this responsibility sivility lity of representing the rights of the people too seriously they feel that the entile responsibility of representing the people cepl t falls on their broad and manly shoulders it it Is their one grand opportunity to save the world and make the good old U S A i sate safe tor for the democratic party As a re 4 i suit they become more or less and develop an aggravated case of II 11 of the ego they measure success by the number of bills they introduce regardless of the merit of the bills they attempt in sixty short days to make over a world that has a billion 1 years the start of them 1 I notice one of them took a crack at the newspapers yesterday said the customer cu tomer he opposed a certain bill be cause it would require advertising in the papers he claimed that the papers held them up on rates and expected the leg I 1 to furnish them a living yeah and ill bet that bird about 13 broke his neck to get the newspaper i to announce e his candidacy said bill i the trouble e Is that a lot ot of those H r shortsighted short hort sighted babies fall to glive give the p newspaper credit tor for the vast a mount amount of tree free public service which they ren 1 l der there Is no civic project or public I 1 affair a of any kind that the newspaper P V asked to furnish hundreds of dolc lars of tree free publicity everything from 11 V a tree free announcement lor for a political job I 1 to the raising of funds to build a new j courthouse to put the politicians in to i I 1 isay say nothing ot of the public service on I 1 charity on the death of loved ones on church notices and a thousand other p things it if it tor for the legal advertising ver the newspapers have to give public notice of where the money goes you would find a return to the old system of embezzlement etc and a lot of other things I 1 could remind you of of course if af the crooked boys could eliminate the newspapers they would be happy and rich quite a sermon bill said the customer i well as I 1 said before thank the lord we have enough sensible men in the legislature to hold bold the rest level replied bill but anyway every voter should watch atch his legislator and cut him off at the I 1 pockets it if he goes haywire hay wire 1 lets do it suggested the customer r on watch replied bill afi G a Y a t BREAKS 5 LONG SILENCE SAYS TIIE THE christian science monitor tucson arizona welcomes herbert hoovers I 1 transient visit and the nation welcomes nis his trenchant words as break i t ing his long silence as a private citizen h he recommends a return to the gold standard as a restorer ot of confidence conil dence and a return ol of prosperity the supreme I 1 courts gold decision he intimates showed that the government acted unconstitutionally t but failure of the court to 8 grant citizens redress may have long moral consequences advises mr hoover restore condid confidence in the dollar dont wait on foreign nations put more r men to work than any other action de ceraso need tor for relief halt rising costs discourage inflation president theodore roosevelt of the national republican club of course agrees most heartily but secretary of the tres treasury says hes satisfied with the money policy as it Is contemplating no change sometimes sometime pondering this money question one considers how ludicrously simple Is ernsteins Ein steins theory of relativity I 1 vi a a s F i WE IVE CANT DO WITHOUT I 1 1 METALS I 1 k rp IF YOU want to obtain an idea of the I 1 y value of metals look around your I 1 home 1 0 m e I 1 fc office or factory practically every everything t h in if Y you use involved Involve a one or r more metals I 1 automobiles and pens furnaces and I 1 thumb tacks kitchen equipment and 3 1 I 1 sporting goods truthfully says the industrial du review h every basic industry Is vitally depend 1 f ent upon metals tor for making and distributing its products or services if the impossible happened and we suddenly I 1 found ourselves without metals tomorrow q life would have to be carried on in vf rf ln importance that Is if attached to the domestic I 1 mining industry and shows why farsighted far sighted economists are so ao interested I 1 in P iem ra tar |