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Show THE BOX ELDER NEWS, bemi j?AGE TWO BUjg BEES LOSE TO Box Elfor Sfotua TOOELE TEAM Every Published Tuesday and Friday Semi-Weekl- B. C. WJXOM. Editor and Manager Subscription Rates: . One Tear. Biz Months Three Months.. THE NATIONS NEEDY LAXATIVE 61-0- 49-ya- rd ACTION .60 Entered at the Post Office at Brigham City, as Second Class Matter. rd THANKSGIVING line. Coach DAY Earl Ferguson and the team are to be given due credit for their Thanksgiving Day, as we know it, is a distinctively American institu- seasplendid season. Starting the son with a small team and few veterans, the locals were given little chance to win the region one honors, and fighting all the way, the team won a place in the state finals and in the final game put up a wonderful fight against overwhelming odds. The large crowd of local fans who followed the team to Salt Lake were well pleased with ithe showing of the local boys. The lineup follows: BOX ELDER TOOELE tion, although festivals of similar import may be traced back many hundreds of years. The Hebrew Feast of the Tabernacles, the Greek Thesmophoria, the Roman Cerealia action of GET theoillubricant and the English Harvesit Home all without objectionable comappear to have had something in features! Agarex is a creamy emulmon with our national holiday. sion that is actually delicious. More effective too! No leakage for Immediately after the first harvest the oil is in minute drops. And it is of the Pilgrims in 1621 Thanksgiving so was first observed in America. SimiAgarex is sold only at Rexall Drug lar observances were instituted by Stores. If irregular elimination is other colonies by Massachusetts in keeping your health below par buy in and Connecticut 1639, by 1630, by a bottle of Agarex today. 1644. New Netherlands in During the Revolution several Thanksgiving Days were appointed by the Continental Congress. President George Washington designated November 26, 1789, as "a day of public thanksgiving and prayCompound er," and in 1795 he made a Blmilar designation. President Madison appointed a day of thanksgiving at the Gjfl pint close of the War of 1812. Various states observed the day irregularly during succeeding years, but it was THE not until 1864 that the day became v a fixed, annual event 0 Mecham. Tooele touchdowns J. Rin In that year President Lincoln apTooele aldi, F. Rinaldi, Evankovich. pointed the fourth Thursday of November as a day of national Thankspoints after touchdowns Orme (line buck) ; F. Rinaldi (place kick). giving by official proclamation, and STORE the example thus set has been folSubstitutions: Box Elder Braegger, lowed by all succeeding Presidents. c; Tingey, le; Tingejr lhb; Bott rt; e Washingtons original Thanksgiving Knudsen rt; Bott It. Tooele proclamation is preserved in the c; Lacey c. ville Library of Congress. The precious Officials: Don Reddish, referee; document was lost for more than 100 Allen Parry, umpire; Bert Blaser, years, until it was discovered among Preston Frost of Brigham City head linesman. some Washington manuscripts being the week-en- d spent visiting Mr. and auctioned in New York in 1921, when Mrs. James Rasmussen. it was purchased for $300 and reMrs. Lavoy Chlarson and Mrs. Eva stored it to government archives. Hunsaker visited Mrs. Nela Rasmussen of Bear River on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Wintle SMALL TOWNS entertained at a social Friday, In A Washington correspondent calls honor of their wedding anniversary. attention to the problem of making Luncheon was served. the NRA fit small businesses without Mrs. Jack Standings mother, Mrs. causing them to blow up and fade O. A. Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer out. In a moment of Impatience, Barnett and Russell Barnett, all of General Hugh S. Johnson, industrial Ogden, were guests at the Standing administrator, is quoted as saying home Monday. that an employer who cant pay 614 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Carsensen of to 615 per week and maintain hours Ogden visited Mr. and Mrs. Ray Twenty-nint- h prescribed by the code, is too un- Boothe on Sunday. economic and inefficient to keep in Mr. and Mrs. Austin Tolman and the industrial picture. children of Ogden, spent the weekIn handling his big' task, however, end here visiting with Mr. and Mrs. General Johnson should remember Hyrum Boothe. that all over this broad land are Mr. and Mrs. Ervil Boothe anThe twenty-nint- h