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Show PAHP ,4 THE ml Tl? v W TIMES-NEWS- - A. B GIBSON ROY E. GIBSON - Ir- J' -i s- Entered in the Pot-- t Office lit Nephl, Utah, a second class muil matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1878 Attorney P. N. Anderson was in City Wednesday on buf incss. Salt Lake Editor and Manager Associate Editor Miss Stella Karris and Miss Ethel visitors Mcpherson were week-en- d In Salt Lake City. McCune was in Ogden Lake City the fore part of this week on business. Herman and Salt of lives Motor accident continue taking an Increasing toll eouU be which of number the the nation, greater throughout of Uio eliminated by more caution on the part of the drivers on the automobiles. All of the carelessness, cann- t be laid door of the motorist However in a great many instances, the steering lack of proper caution on the part of the person at the life and wheel of the motor car la responsible for damage to property One of the chief causes of motor accidents is the driving accorInto arterial highways and streets without stopping In undance with the provision of law. This is one of the most It Is on the part of motorists. necessary acts of one that should be eliminated and can be. Too much of this continues type of law violation with Its threat of Injury to life tn this district. The time to HALT this practice is NOW before the responsibility for Injury to human Individuals is charged to some motorist. - v - , f Lake Miss Enid Brough spending In Salt her aunt, f No More Monkey Wrenche Now that the elscton Is over and there Is nothing to be gained by trying to discredit the New Deal or embarass the administration it is both wise and timely for all special interests which have been heaving monkey wrenches into the machinery to crawl under and remove the obstructions which have been delaying the car of progress. It is gratifying to note the tentative offer of "organized business to cooperate with the administration to achieve recovery" as announced In a press dispatch from Washington. While bankers. In their national convention, declared a truce with the recovery program, according to Prsldent A. P. Gtannlnl of the Bank of America, one of the strongest financial systems of the country, in a statement publlshe this week, called upon "Wall street and all It represents to stop fighting Roosevelt." Commenting on the California governorship election. Glan-nasaid: "When a lone wolf like Sinclair can run up nearly a million votes in a state like California, there Is something to cause every citizen of the United States to sit up and take notice. We are going to have unemployment Insurance in this country and we are going to have old age pensions. We must have social security. As The Salt Lake Tribune has pointed out, there Is food for reflection in the vote, not only of California, but of Wisconsin, Minnesota and two thirds of the other states. The old parties may not be dead, but they have ceased to function as such. The landslide was not only an endorsement of the Democratic organization, nor a repudiation of the Republcan organization so much as It was a renunciation of old economic methods and a demand for something new and different, regardless of expense, mistakes or alarms Incident to the changes. Salt Lake Tribune ABO 'A r - of Mr. and Mrs. Nolo Sudweeks, Mrs. Oris Sudweeks, Mrs. Richard Sudweeks and Miss Genevieve Sud- wcks were Porvo visitors last Fri day. w 'f'i is holiday Thankjsptvirnf Lake City at the home Mrs. 8(1 ma B. Foote. T ABO 4 City is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beasrley during the Thanksgiving holidays. er - Mrs. Alva Stout of Salt the earlf-ssnes- s - 3 Mrs. Pearl M. O'Gara and baby Dawn Maureen of Manhattan Bsach California are visiting for a short time at the home of Mr' and Mrs. M. M. O'Gara. Ti.i fnrinprpitn of eastern Wasbluuton U holding some prlz win X ning sheaves of the slate's wheat hanrMt, which this year amounts about 85,000,000 bufihels. Mr and Mrs. C. O. Scott and daughter Dorothy of Souths Super ior, Wyoming are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul B Ingram over Thanksgiving. Lindy's Cottage on Long Island Mr. and Mrs. Oran Foote and son Melvln of Salt Lake City spent at the home of Mr. the week-en- d and Mrs. Samuel P. Nlelson. Andrews, who is Floyd Set Mirror and $7.50 Traveling kits in full leather case Zipper " $5.00 lock $6.50 working $7.50 $11.50 $8.50 LEATHER BOUND nd Dairies Andrews 6ilfi?i Flying and Flying fishes, of which thers are of species, are