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Show FRIDAY AFTERNOON, rHE PACE SIX N c uis-3- J A Semi-Weekl- oum al Newspaper Successor to lb'ttl) and Jan. 1909) Elder Subscription Rates: Anywhere In Box a County $2 50 a year, $1.25 for six months,a 25c month: outs.de Box Elder County, $3 00 year. Subscriptions must be paid in advance. Publication offices, 41 South Main Street. llil.i Jan. 13, 1933. II IH typewriters Second-han- 1 fori j Jones was elected as President of the Clamber of) Commerce tonignt. Board members also eleete t were Tnornas Everyone seems to have a facinated hor- L. Davis, He' v n Bunderson, ror of eating horse meat. And yet Ive Jarvis Koford and Rulon Baron. heard a lot of guys claim to be lovers of Jan. 14, 1933. Wayne Stalker, horseflesh. and Mrs. Guy died in Bear River City. I'm not sure, but I believe theres some- Stalker, Miss Irene Killion and Clif J12 typewriter thing in the Bible that sets the fashion in ford Fretwell were married in Mipply class condition. first desk, what animals you eat and what animals you Ogden. OK SALE: Farm on state highUPCall Howard Hotel. dont eat if you are a carnivorous human Jan. 15, 1933. way 2 miles south of TrenionMrs. Ellen Patterson Russell, ton. For particulars call at REAL ESTATE SOLD animal. As I recall, it sayls something about of died James mother 80, Hull, 270 East 1st North, Brigham, REAL ESTATE BOUGHT eat the cloven hoof. Youre supposed to J22 or phone REAL ESTATE LOANS following a long illness. animals w'ith more than one toe touching Jan. 16 ,1933. S. NORMAN LEE, the ground, with the usual number of exHelena Charlotte Gustamsson, lMtslIGAIE THESE BLYS: Licensed Abstractor with to be a hoof, 71, died at her home in the 40 acre irrigated farm ceptions. And its supposed good home in Elwood, Utah. and not a toe with, again, I suppose, a Second Ward. FURNACE CLEANING Price and terms right. We Vacuum Clean and Repair quota of exceptions. Jan. 17, 1933. All Makes of Furnaces The Boden house, with severMr. and Mrs. John Musulas, COAL and APPLIANCE BEEHIVE extra and al aparements, Phone MONEM Now days people dont seem to pay as Andy Pathakis, William Dokas, , so rooms. Real much attention to the Bible as they should, Lewis Jones, J. Wesley Hors-dont miss this! Located 22 SELL your dead or useless in a lot of matters, so thered probably be ley, Ruel Eskelsen and Alf, es and cattle to Whites Trout 2nd West, Brigham, were among the Brig-more no moral scruples against eating horse meat, Freeman O. G. Bargeron, Agent. Farm and receive ham people that were stuck in( Utah. 6. 11R2 nl. Phone Phone Hyrum money. for most people. snow drifts near Berry, when Collect. J43 they found the roads impassable LOST: A liver and white, meWe civilized people probably on account of the heavy snow. Junior di urn sized pointed pup. His- WANTED: Senior and A son was born in a local hosdont eat horse meat at the moment, knowWednesday. Wearing appeared pital to Mr. and Mrs Douglas collar with old license lag on. ingly because our Quayle of Perry. Mrs Quayle it Cali 657 or 10. after 5 p. m. J12 15 lip who also professwas Coombs. Cora Miss formerly ed to be civilized people, didnt eat horse FOR SALE: . One 1939 . G. M. C. Jan. 18. 1933. , Prommeat. The didnt even consider it fit to eat. A son was horn to Mr. and George A. Woodward of 'l ln n malTipd 0g'kn w.ere i m a s .as Mrs. Rav Boothe of Honeyville. on01?' ir J, to L. A. was Stout promoted But probably the reason our Miss Vilate Mann, daughter p. in. or anytime Sunday. J19 f F D Mann thp Potion of assistant gener-tr anrt civilized & M. al of the C W i, didnt eat horse meat was because the Bible cTvald J N JhorT1' a Untied a picture show 'Co., in sLlt Lake City. told them not to. Now were in the interBngham City on Monday afA son was born to Mr. and T W ENT i 1 KAILS AGO ternoon. directive of a Mrs. C. O. Roskelley. obeying esting predicament Jan. 12, 1923. Keith Young, son