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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY. APRIL 7. 1933 I i WAEIT, the Speed Cop - - By Fronk Chevrolet Co. The MARCH OF TIME prepared by th Editors of TIME The Page One) its current than wore immigrants to help Invitations law-permit. to qU the committee went to Great State, France, Italy. Belgium, The (Continued From s vetnerlands, Denmark. Sweden, Switzerland and 20 South Amer-jja- n' republics. invitation was Secretary Hull's in the U. S. by praised unanimously TZsti welfare groups, the Federal Council of Churches and the nation's and prompt official acceptance Lined likely to be forwarded from NetherlGreat Britain, France, The Warm In Springs, ands and Belgium. Roosevelt said he hoped Ga., Franklin tne'u. S. would maintain its 150-yean asylum old tradition by becoming not only from refugees political for ar but from Russia, Italy and Austria well. Spain as Of Secretary Hull's plan, Adolf Hitler last week said, "I can only hope that the other world, which has sympathy for these crimiat least be generous enough to convert their sympathy into practical aid. We. . . are ready to put all these criminals at the disposal of these countries, for all I care, even such deep nals, will on ent number of refugees the U. S. under presquotas would be 26,000 each year from 2,700 Germany, 1,400 from Austria, from Russia, 5,800 from Italy. o "SWOOSH" - - - For gunpowder salutes to the President and other dignitaries, the War Department last year spent $124,500 or 96,000 over its appropriation for this purpose. Paring expenses, the Department last week announced that official salutes henceforth would be fired by inferior powder, thus cutting n the cost of a salute from $62.37 to $28.35. With cheap powder, War Department officials say, the noise made by salutes will be not "Boom" WASHINGTON used in 21-gu- but "Swoosh," CARS - - - Over y roads last week; drove President Roosevelt in a brand new Ford touring car (license: FDR). In Gainsville, he later took his first ride in one of the new cars which he will henceforth use when exhibiting; himself to crowds a specially-- 1 WARM Georgia's built SPRINGS, Georgia red-cla- Cad nine-passeng- er K BOVS-VlOO- Weekly Neusmogazine, illac with handles on the windshield for Secret Service men, a stock of tear gas bombs in a compartment behind the driver's scat In the ample noor space behind the compartment the President can lie down, if anyone starts snooting at him. OFF hEQE WORK THIS PEOPLf! Rflv.Tuccc rAeK.Vi.;.ilirr., 6oooVJa (Ctt Sop TOWM-K- looks rHi4 UthCSE AT Vtucm HERE'S AM CATCH btoos - Vruttt eenn, oiP . .,,. e () iVt!fc VMIUfc Y Al. ItU M?".V"V . NEVtR COMB OVERHAUL JOQ JTJ PV" lf l! 0T II . , At-r- -, 7usafScar -- ZT Standard Sedaaf Heater Radio AT 5395.00 Y ZPC YK y--T-A CHEVROLET CO. 1933 PONTIAO SEDAN Reconditioned $295.00 BUSINESS: GOVERNMENT WEEK 1931 WARM SPRINGS. Georsria Rush ed by airmail to Franklin Roosevelt at Warm Springs last week was the special report on the railroad crisis prepared by Interstate Commerce Commissioners Walter M. W. Splawn, Joseph B. Eastman and Charles n. Mahaffie. Meantime, in Washington. tne Association of American Rail roads and the Railway Labor Execu tives Association "decided to wait and see what the President is going to do before discussing wage cuts. Said K. u. E. A. President Georee L. Har rison after the meeting: "They told us how poor thev were." Said A. A. R. President J. J. Pelley: "And they told us how poor they were." GAINESVILLE, Georgia Speak ing at Gainesville, Franklin Roose-veedeclared that wages and the standard of living in the deep South are too low. Said he: "Georgia and the lower South may just as well face facts. . . Most men and women who work for wages in this whole area get wages which are far too low. On the present scale of wages, and therefore on the present scale of buying power, the South cannot and will not succeed in establishing successful new industries." Ascribing part of the South's economic difficulties to old fashioned feudalism, the President added: "When you come down to it, there is little difference between the feudal system and the fascist system. If you believe in the one you lean to the other." WASHINGTON Continuing his ef- in February, Franklin Roosevelt appointed Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. head of a committee to study the problem and prepare a program for its solution. The committee: James Roosevelt, SEC Chairman William O. Douglas, RFC Chairman Jesse H. Jones, and Vice Chairman Ronald Ransom of the Federal Reserve Board. TERT 1334 CIIEV. o forts to satisfy the demand for more credit facilities, first enunciated by the small businessmen's conference o PRESIDENTIAL IaH lt luxury ships." The maximum entitled to enter PAGES FORD SEDAN at A Snap No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains $150.00 which five years ago begean a mon umental $250,000 study of public and private recreation in Chicago, last week published its findings In a 176-pa- ge Bath Needn't Have Wailing Walls Splashed-U- p If you'll promise to keep it to yourself, the average housewife will tell you that the average husband is a porpoise when he takes a bath. When the shower suddenly machine guns him with an unexpectedly icy blast seemingly piped direct from the Arctic, hubby not only lets out a yowl that would make a mountain lion cringe like a kitten, but he inundates surrounding walls with the tidal wave churned up in the wake of his gaspy getaway lunges. Mother gets the worst of it, naturally. Those dripping walls , . . wailing walls what a mess. Something must be done about it. Nice part of it, something is being done about it in a lot of homes these days new dwellings and those to be modernized this report the most exhaustive study ever made in the U. S. of what people do clandestinely and publicly with their spare time. The report revealed that Chicogans spend slightly