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I PAGE SIX : THE LOGAN REPUBLICAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1919 H ITHE LOGAN REPUBLICAN B Published I)y B TUB REPUBLICAN PUBLISHING COMPANT B ( Logan, Utak H U. nullon . .President and Editor H entered at tlie Poat Office every Tuesday, Thursday H md Saturday, at Logan, Otah, aa second class matter H Bubscrlbcra wishing tho address of tholr papor B changed wilt ploaso giro their former as well as tnelr B jrosent address. All papers aro continued nntll ex- Bl tllclt order Is received by us to discontinue. All H arrears must be paid in tkts caso. H If not paid In advanco add 60 cents a year extra. B Subscription Kates By Mall B Ona Year s,0 B Six Months 1,co M Tkreo Months ...........-.. .- " H Subscription nates I)y Carrlor B One Tear l3-60 H MONKEYING WITH EUROPE B In our last issue we said "The more wc B monkey with Europe the more Europe B will want to monkey with us." At that B time we did not know we were hewing B v so close to the written Democratic word. B Since then we happened to run across a B Democratic Campaign Text Book for 1916 B the platform upon which Woodrow Wil- B son was re-elected. On the pages giving B Governor Glynn's speech we find the B following: B "Governor Glynn's speech, sounds party B battle summons"and quotes the governor B as follows: B "The President of the United States Bj stands today where stood the men who B made America and saved America. B ''If Washington was right, if Jefferson B was, right, if Hamilton was rght, if Lin B coin was right, then the President of the B United States is right today. B "And whom, we ask, will the policy of B oui opponents, (Republicans) satisfy and B fox how long? 'Fighting for every de B gree of in jury wciufu iiieflh perpetual war, B and this is thepolicy of our opponents, B djeny it hpw they will, ttt wbuM not allow B the TJni'ted. States to keep the swprd in j the scabbard as long as there remains an B unrigKtqd wrong or an unsatisfied hope B between the snowy wastes of Siberia irf B the jungled hills Of Borneo. It would make B America as dangerous to itself and' oth B ers, as destructive and as uncontrollable B as the cannon of Victor Hugo's tale of '93. B It w;ould give us a war abroad each time B the fighting cock of the European weath B er vane shifted with the breeze. It would B make America the cock pit of the world. B It would mean the reversal of our tra B ditional policy of government. B It would make all the other nations the B wards of the United States and the Unit B ed States the Keeper of the World. What B would become of the Monroe Doctrine un B der such a policy? How long do our op B " ponents suppose we would be allowed to B meddle in European affairs while deny B ing Europe the right to meddle in Ameri ca can affairs? The policy of our opponents B is a dream. It never could be a possibil B ity. It is not even advanced in good faith. H ' 4- in a Word this policy of our B opponents would mako the United States B the policeman of Europe. Rome, tried to B be policeman of the world' and .weni. B down. Spain tried and went down, and B the United States proposed to profit by B the experience of the ages and avoid am B bitions whose reward is sorrow and B whose crown is death." B This address was made in defense of H the "He Kept Us Out of War"' slogan, B and against the Re)ublican charge that it B was murderous to have kept out of the B war with Germany so long. It now reads B like thfe speech of one of the men who B has recently been denounced as a "con B temptible quitter." Or like one of those B who has been called "pigmv minded." Or BB a "dream of a man living in a forgotten BB age." B . At any rate it is the wavp and woof of BB the American plank of the platform on BB which Woodrow Wilson was reelected. If B there is one thing we like more than an- B other it is to once in a while' take a dose Bc of our own medicine, and if there is one B thing we like better than that, it is to fl rive the other fellow a dose of his own B medicine. ra a ra H VOX POPULI, VOX DEI B At the recent conference of Cache B stake Apostle Talmadge .made the statc- B ment th'at-God would not permit any H President to lead the United States B astray. B On the 24th of October, 1918, the Prcsi- H dent said, to the people of the United H States.:. Wv, BB "If yoU$avte .approved of my leader- fl snip arid''wishie to continue to be H jB BR:' n WW y .... . IBBiBMBBBBBBBBtBIBBMBBBflit m-M? your unembarrassed spokesman at home and abroad, I earnestly beg that you will express yourself un mistakably to that effect by return ing a Democratic majority in both the Senate and the House of Repre sentatives." At that time there was a Democratic Senate and a Democratic House, and af ter the President's appeal the people all know how the several states responded Instead of the people giving the Presi dent license to act as their "unembarassed spokesman at home and abroad" the peo ple rebuked the President by