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Show THE UTE SENTINEL, MIDVALE, UTAH Friday, March 17, 1939 More bears are killed in Main& than any other state. THE UTE SENTINEL Zntered as Second Class Matter at the post office at Midvale, Utah, under Act of March 3, 1879. Birds have the keenest and most far sighted vision. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY WOODRUFF PRINTING CO. HOWARD C. BARROWS Editor and Manager C) u~Aif"~~cfA:r7oN SUBSCRIPTION RATE: ()ue V f'fl.r ....... ................ .. .... .• . • .. ..................................................._ The eyes of a cat are forty times more sensitive to light than man's. 'fHLS COUNTRY, WITH ON~V 6 PER CENT $1.50 OF TI-lE HEED THIS WARNING! WOR~0'.5 POPULATLOI'I- Advertising Rates Given on Request. HOPKINS FACES FACTS Secretary of Commerce Hopkins' recent Iowa speech pointed directly and unerringly to the heart of our present domestic difficulties. There can be no stability in this country so long as labor warfare disrupts industry and the ranks of labor alike. There can be no prosperity so long as great industries exist in a vacuum, because of fear of governmental competition and "crack-down" legislation. There can be no recovery worthy of the name so long as our relief rolls stay at record levels and private business stagnates, unable to absorb the unemployed. There can be no confidence to revive business so long as fnvestors are in constant fear of some legislative bombshell being exploded in Washington. Mr. Hopkins did well to recognize these conditions and not attempt to dodge facts. Business does not want to remain in a state of paralysis. Investors don't want to hoard their money. Most of the unemployed don't want to stay on relief. To the contrary, business wants to expand and go ahead, investors want to put their money to work building up the country, the unemployed want real jobs. This is a great country. Its capacities to produce and consume are close to limitless. There is no visible ceiling to the extent to which it should be possible to raise the standard of living of everyone. But-and there is a big "but" indeed-private business, which (Special to The Ute Sentinel) Finis has been written to the twenty·third session of the Utah ACTIVITY. state legislature and as an after' math of its lawmaking activities since .Tanuary 9 approximately 150 new and amended statutes will be inscribed in Utah's law books. General opinion is that only about a score of the measures enacted by the legislators who "callI ed it a day last Saturday" will make any appreciable dent in the daily lives of Utahns as a whole. The other 130 will effect only segregated groups, minor classifications, and scattered sections or . individuals. ' On the whole-so say leaders of varied divergent elements - the 5"0 'I'EAR$ AGO, twenty-third legislature may be ' A~UMIHUNI WAS SO ' RARE AND COSTL'I' regarded as having assumed a • uEWE~E:R.S ()/SPlAYED IT IN THE STORE WINDOWS -TODAY attitude in their middle-of-the-road IT CA~ 81! MADE FOR deliberations. Business and indusI~ AH 01/NCE/ try suffered no body blows. On the other hand they benefited thru a general inclination toward confidence-restoring action. Labor, while getting little of what it sought, lost none of the ground gained two years ago. Agriculture, recognized as of petent hands of Mercer Christenwidespread importance to the sen of Bountiful who has worked state, received much consideration, for nearly eight months to get although it failed to procure propthese small models true to color t t d t' · g neral and scale. The committee was glad ter Yd atx re due tons ~ ga thee tax ren owar preservm to utilize the talents of a young t t t t Education . local commercial artist rather than s r~c urde bsta us t~ualo. . achieve u par 1 success m to take advantage of the expentt• t f d ll t ts ence of out-of-s.t ate organizations I gbet m~/rc: er _un : ~ ~:: ~ whose representatives submitted u s ·tere n_o lmdpo t~n fsthe e plans and b1'ds f or Utah' s exhib't 1 . unless 1 was. m . re uc 10n o Nearby exhibits in the Hall of state's contnbuhon to the teachWestern States are using three ers' retirement fund. Social welfare legislation spottimes as much space as purchased by Utah with proportionately lighted last-minute proceedings . g 1 when the legislators finally aplarge expendit ures f or p1acm . . · 'b't F d t' · proved admimstrabon-sought acthelr exhi 1 s. or a ver 1smg . h xhilbit tion that places old age asSlstance value, however, the Uta e . d th 1. · t . is out st and mg an d the memb ers of on a bas1s of nee , . us e 1mma . . the comm1'tt ee are proud of the I ing many undeserv;mg ree1p1ents · eff ort s. of benefits from the rolls in fl!)'or result s of the1r . 