regular meeting comparatively small towns, kept alive nounce the arrival of a baby boy, of the Central Western Shippers by comparatively small businesses. born Thursday last, Board will be held in PocaThe trade volume does not make posThe Werzell club met at the home Advisory tello, Idaho, Thursday, December 14th, sible large' overhead, nor are the ex- of Mrs. Truman Tolman on Saturday. The meeting will open promptly at so an as of The afternoon was spent In playing 9 a. m. penses employee great In the Elks club, will adjourn those of one in a large center. An bridge. Mrs. Leon Christensen won 'for to be held In luncheon at employer in a rural community earns high score, and Vera H. Hunsaker the Hotel Bannock,noon, and will continue less and an employee requires less. drew, cut prize. Mrs. Tolman Burke, The small town serves the conveni- Mrs. Pearl Grant, and Mrs. Orval deliberations in the afternoon, at the latter place. ence of a considerable area, and its Hunsaker were guests. subjects to be considered instituits with small Miss perpetuation, Lyra Grant spent Saturday In arePrinciple as follows: tions as little Impaired as possible, Salt Lake City. 1. Coordination of Transportation. will be a source of material aid to Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Benson visited (a) What the Federal Coordinator future farm values. with Mr. and Mrs. Cleone Hunsaker of TransportaUon has done and proThe small town has had a vital of Deweyville on Sunday. part in pushing baCk the frontier, in Mr. and Mrs. Roy Grant were poses to do. developing the country and in pre- Ogden shoppers Wednesday. (b) The Highway Transportation Code. Its effect upon shippers and serving the best in civilization, and the machinery of recovery should be Its relation to the possibility of coAndre Rembert and Miss Viola ordination of all the handled in a way to save its businestransportation ses, though as a rule they may Sutton, New York City couple, picked agencies. be small. Griffin, Ga., for the scene of their (c) The need for regulation of all wedding, because "it .is In the heart competing forms of transportation and how it should be applied. Herbert Brown, who committed of Georgia." suicide in Coventry, England, left the (d) The relaUons of industry to When Mrs. L. T. Fraser of New transportation. following farewell message: "I have come to the end of my tether, tra la York returned home 2. Discussion of the Consolidated la. I can not carry on any longer, from out of town, sheunexpectedly found her Freight Classification No. 8. hip hip, hooray. J. am done, mind, cook entertaining ten guests at a (a) Explanation, for shippers of swell dinner. body, and pocket, oh la la freight, of recent changes In packing requirements, etc. (b) Discussion of the effect of the consolidated freight classification rules on the use by shippers of truck transportation versus rail. 3. Plans of the Farm Credit Administration for Financing Agriculture (a) Question and answer forum on this subject will be in charge of a regional representative of the administration. 4. A Forecast of Industrial Shipping Plans for the First Quarter delicious taste g. AGAREX EDDY DRUG Kara-batso- Honey News SHIPPERSWILL MEET DEC. 14TH IN POCATELLO Reach Into Flour, Bread, Clothing More Than Five Million Homes of Jobless Seven hundred thousand women volunteers under the Red Cross banner sewed for the needy last year and many thousands still are making cotton garments for their Red Cross chapters. Announced. 1 The Red Cross has 3,701 chapters and 10,000 branches of chapters. Thus ii tsta he mobilized nationwide in a great relief task within 24 hours. Another man give it to me, was Harley Hughes of Greenville, O., told police who found him carrying a pay telephone in his arms. what A traffic jam In every sense of the term occurred near Auburn, Ind., when a large truck loaded with jellies and jams was wrecked. Don't spend "wildly" when you have money or your bank balance will "drop like a rock." Save . . . end your balance "UP" not "DOWN" if you want to get ahead. START SAVING REGULARLY NOW We Welcome YOUR Banking Business FIRST NATIONAL BANK MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH HlllllllHIBIIIIHIlHIIIIIIIHIIliiBigiiiil and Many can buy the first three not the fourth! Its made up of natwS ability plus long experience. v OUR PRINTERS HAVE BOTH! The Box Elder Tiems JOB DEPARTMENT II Mantua News BUSINK Mr. and Mrs. Sam Riggs and daughters of Wellsville, spent