of Mr and second-hanx son was born to Mr. and that we wont obey first-hanMis. Zillah Rees, 83, died at Mrs. Wallace Voung, was the L. Alf Freeman. her home in the Third ward, jire. MrsVerna Peterson, daugh- speaker at the Sunday evening I doubt very much if I ever ate horse following a long illness. Iter of Mr. and Mrs Waller services held in the Petry ward meat, although I have bought and eaten aiV ... Johnson, was scalded to death. chapel. He used a chait in some suspiciously tinned meats, .uS' at her home in Salt Lake City. presenting his subject "The tC and probably have taken a crack at dogfood mother of Mrs. Dt. R. T. W illey, XWENTY-FIEternal Progression of Man E EARS AGO died at her home in Salt Lake Jan. 13, 1918. I know' I served them one evesandwiches. supper was set ved at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Frederick Petersen, ning, in my bachelor days. It would be a City. Mrs. Young Stokes, 72, died at his home on South Sec- Eisle Larsyn on Saturday point for debate as to whether the guests died at Amy her home m the Second ond East ollovvimg a long lU. ning by a group who later who, unknowingly, ate and admired the canco hlnfT rT'naW sandwiches, then knowingly reversed the In war(i recreation 1918. . .. 16, in:n street, tre process, could be considered actually to have yILss Leona Whittaker, daugh- hal1eaten them or not. Anyway, the dogfood ' Ground was broken today lor probably contained horse meat. cWfOTdJensn a new business block immediate- - , Honeyville News Temple" Salt Boothe Iv north rhe of hotel, by Miss Anna Q R Streida and When I was in high school and read arHONEYVILLE, Jan. 11 The van . o 8anticles by Ernest Thompson Seton and Dan Joseph B. Jeppsen of Mantua son was otn o , Wheatley on iere married in the Salt Lake in honor of The. on He Killdeer Beard, and named my .22 for Mrs. Isaac Young of Perry. left Jan. Thursday .temple. evening Hawkeyes weapon in The Last of the Mo- Jan. 17, 1923. 8 for the navy. A crowd large and Anderson Cleofa Mrs. and a fine hicans, thought of friends and telatives tumSaturday was a day spnt in the country living on the land, led out and enjoyed a fine prorLKRY NEWS the land being a questionable stew made of HE READ igram and dance. Theron is the PERRY, Jan. 14 A group of son of Mr. and Mrs George H. carrots and potatoes and turnips dug out of OGDEN young folks enjoyed a delightful Wheatley. some farmers garden and a rabbit and a STANDARD-EXAMINEbirthday party on Saturday eveJoyce Chamberlain entertain60c Month Delivered In Brigham squirrel ami pigeon and maybe a possum ning at the home of Mr. and ed 40 of her young friends at a DAILY and SUNDAY skinned with a hunting knife and more or Mrs. Ezra Weaver, given in danemg Ralph party at her home at less washed in the creek, I was willing to try honor of their daughter. Bonny .Crystal Springs Williams Wednesuay eve-Jean, it being her 14th annt- ning They reported havirtr a anything of an outdoorish nature. Ntv th 1t Fat versary. Lunch was served to grand time the following: One Saturday afternoon we stopped in to Mrs. George B Wintle Betty Whaley, Marva Davis, Barbara Davis, returned to her home in see Harold at his dads farm, as we prospecDarlene Hobson. Bonny Jean after spending a week m Horn's ted about the country. Farm land in that Weaver, Denton Nebeker, Ken-- villo visiting relatives area was selling for around $100 an acre neth White, Richard Nelson, then, and it was all farm land, but three Stanley Wolfley and Darrell miles from town it seemed pretty wild, NeLson. The later spent Dr. E. B. Harrison the evening atgroup thanks probably to the influence of Seton, the M I. A. dance OPTOMETRIST being held in the ward hall Beard, Cooper and company. Harolds dad Mr. and Mrs Raymond Pay Brigham shoppei.s Satut dav had just butchered a horse to feed to the 20 South Main Street of Nephi visited over the week-- ' Mr. and Mrs Fm F..nm", pigs. The meat looked red and clean and end at the home of Mr. and were guests of edible or maybe we were just hungry. !C Mrs. Carl Crovvther t on Anyway, someone suggested building an outBishop Douglas Quayle and Monday. door fire and roasting us a horse meat his Mrs. mother. Nellie M!LK Pasteurized Hal Tohmn of o to,, Peiry. steak on a spit, but somebody else said no, attended the funeral services on the wook,.t1j m Hon.