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Show EEAR niVEP. VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, TAGS TWO ' BEAK RIVER VALLEY LEADER Entered at the Postoffice at Tre- bobtoo, Utah as Second Class Matter. Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of each week. Subscription Rates One Year (in advance) EJx Months (in advance) Tfcree llonths (in advance) i NATIONAL ' ' mm (T I EDITORIAL f anaTI r T at f. Z- - if ! k. $2.00 51.00 50 e JJ as well as to your Country PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS CLAIM has been made that we Americans have purchased by increasing the national debt. Well, a war cannot be won without the expenditure of money. During the past four years we have fought the most remorseless enemy in our history. We have struggled with depression on a battlefield which has extended into every square mile of American territory. As a result, there has been an increase in the real national debt of about 712 billion dollars. To balance that, there has been a rise of over 30 billion in total national income and of 73 billions in the nation's tangible wealth. TJ. S. Senntnr Rnhert. F Wnnrter Some call the New Deal reckless experimentation, but the most reckless experiment in which America could now engage would be to stop Roosevelt. No executive would discharge an executive under whom his business h:.d climbed from failure to success, and hire some unknown who promised to reduce total expenditures without reducing any one expenditure. Edward A. Filene. What about bank insurance? In my opinion, even in its shor: life, it has proved itself a wholesome and needed tonic for the enti banking system. Maurice L. Briedent'r.d, Kansas City ban'xv. THE ng Mrs. Rudgar Foresgren entertained at dinner Monday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lamb, of Santa Anna, California. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mrs. Susie Barlow of Short Creek, Drew were also guests. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Summers, Mrs. Arizona has been visiting at the home T. V. Summers, Merlin Summers and of her sister, Mrs. Samuel Mills. Fred Newman of Ogden, was a Sun- Miss Thompson of Brierham motored day dinner guest at the home of Mr. to Salt Lake City Saturday. Mrs. Rudy Scholler, Mrs. J. J. Newand Mrs. Earl Newman. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Stark, Geo. man and Miss LaVaun Tolman were Stark and Misses Lelia and Myrtle in Ogden Tuesday. Mrs. Fred Taggart of Lewiston visStark were in Ogden, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brain of Salt ited at the home of Mrs. Thomas Lake City were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Nels Anderson. Miss Dorothy Leavitt of Cornish spent the past week visiting at the nome of Miss Eyvone Summers. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ball and little daughter and Mr. Cedarquist of Salt Lake City were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Summers Saturday. A. E. Sanford of LeRoy, Wyoming was a visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Anderson the past week. Bill and Dick Stokes of Blackpine called on relatives here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Christensen and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Christensen visited with Mrs. Lewis Christensen's sister, Mrs. Ezra Lewis, at Preston, Idaho, Sunday. Messrs. Max and Eli Anderson, Art Wilson and J. Leo Nelson of Brigham City left for a hunting trip Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lamb of Santa Anna, California are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Drew. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Burnett and children of Eden spent the weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Summers. at the home I J ' Editorial Comment by Eminent Leaders By Phyllis j ""' Appraising the New Deal - . Club I AUESICAI IKCUSTSIAL LIBRARY FMlmrht BUU. CUU.I111jm1 I Mrs. Hyrum Tibbetts of Logan T T . rnwi aaiu J son, r.merson iau spent Sunday vis. ting with, her sister, Friday in Ogden on business Mrs: George Abbott. Miss Edith Bourne is attends Mrs. Helen Hackey of Bountiful Quish Beauty school in SaltLajf was a guest of Mrs. Ray Hill Thurs Mr. and Mrs. Owen Hessf and day Friday. ... .y on j, E. F. Allred of Spring City, who j and shopping. his month has spent the past visiting Mr. and Mrs. Marcel JoW.. Mrs. R. G. Brough, return daughter, were in Salt Lake Citv aT aT SKv. ' 41 .A family a7 i' ed to his home Saturday. to dav attend funeral so,i Mrs. Warren E. Wright and three of sister Mrs. Johnson. children, and Mrs. Sarah Fridal all L. Earl Sr., who has htn J. of Salt Lake City, spent Saturday 3 with Mrs. Wright's sister, Miss May ing the past weeks visitingV Idaho with his son, Gene ker, Fridal. "cic fTidj, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Scoffield of Miss Carmen Farnsworth, who were Sunday dinner guests of Layton "Scampering Death ently underwent an operation .. Mr. and Mrs. George Scoffield. is suff icientiv I Valley By FLOYD GIBBONS Sergeant Alonzo Galvin and Wil- cteu tua hospital, 10 De Droughtfc ix iu auie liam Christensen of Salt Lake City Famous