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Show THURSDAY. OCTOBER 25, 1934 .t . : ,u adventure. .h ance of Scott and a, fronts uis, uiey set forward. Among the c Vi UI. train ar IN NEW SCOTT RANDOLPH yuung widow. Gail Patrick and hef MOVIE BY ZANE GREY on. Ceding from hw husbinJl who want to get possess of lhe t andolph Scott, tall and handsome U a ' . star. AT THE ROYAL Ht,. play, the .mnunt adventure 7 fiction TZZ Z of Zane in the g .SetUera -Weon Wheels- the dramatic of the t,rst j Gall Patrick account of the adventure, is befriend by pw cross the countrv- tn oa Min to " " to his tmin i,responds agi" mes in 1144. which all along Friday But .... are teet v.. u j o.t.rHiv to the Royal Theatre. uans, and it is M"""" 0,y Wtten ,v . Gail Patrick Monte Blue mi fc. ond Hatton In the chief support- Oregon. film also presenU the that the J ing roles, the chlM actors. tentlon of 8iaughlerTnK t!l est dfecovery among I members ... . . nm T jxa hn ni or me caravan. little iuu. an important role as Gall Patricks Blue's true nature becomes (vMWl. when he appears with the son. Indians. The -Wagon Wheels'" was adapted from valiant defense by the pioneers the Zane Grey novel "Fighting Cara- about to crumble when Scott saves the vans'' and depicts the hardships, day and routs the Indians a clever by of lives the romantic sturdy: ruse. Safe Bl periis and tne pioneers cross adventuring P oneers who helped to over lnto Q forge an empire by their conquest of Patrick announce to little Blllv tht Scott will be his new faher. the West. at action opens Independence, The Leila Benne, Jan Duggan and Olin xia where pioneers from all over the Howland appear in the supporting for the start of roles of this film which East are gathering was directed by Charles Barton. Oon : -- J; j" ,-- MAE WEST STARS IN STORY OF SEALED msou Iqpl Mae West returns to the gay Naughty Nineties in her latest starring picture for Paramount, "Belle of the Nineties," coming Sunday. Monday and Tuesday to the Royal Theatre. "Belle of the Nineties" presents Mae West aa a colorful burlessue queen who leaves St. Ixui3 for New Orleans when the man she loves walks out on her. Mae West, herself, wrote the original story and screen play for "Belle of the Nineties,'' and Leo McCare directed the picture. The star introduces several new, typically Westian songs written for her by Sam Coslow and Arthur Johnston. Three leading mon play opposite Mae West in this film. They are Roger Pryor, John Mack Brown and John Miljan. Katherine De Mille, Warren Hymer, Stuart Holmes and Duke Ellington and his band are featured in the supporting cast. How can you tell that a battery really is "new?" That question is answered now by the new and ex- elusive NATIONAL "Seal." ji AT THE COZY T This seal Is a metal disc welded te the negative post. It must be removed before the battery con be In- ta iu tht mew seal and let us explain the new NATIONAL KM! adjustment plan. 11 RALPH BELLAMY HEADS FINE CAST IN "GIRL IN DANGER" m stalled. FOR SALE By Ray's Battery Shop if CSsj LANDIS 1 y J eMh' - .4-' I EAtRIN "Girl In Danger," a thrilling detective melodrama, featuring Ralph Bellamy in the role of Inspector Trent, with Shirley Grey, Arthur Hohl and Charles Sabin In support, will head the new program at the Cozy Theatre, starting Sunday. The film Is an exciting delineation of Inspector Trent's amazing adventures tracking down a ring of jewel thieves, particularly In the case of a stolen emerald, in which a thrill-seekisociety girl has been innocently Implicated. Shirley Grey Pert, blonde-heade- d portrays the adventurous social deb who aids the conspirators In the burglary of the famous "Cortez Emerald.'' Getting herself invovlved In the affair for a lark, Miss Grey soon finds herself the center of a turbulent series of including a thrills and adventures, a kidnapping, police and a narrow escape from death at the hands of a desperate crminal. The solution of the baffling robbery devolves upon Inspector Trent, and in his usual, deliberating manner, he adttb wits and wit to the unraveling of the mystery. "Girl In Danger," incidentally, is fourth- in the series of Inspector Trent detective murder mysteries which Ralph Bellamy has brought to the screen under the banner, of Columbia Pictures. The