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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, APRIL WART, the Speed Cop The MARCH OF TIME Prepared by th Editors of TIME The worn Paee One) 'Tto j b's job in Washington: husetts' Congressman Joseph 7 Martin Jr., who since of the Chairman been has Congressional Committee. "blican e p Republican Congressional mem-of of 21 Republican he House of Representatives. berS. v, i to help those Republican Its who have a fighting chance fret into Congress to do ding S, Jan-193- Com-consis- ,L We ts so-ad- . i their locai speeches nnrvmolcrn t rVipats . writ. for them, helping to fbiicize their campaigns. failure of Re to 1936, the abysmal was nowhere better lican strategy Lnonstrated than in the fact that money was overconfidently squander, win Congressional trying to where the fight was hopeless, jived in districts where the fight was is not one of dose. he visualizes and faults, Martin's joe 75 new seats not much more than He does not plan to lose jjjjs year. any of his present Congressmen. Hie Republican Party, like many depends a other U. S. institutions, reat deal on Franklin Delano Roosevelt The old rule that Depression makes it easier to turn the rascals out tas never yet been tested by a regime which has spent money like Franklin Roosevelt's. While deepening Depres-so- n should presumably help turn the political tide this year, it might not that the Administration has turn ed out another spending program. Jr dis-rtC- ts I 7T EXT Weekly Newtmoiazin EXTRA "There have been two occasions in which Germany feared France. One was at the time of the reoccupation Jiiueiajia ana me otner on the occasion of the official proclamation announcing Germany's rearmament. I can admit quite frankly today that . . . The Fuhrer and we all were in fear and anxiety then. Todav thw fears have passed! There can no lon ger be any question of a 'promenade' from Paris to Berlin. That was once but will never be again! "Our critics are morbid, degenerate, democratic intellectuals relics of the 19th Century!" concluded the Minister for Public Enlightment. "They are dead, they are unable to act!" 10O per cent In Austria and other districts of Greater Germany, the plebiscite called by Adolf Hitler was scheduled for April 10; but balloting began last week on German ships and among Germans living outside the Fatherland. Der Fuhrer won the pleb iscite most recently held in Germany by 98.79 per cent, but in last week's "early returns" he was officially announced to be getting exactly 100 per cent of the vote. DESCRIPTION ALL ABOUT THE BIG EGG HUNT , ESCTRA, -- ENLIGHTMENT last week reported to have reach ed a total of 34,000 in Vienna alone, and the day by day suicide rate continued to climb (102, 112, 132), a cheered throng of 25,000 Viennese were Germany's Propaganda and Public Enlightment Minister Paul who cried: "The Joseph Goebbels, numbers of suicides in Vienna remains tie same; the difference is that, where is before Germans committed suicide, it is now Jews! I know some say the Jew also is a human being.' Just that word 'also' is the best indication phat the Jew really is! . . . Our racial theory is the sole basis for the correct solution of the Jewish .problGreater ... af em. . . WILL BE AN - AND WE (mm D THAT'S THE ONLV CLUE HAVE AS TO WHERE TO LOOK p"c?v rWK IMC HIUUtN fc&faS! Mf6 He avoided! , 4 jfl a WHO MAKES USED CAR CHEVROLET CO. The IOC'S, HAVt WHV-O- COURSE KNOWS f Standard Seda4 Heater - Eadiai . SHOP WONDERTUk -- ftECN FOUNO-VO- CANT 102i CHZV. BUYING SAFE ONE MINUTE AFTER SIX AND ALL OF OVERHAULING 395.00 THEV Ml&HT AS WELL HAVE PUT THE STREET ADDRESS IN THE PAPER-TH- E, U TOOL IN THIS TOWN Oijb.1 ir icnt riiun ' 72 . 