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Show THE BEAVER PRESS, BEAVER, UTAH, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1932. 5I? Scatter A. C. SAUNDERS their attention called to the unexcellproducts of Utah." In Utah, celery wi:l be featured on dining car and restaurant menus, and there will be special displays of the S'. Sato, of Eery, is marketing a product in all food stores. ton and a halt of dresred turkey this . o ' .nn. week. Mr. Sato reports that his turYou can't always tell, many of the out and marketed fr:m time to time key crop has made vary satisfactory men who refer to their wives as the as they are ready. This supply es- gains but the market price this year old woman, treat them better than do pecially at feed lots close to the mar- for the same quality of birds will be the fellows who are always careful to ket is always a hazard because it is considerably less than it was last speak of them with the great respect. However, he still expects a a visible supply and one upon which year. profit from his turkey crop. the packers may draw at will. Mr. Sato has grown ten acres of Local moat conditions are relativethis year which he says was cabbage Southern to time th'n ly good. Up California has shown an increase of good quality but due to market JAPANESE FARMERS OF BERYL PROSPER DURING DEPRESSION fxtm Publisher Phone 24 . .m.ii.. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Los Angeles, November 22, 1932 The Los Angeles Branch of the Agri$2.00 Per Year SUBSCRIPTION cultural Cretlit Corpoiation is under way with ample funds for all worthy in PostofTice in Entered the Beaver, Publication A First Class purposes. A large number of appliof of Act Congress Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter, under the cations have been received, including March 3, 1879. applications for loan3 on Real Estate which are entirely foreign to the purRULES FOR GOOD SPORTSMANSHIP pose of the organization. The men who have been drafted inWith the high school basketball season near at hand, it is not to this service may be relied upon !o out of place to admonish both players and spectators to resolve do their best to serve Agriculture that better sportsmanship should be displayed during the coming and needed relief. It looks like about the only safe season, than has been shoWn at times in the past. The Kiwanis rule that can be followed with reclub of Nephi has formulated a set of rules that foster good to stocker and feeder loans is to spect are as follows: be which emulated, sportsmanship and that should them upon present values, base Player feeders that meaning Fair play should figure on prospective A good American will be a good sportsman. fattening their eat-tian marketing them at present fat strengthens character. 1. I will play the game. prices. The local cattle market has 2. I will be courteous to my opponent. reacted a quarter to fifty cents higher than a week ago, and the under3. 1 will be a good loser and a generous winner. tone seems stronger, although hog 4. 1 will be loyal and honorable. values which showed a constant rise Spectator A good American will appreciate and applaud any display of for several successive day are again showing weakness with a tendency o courage. back .thus confirming what we slip 1. 1 will cheer good plays by either team. have said right along, that there can 2. I will support the decision of the oli'icials. be no permanent appreciation in val3. 1 will respect the rules and encourage others to do so. ues without sustained buying power 4. I will remetmber that to build character is move important which must come from labor employthan to win games. ment. o Local feed lot supplies are plentiful but not alarming. There are ARE WE WET OR ARE WE DRY? about 20,000 cattle on feed in Lo". Angeles County which means 20 days Everybody seems to be farther up in the air now regarding supply for only the Los Angelas the outcome of the prohibition repeal proposition than before the trade. These cattle will be topped consumption of meat food supplies. This situation has beer', helped some by the big fleet in tlr-- Pacific waters drawing their supplies from the West Coast and assisting in the absorption of what otherwise might have beer, a surplus, but now tha volume is just about holding its own with last year, with the price of beer ranging from 20 per cent to 25 per cent lower than a year ago. The exception is Babv Beef which has held its own as compared to last year's prices. i recent compilation of figures in with the unemployment situation in this locality indicated that the meat packing institutions are employing a considerably larger number of men than they did in 1929, A connection due to increased volume and spreading the employment and wages among the greatest number. It should be recognized that the packing business is highly specialized, requiring a large percentage of skilled labor. Nevertheless, the attitude of the packers has been to cooperate to the utmost in absorbing a portion of our surplus labor. ANCIENT SKELETON FOUND IN STREETS OF PARAGONAH LOVE TRIANGLE IN WASHINGTON COUNTY RESULTS FATALLY 28, of i. Better Toast e election. Speculation is rift as to what will eventuate; but its only speculation. Absolute national repeal is still a long way off. Congress may bring it nearer during the next session, but may not. There are more "dry" congressmen to be reckoned with in this coming session than will be the case in the first session, next spring, under the new administration. Then there will be a good many new men seated who were elected as "wets." Druggists throughout the state are being circularized by distillers in the attempt to induce them to stock liquor for sale on prescription. It seems to be true that a certain number can legally sell it on prescription, that number being regulated by population of the communities. Very likely few will