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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930 AGE FOUR E2AR RIVER VALLEY LEADER ally. Any wind blowing faster than Entered at the Postoffice at Utah, as Second Class Mat Tre-nonto- a hurricane. No instructions are given for recognizing it iou won t need any. 75 miles an hour is n, ter. James Walton, Editor and Publisher Published at Tremoaton, Utah, on Thursday of eaeh week. Subscription Rates $2.00 Dne Year, in advance. ... $1.00 Kt Month, in advance .50 Three months, in advuce MBipSH930 UTAH STATE PRESS ASSN. To Your Town 8S well as to your Country PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS POLITICS AND PERSONALITIES In the Congress that convenes this December there will be many varieties of that curious species known as the "lame duck." A lame duck is a representative or senator who has met defeat in the November elections but who, according to Constitutional provision continues in office until the following March 4. His position is not He must pleasant to contemplate. look after the interests of "the people who sent me here", just as though those people had not already recalled him. Hi3 every speech is a swan-sonHis votes must be cast with an eye to the welfare of a constituency that has repudiated him. He is, in short, an anomalous and obsolete factor in representative government. The question arises: why isn't something done about it? Something has been done, but not enough. Senator George Norris, of Nebraska, has introduced five Senate successively resolutions providing for a constitutional amendment that will, if adopted, cause the newly elected Congress to convene in the January following the November elections. It would also from advance Inauguration Day March to January. All five resolutions passed the Senate, the first on February, 1928, and the last in June, 1929, and all went to the House for further action. But here is the hitch. The House has never acted, despite the fact that some of its members have introduced similar resolutions. The Norris Amendment now languishes in the House Committee on Election of President, and Members of Congress. And the American people, with the fortitude ot apathy whichever one chooses to call it that is bred of a long famil- iarity with the cumbersome processes of government, still suffer passively the evils of the lame duck system. g. Vice-Preside- nt WHY NOT CONSOLIDATE? Many chapters in the history of transportation have been written al- in terms of railroad . most entirely That was when highways growth. ' were little developed, and aviation was only a dream. But, the picture has changed. Automobiles and buses now move swiftly over a country-wid- e network of smooth roads. Established airlines offer regular passenger service. A prodigious waterway program is on foot How can the railroads, still a most essential part of our national economic and social life, hold their own against this competition? , The solu-- j tion of that problem is far more easily stated than achieved. If the industry can gather up its odds and ends, absorbing weak lines into strong ones, and bends that all lead to the same detours and eliminating round-abogoal, much will be accomplished. Some roads, acting under the provisions of the Transortation Act of 1920, have already effected consolidations that are of benefit to both the industry and the public. Others are eager to do the same thing. However, Congress, in an attack of caution, seems about to "freeze the situation" with legislation specifically designed to suspend railroad consolidation. So the railroads, instead of being allowed to follow the inevitable trend of an age of stabilization and unification, can only sit back and wait ut WHEN THE WIND WHISTLES The velocity of any kind of wind, from a mild zephyr to a hurricane, can be ascertained by the layman. A simple "rule of thumb" system published fey the United States Weather Bureau sweeps away technicalities in favor of homely devices. If wind blows less than one mile per hour, smoke rises vertically, the Bureau tells us. A wind of one to three miles per hour causes smoke to drift but does not move a weather vane. Breezes that make themselves felt on the face, move vanes and rustle leaves average four to seven miles. They must attain a speed of eight to twelve miles to keep leaves and twigs in motion or extend small flags. When a wind can raise dust and paper off the ground and move Email branches it has reached a speed of 13 to 18 miles. And a' wind velocity between of 19 to 24 miles an hour will sway little trees and ruffle inland waters. A "strong wind" (25 to 31 miles) whistles through telegraph wires and turns umbrellas about, while a wind of 32 to 38 miles move large trees and retards walking. Chimney pots and slate shingles may fly through the air impelled by a wind traveling at 46 miles an hour. Officially speaking, any wind of a velocity between 39 and 54 miles an hour is a gale. A "whole