latest one preceding it was "The Crime of Helen Stanley," in which Miss Grey was also featured. DanOthers in the cast of "Girl In SherVincent Ward Bond, ger" are McDonald man,, Robert Allen, Francis is direction The and J. Carrol Naish. Lederman. by D. Ross n, y i THE PARK SHOE REPAIRING SUSP FIRST EAST, FOURTH NORTH Old Glover Grocery Building HAROLD OSBORNE, Prop. Come la and give us a trial, work done while you wait. 1 WINTEE I CEC i COMING 1 or You can't afford to take chances with ordinary Cheap Plumbing. UE-WH- AT? hatpin e fur a greater number. The becomes Infested U is necessary to last fifty years have seen an Immense I avoid planting these tegetabes there diffusion ef knowledge. It ha en for many years. dowed the majority with that faculty Pulling and burning these old plants of concentration which brings cn a also prevents the survival of many inrrowh of character on which know sects which hibernate during tfc winledge must feed and which develops ter under the litter. Perennial garden Into wisdom. plants such as asparagus, rhubarb, Tea. we live better and with less etc., should be cut off at the surface work, but we still have a long way of the ground after frost has killed, to go to become better men than our the tops and the dead parts raked up grandfathers were. and burned. When your garden Is fertilised with, FALL 13 TIME TO CLEAN and allowed to lie throughout tie wt UP AND PLOW UP fresh manure and plowed Ia the t&3 ter without further working, the Trees little work In the fall devoted to tag tnd thawing breaks tip tfcl soil In. cleaning and plowing1 br digging the to small parlcles and gives them garden will help to keep the plants chance to settle down into a fiae comhealthy and the garden free from pact mellow esd bed. When harrowweeds next summer, says J. C. Hogtn-so- ed in the spring, such a teed bed beextension specialist in Agronomy. comes Ideal for ths rapid growth Ct Cleaning the garden In the fall will young plants. remove a big crop of weed seeds and Fall plowng, likewise, helps to km simplify the problem of weeding next Insect pests by exposing the vggs and summer. From the viewpoint of weed the hibernating adults to ths freezing control alone fall cleaning Is profit winter weather. able. Pull all old vegetables and weeds; The plowing under of the manure pile and burn them. Some of our most In the fall causes the plant food which destructive plant diseases are caused the manure contains to become availby fungi which live In the old roots able to the young pants in the early and stems. As these decay In the spring and thus cause more rapid, ground the fungi become scattered vigorous and even growth, Mr Hogen-so- n through the soil. When the soli once says. I am i ho public treasury. k?pt under constant guard looters and despoilers. against Prominent Aj never before I have been con Refute Statements Bankers Are Re verted in a ponderus fee4 trough. De A veritable deluge ts being poured fusing Sound Loans scribes Reasons for Reduced into me. only to be seized upon and Volume of Credit snatched up by a growing army of Justling grasping, contending human- piGtSES supplied by typlcaL well- - ity. KsnagedXfinls ia different tarts of Th more I give. the louder they UJ eonntry show that 1 llgSTropof- - cry tor MOKE, noB of all applications tor loans bars The FAT as well is the LEAN have been granted In the past year or two. deserted their own boards to come tfl says Albert W. Atwood In a recent artf. ela ia Tht Saturday Evening Pest on feed ther fiU out of my generous boll. There seems to be no end to their "The Idle Dollar." Excerpts from Mr. At wood's srticle follow: capacity. n, Their hunger Is never appeased. "Frequently banks state that as high as 80 per cent of sll such applications They give bo thought that there are granted and for from 60 to 75 per might come a day when the food eent of the amount asked for. Allow, stream that feeds them may dwindle ing that the bankers make these figures to a mere trickle. as favorable to their own ease as posExperience has taught me that that sible, it seems strange that we are told and must, come. again and again that banks art not day will, I see signs of shrinkage In Already lending at alL "It we take into account the whole the flow. Will they