1 of those who really need asslstMrs. H. E. Godwin of Salt Lake ance. Proponents cited danger of City and Mrs. Lucile Wallace losing federal funds as their chief Wolf of Ogden are acting as host- argument for changes. eases in the exhibit. Where pocketbooks of the peaFlag day, June 14, has been set ple at large are affected, passage aside as Utah day and appropri- of the largest appropriation bill ate ceremonies will be held. George in history-$8,237,391- means, l.n J. Gibson, S. J. Stephenson and H. 1 the opinion of many, that the 2.4 J. Plumhof have been appointed by mills general fund tax levy will the chairman to make arrange- again be imposed for the present ments for this day. biennium after having been eliminMembers or the committee ap- ated during the past two years. pointed by the governor are as Legislators throughout the seafollows: Frank M. Browning, 0~- sion held to a general trend to den, chairman; George J. Gibson, maintain the present tax structure Salt Lake, vice chairman; S. J. intact as far as possible. This was Stephenson, Salt Lake; Wm. M. j evidenced in failure of the homeKnerr, Salt Lake; B. D. Nebeker, stead tax exemption bill and the Salt Lake; 0. F. McShane, Salt rebuffing of all efforts to increase Lake; Mrs. David L. Rice, Farm- taxes, such as raising the income ington; James A. McMurrin, Log- tax levels and mine occupation an; Will R. Holmes, Brigham City; levy and refusals to impose natural Edward C. Maw, Ogden; Fred S. l gas and chain store taxes. Remov-CARRIES ON 50 PER CENT OF ITS 8USIHES5 I IN THE MIOOLe. AGES CELERY WAS !ATEH AS A CUR6 ~OR Gpllr- (IN THoSI! TIMES PEOPLE ATE THI! LEAVE~ INSTEAD OF THE STALl<} Utah Is Well Represented At The Golden Gate Exposition makes all material progress possible, must have confidence. It must have faith. It must not be taxed to death. It must not be legislated to death. It must be encouraged to take the risks that are an inescapable part of economic growth and social development. utah, through H's display at the Golden Gate International exposition, is inviting the world to visit and inspect the interesting scenes which are a part of utah's wonderland. If this government actually puts into effect a COn- The exhibit was made possible structive policy such as described by Mr. Hopkins, by an appropriation by the state there will be a resurgence of industrial expansion legislature of 1937. A committee that will really bring recovery. He has pointed to the of representative citizens of the sound way out of the doldrums. It remains to be seen state was appointed by the gover. , 'll k I nor and they have worked unceas. h' h now W h et h er oth er men lTI Ig POSlhOn Wl ta .e a . 1 for the past year to get the ' 'l ar1y Const rue t'lVe S tan d . mg Slml bestYexhibit possible for the liimited amount of money available. Twenty-five thousand dollars EDUCATION DOWN ON THE FARM was the sum set up for the repThe farmer of the future will be far better preparresentation of the state at the San ed to grapple wifh the problems he must face than his Francisco exposition. Space in the predecessors. Hall of Western States cost $8,The reason for that is education. Farm organiza- 487.50, leaving approximately $16,tions, notably the agricultural marketing coopera- 000.00 for building and installing tives, have given great attention to farm youth. the exhibit, also maintenance. For several months the committee met Young men and women who look forward to careers and discussed various methods of in agriculture are given specialized training not only presenting the scenic beauties of in land utilization and the raising of crops and live- Utah which was early decided upstock, but in those economic matters that so vitally af- on as the natural theme to be fect farm income. When the time comes for them to developed. This, after all, is Utah's greatest asset. take over, they'll be ready. Finally a proposition was accepted-that of showing in dioTHINGS ONE REMEMBERS rama