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Show THE BOX ELDER NEWS, Page Two 0. S. The Box Elder News Publishing Company Published Every Tuesday and Friday B. Editorial Ask'd Subscription Rates: One Year. Six Months Three Months of Architect and Mrs. C. F. Wells friends with visited City Sait Lake Mrs. C. S. Hamilton and sons, Lyle and Max, of this city, are spending the week at Downey, Idaho, visiting with relatives aDd friends. Peace Poll Ends; Questioned Answered By Nation-Wid- e $2.0 1.00 50 Mr. and Mrs. Orval E. Sackett, Fordham Dummer and Miss Uarda City Steed, motored to Salt Lake state this morning to attend the bottlers convention being held at the 300,000 Students. Entered at the Postoffice at Brigham City, as Second Class Matter RESULTS COMPARED Who Will Pay? MANY Paragraphs AT U. OF U. SAY Managing Editor C. WIXOM Newhouse Utah school districts about reached their limit of bonded indebtedness. This is already true in the cases of Salt Lake City, Ogden, Al- ? Utah Chronicle, Campus Paper, Cooperates With Literary "DLONDE, brunette or red head, youll find among Cara Nomes 49 famous formulas the very ones that will give you NEW BEAUTY I And you can be sure that you have the finest up- formula known to coe. Ask to see Car science metic Nome at the Rexall Drug Store. Mr. to-da- te so-call- ed CARA NOME beauty creations EDDY DRUG th STORE i , At the Capitol $- i j Look to the Future HAVE that Clean Up and Repair just soon as his thoughts turn more often to the past than to the future. Just so, a business is enfeebled when it is not forwa- play the principal characters. This also was done in many parts of the United States. For more than six months the entire resources of the company, both in America and abroad, were concentrated on a search for a boy to play the juvenile David. He was found, finally, in the person of little Freddie Bartholomew, an English boy, who makes his screen debut in David and is heralded as the Copperfield, juvenile sensation of the year. Other players finally chosen for key roles included W. C. Fields as Micawber; Frank Lawton as the adult David; Lionel Barrymore as Dan Peggotty ; Lewis Stone as Mr. Wickfield; Madge Evans as Agnes; Maureen OSullivan as Dora; Edna May Oliver as Aunt Betsey Roland Young as Uriah Heep; Basil Rathbone as Mr. Murdstone, and others equally well known and well chosen to fit the characters they portray. Farm Implements Is Advice of Specialist (Capitol Theatre These days are good times to clean up, repair and grease all farm and garden implements so that they will be ready for use when the time comes, suggests Professor J. C. Hogenson of the Utah State Agricultural College extension service at Logan. Apply manure to the garden soil and lawn if this has not already been done. At the same time make a fairly heavy application of manure as a mulch to the perennials such as rhubarb, asparagus, raspberries, blackberries, and currants. This mulch will protect the plants throughout the remainder of the winter and should be worked into the soil In the early spring. This is an excellent month in which to repair hotbeds and or to construct new ones. Get them ready now" and plantingB will not be unnecessarily delayed. Spend some of these long evenings studying the seed catalogs. Their contents are instructive, inspirational and fascinating. Secure catalogs from the seedsmen now. This is the time to start planning your next years garden, in the opinion of Professor Hogenson. TODAY AND SATURDAY Teacher: "Robert, if you are always very kind and polite to all your playmates, what will they think And by the way rd-looking. that youthful, forward-lookin- g feeling is the best protection we know of against having Business Jitters. Those that claim to have seen that sea serpent insist that its four miles long. You've got to be mighty sober to think a sea serpent is any shorter. Japan Ready to Finance Big Headline. This means, Navy naturally, that she has the yen for it. ld Trot-woo- SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NEWS. The Honor Theatre for Perfect Sound BIG DOUBLE BILL: Ann Harding and Robert Montgomery in OUR d; semi-wint- er cold-fram- of you? Robert: Some of em would think they could lick me! David Copperfield PICK r Immediate Claims Settlement! ar ar O THE PICTURES jj ,r of Salt Lake City and C. L. Wight of Ogden No waiting . . . Collision bills paid with sight draft from our local office. BARKER 2250 BROS'. AGENCY Washington Ave., Ogden Telephone Number 968 S. Martin Rasmussen LOCAL AGENT 110 North, Second East Street Telephone Number 336-- You can WASH Imperial Wall with SOAP and WATER visited with relatives and friends in this city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Johnson left trip today at noon for a three weeks Kenin the east. They will go to tucky, where they will pick up their filling daughter. Fern, who has been Washa mission there and will visit ington, D. C., Chicago, and many other places of interest before returning home. Fingermarks, smudges, even grease spots mean nothing in the life of these new 1935 wallpapers. They can be washed with soap and water or cleaned with commercial dry cleaning solvents as The Beneficial Life Insurance company is now making installment loans on real estate. See Lamont Glover, (ml-1district manager. . many times as needed. Dirt goes, and the texture and 5) color of the paper harmed in the least. Drivers License Law Comes In For Praise isnt Yet these Imperial Washable Wallpapers have no lacquer, no varnish, or other protec The value of an efficiently administered drivers license