1933 PONTIAC SEDAN Reconditioned Y 1 No shrewd buyer passes up our used tact with business all over the country that there are no real basic ills responsible for the present setback and that the worst part of the recession is in the minds of the people." While generally bad, business is not equally bad everywhere, as Dun and Bradstreet's monthly nationwide chart of trade volume last week indicated Currently the hardest hit section of the U. S. is the industrial East. Because of the slump in automobiles, trade in the Detroit area was off 26 per cent New England trade was down 21 per cent as its rambling texay iron-weight- ed three-quarte- rs ri car bargains Aaronic Priesthood Activity Column Your stake committee associates hand on to you the following conference notes and suggestions: The Presiding Bishopric and their associates urge that every quorum, under the ward bishoprics shall hold a May 15 celebration at some suitable place within reach of your ward where young men can spend a few hours together enjoying scenes and exchang ing thoughts relative to the wonderful event of the restoration of the Priesthood. This outing on May 14, then on May 15 a spicy program of the whole Sacrament period in which as many boys as possible may take part. Try in new and inspired ways to impress upon boys and parents the great responsibility of bearing the priesthood and to inspire them to learn each of his opportunities in this calling. According to 1937 reports there are 12,480 priests, 9.025 teachers and e deacons payers. Here is a challenge to us. Let us set the goal that everyone of our members rs shall be enrolled as full in 1938. This can be done by vigilent effort, reminding the boys to separate 10 cent from every dollar of their earnings and to hand it monthly to the ward clerk, carefully preserving theor receipts. By further reminding them of their projects of $2, $3 and $4 per year for each deacon, teacher and priest, respectively, this stake! may make an enviable record and be outstanding as pillars of support to the Church ' Security which is now growing by leaps and bounds. Remember that to gather together and do a job of local beautificatlon, clean 10,-4- FORD SEDAN A Snap 71 non-tyth- tithe-paye- ing up meeting house yards, making each of our homes and grounds beautiful, keeping weeds and brush away from fences, carrying some helpful service to homes where there are sick and afflicted, carrying the Sacrament to them ets. are all part of our regular field of opportunity and are means of multiplying our Joy and speeding advancement. Remember 3rd Sunday of the month, to be with stake committee at Gar land to systemize our work. Key Men, remember we look to you to reach every member. Let us commend your increase of activity in collecting Fast Offerings. Persist in this monthly prompt service on the Friday or Saturday before the first Sunday, the people are fast learning to have ready. The church is greatly needing this finance. Our people arei very willing to make offering but do appreciate having these fine young men remind them of it and collect it. Our bishops have been instructd to mention this fund in Fast meetingst but in no other gatherings. At these meetings the clerks are ready to receive this fund from those who missed the boys, or who may not have had it when the boys came. Your roll books must be kept up to date weekly. Let each man report the number of assignments filled as he answers to his name. This is not boasting of his labors, but answering a call that we must answer, that of reporting our activity. Will Key Men please see that these monthly reports, are sent in promptly. Word of There is a church-wid- e Wisdom drive. Please consult the Era and be up on this very important drive. Your Brethren Stake Committee this-offerin- SUBSCRIBE FOR THE LEADER o SUBMARINE PLOW - - NEW YORK Since 1858, when England's Queen Victoria and U. S. President Buchanan opened the first transatlantic cable, some 3,500 cables totaling 300,000 miles in length have been put in operation in all parts of the world. They lie flat and tension-les- s on the ocean floor, avoid undersea peaks and canyons, go no deeper than about three miles, cost around $2,000 a mile. Inside each cable a inch copper conducting wire, thick, is protected by layers of guttapercha, brass tape, jute yarn, galven-ize- d iron. The thickness of cable covering depends on