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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, -- by J thi Etors cf TIME M.v,,:cJTrom Page Ore.) crowded House ci ujiua;'U.'larl0ld Prime Minister Ne- '"Jt'berlain announced that - . vlm'p noirotiatir.sr . r : a:-- a "-- s j j ,ier.i of military agreements isazi aggression. be: ," ' i.usma;jz:na 4 Clearly exempt processors of! specified agricultural products from . ra. ..Miii.y en inesa are now covered by a clause which fles even Mr. Andrews' astute Gener- j counsel v.aiven aiajrruaer. 5 Exempt Puerto Rico and the! Virgin Islands from the arbitrary wage minima prescribed for the U. S. and let committees familiar with island industries figure out how to raise wages without ruinir.g island industries now accustomed to living in an economy with a much lower scale of prices. Last week New Jersey's Mary Teresa Norton, chairman of the House Labor Committee, offered Elmer Andrews' amendments to Congress. In doing so, she conceded that the Act as it now stands "has tended to create hardship on employers, reduce employment and eenerallv dislocate the flow of business in a particular industry. r- further I, ?ti..ry nave, Recent happenings state made every or wrongly, 'v j eoun-s'p;'rl- C nine-ounc- Busi-nes- A les-'ei- low-pai- d f, -e ut V. Look for the name Behind the name "Caterpillar" is more than S3 years expert-u,- e in building: track-typ- e of quality a,d workmanship. This long M'ricnoc, plus the many ex-- ,r value futures built into these machines, accounts in a highest measure for "Catorpil-Llr- " n the track-'Mt- e tractor field. tell von about thp extra 'inie, fiv.ti.o thou. nia- '"es and how ran sae they l'n anil ninney for you. AsU por a Demonstration . ,t REPAIR A. E. KOC1IE, Prop, rx.-t- tU ! s thor-oughfar- ar g one-fourt- h U ade-floa-te BUSINESS SPEAKS FOR ITSELF ! ' business man has ridi-:.i tl.c butt of censure, blame for almost every condition in our He has been maligned, and misunderstood and taid very little about it. In , l: j dmtth J rutting hay crops into the silo instead of the haymow is brininff about a change in dairy barn design. . . r-J The new order of tilings makes it possible to dt away with the haymow, Slaughter supplies of sheep and keen the riairv barn down to one story .iml from April through June will lessen fire dansrer. Already some er be considerably smaller than in the( the dairy equipment firms are selung same period bust year, says the Bur-- 1 dairy bams. ( Farm Journal, eau of Agricultural Economies. The- April.) early spring lamo crop prnimuiy wuij be slightly smaller this year than last. Although 1939 set s the principle of But the number of early lambs avail- - 'nil- - risk" insurance extended to R. E. SIMPSON able for slaughter before July 1 will wheat growers on a Nation-wid- e scale be materially smaller than a year under the Federal Crop Insurance able night fatalities on America's earlier, because of the poor condition Corporation, the Idea of crop insurFatal Streets cost about $2,444 per of lambs in California and Texas. ance is not new. mile per year. tht Benjamin Franklin was one It is Mr. Simpson's prediction Forty-sevestates have indicated first to advocate the use of insurance come will to real that authorities that they wish to participate in the to protect fanners against crop ize the vital relation of light to new Federal-Stat- e cooperative plan safety and cites Detroit as the out wildlife restoration, reports the for standing example of an American of Biological Survey. Under The development of u definitely city that baa saved both life and n Act. Congress the dollars through modernizing visi gladiolus, praised as to inaugurate $1,000,000 appropriated the of "one 35 miles outstanding achievements bility. Detroit relighted the program in the year begun July of horticulture of the past decade,' of its fatal streets and, as a result, 1, 1P38. The funds are available for was announced yesterday at the 2Gth cut the former ratio of 7 night conducting studies in wildlife man- annual International Flower Show In deaths to 1 day death to 1.6 nfght agement, developing and impioving New York CHy. Several species of the deaths to 1 day death. publicly owned or leased areas, and scented flower were shown. Tho L. J. Schrenk, General Superinpurchasing cither lands desirable for scented gladiolus was developed at tendent of Detroit's Public Lightwildlife restoration. "Had that Commission the Joyce Thompson Institute- under said, ing Utah is making a detailed study of tho 8UIvnisin of Dr. Forman T. lie- ratio been maintained in 1934, 1S35 beavers through funds set aside from jj0;lni p:Ult physiologist a t the insti and 1S3G prior to improved light-tomore than 100 lives woo Id titer i:uti ai tiyi'i.'in ifin. tute. The