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Show EEAR RIVER V ALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, PAGE TWO BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER at the Postoffk at Tre- moo ton, Utah as Second Class Matter, Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of each week. Subscription Rates - $2.00 One Year (in advance) $1.00 Six Months (in advance) Three Months (in advance) - - - - 50 Free to Public Trie only place in the U. S. where c.toloi. nj jvett'urit matter eoverin en y line or buainM or product ran be obtained Free and Without Library Obligation the American Induatnal Write for Bu.inet. Advertiains Matter yon are intereated in; not will be promptly forwarded. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY Eaaineeriut Uaildin. Cklcaso. IILLui To Your Town as well as to your Country PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS Honesty In Merchandising "arnRV. tmth If I goal is a in advertising" mer- - that every reputable d like a high school education, be to has of out the ordinary ing some-Entew- FEBRUARY 14, 1935 done. CENSUS OF STARS NEARS COMPLETION By DWIG SCHOOL DAYS Leaving my childhood home in the foothills of the Catskills in 1908 I went to tbe city of Kingston, N. Y. There I sold papers, ran errands, scrubbed floors, washed windows and sold various things in an effort to pay my way through school. One Sunday night, after several weeks of bad business, with cardboard in my schoes to keep my feet out of the slush, I went by the St. James Methodist Church and heard floating out on the wintry air the reassuring words of the beautiful song, "Be Not Dismayed Whatever betide, God Will Take Care of You." Turning about I went into the church and slipped into a rear seat. At the close of the service, a business man, seeing trouble written on the face of a boy, came up to me, inquired my name, where I lived and what I was trying to do. In the days that followed, without giving me so much as a nickel in cash, by his brotherly interest and indirect tactfulness i n seeing that work was turned my way. he demonstrated to me that power of fraternity as he helped me to help myself. By the power of fraternity he not only made life pleasurable for me by the contact of his fine spirit but he also drew out and helped develop la tent capacities and powers which might otherwise have lain forever dormant. The confidence and enthu siasm and initiative which he thus aroused have packed life with durable satisfactions and helped make it reasonably successful. Fraternity can be made one of the greatest powers for good in the world. The fraternal spirit as fostered by church and school by ledge and service club by paper and periodical has made America great. This spirit infiltrated between classes has for the most part held our people steady during one of the most trying periods in the history of man's climb from and brutality to civilization and service. chandiser, every honest adverperiodtising agency, every sincerethere reical, seeks to reach. That mains considerable room for improvement along this line is observable to all who read, listen to the radio, or are waited upon by some salespeople. That is why your federal government at Washington, under the cruof y sading zeal of Guy Agriculture Dr. Rexford the seeks to take a hand in adand By Mrs. J. O. Hadfield contemporary merchandising vertising worlds, and wants to reguMr. and Mrs. H. S. Tingey enter late them with a bureaucracy. We agree with Dr. Tugwell, with tained a number of friends at their home Wednesday evening. the Bureau of stanaaras, aim wim t Geo. Bowcutt, Jr. and Fay Stand Pure Food and Drug departments that the American consumer is gyp' ing nf Fiplrline were married last young people will make ped" in some of his purchases; trick week brand name are created; aecepuye hQme m Riverside ottkd goods sizes of canned j Mrs b Haleg ? nlaced on the market; and many otn- - uat en for their ertained Forsberg commodities are sold through the subtle art of sales deception. But husbands Saturday evening at the the placing of every farm and Indus- -- Hales home, the occasion being their trial product in tne nanas or a wasn- mrinaay anniversary, a large crowa ington bureaucracy is not going to was in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. solve the consumers problem. Lloyd Cravens of Salt Lake and Leon The Eccentric joins with many oth- Hales of Brigham were out of town to ers who are unalterably opposed the microscopic- control of human ac- guests. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Udy and Mrs. Geo. tivity from a central bureaucracy. were Brigham visitors Tues Forsberg like would Such a plan as Dr. Tugwell even day. to develop is unworkable Leland Capener and Howard Cap- though much of it may be commen a ener intend to leave the latter part of dable from theoretical viewpoint. Dr. Tugwell's complete regulation the week for east expecting to and standardizing of American farm visit Detroit, New York and Florida and industrial outputs would stifle the before returning home. American system of commodity exJoe Butler and J. O. Hadfield made change. Under a complete Sovietlza- - a business trip to Ogden Wednesday. tion of this country, in which the proArthur and Mrs. Griffin of to would Welling the motive profit give way duction and distribution motives only, the M. I. A stake board, were