location. Near shore, insulation is heaviest, up to 4 J inches thick; a cable is just over one in ARE OUT OF TODAY'S REAL ESTATE PICTURE! got to keep your property if you want to maintain its value. You've up-to-da- te mid-ocea- . IMPROVEMENTS Clean yards, attics and cellars . . . repaint and redecorate . . . make needed repairs . . . add essentials of beauty, liveability and comfort - fro SUNDAY MEADACMIS spoiiouq Day If StffCE ALKA-SELT2E- 1UW Don't let HEADACHE, Acid Indigestion, Neuralgia, Muscular, Rheumatic, Sciatic Pains, rob you of healthful recreation. Take Alka - Seltzer. Find out for yourself how quickly it will ailrelieve your every-da- y ments. er relieves pain because it contains an analgesic YOUR BUILDING REQUIREMENTS FOR MODERNIZATION PROGRAM CAN BE FILLED AT OUR STORE Whether remodeling or building a new home . we can supply your every need in quality (acetyl-salicylat- r's vegetable and mineral help to neutralize excess stomach acids. Building Material, Hardware Glass and China Ware - Goal It m EVERYTHING FOR FARM AND HOME Farmers' Cash Union "your good Alka-Selt-xe- e). will our best asset" your dnif iUre, at the soda fountain, and In 38 and packages for home use. contest positively ends at midnight Saturday, April 23. Only RANGES E3TEI.LA Vt. FETEHSON. Sonlaouin. Utah. ims. B. H. ALSTON. Salt Laic City. Utah. W.S. DON P. SHAW. Marjaa. Utah. MRS. G. L. PALMER. Ogcion, Utah. MRS. MARJORIE McCULLOUGH. Park City, Utah. MRS. CHAS. PEARCE. Montplir, Idaho. Mas AUDREY N. ATKINS. Salt Lak CitT. Utah. MRS. EDWARD HEATHER. Bingham, Utah. MARY HOAGLAND, Holladay. Utah. MIXERS MRS. S. t. CATE, Salt Lak City, Utah. MRS. D. E. MOYES, Oad.n. Utah. PHE.U WHITTEMORE. Aihlon. Idaho. MRS. I. H. MILLS. Bingham, Utah. EDITH WELLING. Finding. Utah. M.1S. H. C. WARNER. Salt Lak. City. Utah. 1 IIS. HELEN T. BECKSTEAD, Proiton. Idaho. MILDRED STEELE. Salt Lak. City, Utah. MR3. H. C. WELLS, Proro, Utah. entries bearing postmarks before that deadline will be judged. So enter now. Just write a simple, sincere statement of 50 words or less on the subject: "Why I Would Like An Electric Range" L TOASTERS ALT A J. FAUX. Preo, Utah. MriS. W. J. TAYLOR. Plain City. Utah. MRS. THEO DANIELS. St. ChatUi. Idaho. MRS. LEO BECKSTEAD. JR.. Swan Lak.. Idaho. MRS. G. B. JENSEN. Salt Lak City. Utah. MRS. HILDA F. STEWART, Prow, Utah. MRS. F. R. TITENSOR. Salt Lak City, Utah. MRS. H. I. OWEN. Ogd.n, Utah. MRS. MR3. GEO. B. WAGSTAFF, Salt Lak City, Utah. I LAMPS MRS. C. C. STUART. Eranilon. Wyoming. MRS. GLADYS PARSONS, Salt Lak City, MRS. E. RAY PETERSON. ProTO. Utah. M:HS. RHEA COSSET. Oakly, Utah. MRS. N. F. JENSEN, Salt Lak City, Utah. MRS. ELLEN W. McKAY. HunUrill. Utah, MRS. WALTER H. ROGERS, Ood.n. Utah. MRS. C. O. HANCOCK. Proo, Utah. MR3. P, J. HLRMANSLN, Utah. i j i i 4- II Utah. Thia MONARCH Range will be awarded to the writer of the beat atate-me- nt in the laat week Ogd., At o( the o conteat Follow ih limplo ruloa which ar printod on tho official ntry blank. ThY aro available at dealori Belling electric rangea listed below. Official Entry Blank At FRIGID AIRE KELVINATOR GENERAL ELECTRIC Ml "- - MRS. Alka-Seltz- merchandise. t j FOR THE FIRST NINE WEEKS - Assist You In All the Details r ii PRIZE WINNERS I R rr TD WIN AN ELECTRIC RANGE, MIXER, TOASTER, LAMP n, Modernize . . . n wa" one-fift- h NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE We Can ' iaa Stores Selling Any of & H. L MONARCH HOTPOINT - at $150.00 inch in diameter. Though no cables have worn out, their hazards are many earthquakes, marine worms, icebergs, anchors, wars, fishermen. To keep cables in repair, 30 maintenance ships, strategically placed around the seven seas, go on trouble location at a cost of $1,000 a day, help bring the average yearly cost of upkeep to $300 per mile of cable. Most troublesome single spot on Western Union's ten lines to, Europe is on the Atlantic shelf, 500 feet to 2,000 feet down, off the west coast of Ireland. There, halibut-fisher- s drag nets over the heavy ocean's floor, frequently break cables, sometimes hoist