from several of the outstandIn spite of wars and threats of wars, dictators and ing scenes of Utah. The Great threats of dictators, taxes and unemployment, spring White Throne, Bryce canyon, Edwin Natural bridge, were among is nearl y here. I t Will do you good to get OUt in the the firsf scenes to be chosen. Othopen and see how insignificant are the vanities of men and politicians who are powerless to check the turn of the seasons, create the food that the world must eat, COntrol the COming of the new leaves, the · H h grass,. t h. e ca l ve~, t h e l am b s and t h e pigs. ow muc ers which were added later were the Temple block, the Salt Flats, showing a picture of Capt. Eyston's car, "Thunderbolt", traveling at 357.6 miles per hour, a typical utah irrigation scene and the utah more Important IS the work of a good farmer than the Copper mine. These are all rebombast of the miqhtiest dictators or the mouthings / produced in color, built to scale oi the nosie s t politicians. and represent a cross section of Utah's scenery and industry. ConNew Soviet laws according to oress reports de- stanu! changing lights add to the J. , ' , , • • ' Ieffectiveness of the scenes. Cree tardlness a caus e for diSmiSSal Without appeal, The exhibit was one of the few and thE:~ro 0 · ~-9 not enough alarm clocks to qo around ready on opening day. General Gillin Russin.. The Po"'tla.nd Oregonian says: "Until they more, director of government parshow u.s something better-and they haven't-we'll ticipation for the fair, complimenttake alarm clocks and capitalism every time." ed the committee on this achievement. 1 trade act. No new taxes or restrictive measures which might injure business or industry were ~mpos ed. Labor lost its two most soughtfor bits of legislation when }?ills setting up intrastate wage and hour standards and providing for payment of compensation to occupational disease victims failed of enactment. It did, however, receive some assurance of future action when $25,000 was appropriated for a study of occupational diseases, and partial compensation in the miners' hospital treatment measure. A check-up of enacted legislation shows that 171 measures of varied classification were passed by both legislative branches. Six hundred were introduced. Governor Henry H. Blood has signed 46, including five resolutions and memorials, up to Saturday night. He had 116 in his office awaiting approval or disapproval. He had vetoed one measure, not repassed and approved. Eight resolutions require no gubernatorial action. The legislature asked the national congress for federal assistance in preventing further erosion on Colorado river tributaries in Utah and enactment of farm credit liberalization laws. It indorsed national bills for federal aid to education, stabilization of silver at $1 per ounce, the Pittman silver purchase act, and the rearmament program, and opposed reduction in tariffs on Cuban sugar. SPIRIT OVER MATTER SEEN IN JESUS' WORK "Matter" is the subject of the lesson-sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday March 19. The Golden Text is: "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain; for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain" (Exodus 20 :7). Among the selections from the Bible is the following verse: "And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people" (Matthew 9: 35). Accompanying the selection is the following passage from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mal"J Baker Eddy: "If God had instituted material laws to govern man, disobedience to which would have made man ill/ Jesus would not have disregarded those laws by healing in direct opposition to them and in defiance of all material conditions" (p. 227 ). -------- • Every moment of the day and night your valuable papers, records, etc., are in danger of loss, theft and fire. Why not place them in a personal Safety Deposit Box here? Rental is only $2.00 a year. MIDVALE Branch of BANK: SandyCity Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Strange But True By GOFF • Every servtce we conduct is an achievement of dignity and beauty. We consider it a privilege to meet every wish of the famlly we are called upon to serve. c. 1. Goff & Son MORTUARY Phone: Midvale 162 F 0 R ••• Style, Qualify and Long Wear BUY Your CLOTHES -from- H. F. Rasmussen Merchant Tailor SPECIAL SUIT