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Show Publishing Company Every published Tuesday and Friday Semi-Weekl- y, DOUBLE ACTION Assb Member National Editorial Rex-Ment- Managing Editor C. WIXOM. ho -1- 25c 2-01 - HIx Months. Three Months.. bap?181' THE CHEST RUB Subscription. Rates: Dae Tear.. y and Its Beneficiaries Nation s $1,000,000 Birthday Cake llllllllllllllllllillllllUIIIHIillllllllllliltllllMllllllillltlllllHM The Box Elder News & Semi-Weekl- THE BOX ELDER NEWS, Page Two 1.80 .50 Washington Entered at the Fostomce at Brigham - City, as Second Class Matter tt,. thathekno so many 0f their trS Now there is th A Fine Report The News n may be that oneof the industrialists L' Lewis paign T' contributions. campaigns have aim, ducted on santifiJ1 we irreverent fellow? 4 R is a boys as to whether all spent really has any result. In fact cans recent experience is indebted to Charles II. Skidmore, state superintendent of public instruction, for a copy of the latest biennial report of his department. The report, published in a booklet 6 by 9 inches and containing about 250 pages, is replete with information concerning the schools of Utah in the various departments. There are about 84 pages of tabulated figures which give an immense amount of information in condensed form. It seems to us that it would be impossible to compile a more comprehensive and valuable report than Superintendent Skidmore has given in his biennial statement. Many thanks, Superintendent S, S derance of evidence be on the negative way, the money is fJ 8i part ELECTREX FLAT IRON speak, and if lt would be as bad aa & device replacing a ma been working for a forty years. The point is. however fat boys who THE EDDY DRUG STORE h?rntribTthi0n3 expect someth are some, who contribute through but mostly it is a case a good investment upon J ru expects good returns In ti, , tariff favors, income tax kwr ing material to the govern subsidies. John contributed $400 miners d moaen recent new deal victory, andj pects a return on his He doesnt want to sell to the government or am favors, mat John wants 000 Dictatorship Decried and freedom are of the very essence of the more abundant Dictatorship has been accept- life, which dictatorship seeks ed by the peoples of Europe to realize through regimentation. under the belief that it provides an avenue to an improved general welfare. Above any other class in American Society, Christian ministers recognize as their principal duty and interest in life the advancement of the well being of our people. A few of the statements of Americas leading clergymen are DR. 0. E. BAKER SHOWS NEED FOR MORE CHILDREN Dr. O. E. Baker, senior agricultural economist of the U. S. D. A. addressed the county agents, home demonstration agents and extension specialists at the first session of the extension conference held last week at the Utah State Agricultural Quoted: Dr. W. T. Watson: Dictator- College In Logan. During the depression, 34 per ship is sin economic and political sin. It destroys all of the cent of the rural people moved to qualities of yery highest civilization. Dr, Floyd H. Randall: tatorship holds Dic- no hope for the city, said Dr. Baker in speaking on the economic problems In population trends. Unless the birth rate is increased in the next decade of the century the commercial farming needed will be reduced. There are only enough children being born to nafntaln the population of our . Christianity. It dethrones Christ. All na. Dr, Bruce Corbin: tions are imperiled by a world- country. A few years ago we were all conwide trend toward dictatorship. in production, cerned It is likely to succeed in Ameri- but withweIncrease are more concerned two-thir- ds hard-earne- any just now and With more than 6,000 celebrations in prospect for January 30, President Roosevelts birthday, a fund of approximately $1,000,000 is forecast for the war against infantile paralysis by Colonel Henry L. year. Seventy percent of the fund thus Doherty, chairman of the National Committee for the fourthother thirty percent going to the Warm raised will remain in the communities where collected, the Springs (Georgia) Foundation. Utah Farm Bureau FARMER HEADS BANGS DISEASE FARM BUREAU Ward C. Holbrook Also Prominent In Senate (U. S. P. A. Service) now, 30, that makes Rainbow On River at grandmother, while Feb. 1st Original Distinguished Cast of 60 Players AND Entire Magnificent New York Production Special Train of 8 Cars, 5 Carloads of Scenery! TRICES i $1.12 $L68 $2.24 Beavers. $20 Including Taxes No one interested in the theatre should miss the extraordinary sincerity and beauty of Leslie Howards