gale" (from 55 to 75 miles) uproots trees and knocks things about gener- - hide. ! Co. 1 A girl, born long ago in Thrace, now called Bulgaria, had written on her tombstone: I am not of the noble Grecian race, I am poor Abrotonon and born in Thrace. Let Grecian women scorn me, if they please. I was the mother of Thenilstocles. Several Good Houses and Lots for sale in Tremonton and Garland. Prices reasonable. James Brough, Real tf Estate, Tremonton, Utah. Sale GOOD BUILDING LOTS For Some right in town, other two blocks out. Also two homes for sale. Call Leader office. WE PAY Highest Cash Prices for Those lines will live longer in hisHides, Pelts, and Furs. Garland tory than if she had written "I am Hide house, J. V. Garrett, mgr. Bell Abrotonon, who ran barefoot from phone, 146 and 26; Valley phone 31. 3tf Thrace to Athens and back in twenty-fouhours, then swam the Hellespont FOR SALE Good Second Hand eight times, breaking the woman's Power and Light Utah Call ranges. record in each case." 9tf Co. The real records for women are held by Nancy Hanks, mothtr of Lincoln; FOR SALE A Monarch Coal Range, finished in blac kand white. Good Olympiaa, mother of Alexander the Great; Bertha of the Big Feet, mother terms for quick sale. Phone 5 tf. of Charlemagne; the wife of a humble French tanner, mother of the great FOR SALE Extra fine Gobblers for Pasteur, and other mothers. Breeding purposes. Call John T. k'l $8 $5:95 14.1-5-- Anderson. I ' Another one of ten thousand trag edies in prohibition and bootlegging. John Bugeio, driving his car, with his country cousin Joseph Dentice beside him, thought he was bound for a good time at Coney Island, and picked up two friends on the way. When they reached the Church of Our Lady of Precious Blood, in Brooklyn, one of the men on the back seat said "here's a church. Pray, and pray quick." Bugeio and Dentice jumped. Dentice escaped with a bullet in his jaw, Bugeio crumpled up dead with bullets and slugs in his body. The police say Bugeio was "active in the grape racket." ia Highbrows Are In Fashion r th T7 deer George Sam, Washakie. HouEe. Inquire FOR RENT 4tf ik T. Spangler. Good Second Hand FOR SALE Power and Light Call Utah ranges. srood fearless THE BISCUIT ARGUMENT The time will probably never come when people cease to argue over the relative merits of old things and new ones. They contend machinery isn't as good as it used to be; they say this applies to shoes and to clothing, and often to tli e things we eat Now comes an argument between two eastern editors we know everyone around Tremonton will be interested in. They are arguing whether or not the biscuits we get today are as good as those mother used to make. As all of us recall, mother didn't have a printed recipe. All she had was a formula handed down for ages. She put in "so much of this and so much of that" and then shoved the pan into the oven heated by fuel from a wallpaper-covere- d box alongside the stove. By the time the coffee began to boil near the top of the pot the biscuits were ready for the table. Broken in circular halves and plastered with a knife-en- d of butter, they made the feast ready. The crusts were brown, but not hard and those biscuits had size! The best recommendation for them was that none ever went back to the kitchen, and they did not have to be dolled up with a napkin beneath them, deftly folded ncrtwj uie lop. Today's scientific biscuit may be as good. .But whn it comes to' just : L.11 oeing oetver never! r or, consuierea from a molasses and jam standpoint, a biscuit has got to have size. And in the modern, scientific biscuit doesn't measure up to requirements 1 Will Deer hide. trolp r.sir i.f doves for Miss Alicia Patterson, FOR SALE Good Home in Tremon-young girl whose father, Joseph Medill ton Call 23. Patterson, had a machine gun coji mand In the big war, thought she WILL BUY VEAL, COWS and hogs. 3Gtf Phone 44 jl, Garland, Utah. would like to do something on her own account, and broke the woman's rec- CASH PAID For Dead and Useless ord flying from Philadelphia to New Reverse call Cows and horses. tf41 York in 40 minutes. She deserves Brighsm 493J2 credit, but there is one world's record Good building lime for women compared with which all FOR SALE Sujar $12.00 per ton. Utah-Idah- o others are unimportant. 