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Show THE PAGE FOUR " --- TIMES-NEW- S. - Zumcs-IRe- ws He Writes Entered In the Post Office at Nephi, Utah as second class maf matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 A. B. American Magazine, Just issued. Between 30,000.000 and 40,000,000 read nis eanoriaia, a persons quarter of all the men. women and children in the United States. In 32 unbroken years of editorializing he had turned out 20,000,000 words. They would make 200 Dig books, a library In themselves. His "Tnis written for the Week" column, Western Newspaper Union, Is published In 1200 newspapers. A cub reporter at 19, Brisbane became the New York tsuns mosi brilliant newswriter within a year, within its London correspondent two years, Its editor at 23. Ten years later he became editor of the New York Journal, then a complete fail ure with a circulation of 40,uoo copies daily. Within four months he built its circulation to 1,000.000 dally. His editorials struck a new note in Journalism and became the feature of his paper. He still writes the editorials ior the New York Journal. His salary for this Is $5,000 a week. $260,000 a vear. and he nas enougn ouisiae business Interests and Investments tn keen an average man busy. He is now 66 years old. "How much time ao you spena on rat, your This weeK coiumnr Crowell asked him. When I am In the office," Bris bane replied "I often dictate this en tire column, or my similar Toaay column. In 20 minutes. More often it takes 30 minutes. Late editions of papers I want to see are brought Gibson, Editor and Manager FAITH, WORK AND THRIFT SECRETS OF SUCCESS. other way. First National Ban k Nephi, Utah (By E. R. WAITE) "The cost of experience emphasizes its value. The lesson it teaches usually is in proportion to what we pay for it." The sKaker was Herbert D. Ivey, president of the Citizens National Trust & Savings Bank of Los Angeles, California, one of the outstanding bankers of the country, in a recent Interview. Mr. Ivey continued: "As the recent business depression gives way day by day to optimism, activity and profitable undertaking, we will lose its real significance if we fail to take to heart the mistakes it corrected" throuKh months of inactivity and fear. "No business enterprise can be considered successful unless sufficient profits are set aside to provide a surplus. No individual should consider himself successful until he has learned to spend less than he earns. A surplus Is as essential to a business man or woman as it is to a group known as a company or corporation. "Depressions present opportunities for the individual or organization with courage, vision and ready money. "When time Impartially analyzes the past few months, we will discover that men who deserve economic leadership took advantage of conditions to strengthen their position still further by the Judicious use of funds saved during the period of previous prosperity. Manufacturing plants were remodeled, better equipment was Installed, new methods put Into operation, all made possible by laying aside for the 'rainy day.' "And then the orderly processes of the individual were not interfered with. Normal home life continued. Children were kept in school or college, fed and clothed, even though father's profits were reduced, because father had made provisions for such emergencies by saving in more prosperous times. "Our recovery throughout the nation is being aided materially by the fact that the banks of America hold large cash reserves, awaiting the opportunity to serve commerce and industry when needed. "AS PROSPERITY RETURNS. THEN. WE WILL NOT HAVE TO COUNT THE PAST FEW MONTHS A TOTAL LOSS IP ITS GREAT LESSON SINKS IN. FAITH. WORK. THRIFT THESE ARE THE SECRETS OF SUCCESS AND HAPPINESS." to ABG IDEAS MEAN SUCCESS. work. and Mrs. Alfred Warner and ANNOUNCEMENT! THE SUPERIOR CLEANERS, located at 97 Every successful man has had an Idea. He must be a dreamer to visualize his idea In practice. He must also be a practical man to put his ideas to work. We all have ideas about how things should be done, in our work, our government, social life, etc., but the rub is to put these ideas into operation. If we try to put our ideas across we are sure to have setbacks and failures, but the average person with average intelligence cannot go very far He is sure to have an idea hit once in a while and wrong. sometimes one goes across with a bang. Persistence with ideas you believe to be right will surely win out in the end. Without ideas this world would be without progress. Is it not a fact that the men putting over ideas in America today are the only successful men? To be a success you must have them into practice original ideas. Why not profit by putting B- - M. T. Denver Post. at once? South Main Street are now open for business. If It Can BE CLEANED We'll CLEAN It! A Trial Will Convince You! Superior Cleaners SERVICE QUALITY (We Call For and Deliver) Local Happenings Mrs. Henrv Adams of Rexburg, Idaho is visiting in Nephi this week. Wallace Blackett returned home