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Show BEAR BIVEiy VALLEY LEADER. THUP.SDAT. APRIL MARCH OF TIME The the r.iitcra of TIME The 1','eckiy Scusmojazine Page 0::e) From Among Republicans, Tlmmas Edmund Dewey has risen f,cm 27 to 50 per cent; Michigan's in - e .,:ovee3 and employers wiih 15 P,T c -- t keei s i.'a took he matters up Tr, even ahead Ohio's Taft (13 pt". t'tnt,.. .,wstion of the Advisory HerboitofTlcover now has 5 per cent .vised that at some future ha3 A If Landon to carf-ishould sped past Government V S. ' fourth place. burden with employers and -' pet-ce- nt Var-denber- ,:- th;;t is, indirect . ' t.ises on meet part rather than j?; a prospective TAGS ' R 9PSELTStncfnt' than utiieucwi- - correspondent aniclt the M jy hsue of Cosmoliian magazine, entitled: "Hitler at the Cross Roads." Hitler has ahvavs been convinced that the United States would never inject itself into another European conflict and haj given littl thought to the attitude once , naa Mr. iiorg-enrnait? henefits,. tt,.- - it!-. r.l nC lrpn reserve fund down. Uranting .". taxes might De slowing n.lVl'C he proposed either to reduce ",,.crv, increase in old age levies f 'cd to rise next January from fC'c'-ito It per cent cn- employers Lff"plovces), or to postpone any t'3?e at all until 1943. That seem- -' OTTAWA V- ss Phasing to 0 J W"-- D?-- as correct- - Act. London, BILL PASSED rMRfi VNTZATION s'vSHINGTON have no doubt what the1 V President reorganizing the U. S. "'veffiment was beaten last year in fitter legislative battle, but anoth-- ; bill drafted by 'reorganization Carolina's Congressman Lind- x,rth acing freedom in all parts of the Brit- -' ish Commonwealth." In short, if Brit-- i ain is attacked, Canada would fight. But Prime Minister King also focused attention on the appalling state of Canadian defense, to say nothing -- Carter was passed last ' of offense. Canada has always relied more half Carter ssman than ronere , c the fight by the way he drafted ' on both British and U. S. Navies for She has less than S00 military tis year's bill. He listed the points help. wc-sk- v ' . ' : I I j j i enemy battleships could anchor Communications, Power, In Service, un- harmed 30,000 yards off Halifax or terstate Commerce, Trade, Securities and demolish either city. Vancouver vA Exchange, Employees' Compen-- ; Worst of all, Canada has at most two ation, Maritime, Tariff Commissions, guns. Army Engineers Corps, Coast Guard, O anti-aircra- Labor Relations Beard, Fed-- I era! Reserve Board, Board of Tax Ap-- ; jeals, Federal Deposit Insurance corp. and Veterans' Administration. Most important, however, is the Comptrol-- ! ier General's office, whose1 functions! ft National LAST DIUVE ! MADRID Heavy snow was falling in Madrid early last week. The city was without fuel, disease was ram-- ) pant, 1,000,000 people were half starved. No restaurant served meals, no bars had drinks. Lentils and dried beans were all anyone could get to Auditor General. eat, and precious little of them. A The bill also forbade the President daily average of 2,000 were reported do away with any function of the dying of hunger and sickness. Com- agencies he might alter or merge, and munications with Valencia, Alicante, it gave cities on the Congress power to invalidate Cailagena warmer majority vote withing 60 days (of coast had broken down. No railroad ; session) any change made by the trains ran for there was no coal. No approving expenditures beforehand auditing them afterward the Pres ifat last year sought to divide be- ten the Budget Director and a new o! and j to i a President. i In 1339 lea He short, Lindsay Warren made the model Reorganization a good drastic than Reorganization 1939. did not consult rten he the White House buses moved, for the gasoline supply had given out. The ships that formerly did a thriving business bringing supplies to Valencia and Alicante were engaged in another equally dangerous but lucrative trade taking refugees out. Order, direction, organ- drafted the bill, and it was neither written nor passed under New M guidance. As enacted, Reorgani- - ization ation 1939 thus stands as the first Spain Eajor accomplishment ffioderates." of the Garner had' broken last week. down in Loyalist Then toward week's end, Nationalist Generalissimo Franco's troops took Madrid without firing a shot and Spain's Civil War was over. Follow- The Dale and Duchess of Windsor Visit tlie Vilhrcr of this country, persistently ignoring the warnings of his Washington Ambassador, Mr. von Wiegand says. Now he is suddenly faced with the problem of the Administration's attitude and this attitude will undoubtedly have an effect on his future plans. Hitler has the greatest contempt for our democracy but he is aware of the human and material resources of America and the blows that these can strike. Hitler is not a physical menace to the United States unless he makes an alliance with Great Britain; unless England should become Fascist, or unless Nazi Germany Bhould conquer England. All of these possibilities seem remote. To Mr. von Wiegand, with whom Hitler has always been unusually frank, he has persistently ridiculed the idea that he has designs on America. "How can I get there?" he inquires sarcastically. He admits that it would be necessary for