research has now reached have been saved.'' the stage. Dr. McLean said, whew Advances from prospective agricul- gladioluses may be obtained in four tural conservation payments to fi scents. (New York Times,) nance premiums due on crop msur-- , I I 13 N U O S K Farmers of Utah have received ap- and children ofi proximately 75,000 forest trees this Mrs. J. Brooks Shurntn returned Mrs Charles Jense.i for plantings in wcMxllots, wind home and her spring home from Salt Lake City, where she Ogden accompanied end shelterbelts, from thobreaks, stunt the Easter weekend visiting' joined the Singing Mothers chorus for nursery at the Utah State Agrieul-M- r conference. and Mrs. Walter Eoslev snd'tural college, J. Whitney Floyd, elm Bishop D. M. G rover spent the Eleanor, Dorcen and La-- i tension forester reports. Siberian two weekend attending conference in Salt the are dive popular Itae, of Corinne. visited with Mr. and; and Russian Lake City. shipped from the college. j species William Bosley, Easter. Mrs. The Bee Hive girls, under the direction of Miss Delia Petersen, their leader, entertained their mothers at a banquet on Friday e vening. An incut. teresting program was carried Save Time, Trouble and Money I5y Having: Your Easter colors predominated. A lovelv Easter program was put DISCS over in Sunday School, Sunday morn We Have Installed the New ing. Elder Sorenson ct uie aunuay School stake board was in attendance. DISC Glen Miller and Jess G rover, who Lo at C. S. A. U. the are attending gan, and Marcel Palmer ot Logan, spent the spring vacation here. Mrs. Sarah K. inhuman spent uum General lilacksmithinj; and Machine Woik Wednesday tj Salurday in East Gar land, visiting her children. Mr. ana ' ; A ... i n Bui-ea- IHttman-Robertso- sweet-smellin- iiay issue of Cosmopolitan y a under the title of "Auto-;a;-,h- 1939," of America ai' business man relates the g i i j 1 j g, j X" . j i co-lil- c. ill: 1 P ij La . r-- NEW YORK It. E. Simpson, nationally known traffic expert and formerly consulting engineer for the National Dureau of Casualty and Surety Underwriters, warned motorists, and town and city that their main traffic are America's Fatal Streets, and that the fatal record is due, in large part, to lack of adequate visibility for night driving. Most street lighting in operation to day produces less than half the minimum visibility for B&fety and they must be modernized if night traffic death is to be reduced, Mr. Simpson says. The facts about America's Fatal Streets were drawn from a two-yesurvey, by Mr. Simpson, of traffic accidents la 47 cities having 20,900 miles of streets anJ involr-ta7.279 automobile fatalities. The survey showed, though main thorof oughfares represent only 10 the total street mileage, that they of ail fatalities account for 41 of all night fatalities. and 60 Three times as many people are killed on them at night as In the davtlme. and all of this despite the to one-fact that only fifth the traffic moves after dark. ATer&jrtnff bis own estimates and those of the National Safety Coun-and Illuminating Engineering Society, Mr. Simpson says that of all night accidents About 50 Are due directly to the bek of ChrminatVm. He estimates tmt t&eee excessive and prevent-- J o3i-cial- ;,. C'rvK-v.:t'.i.- a '. ' ty Si'ii' le yet tnrining story oa u to 'Hoyden Sparkes. The sincere, nw:est, invincible spirit of the man bidciv.ergos in this article. Without quarding for sympathy or asking owner ter, the business man a mill which discusses some of the things give him the most worry in his job. Chief among these are strikes which he calls hideously wasteful. "The people on my mill payroll never want to strike, it seems to me." he says. "Why, I know most of them by name and we are friends. Yet they are being told in insidious I honways that 1 am their enemy. estly bciicve that in these times strikes are a stupid form cf behavior. I do not question the sincerity of those who promote strikes, iut before God, I question their intellibe treated gence and their fitness to as leaders of human beings. The next most pressing worry is how to get orders for goods at a make a price on which the mill can is a problem widespread This profit. with all manufacturers who find that their customers are unwilling to send in carry any inventory and too small rush orders for amounts to even bother with in normal times. Taxes are a prevalent scourge of this industry. When there is a profit, taxes can take a large part of it. When there is no profit or even when there is a loss, heavy taxes go on. "Taxes are so high today and so sure to be higher, that I am afraid me as an they will be the end of man business says. this employer," He cites in addition the heavy tax on his time made by government a:i:l Etate officials. In this article Boyden