OCR Text |
Show PAGE FOUR BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Entered at the Postoffice at Utah as Second Class Matter. Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of each week. Tre-monto- n, Subscription Rates $2.00 One Year (in advance) $100 Six Months (in advance) Three llonths (in advance) - - - - 50 Free to Public The only place in tK U. S. whet, cataloca and aivertiurfk matter coming any line oj buameaa or product can b obtained Free Ina Without Library. Obligation is the American Industrial Write lor BiuineM Advertjin Matter you are intereeted in; aame will be promptly forw arded. AMERICAN IRDDSTR1AL LIBRARY EntineerUiBoUdina. CkiMo IUlaoi To Your Town as well as to your Country T Vvwrr a I vnto oo voo Cove? I . !rcaitu l IUA.MkC IV-- O I W TF l Til TT Tu i ... WkM " i Tl 't vow WAITS Okls I w. Dicks, r : r JVS 111 h li.M! H t l i';' R. B. Kennedy, Editor of i .'.; ..VirVWi.MT.r- L . ft ri lift Classified t Ad Column! "Surely the five per cent could not eat eighty per cent of the food we annually produce, or wear eighty per cent of the clothes, or occupy eighty per cent of the houses, or operate eighty per cent of the automobiles. If they could and did, then think how easy it would be to reach the buying markets with almost any media of advertising. "As a matter of fact, the folks with less than $2,000 a year income bought of the goods more than sold last year. The 'crack pots' confuse silver and gold and currency with national wealth when, as a matter of fact, these things are but a very small part of the wealth of the na- . oOo Newspaper FOR SALE Certified Bliss Triumph and Irish Cobbler seed potatoes. LeGrande Hunsaker, Honeyville, 15. Utah. 3-- fifty-thre- OUR Fronk Chevrolet Co. . . A gray range horse, weight about 1250 lbs, with shoes on front. Call H. A. Hawks, Blue Ridge ranch. tf. 2-- CASH PAID for dead and useless cows and horses. Call Maple Creek Trout Hatchery, Brigham Reverse Charge. 493-J-- 2. 8 tf CHICKS AND HATCHING We are prepared to hatch your turkey and hen eggs. Most modern and equipment made. Quality Leghorn chicks, bred for profit, $10.00 per hundred. All hatching on our own place .from breeding hens from trapnested stock, disease resistant, low mortality, Hanson strains. F. B. Barlow, Tremonton, phone 74.a-up-to-d- 2 Froek Chevrolet Trade-I- Offerings n 192S NASH SEDAN 1929 BUICK COUPE 1931 FORD CABROLET 1929 1932 1929 1933 1931 DURANT COUPE CHEVROLET COACH CHEVROLET COACH FORD V-- 8 COACH ESSEX SEDAN 1928 ESSEX COACH 1930 1926 1931 CHEVROLET Pick-U- p BUICK SEDAN Oldsmobile Sport Sedan TRUCKS 1933 1929 1930 Chevrolet Ford Ford l2-to- n long short l'2-to- n short 1929 Chevrolet l2-to- n short 1934 Chevrolet l'2 ton long l2-to- n -- 4l )( )( 1931 1934 1933 )l ift NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals will be received by the City Council of Tremonton at its office in Tremonton for the labor in connection with the construction of andor improvements to its waterworks system, all in accordance with the plans and specifications as prepared by C. O. Roskelley, Engineer, up and until the hour of 11 a. m., April 12, 1935, Tremonton, Utah, at which time and at which place they will be publicly opened and read It is the intention of the City Council to segregate the labor and material awards. Plans, specifications and proposal blanks may be examined at the of fice of the City Recorder, Tremonton, Utah, or they may be obtained at said office upon a deposit of $10.00. Said deposits will be refunded provided the plans and specifications are Returned to the City Recorder in good order not. later than April 12, 19351 Proposals must be made in strict accordance with all the provisions of the plans and specifications, and must be made on the blank forms provided by the Engineer. To be considered, they must be accompanied by a certified check, Cashier's check or Bid Bond, in an amount at least equal to five per cent of the following sum: The base bid, plus all additive alternates. All bidders are hereby notified that this is a P. W. A. project and all work contemplated thereunder must be done under the rules and regulations of the National Industrial Recovery Act thereto pertaining. (See Construction Regulations, 1 15. ' W. A. Bulletin No. 2, March 3, 1934. Without exception, no bid will be considered unless accompanied by the bidder's Certificate of Compliance, U. S. Government Form P. W. A. 61, Revised March 