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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER FAGS TWO SXAB EFVXR VALLEY LEADER Catered at the Poetofflce at B, Utah as Second Class Matter. Fobllsbed at Tremonton, Utah, on gbaraday of each week. Logan Considered As Site For Area Farm Laboratory 1, 1S38 maare made of synthetic, rubber-lik- e terial called koroseal, that outlasts or- Stuart Chase, Economist; Says America Must Attend Own Affairs --- --- Free to Pjubli'c fellow-countryme- av ML f iw sheets dinary cork. . . Cellophane-likand photographic film made from leather scrap and waste. . . A shirt designed so that suspenders can be worn concealed beneath it. . . A device which automatically raises and closses all the windows of an automobile when the key is turned in the lock of the car door. . . Beer brewed from sweet potatoes: fermentable syrup from the potatoes is said to be better than corn sugar or syrup heretofore used in ECONOMIST WILL VISIT IN UTAH e Possible selection of Logan, Utah, as the site of the western area farm $2.00 research laboratory sponsored by the U. S. D. A., or a branch has been f 100 the stay to our own back yard, of speculation in this secLETS i - 50 tion subject since the recent announcement Europe munitions plants are working 24 hours I of of Henry A. Wallace, secretary day. Huge fleets of airplanes are turned ou: monthly only to be will laboratories that agriculture, obsolete before they are scarcely broken in and thousands of spies in, four divisians of the roam the land in search of the secrets of other nations. United States. The laboratories, to be TKe'only place in th U. S. where cla!or and In the October issue of Cosmopolitan Magazine, Stuart Chase, established in southern, eastern, north dvertiaufe; matter covering an line of bu.ineu or product can be' obtained Free fend Without era and western areas, will be for renoted author, has analyzed Amer-- 4 Obligatioa i thAmerican Industrial Lftwary. search no new uses and market outlea. "We have our problems, but Cornwallis handed over his sword l rite (or Busineit Advertiin Matter you are iotcreeted in; lame will be promptly forwarded. thank God we do not have their to Washington, the thirteen little lets for agricultural products. The reproblems." Mr. Chase Bays. "This provinces became thirteen soverAMERICAN IIQOSTRIaL LIBRARY search duties and the total fund availarticle Is an appeal to my eign "nations." They put up tarable for laboratories, $4,00,000, will be on ur iff barriers against each other. to concentrate divided among the four areas. gent domestic problems Instead of Connecticut taxed imports from themselves with prob Massachusetts at a higher rate western area includes Arizona, The Identifying ATIONAL fWTCRIAl lems across the sea than from England. Money was v t si carAri California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, States. United look at "worth a continental" and not "Now the New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, What a difference." he says. "It trade was at a standstill until a 93 5 Nevada, AjtLfkeL cenThe and Wyoming. Washington Is a clean band, one thousand few gentlemen got totral location of Logan for this area miles broad, straight across the gether in Philadelphia and wrote should make Is an idea site for the This document continent of North America. The a constitution. come turn waves of Atlantic a been termed the federal has created government deLogan laboratory. on one the the to in thirteen little side, long bling bring signed "The with propriety Agriculaural rollers of the Pacific on the other. states together in one super state. West." Intermountain of the Capital To the South is a big muddy river, Finally the Constitution was Since the intermountain area is also and beyond it a brown people of adopted and the integration of the the axis of the 11 western states, with This American continent was begun. very ancient culture. S3 well as to your Country states to the east balancing those to "Eere we are, one hundred and boundary makes plenty of sense To the north lies some more twenty-seve- n million of us, In the the west, this location might also be United States In the territory of grandest slice of continent on called the agricultural center of the Alaska, and an imaginary line be- earth, with almost everything we West. It Is true that Utah agricul PATRONIZE YOUR which is Canada. It doesn't need to give a high standard of yond tural activities are not as diversified make much sense, but fortunately living, right under our feet." Mr. LOCAL MERCHANTS as those in other states, but those It doesn't cause much trouble." Chase adds. "We don't need to of Logan are as diversified as those !TT1 Pointing out that this band is go out and take anything, because ii in any other possible site in the area. larger than England, Germany, we have it right here. We don't Trance, Italy and Japan combined, need