visitors (a worthy eventual human objective, at the Tuesday evening meeting. but still decades away) Dr. Tugwell Mr. and Mrs. Russel Capener, Mr. might find his plan acceptable to a and Mrs. Geo. M. Ward, Mrs. Vesta majority of the people. But, like pro-- 1 Davis, Mabel Hadfield, Mary Bowcutt hibition, and some of NRA, he would Mina Ward and Leland Capener were find under present limitations of human nature that the elimination of Logan visitors Friday. waste" is far .all present . f"economic 1 jess unsausiaciory iman tne icnipur- - a ary enuironement or an unwomaDie regulation for American agriculture and industry. In the meantime, of course, it is up to the entire merchandising world to work out its own destiny if it wants to remain free from bureaucratic domination. CI:crvatory at Harvard Cliieajjo. A census of the Infinite! A counting tif the uncountable f tlie unknown, ancient stn'tr!i;i t into he timeless, limitle-- s ti:iikins of Kjijue! That is tlie Im-- e tusk nearing completionor h:ii tinite men must ;ill completion at tlie Harvard observatory. It was described by Prof. Harlow Shapely, direclor of the observatory, spwiliins at Northwestern st.-irs-, It is a ta;k that is limiie:! by t inability of the camera's eye aiiU'J by powerful telescopes t, i record the light that tillers to ihe earth from distant suns. That limit is set at Io.Oihmkk) years and a 11'ht year is the distance that light, traveling at the speed of ISfi.OOO feet a second, will go in a nt year I A1 I I A j Classified I Ad Column! oOo WHAT IS FRATERNITY? PUBLIC AUCTION (By John Edwin Price) is a 16, 1 farm word. mystical FRATERNITY to describe as faith, as difficult to put your finger on as a radio wave. Fraternity is that something which Saturday. Feb. o'clock. H. David Hansen 2 miles west of Tremonton on highway. Farm implements, livestock, household goods and many other articles to numerous to tion. men- tip. 2-- brings men from the four corners of the earth to the same shores to build ANNOUNCEMENT I wish to ana new nation or to one valley making nounce that I am ready to continue a community. It is basia in that elethe flower and plant business my mental and mystic power which, out husband left behind, and I hope to of the multitudes of earth, brings two serve the people in the same man- ' souls together in the harmony of ner as he did. Ida Kloerig, Garhome. land Greenhouse. tl. If you will pardon the personal reference I will tell you how I first LOST Red white-face- d steer, weight felt its full meaning. I learned the 300 lbs, left ear cropped. Call of as a lad of meaning fraternity 7 tip. fourteen years, from a business man. When a preacher's large family of Will take livestock in trade uurteen children and a small salary TRADE for horses. Glenn Mason Trremon-toof seven hundred dollars a year insist Utah. t4. on keeping company, and all would CASH PAID for dead and useless cows and horses. Call Maple Creek OUR Trout Hatchery, Brigham Reverse Charge. ti traffic bill passed last week and soon to come before the house will take care of the matter. Senator C. Clarence Neslen resigned and Attorney Paul H. Ray of Salt Lake City, appointel by Governor Henry H. Blood, was seated in his place after a heated debate brought about by a motion for a senatorial probe of the new member's business connections. The motion was lost and Mr. Ray "welcomed" to the upper UNDER THE CAPITOL DOME RIVERSIDE (Continued From Page One) Annual of the North Box Elder Farm Bureau Will Held at the RIVER HIGH FEBRUARY to in the Building Program and Dance Will Banquet Admission per plate Banquet from SALE hit-and-r- NONE Tremonton, Utah r - Dodge Makes Record 2-- On my recent trip from Tremonton, Utah, to Los Angeles with my new 1935 Dodge, I averaged 24 miles per 2. X ISRAEL HUNSAKER, Jr. Mayor of Tremonton, Utah li FOR ICE i Beverages & Coal -- t7 SEE- ff $2.98 Tremonton, Utah HI 1 1 I 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 IIHIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIinillllllH SNOW SUIT Outstanding Value $2.98 Boys Z t CLOSE OUT 20 Full Cut, Fast Color Sizes 6 to 1412 Women's FELT HATS 49 25 BOOT SOCKS Broken Sizes All Wool, Best Quality SLEEPERS Priced Random Colors 39 39( iri vol rw rw i Childs All Wool 10 Only 36 to 44 DRESS SHIRTS Phone 16 36 : CLOSE OUT 6 DOZEN ONLY Auto Co. TREMONTON, UTAH 59tf 8 ONLY Sheep Skin Lined Talon JACKET X Fancy and plain gowns, slightly soiled $3.98 ? Heitz & Winzcler BESSINGER BROS. : I Tre-!- f tf. FLANNEL GOWNS JACKETS T gallon on gas, and no oil consumption at all. On the total CHICKS AND HATCHING We are trip to Los Angeles and return, driving 2,800 miles, I aver- prepared to hatch your turkey and If hen eggs. Most modern and up-tT aged 20 miles per gallon. 1200 miles of this was in and date equipment made. Quality Leg-- 1 ? horn chicks, bred for profit, S1.00 X about Los Angeles. 