SALE -EXTRA PANTS FREE- FOOD The Way You Like It FISHER'S, SCHLITZ and BECKER'S BEST BEER ON DRAUGHT JACKS Deluxe LUNCH al of the tax on oleomargarine al- -;W~e~p~ri~n~t;;;;B~u~tt~e~rw~ra~p~p~e~r~s·;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ so lost in the house. ·1 Enactmept of bills enabling counties, cities and towns to undertake low cost housing and slum clearance projects is listed as one of the few "reform" accomplishments. Passage of a group medical and dental care bill may also be included in the "reform" cate• A camel can outrun a horse af- gory. It permits establishment of The natio'1. listened with great interest to Mr. Although Utah's exhibit is small, ter a distance of three miles. health cooperatives. Amendments Hopl<in'='' rP<Y)verv t~lk in which he pointed out that the members of the committee are to the state unemployment com• proud that they have covered so The dog was the first domesti- pensation act, extending the wogovernment must be fair, and encourage the private much of the varied interests in men's eight-hour act, requiring electric industry and the railroads if they are to ex- the state, with an approprlation cated animal. that all sales tax revenues be used pand and employ more labor. The next day, accord- from the legislature no larger than for welfare and relief, and a bill ing to newspaper dispatches, a congressional com- it was. !<'or comparison, records providing for the care of disabled . 'tt d $17 206 000 TVA f show that the state spent over miners at the state tuberculosis m1 ee approve a , , appropriation or $85 ,000 in 1915 for their exhibit hospital may be listed as so-called continuance of construction of a dam at Gilbertsville, at the Panama Pacific exposition "progressive" measures enacted. Kentucky, and to start construction on a new dam 1 in san Francisco. Little change was made in the near Knoxville. That kind of political "encourage The building and installation of state's political set-up. One measment" continues to destroy confidence and jobs in the exhibit was placed in the comure enacted does away with dethis nation, and undermines Secretary Hopkins' re- ______::______....:....;__~~__:::.._______::__ fects in the primary election law covery ideas. and requires secret balloting in political conventions. Some counor sleet pelts the windshield, is the WATCH FOR THOSE ties will benefit in limitation of "IN-BETWEEN" DAYS right attitude for accident-free their share of public welfare costs driving; hazards are intensified by to proceeds of a 5-mill levy. A Believe it or not, more automo- abnormal climatic conditions, and non-partisan judiciary bill failed bile accidents. occur in good weath- call for extreme care. But It is of passage. equally dangerous to "let go" too er than in bad. Business benefits through repeal The reason, says the National much when weather hazards are of the much-maligned average inConservation bureau, accident pre- absent. ventory law and strengthening of vention department of the AssociaTo "let down" is good, but the the fair trade practices act. Under • tion of Casualty and Surety Ex- business side of a steering wheel enacted measures inventories will F a dime could buy more ..• or a ecutives, is that drivers are keen- is never the best place to practice be assessed on their year-end value · cigarette taste better . it would 1y alert when rain, snow or sleet it, say the National Conservation instead on average monthly value, be a SENSATION. And that's exactly 20% alcohol by volume what it is! As you'll discover, when make roads hazardous; but they bureau's safety experts. Drive resix per cent mark-up may 1 while a you try this thrifty, thrilling cigarette. "let down" wheu it clears. !axed, and without strain, but alert now be included as a part of the I To be more vigilant when there 1 and with your car always under cost below which merchandise .· '· -: Los Angeles · 1s Ice on the road, or rain, snow 1 absolute control. must not be sold under the fair Mulock, Salt Lake; B. 0 . Colton Jr., Roos•velt; Alex Hedquist, Provo; Mrs. J. L. Asbury, Richfield; L. L. Taylor, Moab; H. J. Plumhof, Salt Lake; Sol J. Selvin, Tooele; Wm. Shay, Cedar City; Mrs. R. E. L. Collier, Salt Lake City, and E. S. Holmes, Salt Lake City, secretary. WINEHAVEN Brand California I W llj E 4 • I ~:_; ¥·~6-~.~.I.T . 1N ~U StR I:Es;· LTD. I |