18tfd Co., Garland, Utah great-grandfath- ... Good WANTED Only One Woman's Record Pray, and Pray Quick Still a Queer World Don't Neglect Colds great-uncle- 1 This Week by ARTHUR BRISBANE THEY FOLLOW THEIR FATHERS When Philip LaFollette won the Republican nomination for Governor of Wisconsin, he added one more name to the list of sons and daughters wht are following the trails blazed by their famous fathers. The Wisconsin gubernatorial nominee has a brother, Robert LaFollette, Junior, who has held a senior seaiatorship from his state for the past five years. Their father served as governor and as senator from Wisconsin during his lifetime. Senator Frederick Hale of Maine who fills the same place his father, Eugent Hale, filled years ago, is also the grandson of the late Zachariah Chandler of Michigan, a member of the Senate for almost a generation. Ruth Bryan Owen, daughter of the "Great Commoner", has served one term in the House of Representatives and will undoubtedly be reelected by her Florida constituents this Fall. The late Senator John Bankhead of Ala bama has one son in the House and another running from the Senate. Mark Hanna's daughter, Ruth after one term in the House, is now aspiring in Illinois to a senatorial toga as worn by her father. But one of the most remarkable lines of succession is that of the Bay ard family of Delaware. Former Senator Thomas Bayard, who is now trying to come back to the Senate, once stated in the Congressional Directory that his father, Thomas Francis Bay ard; his grandfather, James Asheton , Richard Bayard; his Henry Bayard; is James Asheton Bayarad; and his great, great grandfather, Richard Basstett, had each Berved as United States Senator from Delaware. That is almost as extraordinary as the Adams family of Massachusetts whose members have handed down from one generation to the next a record of statesmanship unique in our history. word-of-mou- ..WANT COLUMN.. the width at tht Shallow crowns, closely fitted sides gained through flares and flanges. Youthfully sophisticated, the new hats are worn well off the fore-hea- d. 5. 8p A baby's dress and sUp was missing from Fair exhibits when exhibits were taken away at close of Fair. If anyone knows of these notify Box Elder County Fair Board or return to Farmers' Cash Union, tf LOST Piece of Zelotex, 4 by 6 ft, between Overland Lumber Co., Finder Garland and Tremonton. please call 23, Tremonton. Reward. LOST Russet potatoes. FOR SALE William Peterson, Elwood. lip J Two cows or will trade 8 for young sheep. Phone 59.0-- FOR SALE 4. WANTED We will call for and pay Cash for dead and useless horses gangland and cows. Phone Logan 49. Colorado Joe Aiello, executed by last week, with machine gun fire coming from three groups of concealed murderers, could not complain of his funeral. He lies in Mt. Carmel Cemetery, in a coffin that cost $11,800. And we talk about "ancient days of Animal Co. 8tf SALE APPLES, Bananas, Johnathans, Rome Beauties, Wine-sap25c per bu. Northern Spy. mile You Pick Them. Orchard west Vz mile South of Tremonton. See FOR s, Ed Thompson. IT'S IN THE 8p Prohibition agents report, a place in LOST Case of McConnon Spices and extracts at Petersboro, in Cache New York where something called Finder will notify Kieth Clark, Valley. is sold five for cents (rVlnk. a whisky 8 Newton, Utah, and be rewarded. fifteen cents for a full pint. The art of making spirits, which CURLEW IRRIGATION AND was unknown to the ancients, never RESERVOIR CO. . produced anything more horrible than the vile concoction sold for five cents Principal place of Business, Snowville, a drink. It Is said to be worse even Utah. than the product of New York's BowNOTICE. There delinquent upon ery "smoke houses," where men pay ten cents a drink for denatured alco- the following described stock, on account of assessment levied on the 13th hol and water. day of September, 1930, the several amounts set opposite the names of the You are living in a world still primirespective shareholders as follows: tive. Brazil reorganizes itself by viol- Name No. of No. of Amt in that respect ence, just as this country did 154 Cert Shares years ago, and the Brazilian mob In Charles E. Harris AGRICULTURE AND EDUCATION Sao Paulo tears down Its 70, 71, 237, 322 303.75 $46.45 Cambusy GET TOGETHER as the mob of the French rev George Wade 213,214 231.50 27.70 Prison, The difficulties attendant upon olution tore down the Bastile. James Cottam 251, 68.40 wringing a living from Mother Earth 318, 316, 296, 331 516.25 are met with surprisingly similar proW. Robbins Myron In the German, scientists. Arctic, 16.65 grams by various nations of the New 123.55 tVorld. These programs, as revealed traveling peacefully on their dog Wm. T. Robbins 8.50 35 63.25 at the 4 19.25 142.60 agricultural con- sieda, were suddenly abandoned by H. B. Robbins, ference held recently in Washington, their Greenlander guides, who inform A. .Eliason 5.20 5 48.10 16.80 may be summarized by the word, Ed- ed the Germans that there were dem- Thos. Cottam 58 126.30 ons on the ice. They knew it by the W. G. Cottam 59,232 ucation. 