wnere Saturday from Cedar City,weeks. he has spent the past few Mr. and Mrs. Otis Christensen of Salt Lake City attended the funeral of Ray Cazier Sunday. Countv Assessor Joel Taylor is out on the desert this week on bus- - AN ACCOUNT HERE is one of the most "marketable" of all securities. It is spot cash 100 at any time or for any purpose. J. E. Memmott is attending a wheat growers meeting in Pocatello, Idaho this week. Mr. and Mrs. Job of Salt Lake were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Vickers Sunday. Mrs. Irving Jenson and Mr. and Mrs. Jas Eager of Logan motored to Nephi Sunday to attend the funeral of Ray Cazier. and Mrs. Chas. Stephenson and daughter Florence spent the week-en- d in Provo, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson. Mr. "Whatever You Earn, Spend Less" Cazier Gamwells of Butte, Montana, is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Mrs. Nephi National Bank IIIHH Nettie Sperry this week. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Olpin visited for a few days the latter part of the week with relatives and friends in Nephi. iTilHiHHIIl LONG MILES in Short Seconds to Preston Ida. BELLISTON BROS. (Lester and Thomas) $1.05 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT WE HANDLE GAS AND By Telephone day rate) Rates Distance Long have been reduced four times since late 1926 (station-to-statio- OILS And a Complete Line of TIRES AND AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES n The Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co. me at four-fifte- in en tne aiier noon. I have untu quarter oi uve to glance at these papers, do my dictating to a dictating machine,a and have the dictation copied, secretary goes with me to the ferry. Riding across the river, or on me car before my train pulls out, I cor rect the copy. From start to finish, my regular dally column takes about three quarters or an hour. "T'm not Droua or tnis. u s a faculty that prevents better work, When I was a young reporter could write, under pressure, about two thousand words of longhand an hours. "That's why I have never written while. anything worth "I have no illusions about my Hundreds of writers editorials. much could do them, probably better. But they're afraid to write so simDlv. about such simple things. "Is it true that you once wrote fnrtv editorials for the Journal In The man with an idea is sure to be the successful man provided he puts it into practice. The man without ideas Is like idle machinery, his brain is sure to rust. Ideas can be turned into profits in many ways. You can never tell the value of an Idea until it is applied to actual Sheriff J. D. Sullivan, May Sulli-M- r. and Mrs. Adrian Warner of van, and Mrs. Jerry Sullivan of Fountain Green spent Sunday in Eureka and C. E. Simpson of Mam-Leva- n the guests of Mr. and Mrs. moth were in Nephi Sunday visiting Orlando Taylor. with friends. Mr. This Week Arthur Brisbane, hlyhest paid newspaier man in the world, tells how he writes his weekly column, under the title "This Week." In an interview with Merle Crowell of the Published Every Thursday at Nephi, Juab County, Utah liness is Commonsense Savings. Spend what you need, but SAVE too. Now, especially, a Savings Account at the Bank affords safety obtainable no 26. 1931. Brisbane Tells How XLhc The golden mean between reckless miserextravagance and Scrooge-lik- e Thursday. March NEPIII. UTAH half a "The day?" exact number was 40 Squibb' s Shaving Cream The Beard Tamer Shaving Brush $1.50 Total $1.90 98c OUR SPECIAL PRICE Ask For a FREE TRIAL TUBE of SQUIBB'S SHAVING CREAM NDC Have You A KODAK? If Not, Borrow One From Us For a Day! WE ARE HERE TO SERVE! Nephi Drug Co. "An Independent Drug Store" LOCAL NEWS ITEMS James McCune of Mills spent the Mrs. Lena Livingston spent Tues with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. day In Nephi visiting with her sister, week-en- d Mrs. Wm. Jackson. Squire. Mrs. P. L. Jones visited with relaMerle Kay and Irvan Wilson motored to Salt Lake City Tuesday tives and friends In Salt Lake City on a business trip. Monday and Tuesday. if m p SAFETY thirty' It took I dictated them. about three hours. I was going on vacation, and left copy to last until mv return." Brisbane's "facility" could not could not possibly account for all he accomplishes if he had not made time and circumstances nis serv ants. Even in his automobile he has a dictating machine, wrucn ne employs for personal correspondence and many of the editorials outside the run of his daily column. a normal day he distates thirty Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Belliston spent On letters and goes over many or forty in on Richfield business. others prepared by his secretaries. Tuesday Transcontinental tram trips ana Warrilow Brough was a business makes many of them do not visitor in Ogden a few days this hp hinder the flow of his daily output, week. His stateroom is equipped with the dictating machine; a sec Miss Zetta Anderson of Fairvlew inevitable with a typewriter and an retarv was the week-en- d Miss