then be satisfied with less class of regular bank borrowers, the plain fact Is very few want to borrow and less Will they be willing to return to yet For the word borrow is merely an other name for the word 'debt, and we their accustomed haunts and provide face a great world-wid- e drive to get out once more for their own means of sup of debt port "An experienced small-citbanker. O will they storm the fount, only asked if banks were lending freely to find it dry? enough, wisely replied: The really Who, then, will be able to stay the good borrower does not wish to borrow now. In fact, I think our customers are furies? making s remarkably fine showing in What, then, will become of me Vl paying off their loans, especially loans If I am destroyed, what Is there to of long standing.' replace me? It Is I speaking the public treasury. The Shrinkage of Credit "Or if we think of business concerns rather than of Individuals. It Is con Mrs. S. J. Taylor returned from a servative to say that those able to main two weeks visit at Garland, Monday. tain high credit ratings have been most She was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. ones to LEHI'S AMUSEMENT CENTER the able maintain ample cash ly resources and, therefore, least In need Heber Hart. WEEKLY PROGRAM of credit As prices and cosU fell, many concerns found themselves with plenty An Army of Goodwill of cash because of the shrinkage in operations. Cash resources .were still When members of the Junior Red further swollen by reduced dividends, Cross ZANE GREY'S learned that schoolbooks had and smaller Inventories made bank bor been destroyed In the Kentucky floods rowings still less necessary. last August they gave $100 from the "Expressed in another way, banks National Children's Fund to buy new cannot expand credit, they cannot make textbooks for use in the schools. Ths loans, unless there Is a demand tor the maximum membership for the Junior same. Fundamentally, the business Red With RANDOLPH SCOTT, MON TE BLUE and RAYMOND HATTON Cross last year was 7,350,280, an transaction makes the loan, the loan Increase- over the A thrill drama of death defying action . .. and romance o previous year Even better tbaa does not make the transaction. It Is a more than 250,000. They carry on civic the book. Don't miss It! mistake to try to force upon business ind service programs in their own ALSO GOOD SHORTS organizations funds which they do not communities which each year ADMISSION ONLY 10c and 15c. bring need. Under the circumstances the comfort and to thousands of pleasure 'Idle dollar ts a natural and proper needy and unfortunate people. An in enough phenomenon. A demand tor ternatlonal friendship is built tip credit Is difficult to create artificially, through correspondence with Junior and tbare Is always danger tn so doing. Red Cross members in foreign coun"Banks must be liquid enough at all tries. times to pay depositors. The idea of a commercial loan is that It represents a To Teach Water Safety process In business. If Life saving services offering train those banker advances makes the only Ing in first aid methods for swimmers that are inherently sound, and selects hare been carried on by the Red Cross his maturities wisely, he will have in- tor two decades. In 20 years, life saving ; coming funds to meet demands. certificates have been awarded to more A AS Government Lending than a half million people who are In "As everybody knows, the Govern- terested In water sports. Last year ment has vast lending agencies, for chapters Issued 72,603 lite saving cerhome owners, farmers, and the like. tificates. These have nothing to do with the subThe Red Cross enrolled 3,802,384 ject of this article, except that all such Government operations would be Im- members in last year's roll call Join possible if the banks did not lend ths in the 1934 roll cIr Armistice Day to IT'S MAE TIMS Government money for the purpose. Thanksgiving. "No one can set a time when borrowing will be resumed. But it will corns 4V when men once more feel that condi. . Steamboat coming Fires on Morro Castle and at sa gT tions are sufficiently settled to warrant 'round the bend briiig Nome, Alaska, Received them in taking chances, In entering In to make Red Cross of and trying upon deals, Help