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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Ee Hit of the Party By Telling Fortunes llilllllri mm mmm rr.i. r,l'LU. Modern Farmer Follows Lead Field in Of Pioneers Building a Ill An AmericanT i, New Homes Built With Own Trees And Own Labor MB O AtiOWEtl THE , ' f MS f chest and back like a warm-In- comforting medicinal vapors. works lor Vlcks VapoRub hours to relieve distress of colds while the child sleeps. Often by morning the worst ! miseries of the mid are cone. w fQ f Try it tonight! VVapoRu popc85&) AND ITS CXfSP TCfQlZHUUfS$ JOtl iliUG JJl ii-W- 33 that makes forks F sleep all night! O Thousands sow deep andiaturbed borauas ef ill em that their being awakened Dight aftar Bight mw'U a from blmidtr amlofion, n4 Ik viuiM. Let's hope eol That's a condition Foioy Puis uoually allay withia H hour, tunra blad-stmuuoa u o preraimt and Foley Fiua so potant, S'ulfty Fills tmwt pnlit rou within ti Wreoe DOUBLE VOIR MOViKY BACK. Make teat. Clt Folwr I'ilte from dm, t-.- t Full eati(aetiea a DOUUUS TiOhU UUNKY BACK. fK.,Tui!li.sinf u kn ia k 1 1 : 1 1 1 1 1 r: Your Home Town Reporter also can report that President Truman, back in harness after his Florida vacation trip is tanned and genial, his grin more lnfectiovs, his general attitude more assured and his handclasp Arm. We stood in line, ages it seemed, to greet the President and Mrs. Truman and shake their hands, at the second annual formal reception at the Wlite House for members of the pfess and radio galleries. An Invitation from the White House Is tantamount to a "command performance" In Washington and prots col dictates yoa must attend if riot III or absent from the city. President Tniman inaugurated these formal receptions on the plane of the big state or diplomatic receptions last year as a change from the Informal affairs during the Roose-vcltia- n era. At least wives of the reporters like them for it gives them a chance to doll up in formal evening dress. During the Roosevelt regime the innual spring press parties on the White House lawn were most informal, gave the members of the press a chance to relax, imbibe a little beer amid the surroundings and trappings of presidential prominence. t major oil filter advantages, Including the exrlu-rir- e Collator Tuba Trap of acid-proglass cloth. Can't rot and thus allow pollution of the oil stream. Gives yoa 10 of d.abU flltraJ Ilea. Get AC and be tur. Hi - X. H " Ml " I i 1 I CUE FROM PIONEERS . . . After searching in vain for lumber to remodel the barn, Burr determines to cut his own lumber from trees on his farm, just as his pioneer forefathers did. Here he cuts Into a tree to mark Its direction before felling. the oak logs. Lumber for ceiling Joists, partition studding, flooring, stairs and other uses was obtained right from trees on the Burr farm. Remodeling Process. The barn was 40 feet long and 30 feet wide. Like most barns, the floor of the loft barely gave clearance to a horse's head. Accordingly, the first step was to raise the floor, so the ground space could be used as garage and storage space. Then the upstairs section was partitioned off into three apartments each containing a 10 by living room, bedroom, kitchen and bath. The walls and ceiling were insulated with full thick batts of mineral wool nailed between studs and joists to provide maximum comfort in Aid for I0h 11 1 ' ... iff! BEFORE . . . Jasper L. Burr, 61, typical "Connecticut Yankee" s, Veteran Fred farmer of Middletown, Conn., shows on the wooded Burr barn the sturdy Browning and Mrs. Browning, farm. They agree It can be remodeled to provide an apartment for the Brownings, currently sheltered in crowded temporary quarters. house-hunter- Built on the side of a hill, the new apartment will have space beneath it for two automobiles. The interior finish, including the mineral wool insulation, will be similar to that in the original project carried out with i tot-- the barn, , Although there is no lack of prospective tenants for the new apartment Burr admits that "I like it so well I may move in myself and rent the big house." elk-- J Taft-Hartl- sE ' So excellent were the results attained that Burr is building an apartment 18 by 25 fee$ in size from material obtained from an old chicken house, smoke house and a shed. Whatever additional lumber is needed will be sawed from his own trees. mean interpretation, application, enforcement by law rather than by men. Any encroachment, even though t be small, on our guarantee of government by law is a step toward that totalitarianism we are fighting. Stability First if imm The final amount of America's aid NO WASTE . . . The gauge on the a the rehabilitation of Europe will saw at the portable mill is set to lot be known for a considerable insure maximum board footage of ime. Whatever the amount may be, lumber from the precious logs. I f the European nations do not establish stable governments, it will not je enough to do the job. If such stable governments were estabof a new baby, faced with the typi- lished