1934, to the effect that the bidder is complying with and will continue to comply with each applicable Code of Fair Competition ,or, in the absence of such Code or Codes, with the President's Reemployment Agreement. Copies of this Certificate ift CHEVROLET Master Coach CHEVROLET Standard Coupe CHEVROLET Bryce Canyon National Is Giant Amphitheatre Bryce Canyon National Park, 90 miles east of Cedar City, Utah, is probably the most astonishing blend of exquisite beauty and grotesque erandeur that the forces of erosion ' i .! . .a Tf ia noting Q zianvATI it is a Tat ampnitne but atre or basin approximately two miles in Treahtv ' announced to the world at large: "It's a lie there ain't no such place." The longer you look at Bryce the more you find. People have spent; days gazing at it, and still have found new combinations of color. A bright watermelon-pin- k predominates, with alternate strata of deep yellows and white, together with tones of red, or- The play of TG, buff and purple. d shadow uPon tte hue sunUSht ; - wide, about three miles long and 1000 colors and seems to give animation to feet deep. Its rim is 800 feet above realistic images. sea level. Near the rim of Bryce is the atThe softer parts of the high plateau Union Pacific Lodge Center, tractive have been etched away, leaving an are the cozy endless array of towers, spires, sta- and in the pines nearby scenic motorways Excellent lodges. tues, minarets, fortresses, pagodas, Cedar castles and cathedrals standing in connect Bryce Canyon with eroded another Breaks, marvelously weird formations a ruined Orential Na- A WAR A red faced New York lawyer, economist, writer presented plans to the Senate Munitions Committee, which if enacted into a law, will make war less desirable to many more Peo' pie. By drafting big industrialists and taking much of the money made in business during war time, it will make millions more anxious to prosecute any war speedily and thoroughly and get it over with so that normal business may resume. If we are ever in another war, it war with will be a everyone participating. "pay-as-you-fig- and tinted basin, and with Zion city overspread by gorgeous color. tional Park, Kaibab Forest and Grand Pacific motor buses operating reguNewcomers are asked to close their National Park, all reached by larly out of Cedar City, the gateway Canyon to led wait eyes and by the guide, tours in comfortable Union to this wonderland. until they are brought directly to the The sudden view is indescribrim. able. One easterner tried. He took his hands from his face, blinked, rubbed his eyes, looked again and then five-da- y will be included with the "Instructions to Bidders." Specific attention is called to the fact that not less than the minimum wage rates prescribed by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works must be paid on this project. The right is reserved to accept or reject any or all proposals or alter- nsm'BURN 5 a- - 5 nates. THE CITY OF TREMONTOtf; a Municipal Corporation. ISRAEL HUNSAKER, Jr., Mayor of Tremonton City. First Publication, March 28, 1935. Last Publication, April 11, 1935. IIIHMIMMiMIMiIMIMMMNH.IiaiKWIininriainMIIII Dr. Wm. Eli Hawkins CHmOPRACTOR MAKE AN APPOINTMENT HOME PHONE: 7.3-- 5 HARNESS OIL NEATSFOOT HARNESS OIL One Gallon 5 Gallon Lots per gallon 75c 70c Tremonton Harness & Accessories Co., Inc. 1934 CHEVROLET Master Coupe PLYMOUTH DeLuxe Sedan CHEVROLET Sport Coupe PRICES LOWEST IN THE STATE -SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Phone 28 OF QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICES NEVER UNDERSOLD Armstrong Lineoleum, sq. yd Felt Base Floor Coverings, sq. yd $2.98 $4.95 v if L.-'l- 4.0 Here's an opportunity to buy your Spring Dresses at a worth while saving, while the season is still FOR ICE Beverages & Coal SEE- BESSIN6ER BROS. $5.50 Living Room Suites, as low as ... $37.50 Walnut Bed Room Suite - only $43.50 ece 4-Pi- M 92y2c 9x12 Felt Base Rugs 2-Pi- -- "We are wealth producers and poor and rich alike are consumers. To reach both classes, the wise merchants make use of the newspaperf to advertise their goods, because more than eighty per cent of the people read the newspapers." Master Sedan 1933 1933 MAKE GOOD OR WE DO tf LOST ROE, publisher of the Northfield 4Minn.) News, believes News was $12.13 per paid subscriber. (Grant Caswell, manager of the Iowa Press association, estimated the aver age annual cost at $2.30. Mr. Roe's editorial, headed "Speak' ing of Bargains Here's One!" is as follows: e is"A bound copy of the sues of the Northfield News that were published during 1932 makes a book of 560 pages, over two inches thick and weighing over ten pounds. Compared with a book of fiction, which sells usually for $2.50, the year's vol- - 7 ds tion. pulFOR SALE 225 lets. See Ferrell Wood, Thatcher. HERMAN his readers to the merit 4-- be good make, in good shape, and very reasonable. Call Leader office. Subscription. of the $2 a year price for his news paper. In an editorial he points out that the annual cost of producing the two-thir- typewriter. Must WANTED-Porta- ble Whit-ti- er lion. 4-- 3-- the (Calif.) News, Says: "If the 'crack pots' are right and five per cent of our people own eighty per cent of the nation's wealth, there would be no advertising. "We are reputed to have 12O,OO0,0o5"T people in this wonderful country of ours and five per cent of one hundred and twenty million is six million. Our estimated national wealth is three hundred billions of dollars, and yet some folks, who should know better, claim that six million people own eighty per cent of three hundred billion, or two hundred and forty bil- FOR SALE Large size rug and good kitchen range. See John Rauber, 4 Tremonton. tf . is quite generally agreed that everyone pays taxes in some form or another. The owner of visible pro perty is the hardest hit because he not only pays direct taxes but indirect as well. He is not to be blamed be cause in recent years he has demanded a replacement plan whereby everyone who shares in the great advan tages of living in this country assist in supporting the government;, iocai, state and nation. NaSpeaking of indirect taxes, the tional Investment Transcript gives a summary of some of the methods by which this revenue is derived. The purchaser of a loaf of bread pays 17 kinds of taxes when he lays down his coin in exchange for "the staff of life," says this periodical. If he walks home on leaving the store, he is wearing out shoes which are taxed 23 times. If he rides In an automobile, he is paying 42 different kinds of taxes. If he takes a subway or an electric car, the total number of visible taxes which are part of the cost of his fare runs to about 58. There is not a thing in the world that isn't taxed. The house we all live in represents a legion of taxes running all the way from taxes on standing timber to taxes paid by the store which sola the finishing paint and the manufacturers which produc ed it, Food, clothing, transportation. entertainment, periodicals, books the tax bill is a substantial item in their cost to the consumer. It Is obvious that these indirect tax es which provide the bulk of governmental revenue fall more heavily on persons of moderate means than on those with higher incomes. A loaf of bread will last a millionaire as long as it will a laborer and the tax is the same on the loaf of each buys. Tax reduction would be the greatest boon the average American could have a boon that would at once be reflected In more jobs, more purchasing power, more spending for the necessities and luxuries which keep the industrial machine turning. v imnit 1 fTs V 10 BETTER H IS STiHi 1 TMTTTTn .nuLL CAOse ToeC0 1 r il an it C0RHSMK cweeTHeArii vvto rs voor. "V 1 fiB feSBWi . 2. It Tremonton, Utah IT ever mod FtHSft. J. fUS FOR SALE-Spri- ng fryers. See La Thair Pederson, phone 39.0-t2p The Lowdown On Taxes. If in educating ftHC two-doll- ar 4-- PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS ByDWIG SfiHOOIi DAYS ; rs news-gathere- BRING IN YOUR ARTICLES for the Public Auction every Saturday, be4 fore 1 p. m. tf 1 ;:-- ume of the Northfield News is a won- - j derful bargain at the price of only, $2.00 to subscribers. Considering all the work done by a large corps of, in town and country and by a crew of compositors andj pressmen in the printing plant the: rate makes the bargain the j subscriber gets appear all the more impressive. 'production records for the North- field News for the year 1931 show that the average cost per net paid subscription was $12.13. Which makes the bargain the subscriber receives rate under the seem too generous." could be presented editorially or in MONARCH RANGES - PHILCO RADIOS AND WALL PAPER young. Prints and Plain Colors, the Season's favorite frV Styles SSHA LW&TjVERSOH TREMONTON, UTAH P-H-O-- 3G I H 1 1 t 1 4 1 H 1 4 I 1 1 1 1 H4 H4 |