guest of other dictating machine occupies an Nelda Beck. best Stations room. adioinlne to handle telegraph mat Florence O'Gara of Los Angeles, eouiDDed are on a prepared scneauie. ine California is visiting with Mr. and ter Pullman Company, notified in ad Mrs. Chas. Haynes. vance, makes frequent deliveries of fresh from the presses Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Beck, Mrs. newspapers nf t.Vie narticular territory he Is and Nelda Miss Beck Eugene Beck, through. Mrs. Clayton Beck spent Saturday nassine On his desk are several oia iamuy in Provo on business. uhotoeraohs. his father, his mother, and a picture or tne Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Belliston and his brother, in Fan frame school-hous- e little L. and and Belliston J. Mrs. family New Jersey, where he went to wood, in Richfield family spent Sunday school for four or five years as visiting with Mrs. T. C. Jensen. boy and where for a while he taught class on Sunday. Mrs. H. C. Larson of Lynndyl Bible Within easy reach of his chair with visited during the week-en- d Dooncasc sauare. revolving Mr. was a her daughter and reference works: a much of full Mrs. Warren. and Fred dictionary, thumbed biographical books of science, Adam Smith' Wealth of Nations", and Bartletti among Familiar Quotations", others. On three sides of the otrice were bookcases filled with two or This year, above all other years three thousand books. Perhaps had every farm and home should pro thousand of them on their backs. duce a garden, in order that as naner seals pasted "How did you happen to go to little family food be bought at the grocery store as possible. This is school in a crude little house like a great saving of money particular that?" Mr. Crowell asked. was wealthy, ly in these times of financial de thoueht your father "Not wealthy Just moderately pression. To produce a good garden, the well off. He was able to give me soil must be rich in plant foods, the benefits of travel and of five when must be mellow, yet firm. The seed years' education abroad, but bed must be well prepared so that I returned to America and went on moisture will rise into the region the Sun I really needed a job. a of soil where the seed in planted. "My father was a student,wasand conPlan your garden on paper first learned man. His one hope so that you will know Just where cerning myself, that I might live to plant and how much to plant of to do something useful, to be of service. I have said that if anyone each particular vegetable. dollars to In your plan provide that the offered me ten million rows of vegetables be far enough stop writing, I would refuse the I meant exactly that. apart so that the horse cultivator offer. And myself. mav be used almost entirely, and I hope I did not deceive very little hand labor need be done, Nobody ever made the offer." Make each row as long as possible so as to avoid so much turning with moisture content of this soilsea-as the the horse and also to facilitate ir nearlyas constant throughout son possible. This will insure rigation. Select the very best seed that the best quality vegetables. The garden should produce not you can possibly get and varieties supply of fresh that are adapted to grow in your only a constant vegetables for the family during the locality. should also progrowing season but store Of the short, season, quick-groand can for ing crops such as radishes, etc duce vegetables to Dlant lust enough so that all rad winter supply. For specific instructions for proishes will be eaten while at their garbest. Plant the same amount every ducing a profitable vegetableshould two or three weeks during the sea- den, how these vegetables use son so ss to have radishes as well be stored and canned for winterState as other vegetables at their best all write Extension Service, Utah Utah. Agricultural College, Logan, the time. Instructions are sent free. Irrigate and cultivate judiciously These Extension during the entire growing season. J C. Hogenson, The aim should be to keep the nine. TO INTRODUCE Local News son-in-la- The Home Garden red-edg- w ed Triplex shatter-proo- f glass windshield has saved many lives in collisions new Ford is equipped with a Triplex shatter windshield. This is made so that the glass will not proof fly or splinter under the hardest impact. It has saved many lives and prevented injuries in many automobile collisions. This shatter-proo- f glass windshield is just one of many features that make the new Ford a value far above the price. Others are the silent, fully enclosed four wheel brakes, sturdy steel body construction, four e double-actin- g hydraulic shock absorbers, more than twenty ball and roller bearings, extensive use of fine steel forgings, aluminum pistons, chrome silicon r drive, alloy valves, torque-tub- e floating rear axle, Rustless Steel, and unusual accuracy in manufacturing. In addition, you save many dollars because of low first cost of the new Ford, low cost of operation and and low yearly depreciation. 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