and if they would forget the cal situation in small communities ivalries and jealousies of the past for a new and landlords considering them a working together short-terto jetter Europe, private American proposition, no move in with and no hotels to live in :apital would do the rehabilitation job. There are billions of idle capi-a- l while watching the want ads. in this country at this time; Stroh learned of surplus buildings for sale at Clarinda, Iowa, by War :apital that is seeking a reasonably Assets administration. The buildings tafe investment. It will not invest In were barracks, formerly occupied i socialistic Europe, and a soclalis-i- c Europe will not become a by Japanese and German prisoners of war. He sounded out the school Europe, no matter with low much America backs it Free board on buying them. The board decided not only to buy 'mterprise again can work in Euthem but to tear them down, haul rope, as it has in the past It can and the lumber to Audubon and build the factories, pro- nae jobs and products. But free homes from scratch. Lots were bought in the residen- :apital will not seek investment tial district and Stark engineered vhere the threat of socialistic con- the filling of a hole on the site with lscation hangs over its head. Amer-ca- n more than 2,000 yards of dirt. government investments, what-rvThe project was finished in record they may be, will accomplish time. The teachers did their own in- lowing if tha socialistic setup is to terior decorating. :ontinue. We will be financing a heoretical experiment as we did in England. Town Solves Teacher Housing AUDUBON, IOWA.-Ar- med only with an idea, some ingenuity and a lot of hard work, this town of 2,409 persons solved its teacher housing problem by construction of two modern duplexes and it didn't take a bond issue to do it The duplexes, which cost about house four teachers and $15,000, their families. At the fairyland rental of $30 per month per family, the houses will have paid for themselves in 15 years. This was the situation last summer, as explained by Supt Allen N. Stroh: Audubon had 10 men on its school faculty of 32. Nine were married and had families. Of the nine, Stroh had rented a home and two others courageously had bought homes. That left six families, including that of Don Stark, the high school industrial arts Instructor and father Is It the bureaucratic, totalitarian spirit of the times that causes the newly elected, or appointed, man in public office to act like a dictator? Not ail, but all too many, who start feeding at the public trough, as quickly as they are seated in an official chair, begin telling the dear people who gave them the job where to get off. The people no longer are recognized a the masters. To the new man, when he Is seated safely on the iofc. the people seemingly are consid-- ! ered the slaves of the officeholder. I liked the old way best My first purpose in When we condemn . . enirtmint - a. nuni us tnumo e what the weather man provides for us now, Just recall what we said about the same weather man iaa July and August. . Darn - like beir nnlnira oi I New depend miHk Nevada and Rhode It produce practically rial that goes into 1a25fl oar a duction of over six fc( lion pounds of margaD In 1946, we produce: pounds of margarine i used 222,830,000 poiei; seed oil; 206,718,003 pc.; bean oil; 13,794,000 peanut oil and 6,589, corn oil. In addition to this,: contains about 16 per c pasteurized skim mfi. and a half per cent solid, three per cent ; one per cent vitamin of wK Ingredients, all duced in the United?-oi ! w (II How I To I Broncl The old barn, living quarters trouble to bepj rm laden pUeffl Md bed" to soothebroncUal ; flamed tones. Tell your ;i "erstananfeTyo; CREOMj WNU-- W ' m mm Kidney 0E j drinking" r"V, thro Hon rfth.kldn.y,-- buying lome town is to serve myself.inmy Hav-- g stores In the town maintains the alue of such real estate as I own. With some 35 million rural people without public library service, hear-Ing- s on the public library demon- I. . ! n Maine, er see COIT - finished . states i Libraries ... The 48 in-la- jr."" AFTER I frz I row, stration bill, authored by Rep. Thomas Jenkins of Ohio, drew witnesses from farm organizations, and library associations. The bill would make It possible for each state to receive $15,000 to $173,-00- 0 annually, on a matching basis, to carry out demonstrs linn nrn. grams m counties where tire ii no library. to USED Qi President Truman bas given up bit early morning walks in deference to his seirtt service guards. Now he takes bis daily walk in the afternoon. Recently he strode through fashionable Peacock Alley in the M illard hotel, a bloik-lon- g corridor from Pennsylpan'm avenue to P street, without being recThe President dislikes noognized. toriety. He goes to a certain Baptist church here because the pastor never refers to his presence. When he attends the National theater, as be often does, be never occupies a box but sits in the audience, preferably a seat im about the AC olTrn ""V Party for Press ng i The