small and light but have long winglike pectoral fins. The fish works np speed In the water, throws Itself Into the air, and the "wings" are able to carry It for some distance. The sallnsh Is a very largs deep sea fish, related to the swordfish, but having teeth, and characterized by the large, high dorsal fin, which Is suggestive of a sail. Five Year a number . s$4 iw'. a the Farmer In a recent arttcle, the United States News says that a change Is taking plRce in governmental farm relief activities. The reason behind the change is that offcials believe that the present legislation has done all for the farmer that it can be expected to do, and that other factors, over which the government has little or no control, will largely determine the future agricultural economic conditions. One of the main factors to be considered, as Secretary Wal-ac- e has pointed out Is the consuming power of the urban dwell" as their financial lot Improves their buying will naturally ers rise. Still another Is the old problem of exports many believe that a vast potential market for farm products exists across the seas. Factors as these arfe Inextricably related to national and International economic and social policies, and the farmer can do little about them. It may be expected that in the fullness of time, they will be clarified. .: There is a field, however, in which the fanner can do much. It is a field In which the opportunity for productive action increases as government lessens control over agricultural problems. That is the field of cooperative effort effort to Improve production standards, to keep a closer check on supply and demand, to strengthen marketing machinery. Much has been doing along these lines in the past more can be done in the future. It is an encouraging sign that the cooperative movement has made constant headway, during good times and bad. More and more farmers have found that their welfare will be determined by the success with which farmers band together to meet common problems. ABO First fBBJSsttlldUfcvU This cottage on the Daniel Uuggenuelm estate at Sunds 1'ulut, Long Island, Is said to have been fitted up for occupancy by Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh and their baby son. The house Is located seven miles from Roosevelt field, and It adjoins the Astor estate on which there Is a flying field. It also fronts on Long Island sound, whereon seaplanes and amphibians can land. mi Wallace Treaty May Be Sent to .......i- to $.75 t - S - - -- - It vuiuuua Critics of the American form of government, who havo and vocal than usual during the past it easier to convince the American people that revolutionary change is necessary if it were not for the examples of Europe. There since the war, almost every conseivable govern-met"ism" has been tried. With the exceptions of a few countries, democracy has been thrown overboard as being outmoded and worthless. And here are some of the results: Italy is under the rule of an dictator who has abrogated freedom of speech, freedom of action and freedom of the press. Under his direction, it Is true, great material pro- -' gress has been made at the expense of almost all the individual and corporate liberties for which the great Italian liberators fought. Germany now exists under a similar, but more ruthless dictatorship. Party government has disappeared when election time comes, the German people have the "privilege" of voting either "yes" or "no" on the proposition of whether they like the present Riechleader or not. Those who vote "no" are vry apt to find themselves dispossessed resirents of concent tration camps before another week rolls around. Newspapers may publish nothing without governmental permission and the slightest criticism of the existing regime is sufficient to cause suspension of a publication and the lmprsionment of its editors. In Russia, a different "ism" obtains, but conditions are almost precisely like those in Germany. A ruthless secret police has thousands of spies at work in the country and anyone who expresses disapproval of the Stalin government may soon start as a prisoner on the long trek to Siberian forests. The list could be continoed, but these examples will serve to show how the "improvements" on democratic have been inaugurated in Europe. One wonders government what those who scoff at fundamental Americanism would us in exgive change for it. all-nrKonn a. tt cw-u. ran Glazo Lady Lillian - LaCross Boudoir and Glow Lamps vt New Types New Styles Silver and Copper Colored Shades in Black and