OCR Text |
Show Entered as second class mall Carbon County, Utai. E. BRANDON. PUBLICATION Subscription Ratea, per year in THURSDAY, 11 ers association is to be criticised for his statement before the pubthat Utah lic lands committee wants the public lands of the state held and administered by the fed era government, going even fur- ther and asking that the public range be administered by the for est service in the manner it now is administering the forest reserves. This may be a selfish wish of the Uvetock growers but would not be approved by the people of Utah. PEACEFUL Fifteen hundred jobless men marched on the courthouse in the city of Spokane, Wash., recently, and after Impressing the county commissioners they were peaceful, made demands for relief, stating they would be forced to looting stores and restaurants if nothing BEER Yes, and another thing hap of coil' A subcommittee pened. Kress reported favorably on a bill to legalize 4 per cent beer as a stimulation to business and to re Such a law. lieve unemployment. it reported, would raUe $347,000,-00in revenue. 0 ALIBIS Suys the Senator from Sandpit "To place the blame for the depression and the unemployment of millions of workers, the alibi factories are working overtime to get political ready for the coining And if we swallow campaign. their product we're as dumb ax the man who, to cure his limp, had all his teeth pulled only to discover he had a nail in his shoe." Better read it over again, for I am sure the Senator means it. ; DEM0RAYGR0UrniAMES CHAIRMEN OF PRECINCTS M. Reese, secretary of the Carbon county Democratic central committee has announced that precinct chairmen have been appointed as follows: Walter C. Gease. Helper; C. H. Madsen Price; Joseph Seaton, of Sweet Mine; E. C. Rich, Harper; T. F. Kelter, Heiner; Silas Rowley, Spring Glen; E. L. Harrison, R. Standardville; Frank T. Bennett, Spring Canyon; Arthur Havener, La t mi a; Thomas Chantry, Wel- one-thir- E He Missed the Job A SMILE A DAY Even in the midst of the serious business of trying; to balance onr national budeet. coneress must have its little laughs. That probably is the reason why a certain congressman has threatened a congressional investigation to ascertain why his bill failed to pass the lower house. o o-- o MISAPPLICATION OF FUNDS CHARGED IN SEED LOANS April 6. BEAVER, An inves- tigation has been started by the local federal seed loan office of charges that funds borrowed as seed loans have been diverted to other channels. The law pro vides a fine of $1000 for expending this money for purposes other than those set forth in the application blanks. o O 0 Subscribe for The Journal. EVERY DAY IS HELPER DAY BUT CONTEST NAMED Clarence J. Hawkins of the music department at the University of Utah will act for the second successive year as one of the judges of the intermountain band contest to be held at Price April 6 under the direction of the Price chamber of commerce. More than 200 students have entered the solo competition, aud the task of judging this division" is expected to be more than the three judges can handle. 14-1- o o o printing Tubes GRILL Hotel Temple Square 200 ROOMS 300 TILE BATHS Rates $1.50 to $3.00 It's a mark of distinction to atop at the RADIO CONNECTIONS FOR EVERY ROOM Loans aggregating $14,653 are asked for in 85 applications for seed loans received hy O. P. Mad-secounty agricultural agent. But two farmers have applied for the maximum sum of $400, while the average amount asked is $166. Eighty more farmers are expected to file for loans before the closing date April 30. TEMPLE SQUARE H0T8L YOUR HEADQUARTERS WHEN IN SALT LAKE MAKE CITY. - - -- :. ERNEST C. R0SSITER, Manager C v tin a e r j. ft A IN PAIKS new set for ....$15,311 Lifetime Guaranteed GOODYEAR SPEEDWAY Supertwist Cord Tires New High Peaks In Goodyear Value! Thi Niw Foao Eight Dt Luxe Tudo Sedan Husky, dependable, guaran-tee- d tires and tube- - you get these matchless bargains because millions more people buy Goodyear. Come eee them! Light-cylinde- egree r, 65-bora- V-typ- e, Vitrationjesa Engine power e. CASH PRICES Price ol Each Full OraniM Opportunity used to knock Emnow it telephones. ployer look for the quickest way to reach people the telephone directory. Is your same lifted? it pays to have telephone service. Why not discuss It with us today? 3Vx4.50-i30x4.50-2- 3OI.V00-2- 3U5 M J.M S.4f 0 28x5.23-131x5.23-2- .71 .H . 