result Is that the three families now living in the converted structure have apartments that for sheer attractiveness are seldom equalled anywhere. The apartments have magnificent views of wooded pastures and hillsides, virtually all city conveniences and Intercity buses stop almost In front of the Burr homestead. poultice. This wonderful special pene- action brought to you only by PEP ARTMtl fort-father- s. about ejjectit'tneu of government controls in keeping prices down, consider what bas happened to sugar. It is plentiful and comparatively cheap. Remember when it went to 30 cents at pound after World War I? Well, sugar is con-trolled by law under the 1947 sugar control act passed by the first session of the Republican controlled HMD con- gress. It not only fixes quotas, but also wage rates and prices. Public hearings on 1948 beet sugar wages ana prices will be held January 5 to 14. Stimulates CLASSIC ot there is any doubt in your mind j ! J if.; both summer and winter and to save on fuel cost Furthermore, knew that because the mateBurr Burr, assisted by Browning, went rial cannot burn its installation out and felled enough trees to proreduce fire danvide the lumber necessary for what would considerably of extreme importance a factor ger, he had in mind three apartments in the old barn. A portable sawmill in any farm building. The walls and ceiling of each was set up a short distance from the barn and the huge two-fologs apartment were finished with sheets were dragged to the job just as they of wallboard and painted according to a simple color scheme. Electric were in the days of Burr's The only difference was cook stoves were placed in each that he used horses instead of oxen kitchen. to cart the felled logs. Ideal Apartments. Care was taken to obtain maxiWindows were provided all around mum board footage from each of and a doorway was cut in one end of the barn. From this entry, an enclosed stairway was built to a hall on the second floor from which access is obtained to each apartment. Gold Into upper bronchial tubes with Special soothing traUng-stimulati- grew on the hillsides of this Connecticut farm, with a fourth one now nearlng completion. y thrX 40-ac- re that Is how three homes veterans' families literally Taft-HarUe- : dairy farmer who farm nine miles a from Middletown, Conn., had been besieged by families looking for even a single room to rent. He was particularly struck by the plight of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Browning and their small son. Pondering their problem, Burr hit upon a solution. Among other buildwell-bui- lt ings on his place was a large, barn. It was being used only for storage of odds and ends. The livestock long since had been transferred from it to other quarters. And the ball m your , and pretend to throw?: -- I labor act it into VniT 6iuvea-at least one amendment if caught it." There were two et i I if it is to it those purposes for which it ; batter The pi catdlN was intended; if it is to conform to his motions ,! our constitutional system of govern- mitt. "Strike ment by law, not government by lowed Kerns. I "Strike?" men. "Why that baRyiM The Wagner act failed largely side!" for the reason that its application was placed in the hands of a group of men who were constituted the prosecutors, the interpreters, the judge and the Jury. While the new law provides for specific changes that were needed, it again places enforcement in the hands of a board, and largely In the hands of one man. Again that board, or that man, is to be the prosecutor, the interpreter, the judge and the jury. Again it Is to be enforcement by man, not by law. . The fundamental difference be'NO tween our American government NOBODY BUYS "7 and that of other nations is that matOR PA TS Mi vs. ter of government by law, not by men. That is our American guarantee of individual freedom. The in..... TV,, d if i- -terpretations of the acts of congress yg 'fir.- ;,. is left to the courts. No one man, or i." 'MI'S.- - i V . V' nois no group, can arbitrarily deprive us Y the of our individual freedom. Only ; com courts and a jury of our peers can ut the determine our guilt Neither LIVEST0CI (1 m legislative nor the administrative in.yoi branches of government may contheir appetites with Dr. Utf.i IfflU ideal tot i ijditioi demn us. That comes, if come it icnption. Also an .ii ""wi ae Helped a ,; must, only from the judicial branch, uj iuiuiuui fiilini nog raisers.) iar pa rhat is enforcement by law, not by HELP INCREASE MILIf ' i ord men. vi iiuniw inuKeri oy stimuli' I TO PRESERVE FREEDOM. appetites with Dr. LeGear'iC 5 cm tion In their feed. A cow In wartime government by law to Civ satisfaction. I on20SI .4 ( of a means may be suspended as f preserving the nation, but we must MISCELLA.Ni; 'i demand government by law in HCNTERSI IM Us Tan Your Deer off peacetime if we are to preserve our Write for Inforeii- -i freedom as guaranteed each of us THTJRLOW GLOE 100 N.E. Union A., tutt by the Constitution. I have nowhere near the abilHUNTERS! f 4?Frontier Leather