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Show SMITHHELD THIS ! u Second Clam Mail Matter TRADING AT S1SITHFIELD way of building up yHir home town is by doing yt'ur trading with local merhcante. Recently a strange lady met with the misfortune cf having her car damaged while driving thru our city. She asked the curious crowd of spectators where she could have her car repaired. A local townsman (because he resides in Smithfield) stepped forward with the that the car would have to be towed to a nearby town for mechanical service. This gentleman, evidently forgot, or over- f the surem proper looked. (he fact that Smithfield at the present has three purveyors of fine mechanical assistance. Or poaaibly it waa just a habit of patconcerns that ha wanted to pasa on to the unwary ronizing stranger. The soundest argument for trading at home is, spend your money where it will do yon and your neighbor the most good in Smithfield. LLTS RU1LD UP OUR TOWN BY TRADING IN SMITHFIELD. POO i A WORLD RECORD Prsctirally every necessity of life, along with most of the luxuries, it did prior to the World War with a single important exception. That exception is electric power. In spite of five years of depression, your food costs yon mdre now than in 1913. So do furniture, shoes and fueL So do entertainment and reading matter. The average cost of living is now nearly 50 per rent In excess of the 1913 level. Electricity, by contrast, has gone down ateadiiy. In no year haa, it shown any substantial advance in eot in almost every year it has ia the more amading sluiwn substantial decreases. And this record in the light of the fart that reductions were made In the face cf rising costs of st kinds.Labar, skilled and unskilled, receives more than it did in pre-wdays. The working day and the working week are shorter. Metals, chemicals, buidling materials all commodities the industry must buy are more expensive. And, moat important dt ail, electric taxes have soared until, today, it ia reliably estimated that the industry's total tax bill takes 15 cents out of every dollar of gross income it receives. Few industries bear so heavy, a tax burden. Ameican A federal survey of electric rates in 32 representative cities, ahtfws that the average rate in February, 193S, was 29.8 per rent under December, 1913. There, in cold figures, is n record that challenges any industry in the world for service to the public and tax payments in support of government. now costa miAre than ar -- Sometimes the malcontent! make try. Then something happens to wak ;us up, like this letter we Just from a Utah fanner, We are living in a very Interesting time, I have never seen eo much unrest. Anything goes at this time just so a certain clement can get something for nothing. We are ruled by a class that don't know a hoe from a shovel. All they know is the school room. As long back as I can remember, I have heard the old story that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. "I have visited eleven nations and born in a foreign country. know thie ia the best country ij in the world. Anyone who will work and save can climb the ladderto ed i Advertising Rate Will Re Made Known Upon Application One A so much noise we forget about the ftu-'ga- l, people who are the thinking, eoun-- ! the of backbone working Published Every Friday at Smithfield, Utah at the PMtoffic at Smithfield. Utah, SnlttfltfA GOOD COUNTRY The SMITHFIELD SENTINEL Euteiwd IS . $ - , BENTI.VEL success. I will be 73 years next April sailed tlmt with my mother we from Denmark for the U. S. We enme from Omaha to Utah with an ox team. I walked all the way. With no education and ns poor as r.nyone could be, I have made my way up the ladder to the $150,-09- 0 mark, but it has taken hard work and aom fbrcaight. I have never had n dollar given to me, but have given thousands sway. It makes me tired to hear a lot of pinheads get together and plot against the man who has the nerve to get out and do things. In my early manhood, 15 of us young men located on a stream in Utah. All any of ns had was our teams. I bought some of my neighbor out through foresight I worked hard. Today I vn more land, more and outer, more horses, cattle left iheep than the 12 who an all combined. Under the plan of nme I should divide up. No. This is a good country for ail who are on the square. If I had the power, I could cure this evil that is so prevalent thru he land. I would send all the discontented to Europe, give them 50 lollars to start out on, and tell chen Now root hog, or die. Give them three yean abroad. They would Chen bo willing to coma back and be good Indiana. In sere weather, not much fof i water likely to drift in from open farther out in the lake. Often there Ice is enough wind to keep the In whiro mow. of dean swept frost weather, on the other hand, from the stiaming of deep smoke water remains unewporated and may despread over the ice. It also may powdered of finely sheet posit a mow. fr would be the permanent U Nofiee to it amendment, law of the a Constitutional IN THE DISTRICT COURT Aide from thatrJets take a look THE FIRST JUDICIAL J? in waa law AAA ease. That at tha effect two years, sevsn months and of 24 daya. Hundreds of millions ! . When the air is clear and the surface of the ice dean,, ife at 0 to thick, degrees Fshrenhdf ! hound an fasten and often become