-- pi'p we had to get on with our hunting. CHEAM - BUTTER So we Saturday at Franklin. Idaho, for the home of his au,, 11 Beverly Shumw ay. didn't eat horse meat that day. YOlTR REST FOOD Miss Law ana Nebeker spent several days this week in Logan ALWAYS PURE I doubt very much if my digestion is as at the home ol Miss Fae good as it was then. But if worse comes to DAIRY SUPERIOR worst, and we cant get steak or lamb or The Perry school clu Id ten, 19 E 1st So. chicken or even mutton, and it gets to where Ph. 501 accompanied by their teachers. Mr. Ferguson and Miss Blauyou turn vegetarian or eat horse meat, and ancOBd Jensen mo the first horse meat I see looks as appetizing WiiNUX A1L to me now as that horse meat did then, I wouldn't mind trying it. I DON'T MY 15-1- three-drawe- -- farm machinery. r ond-hun- C. W. ami M 423-W- APProwMi7l; - The Double Standard The title is just a trick to get you to read this. Its not the double standard you thought, but just a double standard of values, this time. When point rationing, about which weve all heard so much, becomes effective sometime after February 1, well begin paying two prices for a lot of the necessities of living. Not twice the old cash price, but a money price and a point price. The housewife will carry a comptometer, a slide rule and a large scratch pad when she sallies forth to buy her weeks stock of groceries, and the household council will sit up evenings with a second budget a point budget, as well as with the usual household accounts. If this sounds hors-Sout- - "i? - . , . . 2S REAL ESTATE d. - ed j s 1 , I) . seven-monf- j - - I R J mn' j ' 1 cloven-hoofe- c s - Lo nHs The Allibone dut.orn.y alone supplied 119 box s of plates, weighing a total of 7. 920 pounds. But collection ofiieials like to i0'" u,th a r ALKA - SELTZi R fo fast rlisf for Simple Neuralfifc in After, CoMDtftrw Muscular Psimt Acid Indent. Ak (( volume Thpy rathpr n wou,d bp nRP Volume B B for B!,tz to Hit- thmkf u' . j comP1-T- e lotPr 0I Uilh Ihp , v Good-sel- s 1 - . One-year-ol- d , - - SIDE LOUISVILLE. (UP) PHILADELPHIA Ky. iff David Sehn,d els from aatdva.k to zymura message i started out hie sidewais vvill write out but nothing bjJ news Louisville doctors aie ho containing for Hitler and Hirohito in the almost daily conferences tc termine if an operation u: npar future The wouis, engtaved on plates able the youngster to grov 0f lead, copper and zinc, with normal eating habits. vv,n bp converted into bombs David, the son of Mr ells to bung a message Mrs. Fred Schmidt, was ancj t0 the Axis leadeis in the only with hi stomach and dev language they undet stand, death trig colon on the right sde stead of the left. Alt's an(j destruction. Through the salvage efforts of David is a little over a the J. B Lippincott Co a Phila- - old, the side tw ist to his delphta publishing hrm celebra-- ach has insulted in his j ting its laOh anniveisaty, the ing only 13 ounces over hiS 0f som(, 1.500 books will weight of 11 pounds and 14 be turnod ovcr t0 thp g0V0ln. ces. ment for conversion into the. At present he is being smews of war. through a tube Dr. Efc S Austin Allibone, when he Scott believe., that Dav.d "rte hlS DR,10nar-- ' of En2ilhh ilvp UIh hisbutstoraachhe cat that Literature in the early 180us, wrong side, piobablv never dreamed that, gain weight normally since a hundred years later, his schol- - normal passage ol food Is arly wo ids would scream out of od. The baby has only am the skies with a message of the growth of death- - but the copper plates