Wsiite. ed First Naval Uniform The first American naval uniform of which any record has been found was provided by a resolution of tha In April. Massachusetts council 1776, which required that officer furnish themselves with green and white uniforms. al Book Covers chemists have traced r to Londisintegration don ahr after examining the libraries of Buckingham palace and Windsor castle. Air Destroys Priced At $1.95 MAKE A SMALL SELECT YOUR GIFTS NOW DEPOSIT AND WE WILL HOLD THEM FOR YOU UNTIL CHRISTMAS. Nephi Drug Go. British iron-hand- r book-ceve- wc&z -- w Wrathful over the recen statement of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace that Hawaii is not an Integral part of the United States, citizens of that territory are considering sending for his Inspection the carefully guarded treaty of June 16, 1897, which ceded the then republic to the United States. Withdrawn from the darkened vault In Honolulu where It Is protected against the ravages of light and time, the document is shown being Inspected by Lorrln P. Thurston, whose father was the original signer on behalf of Hawaii (right), and Edmund Hart, keeper of the territorial archives. low a - .11.111 "' "" "' " " irn.iirm- - NEWHOUSE 3 HOTEL iiVin v - Salt Lake City, Utah pig. 100-poun-d fell Where Saar Plebiscite Commission Will Meet 'it The Python's Capacity The python, because of the great expanslveness of Its Jaws, U able to swallow an animal man; time its own diameter. , It la perfectly possible for a large python to swal- , nT vitd Monetary Realism R Deserving Its Popularity f ii ! ! 1 ITHill - iM . - t a. - iuf f ft i till . Mrs. J. H. Waters President ! ABQ- A common plaint of business is that monetary uncertainty must be removed; that the value of the dollar must be officially fixed. The fact is that the dollar has been stabilized for some Actually there seems months without public announcement. to be a definite intention of the Administration to refrain from further tinkering with the monetary unit. This reflects somewhat the growth of realistic thinking In official circles. It reflects a waning of enthusiasm for the commodity dolllar doctrines of Professor Warren. It would, be a mistake, of course to assume that there will never be any further revaluation of gold and silver. The Government is not burning its monetary bridges behind It. Hiher prices, especially for farm and other raw commodities still is administration policy. And some serious breakdown of prices could, and probably would, prompt the government to lessen arbitarily the purchasing power of gold and silver or both Therefore no public pledge to stabilize Is expectable in the near future. But for most practical purposes,, there is now less reason for nervousness over monetary uncertainties. Nation's Buiness. Cutex All popular shades and Priced from Styles 25c to $4.00 Red means humeu w . ' ? war, strength, success and means famine blue protection; j privation ; DiacK can oniy oe asau-clatwith death; and purplt denotes witches and witchcraft symbolism. grown more numerous five years, might find $3.00 in Indians' A Belgian scientist says In scientific report to the Smithtonian institution that the Cherokse InNorth dians . residing in western Tf1" ,f, $2.50 Sets Color-Symbolis- ' Key Lock Great Britain --. ' $2.00 - Manicure The first civilized man who la reported to have visited Great Britain was Pytheas, who, tn the Fourth century before Christ was sent by the merchants of the Greek colony of Marseilles to try to open np a trade with the people of the north. He sailed through the Strait of Gibraltar to Britain, and after vis iting Kent, he again set sail to th east and made his way to the mouth of ths Vistula. Take A Look Ahead -- pc. Comb, Brush at the C C C camp at Woods Cross spent the week-evisiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James n! , - " Mbs Ivy Christensen visited in Salt Lake City last week. - Let's Stop It Now An Opportunity for - - - -- - Local - Social A Sample of Washington's Harvest published EWry Thursday at Nephi, Juab County. Utah. November 29, 1934 Thursday, NKFIH. UTA'H , m!mce2t The "neues landes gericht," palace In Saarbruecken, where the commission for the plebiscite pf the Saar will meet In January, 1035. It is in this building that the present League of Nations commission sits. L W! W. E. Sutton General Manager ' Offering indlrldaal rooms at a priee that is exceedingly moderate Ratea Single $1 to $4 I Double SZ-S-O to $4$9 1 I 400 Rooms 400 Baths T Y Chauncey W. West Assistant General Manager |