Headline Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Leo Earl and rv, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and INTRODUCING Mr. James P. Bones of Plainfield, N. J., today's Mrs. Allen Bennett. spent Friday in Brigham. The Gleanor Girl class held a Distinguished Adventurer. Jim is going to tell us about an expeWinston Christiansen of Salt Lake rience which I firmly believe to be the only thing he ever took seri- City is spending the week with his gressive party Tuesday night first course of their supper was sister, Mrs. Allen Bennett. ously in his whole doggone life. Gar-- ! ed at tne name of Mrs. Ule (J G. Brouerh. Jesse Mrs. Mrs. R. You know, Jim is one of those lads who has always got a grin main course at Miss Beth ggf on his Irish mug, and a joke on his lips to brighten up the day and field. Miss Dona Bronerh and Miss home, and dessert nr viswere Lake Salt Helen Christensen Wood's home. After which thee? lighten the business of living. I wouldn't be surprised if he was iters' Saturday. that same Mr. Bones that used to go trouping around the country Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Hadfield of ing was spent in games. All iJ with all those minstrel shows. Anyway, the letter he sent me kind Portland, Oregon spent last week with having enjoyed the evening mucn. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hadfield. of sounds like it. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Udy and 1 Bouii-Mr. C. of Mrs. J. and Bennett In January 1913, Jim had a job at a coal mine in Century, W. Va. "I was working as a blacksmith," he says, "sharpening tiful called Sunday at the home of Jay, and Mr. and Mrs. Amii miners' tools and shoeing horses and mules. Eut, after a few their son, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bennett. have gone to Southern Califomj weeks I was seized with a morbid desire to mine coal." Mrs. George Abbott was a Salt a pleasure trip. A large number of people from Well sir, they put Jim to work down in the mine with his brother-in-laLake visitor Friday and Saturday. and an Italian lad. For three weeks everything went hunky-dorHer daughter, Mrs. Jeff Barnard, re- nave gone deer hunting. Reports Then, one day they went to work in a new spot five hundred yards from turned with her and will spend the, it that some were lucky enou the main heading. &tu urai ucci a icw xiuurs alter week here. season opened. Ezra Parker FriGrant Alice Broueh. John and Explosion and Black Damp Peril Young Miners. Farnsworth and Job Wellin? dal are and all who Arbon, Lyman When they got there, Jim's brother-in-lasaid: "Partners, I to Logan canyon, and La& smell gas," and he w,ent looking for the fire boss. The fire boss came attending college, spent the weekend gone to Beaver City Earl home. at and said: "Hell, that isn't gas. It's that green Irish miner you Glenn Christensen was in Salt Lake smell." And he pointed at Jim. At the same time he took Jim's carbide lamp and held it up near the ceiling. BANG! Two feet of gas, col on business Friday. Jed Abbott left Saturday for deer lected along the roof, went up in a big explosion. ; hunting in Southern Utah. Says Jim: "We stood petrified for a moment, and then a Mrs. Ira Fridal, Mary Fridal and cloud that looked like smoke came billowing out of a corner toward us. The deadly, poisonous after-damMarjorie Hansen were Ogden visitors The fire toss said: 'Boys, we're done for.' Then came another explosion Monday. worse than the first one." THE BEST BUY IN Bryoni C. Burningham of Cedar That one knocked Jim clean out. He came to a long time later City called on Mr. and Mrs. Allan CALIFORNIA WINE ito find himself in utter darkness, lying in the slush along the floor of Bennett Thursday. the mine. He tried to shout but he couldn't. He had somehow lost the Thomas Kay, who has been very power of speech. Next he reached lamp. It wasn't there. Then ill the past few weeks, is slightly imjhe remembered that the fire boss had taken it. He was alone in the proved at this writing. dark. Completely lost in the mazes of the mine. Mrs. Amelia Checketts and son. Horde Rat of Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Adds to Lawrence, Whispering Jim's Horror. Then started the desperate trek through the labyrinth of that dark, Rose Peterson were guests of Mr. and underground dungeon. "I decided to trudge along," Jim says, "until Mrs. Joseph McMurdie of Buhl, Idaho last weekend. Mrs. Rulon Hansen of Buhl returned with them. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hansen of Lo gan spent Sunday with Mrs. Rose Adventurers' To Your Town place Sn tK U. S. wbera catalog and aMSvertniaa'inatter covering any line of buainesa or product can be obtained Free And Without Obligation ta the American Industrial Library trtte or Buatneas Advertiainc Matter you are inter sated in; same will be promptly forwarded. BOTHWELL Summers FIELDING uy rjua t veiling I v Tlx ooly - EAST TREMONTON -- Free to Pjablic clear-thinki- 1936 Summers during the week. Sunday evening after church Miss Cleon Firth entertained a number of friends at her home. Games were played and candy was made. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sumnsion is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Regnald Summers. Messrs. L. VV. Allen, Delbert Allen and Howard Stokes joined the many hunters this week. Lowell Summers, a student at the A. C. in Logan, spent the weekend ai uie nome of his parents. tisa iern I I A J m O ti' p! for-hi- St i fee tli s -- Mrs. Joseph Scothern and Mrs. Rose Peterson attended the wool auction at Ogden last Tuesday. . Corn is always capable of producing corn. The seed may be delayed by circumstance of environment but the are alwavs reaping potentialities there. So it is with a good deed in a vasty, timeless universe. i t X Joi an CEDAR CHESTS I f I . :" a?' Maybe wul .v.n t ring these very smart Cedar Chests To appreciate their valu you must see them and examine the construction, details ar note the rich finish SEC amend Constil jlows: 1 8EC jinate, I Senate, . Why not buy one now for HER Christmas Jeers w Cons tit 'law. at not otli recess PH1LCO RADIOS t t t Another outstanding value With one of these tiful models in your home you will not be disappointed you want to tune in on a special station any St shall a the dir t the ! Person of liwti bea: Secreta 1 rrasur 0T dent be the by ann whe bold hi: Visit Our Store .... Convince Yourself! elected 1 d' tm nd V9ing deSious Mm f the j effect t .tioa S Witution 8ECTI 1 ttprvJii hall b illtUlatii , 8ECTI weby ( mendint ant j'froTided Cal the it tha ; needing ;f and your home will I I evenly heated all winte And What's More - - POOL DRAINED EVERY NIGHT ithereii b IT IS CLEANER r It 8ute 'mend Castle Gate aVfl'H BmaVmaVSis' tff VfXJg J Igffvq Joint saent Consti f Ed IlMtrn .... AND USE QUALITY non-rotf- le de Cc Link Belt Stoker Shop Through Leader Ads First Cs'ysital Springs hereby f 8ECT .... INSTALL A ia U. . Providei SECT samendiT 5 the nei Provider Cut Your Coal Bill ,im w"dcred out' by himself. He turned bottom of W" shaft hed d,ther?. f r M. ready t0 tak6 "P- - He got to the surfiw cant ttiul it b Stat X u; aoiti nn ?f for a week." At the End of the Trail Jim Finds the Elevator All this time men hart- hoon eoonK.'n t: t ". Mirt know ."un that ithr. ho i,ari;.; err the whistle. hk- - """"'e. iu atudti, ma aiiemion. a coal ay ofmine th is a mS Place. thev novor Can It is will a great deal of j ustif iable pride that we preser Passages. For hours, Jim reeled on through the dark passages. He had no idea where he was exeunt that t. no idea of where he was going-exc- ept that he was moving aim' essly from one place to another. When he got thirsty, he emptied the carb.de from the can in which he carried the reserve fuel for his lamp, and scooped water up from the floor. When he got hungry well he just stayed hungry. he 'T'?e waeJ" says, "saved my life. If it hadn't have been the main course of a rat feast been ml' rny body U f me' but 1 had been m that m for Tfiul day.t .4 hours. tWsay know it. I didn't know the exact time But l seemed to me as if I had been there UTAH AUTO & IMP. CO. ons te w Se tzroutv' . I- - i 12-fo- con with dual economy of From oil cUonw and automatic ov.rdrlv New underhung rear axles give big roomy Interiors -- chair fceight seats World's largest luggage capacity e World's easiest closing doors with exclusive rotary door locks e World's fit n built-i- n warm oi, defroster, Only cor, wi.h Automatic Hill Holder World', finest, smoothert father touch hydraulic brake. World', strongest, safe,, 0nd 'Ithe w "The company was then excavating a heading" mine, three miles distant, to draw off the water. But whit if Sose S dams of plankmg, weakened by the explosion, should break f.i and What if 1 shou,d step int a first il y. Jim Reels Through the Labyrinthine World'i fesi Iduc I Gas Along the M'ne Roof Exploded. WORK PERMITS INCREASED; exhaustion got me. I kept one arm extended before me as I went to TIME ALSO EXTENDED avoid walking into obstructions. In some places there was water four or five inches deep along the ground. In others the floor was covered The number of students that have with slime and slush. to work in the beets has inpermits "The place was alive with rats. They up a kind of creased to 91, according to the latest musical whispering that I have never forgotten.keptSometimes reports from the office records. more than twenty years later I imagine I can still even hear Each student had to have a work those sibilant, Erhhing sounds. Rats were running and scurrypermit to leave school to work. The ing everywhere. Th2.7 bumped into my legs as I reeled along. permits are made out to allow them a horrible fear t..at they might attack me while I was still to work for two weeks, and some long conscicuc-w- as hauatJ by a terrible of being eaten alive er according to individual rirrnm- by them if I were t3 collapse. stances. All permits must he slenoH "Another dread, equally fearful, haunted me. was by the parents and also by the drown. I knew that large areas of the mine woreIt flooded-fi- that I might with water from floor to roof. In many places this water was Ud held in W rooms or passages by frail planks. ft ftes, - THUS MORE HEALTH Cai daai, 001 'A Joint nt t Constit 1 . el (Stat S. 1 Wion Farmers' Cash Union " will 1 8ECTK by i orporatit or th. ,. wnoratio "YOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET" Jital anait addiu |