them to the surface, cut them with an ax. To stop this Irish interference, the 2,641-to- n cable ship "Lord Kelvin" last week put out from New York. Aboard was of a mile of nickel steel chain, longest ever forged, to drag a submarine plow Western Union has been developing for the past three years. The steel "plow" weighs ten tons, is ten feet long, four feet wide, three feet high, resembles a gigantic stone boat. Beneath its rear end a keel furrows 16 inches deep in the ocean floor, feeds a cable over a wheel into the trench. The churning wheel and sea's action quickly refill the furrow. Submarine plows can bur-r- y 15 miles of cable a day, may be able to save cable companies $500,000 a year. 1931 I mm . tile mills operated on a week. PHILADELPHIA To dramatize a Northern Illinois trade shrank as crusade which the State of Pennsyl- Chicago unemployment grew. In New vania started last week against the York City trade volume plumped 19 per cent with movie theatres and dehypnotic drug called marijuana, Phar stores feeling the pessimism partment macognosy Professor James Clyde of Wall Street. Not quite so hard hit Munch of Philadelphia's Temple Unisemi-agare the versity described its effects to stu- cultural as such New regions dents. York and Pennsylvania. To give them an idea of its peculiar Florida's dwindling tourist influx properties, he described his own ex- was offset by a flock of new paper perience after taking a handful of mills to keep the decline to 18 per reefers (marijuana cigarets) as an cent. Birmingham coal and iron mines experiment. He crawled into a bottle were less active. Cotton mills in of ink, stayed there 200 years, took Georgia and the Carolinas, which were a peep over the bottle's neck, ducked working overtime a year ago, were back and wrote a book about what generally on time. In Southern part he saw. When the book was done.he California the 13 per cent slump was popped out of the inkwell, shook his largely explained by dwindling movie wings, flew around the world seven revenues. The rest of the far West times. was better off except for the cattle ranching States of Wyoming and Colo o rado, the mining areas of northern RECESSION: WHERE & WHY LIMB Arizona and New Mexcio. WASHINGTON Aboard the Pres NEW YORK Although in business Purely agricultural regions so far indices last week there was evidence have felt the pinch very little. In idential special from Atlanta to Wash of little but stagnation, both Henry Nebraska and Iowa trade was off a ington last week were Solicitor GenFord and RFC Chairman Jesse Jones mere 1.8 per cent. Farm prices have eral Robert Jackson and National chose to be optimistic about reces- fallen, somewhat, but with bumper Power Policy Committee Counsel sion. Said Mr. Ford: "Nothing that crops to market, farm income has Benjamin Cohen. Said Mr. Jackson, has occured during the last few weeks held steady. In neighboring Kansas when asked if his presence indicated has changed my belief that a pros- and Missouri trade was off about 8 discussions of antitrust laws: "I don't perous era is ahead of us." Said Mr. per cent because depression in Kansas think you would be out on a limb on Jones: "I am convinced from my con- - City and St. Louis counterbalanced that" country buying. In Texas, lower Arizona and New Mexico, the stability provided by bumped 9 cent cotton crops is notably enhanced by the oil business, about the only U. S. in dustry still going at close to full blast (because of war demand and the fact that people have, yet to stop driving their cars). In that region trade in January was off a mere .1 per cent. Shabby Hun - Down Homes i $295.00 , are no barbarians! . . It is stupid to say 'Hitler means war! . . . tore the Treaty of Versailles to pieces and threw them in the faces t its beneficiaries. By so doing war "We ras PAGE THRE3 By Fronli Chevrolet Co. 4 HUNT STAGED IN THE WHtkE A BAD 40B HAS Ntvtli BEEN YURNt-- OUT up-sta-te As arrests by Nazis VIENNA THIS EVENT 1938 -- semi-industri- PUBLIC - - 1. Following: Ranges NORGE ELECTROM ASTER WESTTNGHOUSE |