to go out and fight anybody In the western laboratory work and that any one of these nations unless they try to take away what on fruits other will be concentrated "MORE JOBS NOW eotild be eomfortably tucked Into we've got. God help them if they than apples, vegetables, Irish pota the state of Texas, Mr. Chase do. THAN EVER" DECLARES "We have no vested classes. We maintains it Is our vastness that toes, wheat, and alfalfa These are INVESTIGATOR is our salvation. This integration are steeped in political democracy the products of the area in which ma which makes us so different and and we have no domination by a jor surplus problems have occured so fortunate is not a law or na- State Church. We can afford to our forefathers to occur. to continue are and likely ture, according to the writer. do what no other nation can af chickens, the seed, This research attack will represent America has bad to work tcr it ford to do. We can act in ways the spinning wheel, and the baby but one part of the government's gen and three times we have had to in which no other nation can dare eral program dealing with agricultur fight for it, and more than once to act. We can exert strong presinto a covered wagon and started we have come near losing it. sure in the direction of peace, but The other part of that al surpluses. out into the western wilderness, program are production adjustment if war ccinrs regardless, we do "In 1778, thirteen provinces to go it alone,'' ho sys. not have to be dragged in. ac nationwide conservation they sought new worlds to con thfough 'Let's stay In our own back "They defeated the British artnyj fluer. After1 yard." tivity, expansion in foreign outlets became independent. and Young men and women today through trade agreements, and qualare all too prone to ait and mourn ity improvement of products export mtnuhiunimmimiiimimimmuiiMmtmiiinMiMiHtiimiHtHNmii that there are no more frontiers; in the domestic that In this mechanized eivlllza- - ed; surplus disposaldiversion of sur market, including tiou juLia tire lew, and those tew are dispensed by industrial overplus for relief purposes and improve lords; that man not only is not ment in marketing methods and prac captain of his soul but be doesn't tlces, Secretary Wallace said. tven wield an oar! Logan has been investigated as a "That," says Maxiao Davis in possible site by leaders making a sur rtiiiiimitmiiiimimiiimmiHiMiHimiiiHiiitfiiiimiHimimmtiMiiuiiiiinH the October issue of Cosmopolitan NEW YORK Aug. 29 BUSINESS eral income tax of $22.40, would be Magazine, "is nonsense." vey of the western producing area. "Never In the history or manIndustrial production went into a called upon to pay a tax of $56 kind have there been so many kinds dive just about one year ago. In- -' nually. Jobs," the writer maintains. of having the customary season- stead '."Nor have there been 60 many al business spurt last fall, the coun potential needs to meet, and 1 say NEW MODELS And speaking of in this try entered a new depression which spite of the fact that the s country is in the midst of a Bishop and Mrs. D. M. Grover spent persisted for 10 months. Not until automoDiie tactory sales, sweeping deand mechanical embodied to clouds depression." sign did changes the begin Wednesday evening of last week in July, 1938, that millions are Logan. The occasion being the Bis- - lift. Further clearing of the skies oc- - ' m models, to make tneir puouc j. Pointing IT vln' Wnt lor worXTklHPa via" . the debut in about . two months, are ex- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jensen and frown has disappeared from the brow pected to create a sharp sales increase nays that there are still good ways of life for young men and women daughters, of Ogden, were for this industry. Say advance reports Sunday of most business forecasters. Theirwith vigor, imagination, and will. for fall and winter busi- from Detroit and Toledo: "Bodies gen of Mrs. Sarah prediction Shuman guests and In the United States census of ness is "fair and warmer." The outlook erally will be wider and larger. Great Mr. and Mrs. James Jensen. business, service trades come Bixth er visibility is being obtained by the Mr. In the list of employers of men and Mrs. Carl Staples, who are is excellent, they say, the more so use of wider and deeper windows and is to lost because there much and women, according to the at ground spending the summer at Brown's tide. In theso trades a person Ranch on the west side of Promontory be made up. Factory sales of automo-- 1 windshields. Plastiss will find increas-bilecan earn a reasonable income, suffor example, amounted to only,ed prominence in interior body visited with Mr. and Mrs. Orson Jen ficient for marriage, home, aud the first seven months this ware and trim. Half a dozen makes sen, Sunday. children. with 3,227,266 in the will provide gear shifts year compared Saturday, the Primary officers were Miss