OCR Text |
Show IT BEAR RIVER VAL ET LEAXSR, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1936 PAGE FOUR Out of the tamrle of diniflmaT.'. uauuua uavc i lai come ntw f for two routes, one norther! southern. Some time this Fall, ly service for passengers, mail . t press begins on the Bermul York leg, to be jointly operat Pan American and Imperial British are reported to favf northern route for the through vice. Germany, the third entrant race, has, of course, been opt J the Zeppelin Hindenburg since on scheduled flights between Getand the U. S. In September! Deutsche Lufthansa expects to J experimental airplane flights i freight ship, spotted midway btj the North Atlantic, with a redesr the Azores and Bermuda on the a! ern route, serving as a refueling First arrival in New York is pi" for September's second week, j The fourth entrant, France, dark horse. Nothing has been fc from her since the report that a x Atlantic line was being "consj;- KIVER VAIXKY IJEADEK BAR .tutered at the Poatoffke at Tre-looato- 1937 o, SnJ Cla Matter. lull a Fiibliahad at Tremonton, Utah, tn in ECONOMY TESTS made fbureday of each week. Subscription lUtes One Year (In advance) Six Months (In advance) Three Months (in advance) H WW ' 1 ii 1J fi Alt r CRUISING SPEEDS Umtntti JlpiiaWnli President "8" and Dictator "6" at Hart of economy testa at ipeeda popular with motoring public. Cruising at average speed of 35 m. p. h. e until low priced gasoline in the tanks was exhausted, the Dictator "6" averaged 27.46 miles per gallon, the President "8" 23.17. In similar tests at 45 and 55 m. p. h, the Dictator averaged 24.42, and 21.24 miles per gallon; the President 22.66, and 18.56. In upper left, AAA officials, who approved records, are bhcwn carefully measuring gasoline used in the testa. 1937 SHOULD HAVE SLEPT ON PULLMANS. third-grad- J l 2Li si i A53ttl'lOil e'v - at TYPICAL - ,tlJ?. lii-t- :.v-- . ' - Those English boys on an educa tional trip to America who were dis appointed because their shoes left out side their hotel room doors were the next morning should have slept on our Pullman cars. The incident while amusing to most of us reveals the fact that our highly advertised hotels do not furnish the guest with all the little attentions af forded in European hostelries. We have often heard the European lack of comfort deplored, but it seems that in one detail at least they out shine us. Beg pawdon! " drt..inMer CUoMo. IUImI ,Ji v---.'5- rp? hH l..;-:-rfe- u I . 'Sot, To Your Town 89 well as to you r Cou nt ry it will be ' probability. Governor Landon has certain that the House will bo pre-- been biting in his denunciation of New pondt rantly Democratic, while if Deal sje.iding policies. And Mr. London comes in, the Re-- 1 eve It has again said that he I will undoubtedly control the pates balanced budget before long, lower branch. Rej tesentatives must has gone on the record for economy run for office every two years, andjrind a certain amount of retrench-the- ir ' poliitcal life is often very short. ment. Yet both candidates agree that A different state of affairs obtains the farmer should be helped from the ECONOMIC in the Senate. A Senator runs only f'edtra! troasuiy, that Federal relief every six years, and, as a result, the for the unemployed and needy must 1937 Congress will be Democratically be continued. There is also the procimtiollrd e"n though the Republi- bability that the government will feel that it must increase its army and nae 0 IIAPPKNL(JS THAT AFFECT cans sweep the country. It is THE DINNER PAILS, DIVIDEND vy to appropriations. Under such circum GOP for the CHECKS AM) TAX BILLS OF win h ally impossible .:i.;!uvs. Congress will undergo many in the upper house? niaiuiity EVERY INDIVIDUAL. NATIONif it took every contested sent it a headache as it seeks to control AL AND INTERNATIONlack two votes of control. As propriation measures, AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE The tariff will likely be an issue, many contested senatorships are in FROM LOCAL WELFARE. the Deep South, where the Democrat-- 1 difference of opinion has ic nomination is the same thing as resulted from the reciprocal trade flection, it inevitable that the Dem- - age cement act authorizing the la a rreaidentlal-electloi- i will have a substantial major-- 1 dent to lower tariff duties in favor of year, with the headlines and the thoughts of the ity when the members of the Senate countries doing the same for us. voters concerned almost entirely