Monday here c. A. MUNNJ.I with Mr. and Mrs. Orial Nelson and Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Nelson. DENTIS1 Mrs. Kenneth Farr and children of of week Suite 6 First Natloi the Ogden, spent the forepart as the guests here of Mr. and Mrs. Telephone i Lucius Hansen. weekMiss Jessie Keller spent the end at Ogden, with her sister, Mrs. 0. G. BARG Kenneth Farr. Mrs. Mary Anderson and Mrs. Carl REAL ESTATE . FIB LOANS - SURETT Nelson of Thatcher, spent Sunday last as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Notary Pi Charles Jeppsen. I will appreciate y Bishop Conrad Jeppsen and chilPhnn dren and Miss Lilly Jensen, spent Saturday at Salt Lake, where they E. H. MARBLE, attended the football game. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Stoddard DENTIST at Salt Lake, the spent the week-en- d guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Johnson Office First National Jai and family. Phone The Misses Milicent and Carrol Brigham City, Ctt Hodges and Montell Whittington, of Garden City, spent the past week-en- d . c. h. brtah.T) here as the guests of Principal and DENTIST Mrs. Archie Sims. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Perkins of Room 37, First National k Wellsville, spent Sunday here as the TelejJhoneNo.il Mr. of and Mrs. Ernest guests Johnson. Brigham City, The Mount Hope camp of the Daughters of Pioneers met at the S. NORMAN li home of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Goulding Bonded Abstmfe Friday evening, with Captain Helen Peterson in charge. A program and REAL ESTATE, KSBElf refreshments were enjoyed by twenty-on- e LOANS. BONK guests. No. 7 West Fowl Mrs. Roy Hull was hostess to the Recreation club Thursday at her Brigham City, BUj home here. A delicious lunch was served at the small tables to nineteen members and six guests. Rook LD.S. j was the pastime of the afternoon, with Meda Jeppsen receiving high score, and Amelia Jensen cut favor. Beautiful garden flowers were used as decorations. 31-3- i D i l-- I Bill S Ganna1, The No. l.Snmmer Wt ft 8. Light Wt, M-l6. Median Wt, 8. rutabaga-eatin- g M-- - " Med. Wt, Bfc 7. Heavy Wt, BM 8. Heavy Wt, Bit 9. Extra Heavy, EM 10. Ex. Heavy, Bit f, 12. Med. Wt, Part!, IS. Med. Wt, Part 14. Rayo- n15. Silk 'j f, - (State If Man AbFK Postage Prepd U.S.L - In the You May Not ef-fo- rt, Return M SatisfacW Be Sare and Mow Why pay W.L.ui WANT COLUMN commodities. (b) Analysis of plans of carriers to provide adequate and efficient service to handle such business. The transportation problem is .one of the most Important questions of the day seeking adjustment, because of its effect upon every line of commercial enterprise; city, county and VYATCH your balance. . . consult your bank account YY before you make a financial move. Jtlst SKILL! The higher men climb, the longer Leonard Green of St- Louis, filed suit for divorce on learning shortly their working day. Any young after their marriage that his wife man with a streak of idleness in him chewed tobacco. may better make up his mind at the beginning that mediocrity will be his lot. Without Immense, sustained IBSI he will not climb high. And n even though fortune or chance were to lift him high, he would not there. For to keep at the topstay is harder almost than to get there. There are no office hours for leaders. Cardinal Gibbons. (a) Analysis of the volume and class of freight to be shipped by Tlm&Momy Three essentials of printing o printing ... are type, ink and paper. But printing thats attractive, resultful, has a fourth essential . . champions are Oliver Dubois and Walter West of Mrs. Frank Wash of Chicago, testified that she ' and her husband had Cumberland, Wis., who each put lived together for ten years without away five quarts of cooked rutabagas a word of conversation. at one sitting. Richard Delong of Fort Smith, An boy admitted to the Ark., told police that when two highin Syracuse, N. Y., that he police waymen thrust a shotgun In his face had turned in a false alarm Just his teeth chattered so hard that to see the fire engines run. one was broken. of 1934. state government, and national defense and relief programs. . The Federal Coordinator of Transportation has recently asked the public at large, through the press of the nation, to express themselves to him in briefs, and otherwise, concerning their views on the subjects outlined for discussion In this meeting. The results of debate in this shippers conference will find their way