8 1 iSBa 7 Ci Roomy, Beautiful Bodies Tub I 4.15 7 .06-2- 1 In 4.I7 S4) 1 28i4.75-- l 29I4.75-J9ii.M-1- 9 Each .!I f s.s 1 The Mountain Telephone A .14 Telegraph CAFE Quick Service KTWANIS DINING HALL IN CONNECTION Most Attractive Cafe in Carbon County OPEN DAY AND NIGHT PHONE 194 New Low Prices NATIONAL BROADCAST 6:30 p. m Wednesday Helper Consumption Reliability 3-- 4 600DYIAR Saturday Low Gaaoline Comfortable -- 132 Co. Silent Second G ear Miles per Hour Serenty-fiv- e Rapid Acceleration Riding Springs I.I I.M .7 4 I.I In your old tire for the new States Low Center of Gravity Synchronized Silent Gear Shift .94 47 .04 .I J.1J 1.00 TRADE Excellent Meals HELPER Salt Lake City's Newest Hostelry LOW PRICES HELPER'S BEST DAY son than myself, FRANK HENSLER tf 29x4.40-2- 1 New AND BIGGEST n o NOTICE o I will not be responsible for any debts Incurred by any other, per- ANNOUNCING THE NEW FOR D m NEW 18-2- o LOANSAPPUED FOR V8 JUNE 8 IS HELPER j i Got our prices on job SEED Joseph liorzaga 38, of Helper, plead guilty Wednesday of last week before Justice J. W. Hammond in Price to possession of liquor and was fined $100, which was paid. He was arrested by federal officers following a raid on a local inn, a small quantity of beer and whiskey being found on the premises. OFLNTERSTATE BAND recently Issued by the Bureau of Home Economics of the U. B. Department of Agriculture, Th-siiln- g the fact that bean are a concentrated food. It state: "Beans are plentiful even in years of drought, easy to preserve, easy to ship, easy to store; and when cooked they swell to a quantity two or three times their bulk. To use beans economically, the housewife moat keep In mind two things. Beans require a long time to cook, and after cooking they will spoil unless kept oool and used fairly soon, with oarafal treatment, however, she can cook enough beans for three meals at one time and serve them la different ways." The "three for a quarter" sates of canned beans which art being featured In many store now, make them also economical, espeso oo when stops to concially sider the coat of fnel In the long process of cooking dried h trans, and the tact that there la a risk In canned spoils service in any emergency. Safety for swimmers and the saving of human lives Is the primary purpose of the summer Mr. Carroll pointed campaign. out. The life saving and swimming campaign will be held in pools and rivers as resignated by the local Red Cross chapters, each of which will make its own ar rangements and be in charge of all registrations. The Red Cross chapter at Price will hold Us campaign July Temple Square Hotel u, JUDGE lived in New England, long ago, ycrar family wasn't considered quite respectable unless every Saturday night baked beans and brown bread appeared oa the table. Whether yon added molasses to your baked beau or whether yon didn't, depended oa whether you belong to tal eiMJx or to that elan. Bat, aayway, your bean were baked to four times their original six and erred with squares of properly cored pork, crltp without aad fiattr Under within. A Mi ftean Family The Frenchman takes his haricots almost a seriously, aad the 8Btard has even been kaown to sceme poetic about his plntoa aad trijole. Strange names they are to ua, who are familiar with aavy beaks, pea beans, green beans, wax beans, llmaa and lentils but they are all la the good old aeaa family. The Bcoaomical Bean" is the Utte t a Market Basket bulletin, IFtotjnso SUSPECT ADMITS GUILT lington; Fred T. Jones, Sunnyside. Tracy Jones, Castlegate; E. C. McKee, Rolapp; William Manson, Kenilworth; David Parmley, Consumers; H. J. Fisher. Coal City; Robert McKiunon, Hiawatha; Wm. Pizza, Scofield; Nick Clear Creek; D. C. Vave-naWattis; Francis Dimick, KU, and Walter E. Knox, Columbia. six-ho- wanted by Carbon county officers to answer crim inal charges are in custody In California and will be returned for trial, according to A. E. Gib on, desk sergeant at the sheriffs office. They are Arthur Sheppard, who escaped from jail September 19 while awaiting trial on a grand larcency charge, and Clint Jones, suspected of stealing an automo bile belonging to A. W. Mack s eral months ago. Jones probably will face a grand larcency charge 'VgCg 1 11 11 was done. The commissioners promised to open a county commissary and furnish food staples to families where an investigation proved they were in need. It is indeed a sad condition that allows the condoning of such violence danger. in man This demonstration of the power of an encroaching dictatorship threats, but the beast of crime is not new. It has been witnessed in all of our cities; a comes forth when he faces hunger for himself and family. slinking, treacherous power that preys upon the people, levying PRIZE BOOB tribute, exacting its demands, enforcing its own punishments with ruthless and cruel disregard for all human rights, even to life Secretary Hyde of the department of agriculture In Washingitself. D. C, charges that the issuton, to It is a shameful picture paint in this year of the Washington ing of federal loans "to increase bicentennial. That observance has produced much lip praise of the the farmers surpluses and keep institutions which we Americans of this age, who did not create down his prices, except in periods them and have done much to destroy them, claim as our own. By of drouth or storm disaster was desome process of