Davis, after an Investigasame last year. This means as standard equipment. Prices will be period in attendance at Union Meeting in tion covering several weeks, has Garland. Tuesday they met at the that the average life of all automo- about the same as for 1938 models.' analyzed a half dozen trades and .professions, among them beauty home of Mrs. Sarah Shuman, where biles on the road has been increasing Almost coincident with these reports culture, radio servicing,uhe launa quilt was quilted by the officers during 1938, and a potential demand was a statement issued by Connecti dry business, nnd others. In addiis being stored up which sooner or cut s Motor Vehicle Commissioner, A luncheon was served. tion to her prouo or the service must exert itself. Estimates of Michael A. Connor, who, in the in later Members of the Carl Nelson family professions, the writer lias looked national income, represented by the terests of safety, long has advocated Into unusual occupations. accompanied Miss Elvina Nelson to flow of wages, salaaries, dividends, in better wisibility in morot cars. With "Yes," says Miss Davis, "there Ogden Sunday, where Miss Nelson is are few fortunes to bo made In the employed. terest, and profits of individual own-ei- s a word of praise for motor manufacservice trades, but there Is a great of business, for 1938 have been turers who have responded to the pubMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Petersen deal of fun. The business Is yours, revised upward a billion dollars by lic's demand for better visibility, he you are not afraid of technological and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. William the of Commerce to $61,- - predicted that less accidents and inDepartment Improvements, you are not a cog Bosley and children, and Mrs. Sarah 000,000,000 as a result of trade im creased driving pleasure would follow Shuman accompanied Mr. and Mrs. J. In a big machine and you are the use of more glass in the new modsince June. This provement Brooks Shuman to Ogden, Wednesday. figure, els. wholly independent. Ana best of all, you have the satisfaction of Mrs. Marcel Palmer and Mr. and however, falls almost 12 per cent beknowing that you created the Job Mrs. N. Cranford Taylor spent the low last year's $69,000,000,000 nation and that it la your own. So you al income. weekend in I,ogan. THINGS TO WATCH FOR Brushsee, there are still frontiers. Mesdames es made of plastic material instead of Verlie There are still Jobs." Virgie Jeppson, Jcppson and Gladys Hansen spent the WASHINGTON One of the livest hog bristles; the plastic i3 said to last weekend with their parents, Mr. and issues the next session of that real bristles. . . New cockCongress longer Pronouncing Marijuana Mrs. Conrad Fralerickson. They at will have to deal with, in the opinion tail shaker discs which prevent leakThe word marijuana is protended a birthday party Saturday for of observers mixers; they nounced as if it were spelled here, is a matter which age from e is going to hit the average man in accent on the first and third Mrs. Ed Call in Tremonton. Mrs. Jeppson is visiting this week at the place that hurts most his syllables, the a pronounced as in pocket. the home of her parents. the word arm. book. The federal government has had a deficit every year since 1930, and more taxes are needed. Recently, the Treasury Department drew up a schedule of income tax rates that would be necessary to increase gov 1 ernment revenues $2,000,000,000 annually, a figure which would still leave the government from $1,500,000,000 to $2,000,000,000 in the red this fiscal year and the twosucceeding ones. Ac If you conduct a retail store, there are four cording to the Treasury estimates, the things normal income tax rate for individyou wish to do uals, now four per cent, might have to jump to 10 per cent if Congress Stylto docs vote Increase revenues You . . . by to HOLD (1) This would be politically unpopular, however, and it is therefore likely that any tax rate increases on individual incomes would be to (2) You applied hi easy stages rather than all at once. A ten per cent normal tax rate, if it ever becomes law, would mean that a single man who earned City, $30 a week lost year and paid a fed- to (3) You customSubscription Rates Dae Year (In advance) grx Months (In advance) Sfcree Months (in advance) - - USDA EXTENSION I far-seei- To Your Town t WHEN de-eld- beer-makin- g. HEADLINES IN NEW YORK Butter prices drop to 1934 levels as supplies reach new high. . . U. S. and Great Britain reporter near accord on y reciprocal trade agreement. . . Fac-toi- payrolls in nation rise 0.4 per cent in July, reversing previous downward tren . . . sales of office equipment gain in August. . . Secretary of State Hull demands Mexico to settle for land seizures under international law. . . Drug and chemical industry will spend $24,943,500 for research and scientific development of new products