law was very strikingly shown in the 1934 figures furnished by the safety department of the Farmers Automobile Exchange to S. Martin Rasmussen, local representative. States with such laws had an increase of only 9 per cent in highway fatalities, compared with the preceding year, whereas states without such laws increased 16 per cent. Highway safety experts agreed that the most important need in addition to a drivers' license law is: A continued mass pyschology against careless driving a sense of individual responsibility on the part of every driver, and stricter enforcement of traffic Lose a minute today and laws. save a life! ft Rites Held Thursday For Aloid N. Nelson tive coatings usually ciatcdwith washable, a paper . They come ia jj finishes, in nuthoritative it signs by expert dccoratm artists. All Imperial fjj. papers arc fast to well light, as washable. There,, pattern to fit every purseaai every purpose. Come in and look over full selection of pattens it vcry room. MRELLIMEMBBl 5 STORES IN Inter-Insuran- ONE LUMBER-- HARDWARE-PAINT-IMPLEMENT- S C ffi PHONE-- ANNOUNCE e He is all the world to me 1 would you advise me to dor "See a little more of the n 4-- H my CLUB CONTESTS dear. Are there any marks asked the anxious talk The doctor looked the new in state boys and over carefully and replied, Ti baby? Mr. D. P. Murray, girls club specialist, announces the marked C. 0. D. club contests for the following H State of Utah. Any bona fide under supthe club member working ervision of the Extension Service Our Banquet and Enter during the club year of 1935 Is Room for tainment to compete. eligible club farm acIn the national By Appointing counting contest, prizes are offered PHONE 175 rebest-kebusiness farm for the 6. The record is to cords in HOI contain a complete inventory of all farm possessions, a record of money O received and paid during the year, and a balance sheet showing how much money the farm made or lost during the year. A county prize of $10 will be awarded in each county. The state prize will give the winner 750 a McCormick-Deerin- g pound capacity cream separator. The winner of the western states will be doublegiven a McCormick-Deerin- g unit milker complete with pail. The national grand prize will give the choice of a McCormick-Deerin- g 4-- H 4-- 0 funeral services for Impressive Aloid Nephi Nelson were held on Thursday at 2 p. m. in the Sixth ward chapel, with Bishop Henry Holst presiding and conducting. 4-- H pt The opening song, Teach My Soul to Pray, was rendered by Morilla Spencer and Callie Kofoed and in was offered by P. N. Pierce. A violin selection was rendered by Harold B. Felt. The speakers were Bishop W. R. Dredge, Noel Bennion, Lorenzo W. Anderson, President Wm. C. Horsley and Bishop Holst. Between speakers a vocal solo, Lay My Head Beneath a Rose was sung by Mrs. Blythe E. Tingey. A duet, Jesus, Lover of My Soul was given by Milton Jensen and Roy Olsen of Mantua and benediction was pronounced by Andrew Petersen. Farmall 12 Tractor, or Intruck. Interment was in the Brigham City ternational half-to- n cemetery and Leland Nelson dediThe second contest is a national cated the grave. club meat animal livestock proft ject. Any club member who is enrolled in one or more meat animal livestock clubs (baby beef, purebred beef animal, market hog, breeding hog, market sheep or breeding sheep) during the year is eligible to comStake M. I. A. officers announce pete. The county prize will consist special features of interest at the of a handsome gold-fille- d medal of el monthly Union meeting, which will honor. A state prize of a be held Monday, March 4th, at 7:30 gold watch, valued at $50 will be p. m. in the Fifth ward. given to the winner. The sectional Mr. Kennard in the music depart- winner will receive a free trip to ment, will conduct a rehearsal of the fourteenth National H Club for numbers the coming music festi- Congress to be held at Chicago late val and all ward3 are asked to send next falL The grand national prize in the people whom they expect to will give the three winners agriculhave sing. tural college scholarships. Other departments offered are draFor further information get in ma, bee hive, juniors, gleaners, M touch with your county agent or the Men, Scouts, Vanguards and a combined class in reading, hobbies and Extension Service ft at Logan. conversation. OUR ADS BRING RESULTS A short social will be held following department work, with Irish and "the wearing of the green as the main theme of the games and dances. 1935-193- HOWARD BURN Castle -O- Gal R- H Union Meeting Will Be Held On Monday Liberty COAL High quality gives J most dependable, b be! ful, and even 4-- Grand . Intercoastal Shipping Trade Is Flourishing (Exclusive to The News) inter-coast- al provement in 1934. In spite of (he Pacific Coast longshoremens strike, which lasted 83 days, the American-Hawaiia- n Steamship company, oldest and largest of the intercoastal carriers, handled tons of cargo, only 6 1 per cent less than 1933s total. Company vessels steamed 1,464,120 miles; transited the Panama Canal 223 times oQo&id Caal t0,ls amunting to letter to company stock hoi d( Direct, str was $552,286.46, indirect losi difficult to estimate. During the year dividend gating one dollar per sha paid out of surplus. uu i no. band, wont eat lobster. Clerk: Why not crab, then? Wife: Oh, I do, but it does do any good. KNUDS0 BROTHER! Phone 14 or S! Theatre, Webster Electric Sound System Business, the trade, showed a marked im- TRAILING THE KILLERS SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY Coming During