muddy thinking we are able to spur ourselves into unjustified." He termed his partment, the lending agency for to these were institutions that and bequeathed babbling shouting $50,000,000 as the prize "boob" us by Washington, but we haven't unwrapped them lately to see In the history of finance, and staid what they are. Kansas City Star. it was lending money on thinner security and sustaining more losses than ever before In the history CONGRESS TO THE RESCUE of money lending in the world. to railroads Good old congress the by Thus it is noticeable there are help always striving one means or another. First we see a bill introduced in congress two sides to a question. which instructs the interstate commerce commission to ascertain GRAPES just why it is that the railroads cannot put into effect a Out in California the great vine work day for their employes. yard organization has voted this It would be inteiesting to see them pass a bill like that af- year to reduce the grape crop by d in order to prevent a fecting newspaper offices or other private enterprises. and maintain "living Again we see them toying with a bill which would specify surplus If it prices" for the grower. the number of men which would comprise the crew of a railroad chances that there is not enough At brakemen ad infinitum. train, naming engineers, conductors, money this year to allow people the same time, street cars romp thru the congested districts of our to buy their grapes, it is possible a further reduction will come next largest cities with a motorman to run the thing and a conductor to ring up the nickles. You don't see anyone beating it back down year. But no price reduction is the street a quarter of a mile to flag when a street car stops to planned. take "on or discharge passengers, and you don't see congress losing PRESIDENCY Now that Calvin Coolidge has any sleep over it, either. refused to be a candidate for presCongress might try to tell the newspapers how much or a ident this year and has pledged force they must hire to print their publications eaoh day, each his support to Herbert Hoover for but they week. They might try to control other types of business his name is being don t. They just content themselves with trying to help the rail strongly mentioned for the 1936 are nomination. There many who roads. have felt that Mr. Coolldge was the one republican who could be HIGHEST IN HISTORY elected this year, but sentiment is Free traders are never bound by such mundane things as fig- changing strongly back to Presiures or facts. Their reasoning is usually in the theoretical clouds dent Hoover. of fancy, and never was it more so than at present. MANDATE For example, we have had a great deal of talk of late to the Word conies Horn Washington effect that the present tariff is the highest in our history, yet the that a dry organization has passed a mandate on to the leaders ol facts prove that assertions of this kind are unadulerated bunk. both the republican and democrat In 1910, under the Payne Aldrich tariff law, we collected 21.11 ic prtiea that they will not supper cent of the valuation of all our imports in customs duties. port a wet candidate for president, In 1930, six months under the Fordney law and six months regardless of party affiliation. For under the Hawley or present tariff law, we collected 14.83 per taking this same stand they concent of the valuation of all imports in customs duties. This year's demn the wets. collections are running between 14 and 15 per cent. A CHILD In 1910 we collected in customs 40.10 per cent of the valuathat force is wrong Charging tion of dutiable imports; in 1930, 44.72 per cent. The increase was In leading a child to better mana little over 10 per cent. But the gap between European and ners, Angelo I'titri, writing in the Salt Lake Tribune, gives much American wages, which this protection is supposed to cover, had food for thought to parents in the By increased about 100 per cent during the period 1910-193following paragraph: what reasoning is it argued that we have a far more rather than "Something must be done to a far less protective tariff than in 1910, for instance? guide children and save them from their own helplessness and ignorance. Force is not the solution. SITUATION THE Understanding, faith, love, in one In the attempt to solve an international problem of major im- form or another will solve any conflict, every man or portance such as the present And the woman must maintain a highly statesmanlike attitude. first requisite of a statesman is the courage to face facts squarely. In the mass of propaganda, it is sometimes difficult to see faots clearly. In the excitement of controversy, it is often difficult to weigh matters in their true proportions. The Rafu Shimpo, Los Angeles Japanese newspaper. Two men SAN' FRANCISCO. April 6. Seeking to overcome the terrific loss or life by drowning