with i in January. the gress will he leleagured on the one the opposing candidates for the naEven so, best commentators feel hand by powerful groups wanting a tion's highest office, the next Con- that this will not be a major obstacle lug h tariff, such as agriculture, and gress conies in for relatively little at- to Governor Landon's program, in equally powerful groups wanting a tention. But Congress is always vi- event of his election. If the voters k.wvr tariff and bigger foreign busitally important. A stubborn Congress disavow the New Deal, Senators of ness, such as the heavy machinery can just about ruin a president's pro- both parties will sniff the wind and aad automobile makers. as Hoover fall in line with the mandate. And, gram and ambitions The Townsend plan will, in all profound out in his last two years. And on the other hand, should President bability, be little consideration. a friendly Congress can make the Roosevelt be endorsed again, he will Outside of given one or two states, such White House a legislative paradi.se naturally be able to bring about Con- as Townsendites have as Roosevelt learned in bis first two gressional agreement of almost any- madeWashington, a very poor showing in the priyears, when the legislative branch of thing he wishes. maries of either party. And the boNo matter who takes the big plum nus issue is at last dead a $ie government succumbed to the- infact whicji in November, the coming Congress hu.i caused fluence and appeal of he executive. a many political aspirant Make-uof the next House of Rep- will be faced with a number of vital to .say "Thank God. will be resentatives largely dependent issues. The tax issue will be up again Some of the longest and most acricjn who rises to the Presidency if bigger and better than ever, in all monious debate will concern laws which are now in existance but are due to expire the A..$...,.,.;,.j. "temporary emer gency measures." They will go off the statute books unless Congress gives them new life. Among such laws are: The vitally important OPTOMETRIST dollar devaluation measure; the Electric Far m and Home Authority loans; Will lie In His New Office Over Penney's Stoic the CCC appropriations; the reciprocal tariff; the excise (nuisance) tax28TH MONDAY, es on gasoline, radios, etc.; the 3 cent postage rate; the interstate oil proAppointments May He Made With Dr. Evans duction limitations compacts; the much reviled, much praised neutrality 124 T uiueai. emergency DUreau in the government the RFC, which was Mr. Roosevelt is PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS 1 Roos-(Jovern- or antici-publica- ns HIGHLIGHTS math-ornat- ld Tieim-ndou- s i i.M Presi-ocra- Con-answ- roll-ca- ll p so-call- OR. WON C. JAMES SEPTEMBER - PHONE i ts er , fin j'ijriiAtf I A f Mm mm oh -, A COSMOPOLITAN KING-TO-B- - E. rasa Boys hitch up your chairs. When you are eighteen how would you like to be a king? It is all set for one boy now 13. And it is hoped that he will be a capable king duly loved, ad mired and respected even in modern times. It is believed that he will be, for this past summer he behaved as a I "regular fellow" in a scout camp, liv By Mrs. Thomas Ault ing on "equal terms with three Serb, three Croat, and two Slovene boys." Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Barnard had as This cosmopolitan King-tob- e is Pe their guests on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. ter the Second of Yugoslavia. Thomas Barnard and Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Barnard of Rockland. DID SHE PICK HIM On Wednesday evening in honor of OR DID SHE NOT? Mr. and Mrs. Homer Marble, a wed Girls in America like to feel that ding dance and shower was held in they have something to say as to the ward amusement hall. whom they will marry. Of course Odell Burbank will leave the Valley when once married, rarely ever will hospital on Thursday. a woman admit that she did any pick Congratulations to the Bear River ing. She was chosen, chased, and Valley Leader on the 25th. of Sept. clamped. for the twelve years of serving the But that is another matter. The people of the Bear River Valley and future Queen of the Netherlands, Julisurrounding towns and cities of the ana Louise Emma Marie Wilhelmina, state, also Canada, with one of the 27, has decided to marry Prince Bern-har- d best news papers in the home. The Leopold Frederick Eberhard Leader also goes to nearly every Jules Curt Charles Godefroi Pierre zu state in the union