more than $30,000,000 or $10 per capita for public recreation; $250,000,000 or $80 per capita for commercial amusements. Other highlights: 1 Chicagoans buy 20,000,000 movie 8 1 8 t tm mmm mum tickets a year. They bought 1,500,000 theatre tickets last year (an unusually big year) ; 155,000 went to the opera; 205,000 went to symphony concerts. The per capita expenditure for music is 20c a year. Most popular sports are billiards and bowling, on which Chicagoans spent 5 per cent of their amusement money; the city haa 500,000 bowlers. spring. Horse races were seen last year blocks By using insulux glass by 859,000; and $37,305,000 was wafor the exterior wall, the bath not only has the benefit of a flood gered at race tracks. Chicago has of diffused natural daylight with9,331 taverns (the word "bar" i3 pro out sacrifice of privacy, but such hibited by law), one for every 388 a wall is impervious to the porInhabitants, of 3,000 taverns sam poise antics of hubby. A towel pled, nine out of ten violated various or sponge quickly corrects the laws, 392 provided indecent dancing situation. And such privacy exhibitions, 113 prostitution. Prostipanels lift the bath to a new contution and other "dubious" entertainof ception practical beauty. ments were estimated to gross over Inches thick, tha Dad, Junior or Sister can sing, building blocks reduce the transwall, only 3 $30,000,000 a year. in, whistle or to same hearts' of width a as they their mission of sound the yodel block, equivalent Regarding the less savory pastimes, content, too, because the vacuum reduce transmission of heat or insulation value to a characteristic of such hollow cold. The vacuum makes sorh the report concluded that the "red thick plastered brick wall. lights burn brightest in deteriorated or neglected neighborhoods," that the WASHINGTON Introduced in Con Reforming unions is twice as im- PASTIMES cure is not moral indignation, nor gress by Senator Carter Glass with portant as reforming public utilities better living character CHICAGO After working, eating conditions. education, but Franklin Roosevelt's approval was a or stock exchanges, ten times as imbill to restore to RFC the power to portant as reforming the Supreme and sleeping, most U. S. citizens have make loans to "any business enter- - Court; and the Survey shows that ev- some 40 hours a week left In which pnze which is unable to find funds en 35.6 per cent of factory labor puts to loaf, talk, read, walk in the park. I elsewhere. RFC's original power to union reform first. Among executives, But their biggest single recreation, h make self liquidating loans was given 52.9 per cent put it out front. of their spare accounting for to PWA in 1933 and RFC lending Comments FORTUNE: "The indig- time and a bigger proportion of their Grant Smith, of Fielding, had hter power is now limited by numerous nation here seems to be directed spare cash, Is commercial entertain appendix removed April 6. His sister, restrictions. The Glass amendment Is specifically at the leadership of the ment. The U. S. people each year Beth, returned, home Thursday, 19 suggested only as an emergency mea- present union movement. Some of it spend about $10,000,000,000 (an es days after having her appendix reh sure to expire in a year's time. of their income) for moved. is certainly intended for union rack timated ets. Some of it may be inspired by a all forms of recreation, including their Carl Boss, of Garland, had rupturd to that Lewis has overplayed his public parks. ed appendix removed March 30. His NEW YORK As the stockmarket feeling cards and brought a useful cause into of this goes to the biggest TJ. S. condition is slowly improving. slumped to new low figures, gloomdisrepute. Some of it may even dustry commercial recreation. Lyle Neise, little son of James iest statistic of the week was the Dow arise from a belief that Green, in con tJ. S. educators are much concerned Neise, of Howell, had a ruptured apJones industrial average of 106.6, trast with Lewis, has been too inwith recreation, because what a na- pendix removed April 6. His condi lowest point since June 1935. The active in the service of organized tion does with its leisure is an index tion as present is very serious. psychological timulus for the decline labor." of its character and culture. Mrs. George Hansen, of Bear River included grave political reports from the and returned home Wednesday, af Northwestern City, University GainesRoosevelt's President France, ter Recreation a minor operation on April 2. Commission, LEADER THE FOR SUBSCRIBE ville speech in which he twitted the Chicago "selfish few." I . 12-in- ch . HOSPITAL NEWS -- one-fift- one-fift- i ( One-thir- one-ha- lf , WASHINGTON Contradicting advance reports, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau announced: "I would guess that income taxes might run between $20,000,000 and $50,000,000 below our estimate. Shabby Hun Down Homes ARE OUT OF TODAY'S REAL ESTATE PICTURE! You've got to keep your property if you want to maintain its value. 1 "Daddy wanted us to have a safe car so he bought a CHEVROLET y because it has PERFECTED , o up-to-da- te - - - SELF-CRITICIS- YORK Labor NEW unions are first on the list of institutions Americans think are "most in need of reform," the Quarterly Survey of pub- HYDRAULIC BRAKES ! . lic opinion by FORTUNE magazine this week reveals. NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE IMPROVEMENTS Clean yards, attics and cellars . . . repaint and redecorate . . . make needed repairs . . . add essentials of beauty, liveability and comfort TOO MUCH HO TO EAT THAT'S - JUST : ' f hZ i: XI THE TIME TO ALKALIZE EXERCISE -- Modernize . . . We Can Assist You In All the Details f AC C YOUR BUILDING REQUIREMENTS FOR MODERNIZATION PROGRAM CAN BE FILLED AT OUR STORE Whether remodeling or building a new home we can supply your every need in quality merchandise. 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