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Show mt&namigsi BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1837 PXSS EIGHT DEWEYYILLE By ilrm. Tbomaa Anlt William Gardner returned home after spending two years in Kebraaka, Hc is the aoa of Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Gardner of this place, scouts Tuesday after mutual the of home the met at officers scout and Bert YVheatley and honored him with a handkerchief and sock shower, before his departure on a mission for the L. D. S. church in California, freshments were served and a very repleasant evening was spent Bert of ranking honor ceived the highest scout in Bear River stake. ofWednesday evening the mutual ward met at the ficers and partners chapel and entertained in honor of Elder Bert Wheat ley. They presented him with a set of the church books. Thursday John Becker of the Glen Bros. Music Co., installed an electric organ In the ward chapel. Thursday Mrs. Lester Pierson accompanied her daughter, Mrs. Jack Brown and children to Ogden. Mrs. Brown and children met her husband in Ogden. They left for San Francisco, Calif, Friday. Friday evening the testimonial for Bert Wheatley was well attended, some one hundred and fifty dollars was the gift presented to him by his many friends and relatives. Bert will have many happy memories of all while on his mission. Mrs. A. A. Loveland returned here after spending ten days with her daughter, Mrs. Charles Beverage and family in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. LLsh, Sr. attended the foot ball game at Richmond on Thursday where the Bears w met the Bulldogs. A number of frfcnds and relatives from Deweyville, attended thse funeral services of Jaevis Johnson at the Fielding ward chapel Thursday at o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thorsen were luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Aus tin Johnson of Bear River City on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Burbank and little daughter spent Sunday at Bear River Citv with their mother. Mrs Win. J. Rose, in celebrating her birth day anniversary. Donna Marble returned to Lakeside after viai finer her parents. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Marble of this place. Mrs. Cleone Hunsaker is from an operation in the Dee hos pital in Ogden. Mr. M. M. Gardner is slowly improv ing at this writing. Mr. and Mrs. Max J. Schlegel and small son of Logan, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Tther- ington, Jr. of this -plac on Friday. Child of Ogden, Mr. and Mrs. Ovisited relatives here on Sunday af ternoon. Mrs. M. A. Lish accompan led them home to be a guest of her sister, Mrs. Child, for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Beeton of are spending a few weeks here with Mr. Beeton's father, Geo. Beeton. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Burch have moved here to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Burbank and sons were visiting in Ogden and Brig-haCity, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Peterson and little daughter, of Petersboro, visited at the home of Bishop and Mrs. Marion G. Perry on Sunday. National Automobile Fatality Chart ' f ' ' A ' 4' AjfrVjTW t !Mcate DECREASE in Automobile fatautksj CARELESSNESS CAUSES MOST ACCIDENTS ECONOMIC LOCAL WELFARE. er With the exception of auto, auto parts and food products companies, which showed moderate declines in earnings for the first nine months of this year as compared with the same period in 1936, the earnings' picture is very good. A representative group of chemical companies' earnings are up 28.5 per cent; building material makers up 34 per cent; oils up 38.9 per cent; steels up 26.3 per cent; utilities up 48.8 per cent; a miscellan eous group of big companies, including such strange bedfellows as A. T. and T., Gillette and National Distil lers, up 24.6 per cent. With earnings at these high- levels, why, then, are stock prices sagging, along with business confidence that psychological factor which is some - n i i i -- ? third-quart- 1 K Ax f rfyS r rJF f Ir jLa ,' V - I THOUGHT Hot Any a?. WR5 YOU -- ;v; r::. kJ i 7 Farmers' Cash Union -- r II it I I iLS k J Ibabygir, v-- I i II Uolmson of (jgog'SfcAV Over-indulgen- in food ce or ujuaucu irequenuy d an Mr. and Id! dnv; bring, his city vij harents. Tfi pty with 1 frs, Bert an lamilies. I The manj condition in ths. over-aci- gaa on Etnin.irh cafe our stomach, cold "a muscj. paina. To get rid r.' and correct the acid audition, maon, ALKA - S E A LT2EI .6.W.A. nnntnln lira - . . a Mola-Moto- r. v, i i 7 TfJw S ff I fsfyC f fjr1fV FA l VjLA" Lr fJ yA ft r yy) CI I I I (rhV rMe)fiJ I O llVwArQI rtfn rll A L U and dyn.amic rew. will Comparison convince e's! 1 valut "Tr c w$mwmmmmmS, gig ' y ' , JT yUlt J?zi iZz i ...jj.. I J.jfVsar ' UlJil llill n 1 t II nnrrm r lltMCr. AM.M IV ms.m.wm V! M m II I I i J itI II I I l 1 1 I it W m sf 'fe - MUlUJLU UVe J tifMM ffir I 4 " ToL rZ j Sp0Yp ltP EigM J""1 that nowhero can money buy so macA. i ;VHY I i car features and in L r, and Oldsmobiles. Again Olds- mobile's dashing new Si fiXyiiV CfS' ( 'e TF IT'S something new and modern -- if it adds to safety, comfort or convenience- -if t makes action more? thrilling, more enjoy able or more economical, yu'u find lt in the 1938 1 Tl Tl .v It' 9cho5s Electric XSvmt i- InC I BE MONEY AHEAD TLffiisv p HDuSWv v lTvOf Nrf' MJJit6X --r si t I t I i Mr. and fmerly of jLaie City CH ft J mmmmmmmminim YOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET' e Mrs. A .itfll Wee Staying' f0 r( Mrs. I "Everything for Home and Farm" -- fyMissV EATfcK lf) i'l Cit; pare m one-piec- e, - ;( If. Hardware Glass and China Ware f bet cast-alu- - TELEPHONE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR A LOAD OF QUALITY FUEL Castle Gate - Duspruf Coal fLake er ( ft 1 w.; OST WASHING a o it U r Consult Us for Estimates Evening' wages aim jiuurs ior ail ir.dustn, served a in uiuuu uuuui, jiowever the Vitoil w fritted other powers would be so great J fffas some think it would be a V'ir,..i . 11 fscore v over industry, and a 6Crr.rl cat man. land cut gressmen oppose the I Mrs.S reason. ida? iCT? $3 'Wtf 4J w)7) j youryour irienas ana neignoors. ie iair 10 self and family. Wake up and live in a home of your own. furs. pis city,- 0: r. hop jparland, the more times "I hard, lCa1lfivl... tr. important than irom the in . . t Iah nnimatrinflHvft nrnHnrt irvn fidirAn? and that conditions will be "slow" LI., vtimiiuii niui vegeiauie and ffi. this winter. 'ecent auton alkallzers. There are a number of reasons. oOo MMiday, Your driest sells In the first place, it appears cer .1 :ertained a f me arum ana by the pach; industrial By the time this sees print, the tain that fourth-quartspecial Congressional session will be 1 arty. Those earnings will be substantially below seslames La V of 1937 and fourth underway. Chances are that the both sion will run into January, when the ary S. Anc quarter of 1936 earnings. Reason Christensi 1 Industrial production has been drop' I luilt was mad one most of led the by impor ping, .ierved. tant industries, steel, whose producMrs. Marie 41 of cent tion touched per capacity and 1 siussen in a recent week as against vz per mm vwAJts-jlichmond, Ut cent in April and 12 per cent in 1932 his city visiti Consumer industries have been going I Mrs. Arnold slow on placing orders with heavy I quilting bee industry, because of uncertainty as to jay afternoon. future conditions and the trend of di prices. tc f'terwhich tax In the second place, the problem is more involved now than ever. pdner, Fern Business feels that such taxes as the Bck in 1927, the millionth Jlga Rasmussei Undistributed Profits levy and the Mar us washer with The num tub was produoed. Capital Gains levy are decisive detriments. The proponents of these taxes Martag of today it much finer WMhar than evar yet the price feel that they are necessary to protect it low. The us against another inflationary boom tub, sediment trap and other THE Decisive of the 1928 variety. factor features that won Maytag leader in the dispute is the Administration, ship sre tull ex which has had little to say, and