to not only the Federal Coordinator of Transportation, but also to Congress. Therefore, the shipping interests and all others interested In the solution of this problem, from the States of Colorado, Nebraska, Idaho, Wyoming and Utah, are being urged to attend. The plans of the federal government to aid agriculture are not as thoroughly understood as they should be and this Advisory Board affords S another vehicle through which the proper dissemination of such information may be accomplished. The farmers of Idaho and Utah especially are urged to attend this The public at large, meeting. is welcome. There are no membership dues. PAUL V. NASH, Secretary. Essential undertaken The greatest task ever the history o by a relief agency in to a close is drawing private charity of cotton distribution final the with million five clothing to more than Cross. Red American the families by be At the direction of the Congress, Red the ago, months ginning eighteen wheat Cross undertook to convert the Farm the of and cotton surpluses Board Into food and clothing for the conunemployed and needy. In the relief agency this sequent operation, entered upon a commercial enterprise commercial greater than any single same firm has ever undertaken in the period of time. In the ensuing months the Red Cross converted 85,000,000 bushels of wheat Into flour and bread and gave it to 6,803,000 families. The distribution was through 3,700 Red Cross chapters and hundreds of other charitable agendas. During the severe northweetern ironght of 1931 the Red Cross also livegave wheat in the fora of food for stock to 184,188 families. dresses, underwear, The clothing overalls, jumpers, sweaters and stockings for men, women and children, and een blankets and comforters was distributed to 5,465,410 families. More garments than 54,000,000 ready-mad- e and 92,000,000 yards of cotton cloth were given to the needy. This clothing came from 844,000 bales of cotton. The wheat distribution was concluded in June, 1933, and final distribution of cotton clothing is occurring in the fall months. In handling these tasks voted to It by Congress, the Red Cross will expend from its own treasury 6735,000. At the same time the organization carried on Its regular program of disaster relief; of service to the veterans of all our wars; of educational and welfare work through the Junior Red Cross; of health education and public health nursing and of life saving and first aid. Funds for this work come from the membership roll call the Red Cross chapters conduct from Armistice Day to Thanksgiving Day, when every one Is Invited to join the Red Cross and aid in this vital relief work. Meeting of Advisory Board Watch Your Balance The Fourth first page.) line. The fourth period was fairly even until the flashy Evankovich broke through for the most spectacular run of the day, breaking through run for a touchdown. for a J. Rinaldi kicked the extra point. Box Elder made a determined attempt to score, but time was short and the game ended with the ball in possession of the locals on the Gentle 2.00 from uy RED GROSS CLOTHES y, (Continued net APARTMENT FOR RENT Morgan. Phone 323. Thanks See Evan (tf) Reunion WANTED Used furniture, heaters I and ranges. Bargain Store. (n!4-17- ) FOUND Boy Soout News office. pin. WANTED Used furniture, and ranges. Bargain Store. 5 I? VERY time the fire gong rings, it not only announces a lire somewhere but it sounds a warning to those who have been so fortunate as to es cape the devastation lire can cause. CI you are wise, you will heed the warning and make sure that your fire insurance is safe, sound, and sufficient. at (it) heaters e (n!4-17- CJTLrTakei1 Merrell Lumber qln'r, N Q 011 & ItS the ) FOR SALE Milch cow. Merrell Lum-bCompany. (o20-tf- ) WANTED Used furniture, and ranges. Bargain Store. $ Call er heaters to great to, family I Thanksgiving dl f if distance keeps f the family by tel merchandise. I reunion (n!4-17- & i ) Hardware Co. LITTLE RADIO For Hansens Variety L- - (o-t- next best other. A f) BETTER BEDDING COMPANY Manufacturers Renovating Wool Washing, and Card-mResidence phone, 25-(o-tALL TYPES OF RADIO I TUBES teated free' Petersen Elec-tn- c 1 Company. (tf) ASH PAID For dead useleai and cows and horses. Phone 493J2 J Reverse charges. tf f) 1 W The ten g. J. to tor ? Dis(l will rate you the to " J - a USLU. Brigham City, Utah BBaaiBBBaaBHBa L1TTLE RADIO For WRJL N' L Hansen's Variety ST0RE- - (ofl-t- OUR ADS BRING RESULTS f) TheMountaij |