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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, PAGE SIX they are purchasing a new car. From PENROSE FOOD WINS TRIP there they will go to Savanah, Georgia where they will visit Mrs. Stanf ill's Stan-fillpeople and also visit with Mr. route. en people Harley Granger, who is attending the U. S. A. C. at Logan, came home Saturday morning for his father and Melvin Grover so that they too might enjoy the football game Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ross of Salt Lake City arrived Thursday to visit with Mr. and Mrs. Edmun Shuman. On ShuFriday they with Mr. and Mrs. man and Mrs. Starlin Stanfill were in Brlgham, They returned to their home Sunday. There are Measles in three homes here. Mr. and Mrs. John Petersen of Brig ham City were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leek. Messers and Mesdames Conrad Fred rickson, Carl Nelson and the Misses HIGHLIGHTS HAPPENINGS THAT AFFECT AL AND INTERNATION- AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE FROM LOCAL WELFARE. "The Roosevelt victory is of such mammoth proportions as to leave no room for his opponents to be bitter or his critics to cavil. It Is so overwneim-in- g that alibis, analyses and explanation tieem foolish. The only thing to do is cheerfully accept the result, with wonder that it was possible to be so Mind before the election to the irre sistible nature of the combination of sentiment and forces behind him. So wrote Frank Kent, one of the most forthright of Roosevelt critics. This view is generally held by tne professional publicists who supported Landon. Those who supported the President say with justice that tney anticipated the result, that it was In evitable though most of them were surprised by the extent of the victory. For the sake of the record, here is how the great battle of 1936 came; out: The President carried 46 states,! for a total of 523 electoral votes. Governor Landon carried 2 states, with 8 electoral votes. The popular vote gave a President a majority of about 10,- 000.000 26.000.00A to 16,000,00 lor his opponent. It was the most der cisive electoral college victory since y the system became well es ERMA ATWOOD, 16, Pleasant Grove, Utah County, named state champion in food preparation by State Club Leader D. P. Mureducaray, receives an tional trip to the 15th National Club Congress to be held in Chicago, November 27 to December 5. In seven years she canned 748 pints of food, and prepared 340 meals. This summer she planned se LRSflmueLs most of the meals for a family of Bix, and helped in managing tha home. In seven foods demonstrations and other contests she won 1142.00 in prize money. Miss is a contestant for anElec-trolu- x kerosene operated refrigerator to be awarded each of the two girls scoring highest in food work in the western states. She will also compete with other state champions for three cash college scholarships of ?400, $300, and ?200, given by Servel, Knc, makers of the refrigerator, rl sponsor ol the contest. Ogden, Utah At-woo- d two-part- tablished. Elvina and Verline Nelson and Mrs. Pack Leek and son, Dee, were Brig-haCity visitors Monday. The little Misses Rhea June and Gaylene and Master Doyle Stanfil! are guests of their uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Edmun Shuman, while their patents are on their trip. m Pair better shoes from main floor stock .... black, brown or colors .... all heel heights .... all sizes. 540 Formerly to $8.95 $3.95 $4.95 TWO GROUPS $1.95 t3 s J thej try to maintain a government-rtflated capitalism and at the Document Date Back 'On file in the archives to 1650 division the state library In Richmond, Va,J official documents of the colonial yd ernnient tnat nate o.ick to iu.o. Highest Cash Prices Paid Phone, Bell, 146; B. R.V.M '".-- nt hum n. sid Afinmivcffsaffy Sale Is?. Business Twenty Two Years -- The "Base Period' for Figuring Extra Electricity at Half Price ' -- The People of Treinonton and Surrounding Country Have An Unusual Opportunity to Save Money On New, Fine Quality Furniture The "base period" used in calculating the e amount of electricity which you receive at is the period of 12 months ending June 1935, where continuous service was taken during that half-pric- WE ARE READY FOR YOU WITH BARGAINS! .... Never before have we been prepared to serve you than now Our regular big stock has been augmented by many special purchases of new furniture for this extraordinary sellDependable, famous makes of furniture and household furnishings at asing event low prices. tounding .... period. Otherwise it is the twelve months' period thereafter during which continuous service was first taken. Hundreds of Other Bargains Not Listed In This Ad. LIVING ROOM SUITES This original twelve months' period is the elece permanent basis upon which your tricity is figured, and does not change from half-pric- year to year. These Beautiful Sets Will Interest the Most Disci Buyer. im-inati- ng Also For example: The amount of electricity you used during December 1954 (if your base period is the twelve months ending June 1955) would End Tables Lamps - Scarfs to make complete Ensembles - -- be the basis for figuring the extra amount of electricity which you would receive at half-pric- e .... in December 1936, and so on for each succeeding month. Cedar Chests o Beautiful Walnut Veneered This statement is made to clarify any possible misunderstanding among our customers as to the base period used With Cedar Lining Prices As Low As in figuring their $11.75 OTHER BARGAINS I1ED ROOM SUITES .... 