of child and cannot talk, his book aie going into shells. And a German doctor who 1853 ret wrote a med.cal reverence book1 Army ollicets in ei the immediate mended couldn't have known that his, sion of the railroad to New V countrymen would some day be eo. Their recommendation J dodging his words, shot back built ; from the mouth of a chattering posed that one line be of the the tion southern po machine gun. into the : OTictals of I mmnenrt mm and another line wasn't It them section. pany said that Y0 P,aas- - un the touched through throe previous 3880, however, that constructed. roads weie ua"s-u'- a,d amoua' aPProxi1'tl'0ll kun',s of Vltal - at-- - BAB STOMACH ON WRONG Wo. . eve-lpdte- WITH JONS . - n,, Lfe GOOD CONFER ON PLATES OF 1,500 1 . L. Glover Beneficial Real estate, insurance, loans 19-N. L. Hansen Variety's nd bonds Telephone i The Store of a Million Ar E. Burd. John Btigham ed - insurance rates. OPTICAL h ' W. Manager, make z booksOFtoSCRAP. T INSURANCE Participating 1 ts from here on, the authority we quote. I think theres something in it we ought to knov, in spite of the manner in which it is presented. Now point rationing (the professor says) is a system of rationing a group of similar or related commodities which can be substituted one for another in actual use. These commodities must be bought with ration coupons, in much the manner youve been buying sugar and coffee, as well as with cash or credit. Everyone will be entitled to a certain number of points for a certain period. There "on t be any C cards in this case, for exec t in the case of children the government But dont be bringing me nice horse doesn't recognize varying sizes of appetite. Each commodity in the group will have a steaks, just yet, please. Id thank you for your kind intentions if such I felt they point value, which wont have any noticeable relation to the cash value. You have so were but Id feed the horse meat to that many points, so you can buy so much goods fat female pointer that sorts our garbage twice a week I don't know which of the according to point value. That may he canned pineapple or canned rhubarb, but while neighbors she belongs to, but I couldnt find both may cost the same youll be entitled to her around anywhere during pheasant buy 1G times as many cans of rhubarb (for example) as cans of pineapple. For the time being, and until an alphabetiThere seems to be a shortage of round cal bureau orders it otherwise, I'll stick to steak, to continue exampling. Maybe theyll the animals at the rate of set round steak at eight points. Well, you d a day. can blow eight coupons and 39 cents for a something well under a pound of round steak, or you can buy hamI had some Seems important things burger for 30 cents and one coupon per to discuss like here today, but I havent got and pound, get eight pounds for the same around to them, and the space is all gone. number of coupons you'd use for one steak. hat was it, now? Oh yes, a column about Housewives may wind up tearing their hair and cutting paper dolls out of iheir eating dog meat! coupon books (Ration book No. 2, to be Read the letter in todays paper from Sor- specific) but theyll either learn how to use geant Seashore, or the letters you yourself the blue stamps and the red stamps or else get from your boy in the service overseas. have families on theyll their necks Those lads are tickled to hungry at dinner time, toward the end of the month. to a meal of three or fourdeath to sit down cans, with a can Dont think for a minute it will be any opener for cook, and the food that is going breeze for the grocers, either. You wont to them in cans that would ordinarily whip by the cash register with your basket find its way to your grocers shelves is the of groceries as quickly as theyve been whipfood that will keep them in shape to win ping j ou past. A ou have to stop to haggle this war. oer the point value of 21 ounces of prime Our bo