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Show EHPIE. WM. T. IGLEHEART. Deem er. Utah, as Mall 29c 15c Seedless,RaisinsLPack!ge.s ..' .29c Lux Toilet Soap ?0?ar8....: 35c Sunkist brand, sliced or halved, 2 cans for PI riiii.nEiJ Yolo Pickles fit' China Oats Serl... Sweet Corn AQr 7L 33c 39c 32c ssilerur'cll0w:.s"art 25c S...... Green Tea SUGAR 25c tin Peanut Butter Lrnd vault SYRUP 59c 27c 23c Iff1!... Se,quart..can. mak' Strawberries 23e " Zlomi.l&k. Mince Meat Market Price In Our Market Pork Roast Pork Roast I Veal RoaSt p1cu!9 21c poSr.?8 17c 19c i'TJ"............ j r jr Mission skinned and sugar- cured, whole or half, lb IIAMQ rmiUJ STANDARDVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wright were called to Crosby, Wyoming, by the death of Mrs. Wright's sister. Mrs. E. L. Harrison and M. 0. Carlson motored to Mrs. Salt Lake on business recently. Mr. and Mrs. Len Larson and family are moving to Price to make their home. Supt. and Mrs. R. R. Klrkpat-ric- k left for Annapolie to attend the graduaiion exercises of their son. Buster. They will be gone a month. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Sonberg are formerly of Standardville, having a three weeks' visit In California. Mrs. Lapriel Redmond and Mrs. Irene Morrison motored to Richfield Sunday, returning Mrs. Anna Hyiatt to her home, after she had spent several weeks with her children in Helper and Castls Gate. Mr. and Mrs. George Harmer and three daughters, Louise, Na-oand Olive are leaving the first of the month for a three weeks' motor tour of the state of California. Mrs. Weston Vernon of Logan was a house guest of Mrs. A. F. Drury Wednesday. On Thurday the two motored to Moab to attend the eastern district convention of women's clubs, of which organization Mre. Vernon is state vice president. o veaisTer normd ?"? Beef Roast Per Year o fvtr Noodles Class Advertising Rate on Application Address all Communications to the Helper Times, Helper, !0crans . Second Help- DAGGER! MEN AT WORK Castle Rock Mercantile 16c OO Natatorlum CEDAR CITY ficially opened. of- C. A. Knobbs, city marshal, motored to Cheyenne, Wyoming the last of the week to attend the graduation exercises of the General Pershing hospital whero Miss his daughter, Margaret Knobbs, was a graduate. o Two Point of View A married man's idea of lienven Is a place where wives don't ask their husbands for money. Chlca go News. A married wonmn's idea of it is a place where she Is not subjected to the embarrassment of having to ask her husband for a share of what she has helped him earn. Detroit News. from the Nation's Business entering, let us hope, WE ARE final stage of our folly. The air Is charged with rumors The whispering campain Is on. No business Is immune. Have you heard about such and such a bank? Do you know old is going to the wall? I hear the Doe company is headed for receivership. The Roe company has passed its divldeno. Only by wearing muffs can one walk a block without having his confidence shaken. Of comfort let no man speak; Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs. Depression Is on every tongue. It is the most widely advertised product of our, times. Headlines, headlines everywhere, and no one stops to think. And our vaunted salesmanship! Give a salesman time enough and he'll paint so drab a picture of the future that a ikely prospect will replace his fountain pen and lock the safe. Of unemployment, I suspect there are more Idle tongues than Idle hands. The folly of :eo many of us is to accept the echo of the locker room and club car ae the voice of America. For example, consider 1930, lately interred. Now lies he there and none so poor to do him, reverence. Yet that year loaded and unloaded freight cars, and with three million trucks on the Job. too. It made and sold a new automobile for each ten families at the cost of $2,159,600,000 and eaw registration highest of any year, with gasoline consumption of 399 million barrels, an all-tyrecord. It saw electrical production hit its highest mark. Nineteen hundred and thirty manufactured four and a- half billion yards of textiles, and 315 million pairs of shoes, the usual two and a half pairs to the person. It provided work for forty-od- d mil Hon men and women, and earnings through dividends to the amount of $4,500,000,000. Nineteen hundred and thirty saw to it that expenses of giving did not exceed income," as evidenced by hundreds of millions of dollars Increase (In savings banks and eighteen and a half billions of new life Insurance. Nineteen hundred and thirty Reprint IN FARM DISTRICTS matter every Thursday. $?.00 Friday, May 29th Dutch Cleanser UTAH, THTP.S., MAY 23 1831 Editor Enured in the Pofitoffice at 1 orCans COUNTY, BUSINESS PITFALLS o Campbells Soup CARBON Bankers Point Out Hazard of Unsound Practices Help Farmers to Avoid Them in which bankers may discourage unsound farm practices are described by President