him to have command cf the British fleet to accomplish this. There have been many wild reports about the strength of the German air force, most of them flatter-iHMr von Wiegand says. Hitler - - himself takes a common sen.sj view of aerial power. lie says. "Air povwr can destroy, demoralise and iatiui-dat- e. It cannot take an objective, occupy it or hold it." The inner conviction of Hitler that his own days are numbered is aho a contributing factor to the course he will pursue in the immediate future. In the circle immediately around him tiiere h a nervous dread of angering the Fuiner. He h surrounded by yes men, afraid to brirg him bad news, fearful to insinuate that things are rot as he conceives them to be. FARMER'S ly ar Pres-Kesti- al DISCS SHARPENED We Have Installed the New "DEI'EW" DISC SHAKl'ENKK H.C.R0I1DE General IJLicksmithing and Machine Work EVERYONE READS THE CLASSIFIED ADS 0' A. to Ray John Raymond Johnson and Miss Marjory Metcalf Taylor, persuaded; six men ami four women to i c'al ev-- ! furiously on a stationary bicycle exhausted, was each until cry day The bicycle operated a dynamo whichwas connected with a number of ekewhich r trie lamps and a each of amount energy measured the ' cf expending. was capable subject After about 30 days of this sort of; feed thing, the scientists began tochii.'eJ of each cyclist daily gla.-sorange and lemon juice containing unflavorcd gelatin, made from the, bones of animals. The men were given 60 grams (two ounces) of gelatin, the women 45 grams. To their amazement, the scientists discovered that practically every one out-- , of the men doubled bis energy mixput after drinking the gelatin ture. One cyclist increased his output from 00 watts to 225 watts, enough to win a marathon. "Tire results,": said Dr. Ray, "varied from 37 per cent to 240 per cent increases." wo-Strangely enough, none of the men ever did better than 40 watts.! This, said Dr. Ray, was due to the; to store: physical inability of women from the of products bodily creatine, t rr' ; f - 1 V watt-mete- THAN THE LOVE5T MORE , Morvtian "ciatiriio ffo mjmkr" es CARS AND PRICED S I Pill ( GET A o miiEm the 1 TV M.. omwi- - motor. t"mi to uit veun n glycine. (5ct Results Seed Alfalfa, Clover, Seed Grain of All Kinds STOHL ELEVATOR CO. lOTOIt CO. 0 A ny ,i y wife . ' ' : - ' j, ' .. , y Phone 41 Tremonton, Utah station miht have your riht Summer &rade of oil ... No. 20, let's say , or Ho. 30 or No. 40. And anyone rnitht know you need 5 or 6 quarts or so. But it take Your Milea&o Merchant's that Conoco Station for the of bringi you the pus at an everyday price. e t 1 . ' Choose patented Conoco Germ Processed oil to know that the engine partt will attract and a if "magnetized" Like the of shield hold a that shields and chromium-platinoil-platin- smooths the bumpers, . . . it's t holds C0H0C0 GERF.l PROCESSED OIL 7 from Your Mileage Merchant oil-platin- g . . . miked to never leaves a precious part of thousand all your friction, during ever-fas- ' Icadcr Ads tt0ILPLiTIDIG - produced! enery, Dr. Ray could, not say. WAYNE SAN I) ALL wlicnyou change Whether glycine extra mental Having Your Save Time, Trouble and Money H lead-Popul- nt THE FIRST Hitler is a mystic with strong psychic perceptions. He does not commune with spirits, he communes with himself and in his meditations, inspiration comes to him. He is convinced that he was given a mission by Providence. The fact that many of his conclusions have been boine out by events has given rise to the idea that he has second sight an idea encouraged by German cultural leaders who wish to inculcate in German youth a belief that Hitler is a superman. g, glycine, one of the 11 amino acids ing closely were 6,500 food trucks of necessary for life. But doctors canSEW YORK Social Help organization, Gallup Polls, which Franco's not pure glycine for this prescribe were distributed canned probably load it is nauseating. public opinion as well from which because purpose chocolate and fruit. record it, currently reveal strik-- foods, Several months ago, Physiologist! o increases in the strength of Burrill Ray of Brooklyn's, George choices for the 1940 PEP GELATIN Y.) Lonp; Island College cf Medi(N. nominations. Among Demo-- i that quantihunch a had large Jln Nance Garner has risen NEW YORK Scientists have long cine ties of a food rich in glycine might i? a 20 per cent choice enthe means of doubling (December) sought a do the trick. Last week he announced per cent. Trailing him in order durance of athletes, soldiers and tired the remar kable results of exper iments Jim Farley, 10 per cent; Cordell businessmen without resorting to with ordinary gelatin, which is 25 HJi, 10 stimulants. Key chemical per cent; Hairy Hopkins, 8 harmful cent glycine. per cent. which staves off muscular fatigue is perDr. and his assistants, Dr. POLLS were in extension vtitk it vna br.is and organized on a have remainuntil the present. Jan.es C. nsoti, exUn.,ion agronomist, associated with extension work at the (."