35.50 up FELT BASE RUGS $5.50 up MONARCH RANGES $70 00 lJ'::"fli'L I III III M IT 1 electricity. UTAH POWER & LIGHT BMT&OWI&SON r half-pric- e 1" 111 w 3C Of QnHHKHB for HIDES - PELTS FURS - WOOL J. W. Garrett Cet 8 small bottle of BUCKLEY'S MIX. (triple acting at any good drug store take 2 or 3 doses before you go to bed tonight then if that tough old do cough Isn't fellevedf you not sleep like a top ail night long get flash your money back it acts like Hen one sip checks art ordinary cougn. BS9HBSBBSSEBI it' left-winge- rs TURE Down Sfairs Sfore 7 time keep the as conttc ed as possible. At this writing, the President itself has given but one indication! future policy, that was his stateaJ that the budget will soon be balancl a step which, if achieved, will bJ urally be regarded as conservafcf and will be lauded by industry, f seems to feel that better conditJ make it possible to reduce govp ment relief spending by a considers! amount. This saving, plus the incra) in tax income that results from if proved industrial earnings and M er taxes, may ao away with Feddef deficits. Cet Rid of Them This Quick Easy Way $2.95 TWO GROUPS - em-.- Wis-sonia- ge a recovered much of the ground during depression, and win from new experiments, Thuj " small group. Another group feels that the Ph.1 dent will swing sharply to the and go whole hog along the a socialist or collectivist or gram, This too is small. The largest group, and th which seems best informed and a!" est to the White House, feeUtv the second Roosevelt Administrf will follow a middle - of course that .the President wm tempt the difficult job of holding! balance between radicalism on the J hand and reaction on the other other words, they feel that he EE2232I2 Bronchial Soughs Complete lines from Peters for women and growing girls .... also broken lines from main floor. Formerly to $5.75 So far so eood. But when it comes to guessing why Mr. Roosevelt achiev ed the. unprecedented, there is considerable difference of opinion, especially in the Republican camp. Thus, Walter Lippman, who supported Roosevelt in 1932 but turned to Landon in the last campaign, has written that the campaign was more or less normal that it simply proved the srn. which no Republican can hope to careliminry under any circumstance is such Repuconsideration, ated from blican candidates as Harding, and Hoover, won just as handily. On the other hand, famed William advisWhite, one of Landoh's closest differently. election sees very the ors, He believes that "it was not just an election which the country has underflood. gone, but a political Johnston The dam gave way which has been slowly filling of 40 years, fed by the waters of Bryanlsm, of Theodore Roosevelt's progressivism, of LaFol-lete- 's n Wisconsin insurgency, of liberlism, of the progressive bloc in the Senate under the Administration of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover. The waters of the New Deal cover the earth. Republicans did not heed the warnings. . . ." Generally speaking, this view is held. In addition, practically all commentators agree that the Republican campaign was inept and badly handled, that the party organization was about as bad as it could be, and that Landon and his advisors failed to make the best of the situation. By contrast, the Democratic machine under Jim Farley was amarvel of There was "J and effectiveness. no waste motion everything worked with the precision of a series or reiay switches. Furthermore, it is difficult to exaggerate the political importance of the President's personality. A natural born speaker, he has the rare faculty of establishing a personal relationship between himself and the voters. As many point out, no one in the political history of the last century has had so great a grip on the emotions of millions of American citizens. The important question to be answered now is, What direction will future Roosevelt policies take? And here again there is a wide difference of opinion, even in the President's own camp. Supported as he is by amazingly varied groups, no one but the Chief Evecutive himself can ans Coo-lid- THE DINNER PAILS, DIVIDEND CHECKS AND TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVnJUAL. NATION- 4-- H Mid Season Clearance inwer that Question. Timo truth of the old adage that an of Deal a in group is of the opinion thai period unbeatable is cumbent industrial improvement. Mr. Lippman President is likely to take vative course, now that busineatf also says that if the solid south ECONOMIC 's David E. Sherman left for his home in Savanah, Georgia after spending the summer here. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Petersen and Mr. and Mrs. J. Brooks Shuman spent Thursday and Friday in Ogden on business. Mr. and Mrs. Claud Staples of Eden Utah were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Miller Tuesday of last week. Miss Alta Grover spent the week end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Grover. Mr. and Mrs. Al Spiers are in Ogden to find a place to live this winter. Mr. and Mrs. Eph Storey and family of Liberty, Utah were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Brooks Shuman. Mr. and Mrs. Starlin Stanfill left Saturday for Detroit, Michigan, where 1936 (TJOBOro fife CD |