F. D. Farrell of the Kansas State Agricultural College in the American Bankers Association Journal. He says: "In Kansas In connection with the importation of dairy cattle, a large shipment of very Inferior animals came Into a county to be sold at auction to local farmers. The county agricultural agent informed the bankers that the cattle would be a detriment to the comThe bankers refused to munity. finance the purchase of the cattle and the sale was abandoned. The cattle were shipped to another county. The county agent and the bankers there did as was done in the first instance and the second county escaped. WAYS An Unneeded Industry "A year ago creamery promoters began trying to capitalize the Kansas farmers' desire to Improve his markets by Inducing communities of farmers to purchase creamery plants before production and local conditions justified them. Informed of this by the State Agricultural College, the bankers association sent warnings to every bank 'in the state, leading many to refuse to support the creamery promoters until the college approved the plant for the community concerned. This saved many communities loss from the premature establishment of plants. "A third way bankers can discourage unsound practices Is to refuse to finance farmers who wish to pyramid their enterprises, a temptation difficult to resist This la illustrated among farmers who buy cattle for feeding purposes. A fanner feeds two or three cars of cattle one year and makes a good profit. This induces him to buy twice or three times as many the second year, still more the third and so on until he finally loses more by having too many cattle on feed In a year of bad prices than he made in several previous years with smaller numbers and better prices. When bankers discourage bad practices their action Is a positive benefit to the famera concerned." much-malign- - Coal or Electric Monarch Ranges Alone or in combination provides modern cooking equipment at its best. TO Will install a genuine MONARCH mal- coal range in your leable, There kitchen. are many other modela in stock from which to choose. semi-enam- Delivers to your home an efficient new enamel electric Monarch range. There is a style, a color and a size to fit every kitchen. MONARCH FACTORY AGENTS FOR CENTRAL, SOUTHERN AND EASTERN UT Dixon-Taylor-Russ- ell The Lowest Prices Large Scale Specialized Buying Affords Co. s treatment. NEW C. S. Ogflvy is relieving F. L. Gross as agent at Helper for about a month. Mr. Gross and a trip to family are enjoying San Francisco and Los Angeles, where they will visit relatives. Mrs. Alex Lak,le has returned from. Portland, where she was called some time ago on account of the serious illness of her Windsor Hotel centrally Located 225 So. Main, Salt Lake City, Utah Everything for comfort and convenient of our guests. 100 newly furnished outside rooms. FREE AUTO PARKING Rates $1.00 to $2.50 -- AUTOMOBILE LOANS CASH or Have you iiied Up until 1928 grain was the principal farm production in ths eounty. The banker recognized ths disadvantages of this. It afforded a low cash income, and the land was too hilly and rough for profitable grain raising. His idea was to Introduce cash crops that offered more return per acre and were better fitted to the county. It was decided that the county should standardize on the Green Mountain potato and to market It In carload lots. Through his bank he sponsored the buying of a car ot certified seed potatoes. He likewise bought Borne high quality tobacco seed and several hundred settings of purebred eggs. These supplies were distributed at cost through the banks to the farmers. After considerable effort a market for dairy products was assured the farmers when In 1028 a aational cheese company located a factory there. A county appropriation was secured for county agent work in 1923. In 1329 the cash crop program resulted in farmers selling $45,000 worth of milk, $150,000 worth of tobacco and fifty-fivcarloads nt potatoes and cabbage, mostly through cooperative sales. "This was some step from ths $25,001 worth of cash crops in 1921," tts onnty agent says, "and Indications ara that this amount will doubled." e Any Other Purpose the new 3 Ik cans tottmilieitt T JHOIMALT 1 A GLASS Ml? ! Just suppose this were your car. No need oat financial Iom If you are TAPE NO RED EXTRACT FREE NO DELAY every can. Imperil Ttttto! Home Acceptance Corporation Distributed by Utah Beverage & Distributing Company Salt Lake City, Utah for worrying Price, Utah Silvagni Bldg. COMPLETELY INSURED Business and Professional Wacan do it. Ask us. INSURANCE Fire, Automobile, Bonds Written in old and reliable .... X companies UNDERWRITERS CARBON Times Bldg; Helper, Utah Glen Ballinger, Mgr New Crop Ideas When a Monarch Range is Used NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF HELPER GARAGE, a Corporation: Creditors will present ' claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Helper Garage Building, Helper, Utah, on or before the 8th day of July, 1S31. JOHN J. COLZAN:, Receiver of Helper Garage. L. A. McGEE, Attorney for Receiver. o Date of first publication. May RAILROAD NEWS 7. 