interpretation. Hugh Walpole. R cattle were FOR moden RENT Phone 112. CASH PAID For aeaa cows and horses. Reverse charges. featured in the supporting cast which also includes Donald Crisp, Ra Hould, sensational new child actor, Jack Mulhall, Pat OMalley, David Torrence, Wyndham and Theodore Van Eltz. Standing IRRIGATORS TO MEET Notice to Stockholders t Probate and mitting to the present legislature a Guardianship Notices of homestead tax exemption' and plan 0nnJl .p Respective tax adjustment with particular refer- Further Informatlon ence to agricultural interests and)8""8 welfare. He is father of a resolu- - j NOTICE TO CREDITORS tion looking toward the holding of . te f , v , na Valentino, a worlds fair in Utah in 1947, the!nn hundredth anniversary of the Creditors will present claims with arrival of the pioneers in this valley. vouchers to the undersigned at her Plans are now being formulated, res,dence in Brigham City, Utah, or according to Douglas O. Woodruff, athe otflce 01 4 J- Wesley Horsley, secretary of the University of Utah "ttorney Brigham, Utah, on or before alumni association, to organize alum- - tbe 20th day ot March, A. D. 1937. nl members in each county into active WINNIE V. YOUNG, Administratrix county clubs. The plans call for at of the Estate of Lovina Valentine least one organization of the uni- - deceased. versity alumni in each county of Date of first publication: January the state. 19, A. D. 1937. J ,r de-o- ne - MAIL ORDERS NOW Lou- ise Beavers is cast as a devoted colored slave whose sudden emancipation does not alter her love for her young white marster. This RKO Radio release, presents in prominent featured roles Charles utterworth. Benita Hume, Alan Mow- ray enry ONeill, Marilyn Knowl- h Hal1 Johnson Choir, in lt oa to Mlss RobsoQ and Miss The HAMLET pects them to. But the ate tion dreads the day when admit that is what it most io. the men forced out of work of the strike there is fio ment. But the actual striker) porting them Is something ill The administration is dcii now in the case of the i A young boys attempt to escape y the luxurious but inhospitable surroundings of a Yankee grandmothers mansion in New Yoik to return to a Negro mammys humble cabin in New Orleans where he was reared, Provides a situation of dramatic in tensity in Rainbow On the River, Bobby Breen's musical vehicle coming Sunday, Monday and Tuesday to climax. the Capitol Theatre. Karen Morley, Henry Stephenson, Robson is seen as the austere May Jerome Cowan and David Niven are rebel-hatin- g Artists in Mr. Rs Merle Oberon and Brian Aherne present Hollywoods newest romantic team in Samuel Goldwyns production, Beloved Enemy, a vivid drama of love under fire, which begins a three-daengagement at the Roxy Theatre on Sunday. The story casts Brian and Merle as a man and woman from two warring worlds who fall madly in love and follows their romance, carried on under fire, with both risking their lives to snatch a few hours with each other. Against shifting backgrounds, the story proceeds to a very thrilling At the Capitol taken away. ON THE STAGE 2,500 list on this same date. Beloved Enemy -- LESLIE HOWARD and that At the Roxy Ward C. Holbrook liberties rtppupi 1936 on the waiting Take Monday, embarrasses cattle hs inn IU Nothing Miss Perkins or the rest nothing embarrasses then s this stage than questions bj papermen as to whether the i ment will take the strikers a John says quite frankly that The United States bureau of animal industry gives the following summary nk of hang's disease control in Utah from July 1, 1934 to November 30, 1936. The work has been conducted with by the bureau In the Utah State Agricultural College experiment station, under the super- longshoremen. Indeed, it It vision of Dr. D. E. Madsen, animal funny predicament of subsidhl pathologist steamship operators on the oi and The agglutination blood tests comsubsidizing the workers months work for them on the other, pleted during the twenty-nin- e In Utah was for 16.968 herds includ- dentally, this happy handlins then ing 123,186 cattle. Of the total herds, strike is the real reason lot the in 3,281 contained some infection, with been any disorder a total of 7,930 strike. mens reacting to the test. (Copyright, 1937) Dr. Madsen stated that 6.4 per cent of the samples tested proved to be The air pressure agalnSs diseased. He also said that 12,184 plane increases four times la herds totaling 111,909 cattle were the speed of the plane under supervision as 6f November CLASSIFIED AS SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. 