March: Three more Liberty productions: Chu Chin Chow, Imitation of Life, The Silly Symphonies, and also Janet Gaynor in One More Spring and Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire in Roberta. MARCH IS A BANNER MONTH AT THE CAPITOL THEATRE ! Parry and Mrs. SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. as reflected by shipping in Second Feature All-St- es D. ft BIOGRAPHY OF A BACHELOR GIRL An Cast of Players, with FRANK LAWTON, W. C. FIELDS,, MADGE EVANS, LIONEL BARRYMORE, EDNA MAY OLIVER, LEWIS STONE, MAUREEN OSULLIVAN and other big stars. Mrs. A. N. Grover and son Max of Salt Lake City, and her daughMr. and Mrs. ters and S SALT LAKE CITY. Almost three-fourtof the University of Utah stupine and Provo. s dents believe that the United States I can stay out of another great war, $2,-00- 0 Operation of the according to Parry Sorenson, editor homestead exemption act, of the Utah Chronicle, the campus newspaper. which has already passed both Mr. Sorenson made this announcehouses of our legislature and ment after the tabulation of the final returns in the national peace poll, in been denied a reconsideration, which 891 University of Utah, students would decrease the assessed voted. The poll, which was sponsored by the Chronicle at the Univaluation of almost every Utah versity of Utah, was conducted in one-fourto school district by 117 other leading colleges and unione-hal- f. versities by the Association of ColSchool bonds must be lege Editors and the Literary Digest. paid. But so must the school Over 300,000 votes were cast in the national poll. teacher. Present educational Seventy-on- e per cent of the Unistandards must be maintained. of Utah students thought that versity With such decreased valuations' the United States could stay out of another great war, as compared with as now loom for most school a total of 69 per cent in the national districts, only enough taxes will poll, Mr. Sorenson said. be collected to retire bonds. The old fashioned woman who In the question pertaining to the entrance of the United States into The next step would be to used to boast about how many j the League of Nations, however, University of Utah students differed from pay school teachers in uncash-abl- e glasses of jelly she could get the national returns. Sixty-fiv- e per has warrants. Chicago teach- out of a gallon of berries, cent of the Utah students thought ers learned to their sorrow that a daughter who likes to brag that the United States should not the League, while in worthless warrants will buy about how many miles she can join contest the negative vote on League entrance was 50-- per cent. neither food nor clothing. get out of a gallon of gas. Forty-nin- e per cent of the 891 Utah is justly proud of her University of Utah voters thought educational standards. Those that to maintain peace the United States should build a navy and air standards cannot be maintained force second to none. Only 37 per cent of the Btudents in the national by bankrupting school districts David Copperfield poll advocated such a policy. or starving the teachers. To get the seventy or eighty chaIn answers to other questions, Uniracters who appear in David Copper-- j of Utah students voted more versity field," the brilliant new photoplay in line with national results, accordcoming to the Capitol Theatre next ing to Mr. Sorenson. Utah students Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, more voted 92 per cent strong that th than 15,000 actors and actresses were would fight if the United States were you a case of and some 2,000 screen invaded, as compared with a nationJitters? If you are interviewed, tests were made! al percentage of 84. Only 19 per one of those who fear that the This fact gives some idea of the cent of the University of Utah stucare which was taken to bring dents would fight if the United States present upward trend of busi- Dickens favorite novel to the screen were to invade another country, as ness is not sound and will surely with fidelity to the original story. A compared with 18 per csnt In the all national poll. talent search that relapse, then you are suffering of America, all of encompassed Canada, all of Ninety-fou- r per cent of the Utah You Great Britain and almost every oth- students favored governmental conwith Business Jitters. er English-speakin- g colony on earth trol of munitions, as compared with are judging from the past. was carried on over a period of 91 per cent in the national poll. all in order Eighty-si- x per cent of the University If more thought is given to more than a yearx andstars and fea- of Utah students, and 82 per cent of to select twenty-sito the future and less the past, tured players for the principal roleB, the students in the national poll, business will get farther and and some fifty other favorites for favored universal conscription of capital in case offt war. move faster. But here is an supporting parts. cash In England alone, prizes were important point. Someone has offered to motion picture fans who as submitted the best lists of people to a man is old said E Hotel. sons-in-la- Digest Magazine. . y PERSONAL WAR, STUDENTS Semi-Weekl- y, Member National CAN AVOID Semi-Weekl- tta The Best in TODAY AND SATURDAY OUR BIG DOUBLE BILL: ENTER MADAME with Elissa Landi, Cary Grant, Lynne Over and Richard Bonelli SECOND FEATURE HIDDEN VALLEY with Bob Steele, Gertie Messinger, Freer .McDonald and Dick Dickinson SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TllESD- - THE RIGHT TO Uf with Josephine Hutchinson George Brent Pick O the Pictures for the 1935 Crop |