2.30 16.85 In Mexico, correspondence courses sudden change in the weather. The L. M. or Lawrence Harris in agrarian culture are freely proffer- Germans tried to persuade the .85 6.25 347 ed, and agricultural training is stress.45 3.67 207 that demons live in a hot T. H. Cottle ed throughout the school system. and couldn't stand the Ice, Del more Canal Co. country Costa Rica specializes in equipping but 24.25 343 375.00 Greenlanders know better. her men to manage large estates. A Theirthe 7.80 William Robbins 33 58.25 is frozen, not hot. hell thorough rural elementary education And in accordance with law so many is of fundamental importance in Porto shares of each parcel of such stock as Dr. I. Stieglitz, of New York, a- brilRico. And our own America has long be necessary, will be sold at the may carried on a detailed program of agri- liant physician and stfentist, rebuked residence of the Secretary, at Snowcultural instruction. an elderly patient for a ville, Utah, on the 8th day of NovemCuba has one of the most elaborate cold. The rebuke should neglecting be useful to ber, 1930, at the hour of 2 P. M., to educational programs in existence. all men past 60. pay the delinquent assessments thereEmphasis is laid on the "traveling could be more danger- on, together with the cost of advertis"Nothing agent" who goes from farm to farm ous," said Dr. Stieglitz. "When and expenses of the sale. you ing The small giving demonstrations. Wm. Hurd, Secretary. a cold at or neglect 50, deolder, you republic also boasts six agricultural Snowville, Utah schools where rural standards of liberately endanger your life. A cold First Oct 23, 1930. publication, in itself be may with two easily cured, living and crop diversification are or three days in bed. Neglected it runs Last publication, Nov. 6, 1930, stressed. The Cuban government is developing experiment stations which into pneumonia. "Mr. Whitney, wo died NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT distribute tobacco plants and fruit recently, trees. Over 100,000 seedings were aged 58, had a cold and went about SNOWVILLE LAND AND WATER COMPANY sent out by a single forestry station for three days neglecting it, attending during 1929. The Normal schools en- to business, and finally went to bed. Principal Place of Business, Snowville, deavor to train teachers in "agricult- Pneumonia developed and he died in Utah. ural thinking." This is a remarkably 24 hours. He hadn't a chance. If he ambitious program for a little nation, had to bed at the first signs of a Notice is hereby given that at a hut Cuba gives every indication of cold,gone he would probably be' alive and meeting of the directors held on the carrying it through with completeness well now." 13th day of October, 1930, an assessand dispatch. ment of 14 cents per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporaCalvin Coolidge radios hta fu This is the time of the year when tion, payable on the 13th day of Octocitizens that hot dishes are in order. Our bodies prosperity can't be guar- ber, 1930, to Moroni Arbon, the treasneed additional calories so that they anteed. But you can deserve it In his urer of the company, at his residence he in to seems withstand the low dolly "piece," to think the at Snowville, Utah. may get shape Any Stock upon temperature of winter. Quick energy people may have been spoiled by too which this assessment may remain un fuel such as sugar or other sweets many toys. paid on the 14th day of November, should be eaten in considerable quan"Our people own a laree 1930, will be delinquent and advertsed tity. Vegetables and fruits should cotton, copper, wheat, petroleum and for Sale at public auction, and unless also be eaten so that the body may be otner raw materials. They have heavy payment is made before will be sold alkaline. Here are two delicious kpt deposits of money In fue bank and on Saturday, the 6th day of Decem October dainties: to pay the delinquent bfllions Invested In Scalloped Sweet Potatoes and Apples many foreign ber, 1930, 2 cups boiled sweet potatoes cut in countries. Their automobiles number assessment together with the cost of twenty-fivmillions. And so, they are advertising and expense of sale. inch slices. Wm. Hurd, Secretary feeling very poor." '4 cup sugar Snowville, Utah 1V4 cups thinly sliced sour apples First pubb'cation. October 23. 1930. 4 tablespoons butter, The British Labor Government Last publication, Nov. 13, 1930. salt 12,000,000 are Idle here. Our rw-- .i Put the potatoes in butter- ment Indignantly denies it. but our Tintic Lead Co. made important ed baking dish, cover with strike in Horn Silver uovernroeni lacus exact information the apples, sprinkle with lf the Government agencies supply as near mine. Milford News. lf sugar, dot over with the ly as possible such Information as Price Harry Mahleres purchased the 20,000 feeder the butter and sprinkle with lambs in Uintah Basin Government is supposed to want the salt Repeat Bake in a moderat of $4.50 per hundred average price Kiaa Fcaiuro kr 19)0, SyixiK.it, u, ate oven one hour. TILT Nonchalantly tilted, imparting a feeling of comfort and smartness as well ; careless in its elegance; a bit sporty, but also surrounded with an air of dignity. $3.95-$5.00-$7.- 00 249-312-3- Pin-Americ- an 42-31- 14-1- THE MISSING LINK NOT IN A CHAIN Green-lander- s YOUR GROCERY MONEY GOES FARTHEST AT OUR GROCYTERYA - e one-ha- lf one-ha- lf silver-lead-go- ld one-ha- one-ha- one-ha- lf (, j pounds. The Home of the Miajestic The Mighty Monarch Of The Air |