29 Years of work to promote the welfare of with a decrease in production. From agriculture and the Interests of agis possible, until it is here. We an economic standpoint only one-ha- lf of the farms now In existence are riculturists of Utah were rewarded must resist now or never. needed. If 50 per cent of the farms last week when Ward C. Holbrook Dr. W. D. Herrstrom: Civiliwere discontinued It would only re- of Davis county, a practical and zations go into reverse gear un- duce successful farmer and one of the by 11 per cent- der dictatorships which are con Onlyproduction two-fiftof the farmers in recognized leaders in the state senate ducted on the false theory that the United States own their own was elected president of the Utah State Farm Bureau, during its annual the mind of one man is superior land, he pointed out 1934 In 50 and 1935, per cent of convention in this city. to the combined minds of mil- the Senator Holbrook, who was born in lost people Chicago equity in lions. Liberty is life. their homes, but if the prosperity in Bountiful in 1899, entered the away liberty and you destroy we are now having continues, there business of farming when he was all life worth will be a movement of rural ycutl still in his teens and his life ; to the city. If the reverse should bSen devoted to this work. The living. senators farm, where he raises beets, Dr. H. E. Williamson: The take place and we have another Ui3 Bluer people in the city fruit, truck, grains and stock, is United States should preserve rated among the best in the county. will go to the farms. Dr. Baker stressed the need for But, while the senator has put in her dearly bought children to love the farm and many years of hard labor on his against all forms and threats the also the fact that the family i3 the crops, he has found time to make of dictatorship. a study of the problems of agriculfoundation of the nation. Dr. Gerald B. Winrod : The ture, methods of improving agriculAmerican people may hot apI know an artist who painted a tural work and means of improving preciate their liberties now, but cobweb so real that a maid spent a the lot of the farmer in general. In this study he has given especial to sweep it down. they will miss them if they are full hour trying to the paramount problem attention old but I dont man, Sorry, Dictatorship believe of taxation and his knowledge on this it. means the destruction of human 3 bi ,t0. A?.rtant have been Why not? posts, not only in agricultural or known to do such things. liberty. ganizations but also in governmental The consensus of minisYes, but maids havent. terial opinion is that security A western farmer stopped at a agencies. the expense of liberty is a bank to see if he could get a loan Mr. Holbrook has been identified with the Farm Bureau work since bad bargain for the American on 'his farm. "It might be arranged, said the he first began farming. He has done people. Their collective opinion, banker. drive out with you and outstanding work in connection with further, is that security can be appraise "Ill the canning crops organization and it. built only on the spiritual founYou wont need to bother, said the sugar beet organization. In addidation, of Constitutional rights the farmer, noticing a big dust cloud tion he has, for six years been a ministers rolling in from the west Here it member of and a leading figure in and liberties. the legislative and tax committees believe that individual rights comes now. of the Farm Bureau. The senator insists that politics ls merely a hobby of his, but In his 4 politlcal positions he is always found One Performance Only looking after the interests of agri-- ! culture. He was one of the members OGDEN, - - - - UTAH 8:15 P. M. of the state committee of nine en Stage Engagement Extraordinary! trusted with working out and sub-PERSONAL VISIT OF ca because none will believe it BUREAU RECORDS SHOW TESTS FOR Elected President of DAVIS COUNTY will undoata is federal relief for his strike put up $400,000 for the new i He will get in return Jtw, $5,000,000 or Johns bill an; run up into the $100,000,000a (jl9-fl- 6) The annual meeting of the stockholders of the Box Elder Creek Water Users association will be held at the office at No: 4 West Forest street, Brigham City, Utah, February 1, 1937 at two p. m., for the purpose of electing three directors for a term of three years, and for the transacting of such other business as may lawfully come before Buch meeting. It is very important that all stockholders attend due to the fact Pine View water will be here this year and a plan of distribution must be worked out and agreed upon. W. T. DAVIS, President. C. M. CHRISTENSEN, Secy. 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