each year (8000 deaths being the 1931 Red Cross chapters thru rford), o it Arizona. California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Utah are g making prepartlons to hold and swimming campaigns during the summer months. H. Carroll, Edwin assistant national director of first aid and life saving in announcing plans fur the safety campaign, said nine special life saving representatives from the Pacific branch office in San Francisco will be at the service of chapters. These experts will act as instructors, teaching the beginners and help-in- s swimmers to improve their stroke. As swimmers become more six-ho- e, OFFICERS HOLD TWO WANTED IN UTAH r i proficient they are given Instruction in life saving, thus augmenting the thousands of volunteers who have been trained to render NATIONAL RED CROSS TO TEACH LIFE SAVING : WHAT OF AMERICA t Two hundred years from the birth of Washington, who bequeathed to u a great heritage won thru fire, sword, suffering and we who are the inheritors find ourselves agaif under a yoke, abject and shameful subjects of a power enthroned by our own lethargy. This new despotism is symbolized by machine gun and bomb, by kidnaping, extortion and racketeering Its braienness is exemplified by the picture of Al Capone seeking to barter his way out of jail as if the Lindbergh babe were his hostage, as well the child might be. Must America bargain with its public enemies to restore a child to its parents! Must the child itself be sacrificed before a nation is aroused to its own ignomy! The moral rot that other countries see in us is confirmed in the kidnaping of the child of Colonel Lindbergh a tragedy that appalls and stuns. If the crime itself damns America's social organization, the necessary means taken to defeat it damn her public justice. Colonel Lindbergh cannot be blamed for turning to gangdom, now in possession of our soil and citadels, and commissioning the generals of its defiant army of occupation to recover hit infant son. The child is not his hostage alone: it is America's hostage to the forces that have seized our most precious liberties while we hare slept. The time has come again when the drams should beat and the lights gleam from church tower to rouse us to our COAST Many Kinds of Beans ! j 11 Thursday. April 7. 1931 JOURNAL chil'l'g problem. Not in a minute, j not in a day, but in the fullness j of time, or this is a human spirit j r ith which you deal and its wayaj Continued from Pag One matter at the postoffiee in Helper, are mysterious, hidden and unex-- j RIGHT AND WRONG Governor Ueorge H. Dern is to; perteu. be commended for the stand taken: SIX HOUR DAY . Editor and Publisher to the federal government's pro-- 1 got busy recently on a Congress a surface states tender to the posal DAY THURSDAY ltrnHu mlwUt t'tnti resolution which was signed hy t oil KnHli Ul UVIIV I omn n President Hoover Instructing the (1 U IUC . ...4 advance n n.nol -- lVltu tin.) interstate commerce commission to $2.09 derlying be establishMARCH 31, 19S2 will make a fight for all or none. the efefct might forin day railway laI.. 41. McLarland, president of ing a bor. Its report will be awaited the Utah Cattle and Horse Grow- with interest. MATTERS OF INTEREST Uy C. WATT UKAN'UON THE HELPER JOURNAL DeLOS HELPER THE Page Two 7:00 p, m Super-Servic- e Station Houdaille double-actin- g hydraulic shock absorbers with thermostatic control . . . New rear spring construction . . . Automatic g spark control . . retor s ;i . Down-dra- carbu- ft Carburetor silencer . ... Bore, 11 6 inches. Stroke, 3 34 inches i . . Piston displacement, 221 cubic inches : i 4 counterbalanced Crankshaft Large, effective fully 3 GREAT Roadster . . Phaeton . . Tudor Sedan $460 495 500 John Laboroi. Mgr. Centrally Located (f. 0. B. Detroit, plus freight NEW enclosed tive brakes . . Distincwheels with large hub radiator . ; . caps . ; , Handsome Graceful new roof line aad slanting windshield of clear polished plate safety glass . . . Single-ba- r bumpers, chromium . . i Low, drop center frame . . . plated Mechanically operated pump drawing fuel from fourteen-gallogasoline tank steel-spok- e V-ty- n in rear CAR , , . $490 Sjwrt Coupe , lord or Sedan 535 590 Coupe four-whe- . . , Choke on instrument panel AT AN Individual inside sun visors Cowl ventilation . . . Adjustable driver's seat . . . Choice of Mohair, Broadcloth or Bedford Cord upholstery in all d luxe closed types. THE NEW FORD CAR An improve Ford tngme, operating with new smootbniii, h viU llt in fourteen body tjpet t$iQ lesl than the corresponding V-- price) listed below. R J 8 UNUSUALLY LOW Deluxe Roadster $500 teluxeTudnr $550 De Lkxe Phaeton Deluxe 34 5 Coupe Cabriolet . . . and delivery. Rumpen and tpjri tire extra. Small down payment and convenient, 575 610 economical PRICE Be luxe Tot dor . $645 Victor! 600 ConnrtibleSedait 650 .... term through your FvrJ dealer) |