returning a Republican House and a Republican Sen ate. Vox populi, vox Dei, "The voice of the people is tho voice of God." to h m TOOK THE STARCH OUT OF HIM Senator Williams, the distinguished administration Democrat from Mississip pi arose in the Senate a few days ago and asked permission to read into the record of the senate a memorial signed by twenty-five prominent Californians urging Senator Johnson to support the league. Williams smiled beneath his moustache, and evidently thought he was pulling a great coup. Senator Johnson countered by referring to a recent petition he hall received from many citizens of Mississip pi asking him to oppose the league, also to a recent political contest in the same state in which the people went on Vecord against the league. It took all the starch out of Senator Williams of Mississippi. to ta. to. r- i r WILL EXAMINE NEWS PRINT INDUSTRY Newspaper publishers and all those whose business requires the use of news print paper, as well as the public in gen eralt will be vitally interested in the dom ing investigation of the news print indus try by the Senate sub-committee. This committee which was formed under a res olution introduced hy Senator Reed of Missouri, is composed of Senator Robert M. LaFollette of Wisconsin, chairn.an; Senator Charles L. McNary of Oregon; Asle J. Gronna of North Dakota; James A. Reed of Missouri and David J. Walsh of Massachusetts.' The absolute fairness in the selection of the membership of this committee is shown by the biographs of the men ap pointed. No newspaper anen are on the committee. Senator La Follette is a lawyer and in addition to having served three terms as governor of Wisconsin. He was first elected to the Senate in 1903. Senator McNary is also a lawyer having ' served as associate justice of the Orecron Supreme court for two years. He was chairman of the Republican state central committee for two years prior to his ap pointment to fill the unexpired torm of the late Harry Lane. Senator Gronna is a farmer and banker and served as mem ber of the House through the Fifty -ninth, Sixtieth and Sixty first congresses before being elected to the Senate in 1911. Neither Senator Walsh nor Senato Reed have ever been engaged in the newspaper business. .Senator La Follette has stated that he will carefully review previous investiga tions of the news print industry abour which there hape been many chavgfa of unfairness. Data obtained by the Feder al Trade Commission and the Department, of Agriculture will be noted as well as the information available from the pu!p and pape'r section of the War Industries Board. fc h Don't make excuses! Make good- , mm To escape criticism: Do nothing; say nothing; be nothing. ft fc Aim high and believe yourself capable of great things. ft ft ft The leader of the orchestra is always a man who has played second fiddle, ft ft ft Noah was 600 years old before he knew how to build an ark. Don't lose your grip ft ft ft Lift the stone and thou shalt find Me. Cleave the vood and there am I. ft ft ft. Speak well of everyone if you speak of them at all none .of us are so very good, ft ft ft The world reserves its big prizes, for but one thing, and that is Initiative. Initiative is doing the right thing without being told. Next to doing the thing without being told, is to do it when you are told once TRY A CLASSIFIED AD. i t NEVER was such right-handed-two- " Wk 1111111101 J fisted smokejoy as you puff out of a Vwt IH lllififfiffl 'lx jimmy pipe packed with Prince Albert I ':- iliiSiiiiii That's because P. Ai has the quality! liffiiiffliUiH I 1 You can't fool your taste apparatus any more than you fifSSSKjp can get five aces out of a family deck I So, when you hit llMRWkKHBffli Prince Albert, coming and going, and get up half an hour bgsrrrr w&wMk 'It earlier. just to start stoking your pipe or rolling cigarettes, flBBfifebaBBF you know you've got the big prize on the end of your line I BlWTUHJKijiMlJlE Prince Albert's quality alone puts it in a class of its own, Plrfffli but when you figure that P. A. is made by our exclusive FKM;'ftl I ' patented process that cuts out bite and parch well you 'm IBB " ml v feel like getting a flock of dictionaries to find enough words K'lHr ?2a iH to express your happy days sentiments! mPmJp it Toppy rtd.bati, tidy nd tint, handtom pound and half-pound tin iBkLBtiRS humidor and that elatiy, practicat pound eryttal glatt humidor ivith BPmBnlm m sponge motif nr top that ketpt thm tobacco tn-ach porfaet condition. fSStlrWvfitjTyvi m R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C OhShhihiIp The Utah Weekly Industrial Review showing op 1'ayholi.s xsv ex tkiu'hisks in alii skctionh ok the statu 11ks1 ahgu mk.n't aoaixst holsiikvi.sm and builds up communities. September 29. Salt ImVo Main street property brings $1800 a foot. East Gray Hock mine of the Ann conila Copper company In the Hutte district resumes operations with moro miners npplylnfj for work than can be accommodated. Mining offi cials say there