chamclusively Maytag ISGnE; advantages. Any pioned these taxes in the past HopeMaytag available j ful sign, from business' point of view, with gasoline! is the unquestionable increase in Conor for sentiment InCa gressional repeal f REE TRIAL IrMini with radical revision of the taxes if this tlx Mm MsYTAB IRONER goes far enough, some think Mr. ' Twenty modern feaK ? tures of simplicity Roosevelt will take the lead and adconvenience. Six and vocate changes. models with a wide To In the third place, the thought of price range. another depression, even a minor one, is sufficient to send chills running Gc down the spines of both business leadM ers and government officials. Reason: Tremonton, Utah - Phone 307 The country is in no shape to withI THE MAYTAG COMPANY stand a sharp drop in income, proFOUNDED 1893 K'EWTON 1 Manifccfaterj duction and earnings. In 1929, the l ... 7 BE er THAT AFFECT PAILS, DIVIDEND CHECKS AND TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL NATION-L AND INTERNATIONAL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE The joy of living cannot be 100 until you have a home of your own. You feel better, work better and you are better. You and your family are more highly respected by I -- Alka-Selb- HIGHLIGHTS third-quart- I e,.. .7" There will be bitter lv involvine both of th objectives farm aid and ,Z hours legislation. The A,t: wants a farm plan that will crop control in somo v.1U. Wages and hours will cam more talk. Administrate on plan important. Forecast is an extremely hazardous undertaking today, and the forecaster is liable to find himself out on a limb before long. However, summing up the views of most economists and industrial journalists: The consensus of opinion is that industry will be relatively quiet for a few months to come, with security prices moving erratically in a narrow range; that 1938 will bring a lower national income than 1937; Iua r regular session begins. most Th above chart (how the gains and by state in tha nation wids campaign now being waged for highway safety. During the first nine months of 1937 automobile fatalities increased 87, as com pared with the same period of 1936, In the 34 states from which fatality reports were received. Quoting Newsweek, "Perhaps never in history has there been as wide a the state of busi divergence betwe-eness as revealed by earnings reports and the level of stock prices. Measured by earnings, indusalmost are and trade booming in try this country; measured by stock prices, business is definitely in the Quality Building Material fatalities Indicates lack of adequate data for comparison FROM OLD HOME WITH in Automobile Indicates NO CHANGE in Automobile fatalities HAPPENINGS 0THE DINNER ON BUILDING THAT NEW HOME OR REMODELLING AND REPAIRING YOUR all-ti- umt Ctrnut mum CwtX Indicates INCREASE m Leader Ads Get Results government debt was low, and business' reserves were high. Today the recgovernment debt is at its are reserves business' and ord high the been spent during having lows, bad years to keep concerns alive. In other words. In 1929 we were econo mically prepared for a depression; today we are not. In the fourth place, a large percentage of executives and big investors are convinced, rightly or wrongly, that this Administration is following the wrong track in relation to private Industry, is tending toward a Dictatorship, has unspoken ambitions to make the U. S. into a Collectivist state. Whether this point of view is mistaken or not, it cannot help but be a depressive factor. In the fifth place, the foreign situation, coupled with the feeling that this country must inevitably become involved in any major foreign entanglement no matter how wisely the Administration's leadership, is an uncertain the frightening element. This does not exhaust the list of factors contributing to the present confused outlook, but it gives the U 1.1 V lV n m Al II l II i v II ii W 1 it r:u litthWili1li-tiii-tiiIV IIVI m II i Asrss&r T s L tM m II H r, ' a I SEE OUR jibM''' Nl II Streaml If II ! II m FFER ON . . 1 Tr JI II ii vIf II flJA I I "h andLttU fr 'ver lift A |