Co., Shw' ity to write such an amendment will tan your deer and to the Write for Informs! act, but Frontier Leather Cs Shert there are those who have, and it f 6houid be written and passed by WANTED TOE at the earliest possible congress WE BUY AND Office Furniture, Files, Tvp date. With such an amendSafes, Css Ins Machines, ment, the law would conform to SALT LAKE DESK n 62S South Stata St., Sail Ui our constitutional guarantees; it would make of it an American law under which all it was inBuy U. S. Saving! tended to do can be accomft'atur plished. It will remove any posj th sible stigma. It will place the t derival P: Produce law in line with the fundamenFarmers ( dif tal principles of American conAll Margarine Mi embina stitutional government. It would Farmers in all but h iatedtDrmi Burr, Tor 1 is to be effective; book of his pioneering ancestors and build living quarters for three veterans' families from his own trees and with his own hands. It au started oecause jasper u. Modern 'Yankee.' He showed the building to the Brownings, said he believed he could turn the loft into an apartment and asked them if that would The Brownings be satisfactory. were enthused about the prospect more. One day whef to call a game. peration huddle Enforcement of Taf t Law 300-year-o- ld owns (I ' Released by WNU Feature!. Eipandinj Viewpoint Card Fortunes Fun listening to hours WNU Features. AFTER over the approAnd Easy To Learn All of steDs have been snrts Eupriation for emergency devised to schemes and taken the aid and consequent ropean veterwar for homes your Home provide the attention at Marshall plan, for a to remained Is But it WHO gets all report ans. proud Town Reporter The person who American con. Connecticut farmer to take a the of members that of crowd amused, keeps the gress, by and large, have grown up, leaf out of the course! And how better to enter- have Increased in stature Bnd statestain than by telling fortunes. with the commensurate manship and colorful turban Deck yourself in a . holds our a crystal-garbe country and position danKiin? earrlnM. powerful Or then are nine thrilling ways of teUln In the world today. fortune by cards. Despite political and some pro vincial local pressures, the vast ma And don't overlook the tea leavei, die, domuioea and of course horoscope. All Jority of the' members of house and these methods explained In pur .booklet Democrats and Republicans, Me Tell for "Let 25c senate, In coin Send No. 65. Your Fortune" to Weekly Newspaper have they can stand above proved New York 17UH U, St., Servlee. 243 West Print nam, addresa with xooa. minority pressures "back home" N. Y. booklet title and No. 65. and face world Issues In the light ot their own knowledge and conscience riot only for the future welfare of this nation, but also for the future ASK peace and economic welfare of the whole world. Six years ago the story ? might have been different A General Quiz Voting more millions for foreign relief while living prices 1. The Romans had an organized continue to rise here at home Is none too popular in some seciystem of shorthand as far back as what year? tions of the country, and 1948 2. Where was the last shot of the Is an election year. Despite) Civil war fired? those factors only a com par 3. Chinook winds are peculiar few discordant voices to what region? were beard In either house or 4. How often do quintuplets ocsenate. And most debate was not over the main issue but the cur? 5. Whatdoes mountebank mean? method to be employed. white-haire- d 6. Who was the first woman to One congressman, land from the Mayflower? of Florida, cited the Dwight Rogers 7. Coffee was first introduced inalternatives succinctly: We either to France in what year? pull out of Europe, abandon what 8. For every ten people in the we have undertaken and crawl into United States there are how many our own shell of Isolationism or we or we declare war with Russia phones? The Answers give economic aid to France, Italy and Austria to halt communism and 1. In 63 B. C. save the economic structure and on 2. At Palmetto ranch, Texas, freedom of those nations for our May 13, 1805, more than a month own future economic benefit. Conat surrender Lee's after Appomatgress chose the latter road. tox. 3. Pacific northwest. L Once in about 73,000,000 times. There is confusion In both po5. An imposter. litical camps here In Washington. a. Mary Chilton. On the Democratic side it Is fear 7. In 16G2. that Henry Wallace will an8. Two telephones. nounce his candidacy for president. On the GOP side it Is fear that Gen. Ike Eisenhower soon will get his hat in the ring. If f fuersret r either is a candidate It certainly will revise the organisation strategy In both camps. g 7 -- T named Jack Kero7?? i against calling JaZr how dark it ball game was S? M Governor Warren of California rery definitely has announwd his mwillingness to play second fiddle n the Republican orchestra. and other ""vrjl....-- ' ,.f kodacha, Uf pains, '.n,, time ourntal. Try century ; tfco, "J "He, 11,iLS: of P i ft ;!l i 'I U? -- |