Is n distinct Improve ment In tho labor situation, with min ers returning to llutto In appreciably Increased numbers. . Kuroka Several thousand acres piospcctlve oil lands leased In Hum boldt county. Salt .Lake. Farmers of Sovlor county and Levlan Kldge will 'buy Pluto water project. Tho state wants $1,250,000. Marysvale Operations resumed on Webster mine after four years In nctlvliy. IlrlRham City lets $151,065.26 paving contract. ' Salt -Lake. Hams and owes bring D,477.50 first "day or tho National Woolgrowers association sale. Utah crop report shows good third alfalfa yield. Spanish Fork Contract awarded for-paving of 'Main street. Eureka Juab' county planning a . new wngon road through 'Pintle val ley from Silver City. Tho mon In the steel Industries have rejected tho President's appeal to withhold action until" after dip conference called to assemble In Washington early noxt month should have opportunity to establish a basis of conciliation for all Industrial dis putes, Tho public will nrguo that If th't) cause of tho strikers was Just ns they claim thoy could not have been Injured by the delay for which tin? President appealed. Mt. Pleasant. People's Sugar Co. begins operations on October 1, Ogdcn lets $184,100 contract for 36lnch reinforced concrete pressure lino to city water system. Eureka- Utah Power Company -la faking on fulto a lot of now business In' tho eastern end of tho Tlntlo dis trict, ns' practically all of tho newer companies have decided upon elec tricity as the, niotlyo power for their mining operations. Mining men plan record breaking convention at St. Louis for u week, I beginning November 27. Twenty-five hundred nro expected to attend. In addition to deliberation upon legis lation, tariff, revenue leasing, trans portation problems, costs, safety and freight rates, ns they pertain to tho. mining Industry, tho congress has a largo volume of business to transact. Sllvcrton mines activity grows. Price of lead Is n hindrance to great production: rise In copper holpful.. . Salt Lake. Qustavcson Oil com- pnny resumes drilling In Diamond Fork canyon. i "Salt Lake. Company organized for production of potash, Incorpor ated at $5,000,000. - I Tho nation Is. face to faco with a radical labor autocracy which threa tens to crush and -destroy with as ruthless n hand n$ did ever German military autocracy. Tho so-called la ibor lenders, drunk on their own man power aro Ignoring tho greatest forco in the world, namely, public opinion. A few moro police strikes will nwak ,en this nation to tho danger threat ening It under tho guise of a labor movement. J Utah corn crop 571,000 bushels. Spring wheat forecast of August, 2,318,000 bushels, stands. Ogdon Operations began at Am algamated Sugar company's factories. Ogden. -E. O. Wattls, vlco -president of the Utah. Cbnstructlon com ,pany, has returned from California, where he, has been In tho Interest of hls'companyV$5,0Q0i000 conlract for tho construction of the Hotch Jctvhy dnm, Which Is to part of tho waterworks plan for-tho city nnd county of San Francisco. Ho said that It would reuulro about threo years time to complete the dam nnd that a small city would be built at tho construction camp. He added that a school, house, n library and nn amusement hall with a small stago would bo built by the-company. Be tween 500 and 600 men will be em ployed tho year around. Ogden canyon road to be Improved. - Ogden Southern Pacific lets con tract for Installation of power plant ' '- i at Slerro Madro district. ", ' m . As the critical situation 'of public utility companies- becomes moro ' . thoroughly understood, Increased I rates aro being granted without do- IS -ay' I Salt Lake Knights of Columbus to hnve new homes by tho first or ,tho year. Pgden. Weber Irrigation district to bo organized at once. . J Salt Lake. Western Monitor to resume operations. .' DESPONDENCY Sufferers from Indigestion are apt rr to becomo discouraged nnd fool that jr complete recovery Is not to be hoped " r for. No one could mako a greater mistake Hundreds have been per manently curod by taking Charab r laln's Tablets and can now eat any- y thing that they crave. These tablets ' X strengthen the stomach and enable It i to perform Its functions naturally. If you have not tried them do so at. ' I once. ; t - J Left Foot Largott. Your left foot Is larger than your rjilit, In 00 enses out of 100. Sclenco explains It In many wnys;bi3t we uc ''cent the ennlest one. which Is that wo nro-,n world of lef Mooted loungers. Wo lean against posts nnd door Jambs, nnd we do most of mt leniltng on the '$' left foot; cniiKcquuutly, through tho J, ycara It has grown to bupport tho weight that the lazy right foot doesn't. Tho next time you buy shoes, have your loft foot measured llrst. ' fmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmum QUALITY F.RST X ' j Has Always Been our Motto j Jewelry Repair Work Honest Goods At Honest Prices IC. M. Weridelboe, Jeweler b .g .HAST FIRST NORTH STREET LOGAN, UTAH " i " -vwmt' snip: -