... in 1912, v .?V , V v. when Dr. John A. Widstoe, then president of the institution saw the neeJ for such work. He was first, leader ,,f boys' and girls' club work in the state, and during the war he became agronomist with the service, lie Is associSlaughter supplies of sheep and: ated with the standardizing of grains lambs from April through June will! in Utah, stimulating Increase in Tre-be considerably smaller than for production, and developthe( saint period last year. Early spring! ment In the increase of sweet clover lamb crop will probably be slightly' production. He Is also credited for s rival le r this year than last, but the participation in organizing the state number of early Samba available for crop Improvement association, inaugslaughter before July 1 will be ma-- ! urating weed control In the state, disteiially smaller than a year earlier tributing better varieties of grain because of poor condition of lambs in among farmers, and stimulating th California and Texas, a report of the growing of certified seed potatoes to bureau of agricultural tvonomies counties of higher altituU r. Ho is shows. The cash income of $235,000,-00- 0 IKirtlcularly well known for hi.-- j .leas-arural philosophy. to producers of sheep, lambs, and A native of Denmark, Professor wool in 1938 was markedly lower than is a 1S9S graduate of Utah r Hogcnson the of in $308,817,000 high State Agricultural college, a farmer 1937, the bureau reports. Cache county school teacher, a post Records of the U. S. Department of graduate of Michigan Agricultural a former soil expert with the agriculture indicate that the gross college, farm income from agricultural pro- United States department of agriculture and associate with Cornell uniduction for the year 193S amounted to $8,880,000,000 as compared with versity, a foimer faculty member of academy in Paris, Idaho, and $5,300,000,00 in 1929. After deducting Fielding a former professor of agronomy at certain business expenditures farmers had an income available for liv- the college. The county who has seen ing amounting to $5,230,000,000 in Utah extension agent work through from 1938 as compared with $1,800,000,00 in 1932, or almost three times as the beginning to the present is Ro bert H. Stewart of P.ox Elder county. much. A product of south Cache valley, Mr. Stewart opened extension work lu Cash income from farm marketings Carbon and counties in June, in February totaled $430000,000, the 1913, and in Emery December, 1916 he was bureau of agricultural economics es- transferred to his present ponition to timates. This total is six per cent be- pioneer extension work in 15ox Elder low the $450,000,000 estimated for county. His early work in Hox Elder February, 1938, and 20 per cent less county Included surveys of grain varthan the 578,000,000 repot ted for Jan- ieties and dairy cattle herds. Followuary this year. The usual decline from ing these surveys he has promoted January is about 12 to 15 per cent. programs which have placed bis counGovernment payments to farmers ty in Its present position in the Utah in February of $50,000,000 were well grain and dairy Industries. He is above the $31,000,000 paid out in Feb- credited with aiding in building up ruary. 1938, and the $1,000,000 in almost every type of agricultural enJanuary. Including government pay- terprise in I'.ox Elder. ments, farm cash income this February k'Aled $180,000,000 compared SHOP THROUGH wilh .87,000,000- in February, 1938 LEADER ADS end $019,000,000 in January. nine-yea- airplanes, scores of which are Royal Air Force discards. Her Air Force numbers 218 officers, 1,788 men. Her navy consists of only six destroyers, manned by 137 officers, 1,582 men. jrgsies except" certain ones, which j Her total activite militia is 4,034 men. j listed. it specifically defense guns date from Important exceptions in the bill, as Her coastal and are so small that before : the War, stsed by the Senate, are these Civil a which last year's bill was attacked Bi simply left most of them out this f me. He gave the President power the setup of all executive to alter i ral to on nw,t who ; P Parliament would be.u't,We would re gard it as an act of aggression, men- - plan for j I ,; eo'.lege pays and one coimty U "If there were a prospect of an aggressor launching an attack on Britain, with bombers raining death on " i Prime Mini- Congress, just Said he: business, the txten.sinn staff at I't.ih State pi William Lyon MacKensie King, who has often angered strong Imperialists by failing to come out wholeheartedly for support of Britain in case of war, last week addressed the House cf Commons in Ottawa. w-.'e'o- appeasing to Canada's e h Il.-K- CANADIAN SUPPORT ster 1 1 week declared: "Nothing on God's not propose increasing- green earth would induce me to run1 did amounts thee paia out ior for the Presidency." O - of the Ext. i;si,,n SerAs p vice of the United States !. partment of agriculture are anticipc.tit.g of a c.r.nivetsary. nntf.-t.-i- j - I ;:rCe liccall Iieffinnings to Congress has put Adolf Hitler on Roosevelt, who has caught more trains and any other U. S. worxn. sb!y di- - Utah Extcnsionists to Karl II. von Witvzni, .til?! 7fenMVe (o'tne infirStantIme' aordinq in Eleanor the of 139 Hiller on Defensive Sap Karl von Wicgand reg. o. s. pat. orr Ly 6. diain-proo- f start3 end thousands of miles this Summer. You'll sec your beat indicator see your staying down safely; youll Conoco Grrrn Processed oil staying up economically. Then see Your MilrjSe Merchant today for the phi of Continental Oil Company A |