ing Lady Lou with her money." Workers Mr. Atwood says that It may be that aorjrjcetriew dottiest now. Just overcautious are banks the her new 'tall, dark A number of tragic and unusual as they were overconfident In 1929, but and handsome! ' and disasters have recently called for calls attention to the tact that until t Red Cross relief. a little more than a year ago banks new songs galore! Included in them have been a were failing "partly because they had flood in Kentucky, following a series loaned too freely, and were being n August: epiof cloudbursts criticized right and left for precisely demics of which disease threatened adds: He that fault" several sections, Including some "Indeed, the banks which had been caused by drought conditions. Red cautious In their lending policy came Cross workers found much to do Vf ' ,f 7 fww v through the crisis safely. Under such tf W"" for the survivors of the Morro conditions It Is utterly useless to criti. 1 ';WAiMl)J.'a."5'.a(MWv.1s.jSii Castle fire and for those engaged cize banks for not making loans After Si 1,2 k i In rescue work; and Red Cross rethe experience they had for several I St a? H lief went by airplane to Alaska years, especially In 1932 and 1933. it Is when the famous old gold camp. only natural that they should relax Nome, burned In September. their requirements very slowlj and gradually. "Unfortunately, many of the applications for loans are not from people who want temporary banking accommodation for three or six months and are I tvH filslJ . quite able to meet their maturity dates, but are from those who really need permanent capital. They are busted and they want someone to stake them to a new start What they really seek is a ; partner to furnish them with long-tim- e be3 capital. But depositors Insist upon ing paid on demand, and, therefore, it Is a grave question whether banks should tie tip their funds for any length It Is said that all centuries have of time." Also PATHE NEWS and s GOOD CARTOON COMEDY. favored the rich but only the last half ADMISSION ONLY 10c and 15c HOW ONE FARMER century haa begun to smile upon the HELPED HIMSELF working man. In every material respect the work man today has privileges which A farmer accustomed to keeping ing SPECIAL PICTURES FOR HALLOWE'EN and his to grandfather's imagination hardly records found that It cost $18.50 produce an acre of corn. His average could have conceived. Free education, yield was 33 bushels, selling for 60 more clothes and better ones, more cents per bushel. On thiB basis he was travel, and even if he can't travel, he DORIS KARLOFF, LEWIS STONE and MYRNA LOY in producing without either profit or loss. and his family can acquire from the A study of his costs indicated means movies a good idea of the wonders of by which the yields might be Increased the world. Everything that happens is makwithout proportional expenses. By Ex- deported In his newspaper, and even at the discovered of facts use ing The destroyer without: pity, th$ Thill piled upon thrill, shudder on shudderl periment Stations, the farmer secured If they could have afforded to buy it, a sow. witnoux beautiful temptneas one-haan increased yield of tour and many grandfathers would have been In BUCK JONES 4 of No. Also 4JI Chspter bushels per acre (37tt bushels, instead unable to read It. Now electric lights of S3). By Increasing the yield and instead of an oil lamp, automoblea, RED RIDER' bolldlng down expenses, this farmer better homes and comforts. was able to make a profit of six cents Nobody will deny that th world Is per bushel. COMING SOON Irsns Dunne and John Boles In "Ths Affs of Innocence, moving steadily toward the greatest BORROWERS CAUTIOUS I iuust be Writer rUJ ( T1HEATEE Friday and Saturday, October 26 & 27 "Wagon Wheels" - Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, October 28, 29 and 30 -- OHnSUVZE! ' f U vJ U St j" A &t to tlfek J cs.;"--- a Wed. and Thursday, Oct. 31 & Nov. later. cost you dollars and dollars in trouble and expense HELP YOU LET US GIVE YOU ESTIMATES AND 1 ITS B All AIM nSGE'SITG "The Mask of Fu Manchu" SOLVE THE PROBLEMS ML AFTER y NEW ORLEANS Kepiace now witim Tiroa in ' lt 1 i ' FINDS BANKS WILLING, . IMDTir lf PLUMBING and HEATING THE PHONE 23 LESL UTAH STATE STREET Si '"T CM ;J j |