accept the opportunity, because it means a world of red tape, with sales limited and perforce at prices very much higher than offered by our best bootleggers. It's not so certain, either, that the quality of the drugstore dispensed hooch is superior to some bootleg. To quote one who should be qualified to judge, "There are some thinks it is and some thinks it ain't." Which just about sizes up the whole prohibition question. There are some thinks prohibition's going and some thinks it ain't. Of course, if the national prohibition amendment were wiped off the statute books to morrow, within a few months there would be many dry spots, probably rapidly becoming more numerous and larger, for then local option laws would get in their work. There would be dry spots and wet spots. The general hope among the wets seems to be centered more on light wines and beers than anything, else. Referring to another phase of the repeal, the pick-u- p in general business expected from it. This writer believes that has been The drinkers would drink less contragenerally band hooch and less soft drinks, eat less candy. Consumption of refreshments probably would not increase much, if any. There simply would be a change from one kind to another. The gain of che legalized intoxicants manufactured would be oil set all or if: great part by the loss to the manufacturers of plus the loss to the bootleggers and the latter are not few. The principal means of financial benefit would be revenue to municipalities and the federal government from licenses and internal revenue taxes, and there should be a pretty general saving in enforcement expense and, perhaps, in penal expense. ji ed Para-gona- uncovered Dauglas (Buck) Dais, was fatally wounded by a rifle shot Friday at 11:15 a. m., in a shooting affray at a cabin in Shady Inn tourist camp at Rockville. He is believed by Sheriff William Brooks to have been a victim of a triangle affair involving Jame3 Adams", 37, of Kanab, and Mrs. Grace Mangrum Adams, 28, his wife. A coroner's jury, summoned by Justice F. D. Gifford of Springdale, decided that Davis met death from a bullet fired by Adams. Upon an- nouncement of the verdict, Sheriff Brooks placed Adams under arrest j and lodged him in he Washington county jail, to await action by Coun-- : ty Attorney Ellis J. Pickett, who con-- : ducted the inquest. According to testimony presented to the coroner's jury, Mrs. Adams had separated from her husband, and, before coming to Rockville on Sep tember 29, had lived with Davis in Las Vegas, Nev. Testimony indicatd. ed that Davis and Mrs. Adams were iving at the tourist camp while Davis was employed in a near-b- y gravel pit. Adams came to Rockville from Kanab Friday, and is said by authorities to have spent the forenoon with his wife, persuading her to return to him. He was still in the cabin, it was testified, when Davis returned for lunch, and is reported to have called: "You better not come in, or I'll o shoot." Davis is said to have continued to OVERPRODUCTION OR UNDERCONSUMPTION in the advance, and Adams, fired at him, e world-widallegedly doorway, The depression has brought out much conflicting in the heart. The him striking criticism. Some of it has been constructive while some has servwounded man then turned around, ed only to congest clear thought. One man claims ail our troubles took a few steps and fell dead. Can-nonvill- e, o Support the home creameries. Use butter instead of other shortening. Butter retails at a very reasonable price. Butter far excel's in food valWhen you consume an ue and flavor. extra pound of butter jou are helping the farmer of your section. o The laws of the country prohibits one man from taking another's life, but he may assassinate his character with impunity. ' Me ihi ler TOAST OVEN " 171 " 2 Slices, Both Sides at One Time! i Now you can have delicious toast . . . oven-bake- d, just - right , . the kind you like but seldom get. The Coleman Toast Oven toasts two slices, both sides, in one operation. It's the finest toaster you ever saw o UTAH CELERY SENT TO FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT President-elec- t Franklin D. Roose-velt will be the recipient of a carton of choice Utah celery, if the package sent Thursday by the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce reaches its This was one feature destination. preparatory to the opening of celery week in Utah. To call attention to the importance of the observation to the people of the state, a proclamation was issued by Governor George II. Dern: "It is expected," the governor says, "that this year more celery will be shipped out of Utah than ever befora. All loyal Utahns should, where possible, send to their friends in other states cartons of thii delicacy, and serve it in their own homes. If this is done, knowledge of the superiority of our celery will be increased and those living in other states will have ! ; street in a human skeleton thought to be that of an Indian, because of the fact that the road now goes where an old Indian mound used to be. Men working on the ifch conditions he has not been able to sell the crop. His turkeys have consumed as much cabbage as they would eat along with his other feeds during the fattening process. Mr. Sato has two acres of celery which he says is good and will be marketed at some profit. Thomas Kumagae, Japanese, who bought the Eldridge ranch in the Beryl section, has constructed a fine large potato cellar. The dimensions are 108 feet long by 54 feet wide by 4 feet deep to the square. Mr, Kumagae estimates that his storage cellar will hold twenty-fiv- e carloads of potatoes without using the ten foot driveway space. He has a Delco plant which furnishes light in the cellar and power for his electric grader. Mr. Kumagae reports that his potato crop this year is poor. However, his cabbacre crop is very satisfactory and he now has a large amount