Sparkes of a man captures the genuine spiritreveal perwho makes an effort to suasive proof of the validity of America's system of free enterprise. The storv of his life is a testament to his belief in this system. It is the hard work, story of initiative, nnd honesty. It is a story which has many counterparts in the fabric of our national life. did .so. tN red box." 34 of 37 m'.npi la to be have "We said: But when she O animals. of these careful glas very e We wrap them up in tissue paper. I'FXWEE PEKSl'ASIONS It box a red in them away come put . . . would be too bad to break them For parents and teachers who chilseven to persuade You put them awiy," only to grief when they try tr, dr. their bidding, science dren responded correctly. Data Phmwrit words are more effective. last week had cheering news. a umvexsiat research When children refused to dress doll, was gathered by c suits r talk to better toj t,.ft te..cner got much tv of Michigan on how do" by scold than i,n,o-."Please and make it stick. a by saying "I don't understand wny you iningDr Marguerite Wilker Johnson, laborafuse . . . Y'ou shouldn't refuse to dress uncrviaor of the University's out the tried school, tory elementary flat-,- i renuest is better than a relative effectiveness of cajolery, threats and scolding oi f,np- Children were- almost said twice as careful when a teacher on 49 matched pairs of children aged aa when re- ard" be a of on the pair One youngster "Keep the clay 2i to all over i crwific instructions, the other she said. "Try not to get it instructions, ceneW ones; one simple everythirg." the other verbose; etc. All told some Encouragement is more- effective trieci. . were rw.ren.ision than disapproval. When a teacher 26 KinuM in were nr. report. Johnsons f said "You can do it." children ,,.,.r:. ,i,e than words. successful nnd more persistent An adult should use specific i aa many children when she asked "Is it too hard for ror .... : you? ' wound a swimming toy back"Wind j said teacher a when 'Wind it wards" as when she said Uio de Janeiro Weather hotthis y." nrm Rio de Janeiro experiences its pr. -.a. Instrucuona January in December, Simple to test weather v. .. nt a- tfjicher. pointing them away In and February. ... far s rr E R ' SHARPENED SIIAKI'KNKIt "DKI'llW" ILG.R0HDE I" T. Ilonlg. SiM-.w-- distrll-uK.r- -h ,. f . o-- . the e fl i,rr? be to M.iri.ii Murpl.. - Southern Cab. i.rnh nivervil I'ietiires lot i f ': 11I3H ih-- '. Mmlio DaNid K. (inrb- -, ,...Vrati.ns. l icht Na-- h f.rs. V'U .,- ,Vr.-- v.i',1 , ifioier F i din tioriH. L ... " VlEEt TElofir i EC0H0E1Y nir J$ - 8. - .m.(t i Bli3 toys, said 'Tut 2L25 mies to the iallont That's the startling record thi3 beautiful new Nash LaFayette chalked up to carry off its price place among cars of Gilmorc-iie annual famous in the And Economy Fun. r Nash carries off honors f frt comfr.rt, too . . . with enthusiastic praise for its silent, ea-iride... its terrific 97 h.p. cathcr . . . tlie uncanny "V A JT en-Ri- Eye". Yet this tig, rov.y, wbeclbase car is 117-inc- DELIVtRED SWwJ HUE Eijuipimnl h Take a jiriced way down low! Na.h-twh- iy! new a in spin r DIDERICKSON & GOLDSBERRY Kast Main Street I'hone 137 of "m" cars were In the first consignment. The serve as I ransjMirt.u '"it. ...iiiois, ..p...K ro- er in eioir-will also ipp-ar ;o-.- Nasli - fu.-ic- e TERMOUNTAIN factor & Harvester 1J0 . . . zero. Caterpillar leadership t Night ties on Tokii and Gty Streets. - mois-tureproo- 1 . ctV-AAG.'dU.j- ance policies are to be available Immediately to spring wheat growers, the Agricultural Adjustment AdmLi-- M ration en.l tl.e Fed'-rs- l Crop In- .' Thu furantv plan calls for thv. AAA pfr.injr direct n the arv.,r.t the t. ih.- (".,: c. .c for tho crop insurance grower, which amount will . which fit':i future AAA Ad- .the ptwc-rn..y be turned availal:!-- ' ta all whi-a- t vanc. s v. ill growers who are pai Uciriiting or who ngrce to pai ti; ;;Ai' i:i tl.e AAA prohoul-ask their coungram. Growc-ifor ty agent or Inadequate Visibility Blamed for Fatali- jl-iuu:c- w ur PA; - to Germany un- uncertain about and anxious 3?r" future intention. . . Vhati concerned with is to preserve I say cur in- dependence. When y this mean not prdenee. I do of the independence mean i '"Testes whi may be threatened wel-:ssion. Weoftherefore country, any the cooperation Xver may be its internal system Yernment, not in aggression, but . . ue resistance to aggression. an in atmosphere Lot live forever c5.ri" ioa and alarm from which LMP TRICK has suffered in recent months. York The Z common business of life cannot- SCHENECTADY, Newsodium-vapor uncertainof of state orange-yellobland a on in carried of of miles now hundreds lights lamps W chamberlain's words opened U. S. highway. Until recently it has Jv3.y for Poland, Rumania, Turkey, been