this year. . . WPA employment now 3,038,906, an all time peak. . . New synthetic textile fibre being de veloped by E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. may threaten remaining market for natural silk. . . Canada refuses toj with U. S. in wheat sales plan; win aanere to its present export bub-siay to mantel surplus. . . .Despite record flow of deliveries, unfilled orders of aircraft industry are 15 per cent higher than on January 1 . . . Large rise in index of industrial out- put by October seen by the Federal Reserve Board. . j I Eugene Merritt. senior extension economist with the United States de partment of agriculture at Washing ton, D. C, will spend the week of August 29 to September 3 in Utah confering with state extension service officers in Logan and conducting meet ings with young people in various counties. Meetings are tentatively scheduled for Box Elder, Cache, Utah and Juab counties. Mr. Merritt is interested in establishing programs for older youth in rural communities. He believes that at the period of adolescence young people are required to make the most important choices in life: vocational fields, life partners, and the road to travel. Young people are often confused and puzzled by the many alternatives and are in urgent need for more specific training and guidance to help them in these choices. He has visited in Utah on several occasions, the most recent being the annual club leaders' schoorhere in March. In 1936 he assisted with a survey of three Utah counties on situations, problems, and interests of young unmarried people in rural tions. He is author of several publica tions on opportunities of rural youth. 4-- H sec-jo- in land's Abraham ("Abe") Pickus has been busy telephoning world diplomats, dictators and statesmen in a HcrnrrkiiQ nno.man .awmotm. . g T6 about amity. Although umiiucriiuu, mussuimi, jumperor of Japan and many another bigwig refused to talk, Veteran Pick-U- S once was put through to ;3nain'a Franco, another time to Hitler, whom he promptly bewildered by shouting Hello, Hello! Is this A. Hitler? This is A. Pickus of Cleveland, Ohio, U. Last week Mr. Pickus announced he had decided to make a person al trip to Europe, have it out in heart to hearts with Hitler and Mussolini. 1 :"V MTtZJT ito AMICABLE ABE CLEVELAND, Ohio In 1936 a Cleveland oilman ana war veteran put in a long distance call for Japanese Ambassador Saito in Washington, got him on the line, pleaded with him to keep the peace, was assured there would be no Russian war. Since then Cleve- Kussian-Dor- n Japanese-- S.-A- ." v "Behind the Scenes In American Business" PENROSE 7i fsBeet5ugar V 1 ( serl-;ou- rt Surpluses iww s, hard-1,345,3- or over-zealo- andJzLrm AH America !$ concerned" with farm surpluses, because surpluses affect the purchasing power of ihSe farmer, and, in turn, the whole structure of American economic life. American farmers raise approximator one million acres of soger beets each year. What's more, a million acres in sugar beets is not another million surplus acres of wheat or corn! Forthermore, no other major American crop returns to the farmer as much per acre and contributes to industry and agriculture as much as the sugar beet and the resultant beet sugar industry, America needs the beet sugar industry .the industry needs the support of farmers, merchants, housewives, canneries, and statesmen. ' ... i , Intermountain Diitlutjar Companies a, Ver-gi- Try the New r CURLEY HAIR CUT Advertising Does Four Things wish customers. George Hodges has now completed the course in the much talked of Curley Cut and Hair ing See the new all of your present uptrend for Fall... HODGES wish SELL more goods to your present customers. Beauty Salon Brigham wish REPLACE with new ers the old ones who move away. (4) You wish to INCREASE THE NUMBER of your customers. INSURANCE A GOOD THING TO HAVE AND NOT NEED Thus you have four objectives. Not one of these es tan be reached by doing nothing. None of these objects es objectiv uc miutiy reauzcu without advertising in A TERRIBLE THING TO NEED AND NOT HAVE THE BEAU RIVER VALLEY LEADER JAMES BROUGH ALL LINKS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE Utah I FIFTY YEARS OF CONTINUED PROGRESS HAVE MADE UTAH STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE J A BUILDER OF LEADERS . Freshmen Register on Friday, September 23 Sophomores Register on Saturday, September 24 Juniors and Seniors Register on Monday, September 26 With 50 departments offering more than 900 courts students attending the college are afforded excellent opportunities for study in their chosen professions. Courses are offered in the following Schools: HOME ECONOMICS I FORESTRY EDUCATION ARTS and SCIENCES ENGINEERING and t COMMERCE MECHANIC ARTS J AGRICULTURE UTAH STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE LOGAN, UTAH Write to, the President's Office for a Catalogue or additional information. |