of cabbage stored in liie cellar. Iron County Record. The Coleman is a compact little oven, beautifully designed and finished in gleaming special process chrome plate. Has ebonized handles on trays and sides. Equipped with sliding toast trays and removable crumb tray. Comes complete with extra quality cord and plug. See Your Local Dealer or VCr'ta to Th tr Coleman Lamp Stova Co. Philadelphia, Wichita, los Angela, III. Pa. CaliF. (EK24-X- VV. over-estimate- C4 SPURN &K ft A A ... -o If you spend your money at home you are a booster for the Perhaps the reason .some men quit town, whether you ever talk it up or not, but if you spend your paying compliments after marriage money away, you are a knocker on the community, no matter how is that it requires all their time to you hypocritically talk for it out on the street.. py bills. continent-wid- e , comedy little to offer these days; So they formed the Hummingbirds' Trio and went on the airwaves. A fat contract sign ed the world, and Is 6hown telling his story to Chief of Police Myers. it' t iV '.'. stars, Katharine Cavalll, Margaret Speaks and Dorothy Greeley (top to bottom), found the stage has very minister this week proved them r'flht. CRUISER GERMAN HERE The cruiser Karlsruhe, the first German warship to. visit these shores since the war, arrived on the east coast for courtesy vitu. Photo shows the K;riri:he steaming up a Delaware River for stav. over-producti- non-essenti- musical been f As, f or light opera Ross McDIarmid, son of the Manito ba mines, ended when police of Wlllough-by- , Ohio, picked him up at the point of collapse. He left home with $1 to see ly company. Years ago, when Jesse Knight and David Evans purchased the group of claims adjoining the fi2 patented Horn Silver in Beaver county, Utah, and organized the King David company, there was great interest in the project. The mine was well equipped. Extensive woi kings, including an 800 foot double compartment shaft, were instituted. Results did not come as quickly as the veteran mine operators expected, however, and their activities were transferred to other localities. With the death of Jesse Knight, the King David lapsed into obscurity and was all but forgotten when the development of the Horn Silver by the Tintic Lead Company brought the San Francisco mining district into the spotlight. Less than 300 feet of drifting from the Horn Silver will give access to the King David shaft, it is said, and simultaneous development of the two properties is thought to hp pract.ic- able. fM search for runaway over-suppl- factory. When the first pinch comes it usually contracts until it becomes acute. The problem is as old as the human race. This time it is greatly more severe, owing to the high standard of living and to which the people of the world the vast amount of became accustomed. By the use of credit people of the civilized world afforded many of the luxuries that kept the wheels of industry going at full blast This in turn kept the farmer busy and all wereTiappy and prosperous. But nothing was done to supplement the elasticity of the credit chain and it broke under the ever increasing strain. Normal functioning got badly out of kilter and it is still out of order. It would seem that our present economic breakdown goes beyond the proper distribution of income and earnings, which of course contributed to the disturbance. It appears that the vast expansion of business and industry went beyond the available monetary reserve upon which the credit structure was built. More money is needed so that the people of the world can purchase the ever increasing necessities of an advancing standard of living. We do not mean fiat money or money without a sufficient and adequate reserve, only a money that Will be accepted as a medium of exchange. Until recent years silver was always accepted a money. Why not return it to its former position. Clff 4 they have all RUNAWAY over-producti- over-supp- Az FIND and that productive enterprise has . o the gone beyond consumptive limits of the world. TINTIC LEAD TAKES We cannot subscribe to such a theory. It is doubtful that CONTROL OF MINE of goods even at the present the world has a general y ttme. An of the things that the people of the world Reawakening of interest in the need or want has never taken place. Without going into a maze King David mining property was shown when the directors, meeting at of statistics it can readily be seen that it is not of wheat in the west when millions are starving to death in China, Provo filled several vacancies on the in a sense this is true of all commodities and manufactured goods'; board and authorized the establishment of a branch office in Salt Lake the world is starving for them. says the Mineral Survey. When the city worker cannot buy the products of the farm, City A majority of the board consist the rural neighbor cannot buy the manufactured goods of the city now of directors of the Tintic Lead are due to Although 1 ts, STAGE Phlla-rfplnhi- war. jvxr- i .4L vt ... aw a - RUMORED ENGAGED TO PRINCE A new portrait of Princess Ingrid of Sweden, Europe's most talked about royal lady since her name was coupled this week with that of Prince Georg Of Great Britain. P BEAUTY IN REPOSE Reclining comfortably, Joan Bennett models her new evening gown of angel skin, with sable wrap ready to be worn. tfC I tttt ryj i1 i - A--- ft',,. v Vi, j ., - i fgy&J' 7 t ; i W m K xr- wty- it " iV I W i K 'it- j Mk 1 y.p .if4 VS. Hi if1 ' 4 BOON TO RRinr.F.PI AVFDO rui. c.u.. table' whlch huffe nd deals cards flawlessly by eleo-tricity, was the high spot of the National Bridge Exposl- tion in New York this week. Photo shows tha table, with top removed, being demonstrated by Its Inventor, Laurens Hammond, Chicago electrle clock manufacturer. Cards re put In sliding drawer end dealt out to slot before each, player, with misdeal or bad shuffle Impossible. ) |