a ticklish and costly job to get Z soviet Union, Greece, Yugoslavia the sodium into the highly evacuated in lomps without contamination. But an to join Britain and France 7 pledge to aid one another in case last week General Electric Co.'s labBritish Government oratories at Schenectady announced $ attack. The all pretences of a clever way of filling the bulbs. v.., fiatlv dropped It was an The sodium is packaged in tiny, effitinentaf neutrality. nt that went a long way towara frail glass caosuls, a capsule placed .tArire- the balance of power that inside each lamp, the lamp pumped in favor of out and sealed. Then short radio had lately swung heavily words waves are turned on the capsule. It Chamberlain's If dictators. ie that heats up, explodes. The sodium is meant they mfant anything, have will Hitler thus freed inside the lamp and the on now Fuhrer from Jew if any more bloodless conquests. broken capsule is reduced to a harm answless pinch of powder. The world may now find the O debated: two to long questions ers reCan Fuhrer Hitler and his Nazis SOFTNESS FOR SAFETY foremain in power long without their thfc Fuhrer PHILADELPHIA At Philadephias ign "diversion?" When threatens invasion is he bluffing or Franklin Institute last week a dum prepared to wage war? Another questimy namd Oscar was catapulted head on was virtually settled in the aff- first aerainst an automobile wind irmative: If war does come, Germany shield. The pane cracked and some will again have to fight both on eastcrumbs of glass fell outside the car. ern and western fronts. Put- when Oscar's head hit it, the O nane buldsred outward two or three inches. If the dummy had been a real! PATCHES - - person involved in a motor crash, this! WASHINGTON For nearly six elastic yield of the glass migni nave months the U. S. public has put up saved him a skull fracture. e steel ball was dropped nth Federal wage-hoA regulation in on a pane of the same glass from a spite of the Wage and Hour law. Administrator Elmer Frank Andrews height of 28 feet. The glass buldged as been able to get wide compliance and cracked but did not break. A mainly because he is a reasonable young woman stood behind another old- san, the Act's demands are modest nane while Chief Bender, famed let and 25c an hour, 44 hours a week), and fly time pitcher wound up s a baseball at The glass stopped me ie penalties are so stiff that it had to try to conform to a mise- ball. statute. But, vexed Thus with great fanfare was launch rably written ;jst as much as Business by the bungeed a new flexible safety glass, muea d law, Mr. Andrews last week ask-- as the best ever. Five companies co- in the research which pro Congress to cure the worst defects. His chief at an announced cost of it duced proposals: from overtime pay emp- $6,000,000". loyees who get $200 or more a Safety glass is a double sheet with month in guaranteed salaries (as dist- a transparent filler or binding layer inguished from variable wages), thus hPtween. In the old glass the filler removing an expensive and vexatious was cellulose acetate. In the new it burden from is polyvinyl acetal resin a synthetic employers without workets. niastie made from acetylene. In an benefits to that employers will automobile this flexible, yielding panenot be prosecuted if they follow the is something like a transparent, Administrator's rulings and interpretawindproof curtain. It is extions, pending court decisions on pected to cut down the number and aot points. Employers now take El- - seriousness of highway injuries aue Andrews' advice at their risk, to sudden stops. imcing heavy damages, fines up to The idea of shatterproof glass was 510,000, even six months in jail if born in 1903 when a French chemist, courts disagree with the Administr- Edouard Benedictus, knocked a bottle ator on what the law means. from a collodion l,uiiLaiiuib S Don't but the frag cracked make businessmen hottle Th cv,0if subject ' rropunishment if thpv hnv did not spatter. Benedictus i 0 j in plants where thej Act is concluded that they were held togeththe purchaser's know- - er by the collodion film. He get a idire. mt.nt in 1914 but the-- first shatter in auto proof glass did not appear mobiles until 19z4. rv.iinir.sA nitrate was the first bind er used; but actinic rays in sunshine turned this disagreeably brown. Cell ulose acetate as a binder and actinic. stopped the discolora fiitTW l i ' tion. But the glass was hard and, tho 1 l it riiri not flv into lacerating irag nnta n human head striking it far brittle-ied badly. Moreover, it became cold weather. The new glass is not its efonly soft for safety but keeps around at temperatures fectiveness .... 13, 1&33 Traffic Engineer Warns of America's Fatal Streets The MARCH OF TIME Ihe prer-:e- APRIL j i ;iiii" ;i;o |