OCR Text |
Show THE BEAVER PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER r 5, 193d " IxTmrrTT CREEK NOTES BUSINESS TRUTH about ADVERTISING Pft ASSOCIATION ad the N. E. A. WALTER L. CARLTON ................ . Publisher Published Every Thursday 0 mtha. 1 mth. 80c SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN ADVANCE) (PAYABLE Jl 1 jr. f 2 Publication Entered in the Post First Beaver, Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter, under the Act of CongrtM of March J, 1819. Phone 24 Advertising rates quoted when requested. A Office ! C1m COMPETE WITH THEM There aren't many citizens in Beaver who haven't noticed the large number of third-clas- s packages which make their way into the local postoffice around this time each year. This is the literature from mailorder houses, giving their fall and winter business a This is not necessarily objectionable to big send-ofthe majority but you can't blame local merchants for not welcoming it with a banquet and a town band! There are many folks who buy through the mail, who will thumb thru the catalogue pages and place many an order. Again rises the question of loyalty and cooperation for the fellow citizen who is struggling to meet your needs and serve you while making a living for himself. He may sit beside you in church, greet you at a community gathering, his children play in your yard, your wife belongs to a club with his wife, you go to the high school events. The way to combat the situation of mail-ordbuying is thrugh advertising in the home town paper. It goes into the same homes as the catalogue. Give this home your message, your line of goods, prices and guarantees. Tell your story and it won't cost you near iy as much as the outside company. Compete with f. er them! - HE IS AN AMERICAN He is an American. He hears an airplane overhead, and if he looks up all does so in curiosity, neither in fear nor in hope at of seeing a protector. His wife goes marketing, and her purchases are limited by her needs, her tastes, her budget, but not by decree. He comes home of an evening through streets which are well lighted, not dimly in blue. He reads his newspaper and knows that what it says js not concocted by a bureau, but an honest, un trammeled effort to present the truth. He has never had a gas mask on. He has never been in a bombproof shelter. TT1 m tt rns miuiary iraming, an k. u. jl. u. course in college, he took because it excused him from the gym course, and it was not compulsory. He belongs to such fraternal organizations and clubs as he wishes. He adheres to a political party to the extent that he desiresthe dominant one, if that be his choice, out with the distinct reservation that he manv criti cize any of its policies with all the vigor which to him seems proper any other as his convictions dictate, even, if it be his decision, one which holds that the theory of government of the county is wrong and should be scrapped. He does not believe, if his nartv is out of nower. that the only way in which it can come into power is uirougn a Diooay revolution. He converses with friends, even with chance ac quaintances, expressing freely his opinion on any sub. T- - J. ONLY: $5 times, on a wager, men MANY tried to tell $5 bills to strangers for as little as $1.98 legitimate $5 bills worth $5 anywhere. They have usually failed. The reason is simple to see: Lack of confidence. Their proposition sounded too good to be true, failed to arouse the confidence of the prospects, who were afraid to buy. No one trusted the seller because no one knew him. He might be a Who BU- Mcounterfeiter. Will SB knows? He might have some trick up Who his sleeve. knows? Better have nothing at all to do with him. Confidence is the mainspring of business. Without it no business can succeed and no product can be sold, because before any one of us is Charles gain willing to part with a penny, we must have confidence that that which we are going to buy will give us value received. Confidence is not a matter which can be bought. It must be earned. It Is a process of growth. The idea of confidence grows from one customer to the next one. It gives vitality to everything about a business. When confidence enters Into a TODAY i--i 1 , ject, without fear. RED CROSS ISSUES EMERGENCY REPORT WASHINGTON. D. C., September 27, 1939 The situation has been changing rapidly; officers and del egates of the International Red Cross Committee and" the League of Red Cross Societies actually on the ground have made investigations and sent information below. FOR $1.98 everything business transaction, But about It becomes pleasant. whenever confidence Is absent, no amount of any other qualities can take its place. You have often bought something from someone you did not know, say a solicitor who succeeded in taking away your money at the door. Will you ever see him again? Will you get the goods you have paid for? Was it a miniature swindle? You wonder and worry. You spend hours in painful doubt. Perhaps everything turned out all right. Even so, the profit went out of the transaction when you had to worry about getting your money's worth. Buy goods that are advertised from merchants who advertise. There lies confidence. One of the chief services of news paper advertising to consumers is that it denotes which merchants or products are worthy of confidence. Because newspaper publishers are s so jealous of their advertising and are quick to reject anything which does not live up to their standards, readers know that if a thing Is regularly advertised In the newspaper it is worthy of their con: , fidence, j As a matter of fact, the appearance of an advertisement in a newspaper is recommendation of the character and quality of the goods being advertised. BILLS . col-um- Charles B. Roth. expected shortly. The French Red Cross