and also some for eign countries, to missionaries and He may be two years her junior but others who have lived in the Bear the prince certainly "went her" one River Valley. two or three better in the matter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gittens return names. Time was when a princess ed home here after spending the sum couldn't choose her man. Maybe this mer wrth relatives in Idaho, Canada one didn't, but just between us, she and California. probably did as much about it as the Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Tingey have modern American miss and that's moved in the home of Mr. arrd Mrs. something. William FerersOn. Mrs. John Becker of Ogden, spent ATLANTIC AIR RACE. Friday at the home of her parents, Forbes Magazine gives us permis Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Ault, also attend sion to reprint the following from the ing the Box Elder fair at Tremonton. September 15th issue: Fay Gardner is visiting her mother This Fall, a new air race begins in Nevada. when four countries struggle for the Emma Gardner returned to her honor of being first to open a schedwork in Perry Sunday evening.' uled line across the stormy A number of Sunday school, Relief worm Atlantic. Society and Mutual officers attended Joint favorites in the race are Ger the union meeting at Garland on Sun many, the U. S. and Britain. The day. last two are working d Friends and relatives called at the Pan American Airways (U. through Valley hospital on Sunday to see Odell S.) and Imperial Airways (British). Burbank who is doing nicely after; an operation, and will soon be home. DEWEYVILLE 12 MONTHS OLD M PROOF PINTS Lippe-Biesterfel- FIFTHS LOWEST YEAR OLD STRAW Made by the OKE the distillers who have started by Hoover and continued and enlarged by Roosevelt must also be given a new okay if it is to continue. So Congress will be busy next year, whether the donkey or the elephant rules in the old colonial house on Pennsylvania Avenue. The industrial production index is strll on the rise. Favorable signs dom inate all industry. Biggest problem which may grow rapidly in impor tance, is that of the price level. Con sumer groups say that living costs are going up faster than salaries and wage checks, that the rises are un justified. There is political and econ- omrc dynamite in this. ing fine whiskii for the average ck zea's pocketbooi Glenmore Distillen Co., Incorporated LoolsnU Major Protection All Cars Are Thoroughly Insrected to a Thousandth Part of An Inch Brakes Adjusted Motors Analyzed Frames Straightened Batteries Test ed Body Serviced. The sum of these means PERFORMANCE RESULTS - ECONOMY RESULTS - Following Are A Few of Our Values: 1931 c . Into th lavisnlu rwm.. j t ciuucoaKer interiors, superbly tyled by Dryden! Get behind the wheel and thrill to ? Studebaker performance-- in the world', only ca5 automatic hill holder and the finest wjh hydraulicake,t ft HZ FREE1 fiVi f, . PRIDENT of"J11." SEDANS for the best Prudential election. Tune to Stud tor?al, Champigni Monday ni8ht N.B.C. foe detaila. LkJTri." ytah Auto & imp. Ton Pickup Trunk n Rebuilt Throughout "gE'i'TrarmiirasTiHBBa 1930 Complete Overhaul Excellent Bargain . Uiev. fctd. fcedan 1931 Chev. Sedan Good THE BIG ANNUAL ALL - UTAH SHOW Hecord-Breakin- a Exhibits In All Departments Entertainment F or Everyonel r Olds. Sedan Condition 1936 M Ford Delux Coupe 12,000 Miles I I! Plymouthm. Coach Rohuib wiui, dauiui 1929 and Saturday All Next Week fr 'i .... 9000 Miles W S; Backed By A Written Guarantee A exciting new 1937 Stude-bakers first and see the first and finest- eiDrCSsion r,f -1Q17 mntnr . w v. vnt otyilll Own th -- r---- -v, viv.v. uwij ui.u wane Owcaita WE GIVE USED CAR BUYERS .v,4. "B$TCa mat teredthezrofmal Chev. Spt. Sedan tr.. world-fa- m hand-in-han- liMO 79 $ BOURBON WHISKF aii-plan- e hi asswA-wis - . 1933 Mfew. - d. Kari-Kee- jau 4 PRICED Chev. Coach j -- CODE NO. 98 1934 .l. " Sprint? 1 CODE NO. 99 , -- on o 1& un-shin- ed Free to Pjiblic and The only pUce io the U. S. wher. c.talog covenng Mlue oJ butlnew d Without obtained Free be or product can Ubwy, Oblif.tion it lh American InduMnaJ Urita (or Buaineu Advertiaing Mattef ym ua will laterMted beprompUforwided. AMERICAN IKOUSTRIAL LIBRARY KaiariaUaUUB, J WORLD NEWS record-breakin- g SO ivy:- - SOAR TO NEW HEIGHTS The new JiM) lM fDIICRIAL fc'V'i' rtitTirukiA! V' STUDEBAKERS 1931 I Buick Sedan A Real Buy II 1927 Whippett SEDAN Fronk Chevrolet, Inc. Tremonton, Utah Phone 20 1 |