thicker when the air is foggy and the surface snowy, even if the tembelow perature is 20 to 80 degrees than xero. All OUNCE OF PREVENTION Everybody knows the legend shout the little Dutch boy who stuck his arm in the hole in the dike. Old it can be applied as that legend very pertinently to some things that are happening today. Because of Supreme Court decisions that laws are unconstitutional, some persona want to restrict the power of the courts. Others advocate that amendments Cbnstitutional would wipe out state lines and give dictatorial control to a bureaucratic federal regime. These individuals, fortunately in the minority, should remember that even their ideas might be different if the federal government were in the bands of some other groups The same powers .of dictatorship could be qgltrf by any i. Credit TRICT OF frHE STAtb UTAH, IN AND por COUNTY OF CACHE. dollars were wlleeted and disbursed most Some of it may be returned; U- wa paid all of it of it wont; Now take a look at the littl Dutch bay. He didn't try to rebuild the dike. Nor did he try to mare the water run back over it uphill.' Nor did he ' stand idly by, Asking his head while the hole got bigger and bigger and the flood wiped away his home. He stopped np the hole. Theres a hole we ton stop np the by concerning ourselves with our legof forcing few, by making islators to to on guard againat ilallegal acta. The American people acready are taking a much more tive interest in government. Surely they wont atop when the job i only half dona. RADIO NOTICE TO CREDITORS In' tha Batter of the Ewm. DAVID JENSEN, also DAVID A. JENSEN, .to-- Tf Creditor wiH presantdafaT vouchers to the undersigned ju? iaferator at tha office of Ifac Dainea, at 211 Cache VaR Bldg., Logan City, Cacha CW State of Utah, on or batmen 24th day of Much, A. D is. CL EARL ANHDER, sVS si tor of tho Ettate Jansen, also known as feu A. Jensen, Deceased. NEWEL G. DAINES, Attore. Dates of Publication: Jaagmg 81, and February 7, 14, and & Adv. NOISY THE Richards ' LLOYD7 Radis Service Oo. Mortuarj Owned and operated JOHN PHONE SIT LOGAN East of Past Mfios M. DO Office 68 West 1st JOB LOGAN, Phone co-o- co-o- A.r ANNOUNCES 25-A-MON- TH TIME PAYMENTS AND A The Thinner Tha Ice A paradox noted by Great Lakes fishermen, that ice semtimes grows faster and thicker in sera than in subzero weather, is really orthodox, According to Dr W. J. Humphreys f the Weather Bureau. Ice, he explains, grows fastest when its upper surface is coldest The temperature of this surface dewhether it is dean or pends on covered with snow, and whether the air over it is clear or foggy, A Layer of snow on the cie or s ket or fog acts as an insulator, tarding the escape of heat from the under, or growing surface. NEW UCC 6 X FINANCE PLAN Any New Ford Vm8 Can Now Be Purchased for Car $25 a Month with Usual Low DownmPaynent YHb 525-s-mon- car and insurance, you pay $24 for the year of credit; if tire balance ia 5200 you pay $12. Your credit cost for one year is the original unpaid balance multiplied by UCC plans provide you with insurance protection at regular conferinsurance and financing ence rates. You have not only fire and Your cost for this extension of credit theft insurance, but $50 deductible is only Yi of 1 month on your orif-inand protection against other acunpaid balance and insurance. cidental physical damage to your car. This plan reduces financing charges for The Universal Credit Company ha twelve months to For example, if made these plans svsilable through ell balance of $400 for yiw owe ' Ford dealers in tire United States, your th time-payme- plan enablea you to buy New Ford V-- 8 car through your Ford dealer on new low monthly terms. After tire usual low is rxtade, $25 month is all you have to pay for any type of new car, indud-in- f nt down-payme- 6. nt col-liaio- n, al 6. FORD MOTOR COMPANY COME IN AND LET US EXPLAIN THE NEW TIME PAYMENT PLAN TO YOU SCHENLEYS Golden Wedding ftndcf dfoafAt Iffliiiiti CT&utit! inti? K GtlJtn VtJJing 202 QUART I No. 203 Dnboutut Maltt tbt VtmJtrul Dnhtnnet Manhattan. Try ItI i1 Wt 211 Tha Gaidar The Air "Intelligent cmpcratirii and education must go hand in hand, said Dr. Frank P. Graham, President of the Greater University of North Carolina, recently. That tnlnra is especially applicable to cooperation by farmers. The cooperative movement is essentially an educational nufrement. The most enthusiastic group of farmers in the world will make a failure of a p if they lack knowledge and purpose precisely ns the best informed dt farmers will fall short of the greatest success if they refuse to cooperate. have given It is an encouraging fact that the. better farm greater attention to the educational factor in recent years. They have taught farmem much concerning the laws of supply and demand, tariffs and embargoes, currency and monetary problems, and so on. The farmers have learned that there is much more to prosperous farming than planting n crop one season and harvesting it the next. They have learned that their welfare w effected by a greater number of nititfhal and international Issues. And they have learned that cilu;a-tio- n plus cooperation ia the solution to many problems. No. North PRINTING , ooo- EDUCATION FLUS COOPERATION PINT by RICH ABBS Residence 8S So, 2nd WE .iw j- - hici.im. I north cache ! 181 MOTOR CO, Snithfield, INah |