has cabled for. dressings, hospital supplies, drugs, equipment, clothing, linen, and woolens. They also state a need for blankets up to a million in number for use of hospitals and evacuated families. Dressings and other materials are now being assembled in New York for shipment tothe French Red There are in Rumania at . preCross. sent approximately 23,000 refuTo aid American victims of the gees, 17,000 soldiers and 6,000 Athenia 20,000 was made availcivilians. The soldiers are internin able Ireland, Scotland England, In are govand ed camps receiving ernment assistance The civilians and Nova Scotia. are comlpetely destitute and beChapters have been active In ing helped by the Rumanian Red meeting the needs of returning Cross. ' Athenia survivors, American citiThe British Red Cross Society zens and others. cabled for hospital stores, equipMany chapters are active in ment and surgical dressings. full of hospital supplies needed A Is making surgical clothing. and dressings He does not expect his mail to opened between posting and receipt, nor his telephone to be tapped. He changes his place of dwelling, and does not re port so doing to the police. He has not registered mth the police. He carries an identification card only in case he should be the victim of a traffic accident. He thinks of his neighbors across international borders of those to the north as though they were across a State line, rather than" as, foreigners of those to the south more as strangers since they speak a language different from his, and with the know ledge that there are now matters of difference between his government and theirs, but of neither with an expectancy of war. He worships GOD in the fashion of his choice, without let. His children are with him in his home, neither re . moved to a place of greater safety; if young,' nor, if older, ordered ready to serve the State with sacrifice of limb or life. He has his problems, his troubles, his uncertain ties, but all others are not overshadowed by the im- mmence 01 oatue ana suaaen death. He should struggle to preserve his Americanism with its priceless privileges. He is a fortunate man. He is an American. (From New York Sun) 1 SPACE IN THIS PAPER Salt LakeV Newest Hotel Will Arranse To Suit FORD Automobiles Trucks MHtHt 'X I HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE RATES $1.50 TO $3.00 TO STOP AT TIIIS BEAUTIFUL nOSTELRY iMimn week. Neil Rhenstrom, Eldon and Au drey Thomas left early Sunday morning for Blackfoot, Idaho whena they have employment. Granting Woman Suffrage This country was among the last to grant woman suffrage after 70 years' agitation. For SALE TRADE . T.r main tf (v. Telephone DR. E. A. I' H PETH Dentist Office in Tolton Phone No. - S Butid! Beaver, DR. LEON H. CLI! Physician & Sure0l Professional Bldg. . Phone - Office 84 - Re, Otfloe Hours - II to ! j, BROWN and BR0f5 ASSAYERs Mail Work Sollclw We Standardize EUREKA on Act, ARTHUR SMITB n PLUMBING and HEATB TELEPHONE Get a Shave and t CS Haiti at th. SANITARY BARBER SH! MJlo Baker, ProprteJ Located North of Post Ok OR LEASE C. WILSON BOW 350 ACRES Detective Known as the HANGING ROCK RANCH Let Us Investigate Your In a confidential man:-- ' Western Detective Agenc; H Beaver In Minersville Canyon Extending Two Miles Along the Beaver River Partly Fenced City, I i HOMETf LETTER Easy Terms - Enquire of KARL S. CARLTON or KIRK, Milford, Ut. 3 Fortune should manage our fortune Our We like our constitution; enjoy it when good, have patience when bad, and never apply violent remedies but in cases of necessity. Rochefoucauld. Baile Atha Cliath If anyone should ask the location of Baile Atha Cliath, the answer is Ireland. Baile Atha Cliath is the capital of the Irish Free State, in fact, and was formerly known as Dublin. HUNTING Mori teal BUSINESS M Try Our Looking Into The Future g. future." ITS A MARK OF DISTINCTION We Do Repair Work on All Makes of Cars , oo soul-stirrin- MILFORD, UTAn Dealer for VVV appreciated by all present. Mr. and Mrs. Evans and family of Parowan visited with their son and daughter in law, Mr. and Mrs Dell Evans Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Sid Royalty from Los Angeles, California are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Shotwell this No Red ANCESTORS, fighting Indians, surveying the wilderness, and hewing homesteads out of the raw, new country, little dreamed of the problems the future would hold. We of today face diffThe iculties no less trying and future may be as full of change as today is to the past. Only the simple virtues of common sense and thrift survive. Look ahead with the confident 'of financial stability-Sava part of your present income for the YOUR BUSINESS mMMMHaMmmHMtMtHMHMmw W. R. MARTIN GARAGE VV? 1 r Tn OUR PIONEER GOOD NEIGHBORSPRICES TO FIT one. Mr. and Mrs. R. Stewart from Wyoming, Mrs. Lottie bacKDurn from Tooele. Mrs. Clark Prince of California and Mrs. Rube Edward from Manderfield were callers at the home of Wm. TwltcheU, tr., neices Monday. The ladies were all of Mr. Twitohell, Sr., Mrs. Stew art was the former Ina Van Fleet an, old resident of this place. A cottage meeting was held at thehom of Wm. Twltcneu jr., last Monday evening. Twentyeight were present, including Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Paice, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rhaeis, Brother Wm. Mor Cale of Bea- gan and Sister Theda . were ver. Their remarKS giean Onlrlr - . FOR RENT DlREi I u I snnrfav School visitors at our were, Sunday School last Sunday Arthur Wm. Morgan, Brothers re Bhees and Geo. C. Mller. Their every marks were appreciated by By CHARLES B. ROTH UTAH STATE MMMV I ERNEST C. ROSSITER, General Mgr. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THE BANK OF FRIENDLINESS Beaver City Brand A" mat . . MiLr UKD STATE BANK ft |