1981. Date of last publication. May Roadmaster J. Rask went to 28, 1931. the Sallda hospital Friday for DID FOR HIS COUNTY employed. Cooking Becomes a Real Pleasure . mechanic Cunningham, road foremen McGurl and Baxter were visitors in the city last week. A. C. Shields, V. P. & G. M., Is making hits regular inspection trip over the division. Brakeman George NIckerson has moved to Grand Junction, and will work out of that terminal. The Sturgis family has moved to Thistle, and will make that terminal their future home. W. Leatham, Water Service supervisor, of Salt Laie, was called to Salt Lake this week on business. R. E. Knapp, division lineman, with headquarters at Provo, has been busy around Helper for several days. W. W. Thlbadeau has gone to Nevada where he will be employed as specjal agent by the Union Pacific. He was relieved at the Helper division by E. B. Broyles who came from Salt Lake. FOR REFINANCE e n brother. Mrs. Lakie reports that her brother is much improved. Supt. Hugh Wilson, master WHAT A KEY BANKER The farmers of one county In Tennessee are receiving $400,000 additional annual income from new farm enterprises started since 1326 through the efforts of a "key banker" and the county agent, according to estimates from the Tennessee College of Agriculture. A "key banker" is a part of the state bankers' association voluntary field force cooperating with the American Bankers Association in Its nation-widplan for bringing about better agricultural conditions through combined banker-farme- r effort. New projects started In this particular county are tobacco, Irish potato and cabbage production for cash crops, and dairying and poultry raising for livestock. The key banker, looking for something to do to better his community, first attempted to procure a county agent but was unable to got the county to make the necessary appropriation, so he and other leading citizens made up the requisite funds through private subscription among farmers and business men and an agent was S added one million in population to our consuming public a cjty the size of Cleveland. With all its faults, 1930 furnished a national market-plac- e where goods, services anl labor were exchanged to the extent of 100 billion dollars, and the returns are not all in yet. One" ould think, from the wailing, that we had all been wiped out by a terrible catastrophe of nature a Noah's flood, a shifting of the Gulf stream or by dreadful holocaust. . Yet we are all here. The stores are still open. The trains are running. You can get that num ber on the telephone. The traffic problem (8 still lively. Movie houses are no nearer seating all their customers. Children are what they always were. Young folks are married. getting Preachers thunder against the laxity of age. Amos V Andy are taxicab business. stjlll In the Doctors and dentists make appointments weeks ahead. Lawyers' briefs are just as long. Hardy commuters make the 8:15 in less than nothing flat. And under Nature's white coverlet, bud and blossom await the sure fcomfng of spring. If these commonplace signs of "life as usual" betoken national instability tben there Is a public menace In the familiar warning. Danger! Men at work! MERE THORPE. , ... u m--- REVA BECK BOSONE Attorney and Counselor at Law State Bank Building Phone 24-- J -- it ..... . .. DR. F. S. THOME Dentist-Hel- 2"SoSalt 7-- LODGE I A for Physician Phones: lnin.nn1 4 fc A fVOt long distance service today? For example, quality station to Office, 99-- Res. 132 m UTAH No. 15 Dfl. . 1. G. W00DEEAD Dentist New A. J. Stafford Bldg. PHONE 120 : UTAH LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE lelper Lodge No. 1659 SO P. Every Tuesday night, 7: Knights of Pythias Hall ra- - T' H' L0W M. Physician Phone station 0' DR. LELAND R. GR0VER day rate from Helper Surgeon. HELPER f(Mt of and high uuh in Henry Hall Building HELPER, have (instance, . CUy Office Meets Every Thursday Evening K. of P. HAT.L J. A. Gill, c. of C. F. C. Bertollno. M. F. W. H. Browa, K. R. and S. Well, W-S4- DR. WM. T. ELLIOTT TH0RIT HATCH, Lawyer 105 Helper State Bank Utah Helper ONWARD per - Phone ! DR. M. C. MELROSE Physician and Surgeon New A. J. Stafford Building Office Phone: 22 Hrs. 11-- 8 and 8 Helper -J and Surgeon HOTEL Helper AVALON 185 Hours: 11-- 1 $-- 7- 5 -8 Dentist Henry Hall Building to: phon PRICE 10o PROVO 45c LOGAN $100 "-- w r BANK CIGAR STORE WALTER C. GEAflE Attorney-At-La- BILLIARD PARLOR All kindi of Cifr, Cigarettei, Tobaccos, Candy asd Soft Office 313 Electric Building - UTAH PRICH -- "' (ft TCLEPWOME- - Drfia J. E. FLYNN Undertaker and Licensed Embalmer.. price - AKtbulanee Service utah Phone 29 The Bert BiUiards KtT ' nm b County -- th. 1 |