2. CLOSE OUT LEATHER 2-- per hundred. F. B. Barlow, monton, phone 74.a-- Phone 28 DEALERS 19 ONLY Mens Grain and Suede o- Fronk Chevrolet Co. few-hav- on, Farmers Annual Social 8 MAKE GOOD OR WE DO house-resoluti- j n, 493-J-- cameral-o- ne A move local government licenses. to delay liquor legislation until taxa tion and social welfare measures were acted upon was said to have found much support among legislators. Senate measures passed and adopted during the past week were: S. B. 21, providing for the inspection of gasoiine used for motor fuels; S. J. R. 3, 4, and 5, providing that the superintendent of public instruction shall not be elected, but appointed by the governor; H. B. 5, fixing the hours of labor in underground mines, mary and secondary highways. The al Fraternal Congress mortality rat- - of a private license system measure. amended to add a lunch period not type of roads to be built will depend to exceed 30 minutes, and H. C. M. upon the traffic over them. Every 2, memorializing congress to establish county in the state will benefit in ina national park in Wayne county. creased road transportation facilities. Senator Albert E. Holmgren of House action resulted in passage and adoption of the following meas- Bear River City voted yes on S. B. ures: S. B. 28, enabling the state 21, S. J. R. 3, 4, and 5, and H. C. M. fish and game commission to borrow 2. He voted no on S. B. 14, the bili money from the state land board for taxing cigars and smoking and chewThe Social public works projects, passed previ ing tobaccos, which was defeated. He ously by the senate; S. B. 18, permit also voted no on the Hammond of Be amendment to the income tax ting the federal government to buy lands for flood and erosion control, bill and to the Bamberger amendment also passed by the senate; H. B. 9, relating to lunch periods in the unBEAR SCHOOL limiting power of the governor to call derground mine work measure. SATURDAY, 23, 1935 out the state militia in case of labor "Since the legislature convened, troubles, amended to provide that pro- bills have been dropping into the leduction on premises policed by the gislative hopper like so many snow 6 p. m. 8 p. m New militia be stopped until it had been flakes," said Senator Holmgren in Science withdrawn; H. B. 2, regulating pro- commenting on lawmaking trends. duction, sale and licensing of com- "Where and by whom bills have been mercial fertilizer; H. B. 19, applying formulated and conceived is beyond Follow weights for grades of eggs sold at re- me." tail; H. B. 21, creating a redemption 50 "Even a legislator can render "no period on shares of stock in irriga to analyze and than service greater tion companies from 60 days to two bill to determine if itj dissect years and providing for the payment contains every or caters toward viciousness of penalties, costs and assessments; the H. B. 27, creating pensions for em trick laws. If this should prove could a instance case in legislator any ployes of the Utah State Hospital at no better purpose or render Provo; H. B. 28, relating to cost of serve service than moving to relepatient maintenance at the same in- greater measures to the waste such gate S. J. R. 2, the homestitution, and basket." stead tax exemption act, making it Senate bills 4,72 and 91 by Senator mandatory for presentation to the peoople to be voted upon as a con- Holmgren have been reported out faON 9 A. M. SATURDAY stitutional amendment H. B. 37 and vorably by committees and placed on H. B. 38, fixing penalties for their second reading in the senate. and drunk drivers, were defeated, Representative E. H. Cornwall of SOLD TO largely due to belief that the senate Tremonton voted yes on all measures 2-- 1-- passed in the house last week. Hewas absent and not voting on the uni- which was defeated. He introduced H. B. 153, providing for a refund of gasoline taxes assessed in cases where the fuel was used for other than motor vehic les. He voted no on H. B. 9, limiting powers of the governor in calling out the state militia in case of labor tags. Mr. Holmes also introduced, with troubles. Representative Will R. Holmes vot Representatives Farr, Slaugh, Larsen house. ed yes on all measures passed except and P. M. Peterson, H. B. 127 and commis-sionershiA bill introduced in the senate un- H. B. 28, H. B. 9 and S. B. 18. He 138, relating to state road and on H. not B, was absent and preventing commisvoting der sponsorship of the highways committee will give Utah 460 additional 21. He introduced H. B. 117, relating sion members from holding other pomiles of state roads if it becomes a to the organization of benefit associa- sitions. His liquor compromise suglaw. It also places all roads on an tions and providing that mortuary gestions were accepted by the Salt equal footing, doing away with pri- contributions be based on the Nation- Lake Chamber of Commerce, sponsor 2-- 4. ! The world was youn 15.0(XJ,))0 years ago, when the most distant light started on its journey. And the census of those most distant stars counted today is already 15,000,000 years out of date! Nearer to the earth less breathtaking in its distance Is the Milky Way at the most 50,000 light years away. There are 100,000,000,000 stars in that group forming our "local galaxy" and, by comparison with the others, they are right In our own back yard. Professor Shapley pointed out. Only 50,000 light years away. Yet light now reaching us from the outermost star was old when Alexander sought new worlds to conquer. Closer still the census moves 50 miles of the earth. And there, Professor Shapley said, it finds a daily bombardment of billions of meteors the wreckage of some vast solar cataclysm of which only a been photographed, much less penetrated to the ground. That is the nature of the census of the stars. Professor Shapley's talk, was the first of six he will give on it. Under-Secretar- jg ;s Liz Te;!i. m Tug-wel- l, Und-r-taL- ! 1 1 1 each ps |