s over there are struggling with rib roast if you do, youre blowing an awful an intent on destroving them. Well enemy lot of points! be struggling with red and blue coupons And finally, you wont kick about it. H Jios entitled to sit at first table? text-booki- sh LIFE 1 - i its just Your appearance is import-ant to your success. Keep your clothes clean and neatly piess-ed- . Send them to Modem De-pendublo Cleaners. J12-1- low-pric- J . money-maker- J loaBs spraying matenals Produce Co. 1 d g! GRCHAROSUppjl Co - s. to ntt 1 Remember the customer? lies the guy who used to be always right. Hes the fellow you met at the door, and shook his hand, and helped him off with his coat and took his hat, and brushed the lint off his lapel, and talked to very pleasantly, and worked for all day and thought about all night. Remember the customer? Surely ou do, for it wasnt so long ago. Now days, in too many instances, a customer is a guy who comes in when youre too busy already, and asks for something you dont have. Frequently the customer is the only guy you can find to tell about how the goernment has wrecked your business the government and the war and all. Hes .he guy who keeps you busy trying to figHes the guy who ure out new brush-offwhile youre coddling and upsets your help, sweet talk and doing the with making everything to hold onto the help, because help is something else theres no more of when present supplies are gone. Well, theres the whole point, right up there, but we might as well take a few more whacks at the idea, just to dent the hoard. There may be a day when well be going half way and more to meet the customer again. There may be a clay when every creak of the old front doors hinges brings hope, and every sale is really very important. Lets remember this. No, Im not scolding. In my opinion, the stores and sales forces of local establishments are being just as courteous and friendly to all customers as they were in the old days when customers were as hard to find as jobs. But because things arent that way right now, weve no positive assurance that they may not be, sometime. It might be a good thing to keep in mind, from day to day. ground cattle j OH?., fts.nfor sd' . Remember The Customer? aad J 0(1 (jj WANTED: Man with small fain AUTOMOBILES and h- Good, on farm. to work used Will pay cash for cars., ily FLOMBIHG & HEATING; 12,? If. Central Chevrolet Co. wages, good home and other Paul Ta.vlor, considerations. No job too small -- satisfaction WANT E1): Used saddles. Willj I'hiiie595R3. IS 12 l"p Willard. Coleman & Sor- guaianteed. rent or buy, or trade you out S. Martin Rasim LOOK Sunset enson MEN Bill TRACTOR Houck, of them. Panther tractor greases regu- I'al jniino Riding Academy, tf larly sold at nQe, closeout, o. G. Bulge on, a WANTED: Applications will be CENTRAL CHEV,b ,0c fire insui or, for tf. lady young accepted jjoLET CO. ,ce. Worlds, tary hardware, a(h ,.lerk for retail sales work supplies, Kepui.s, drop-leaOak Office Golden F OR SALE sec n s,((1.. The Kenl,nder spoiling goods. Some good Lewis old son of Mr. I sale or lent. We buy good The Reminder tv pew rite) s lice Supply. 82 South Main. 12, 1933. Thu teen inches of snow fell during the night, completely WANTED blocking the canyon toads. News-Journa- JANTUiv,. dikcctejkv EARS AGO TEN THE BOX ELDER JOURNAL at Brigham, Utah, and entered as Second Class Matter at the post otfice in Brigham, Utah, in January, 1909, under the act of March, 3, 1879. KNAT MEWS-JC- H Clipping's From Our Files Of Days. THE BOX ELDER NEWS (Established Inc. Publisned by The Box Elder WILLIAM M. LONG, Editor & General Manager Published every Tuesday and Friday afternoon El HER TD emones y (Established HOX Pu'-ilh- s ' compli-- !TlPnts- i j your Dro-,1and W 0 wj Dr. Miles Nervine Sleeplessness, Nervous Irntabi!itv, Excitability and Nervous Headache. Read directions and use only as directed - Gt your Vitamins A snd D i Cnmpkx by tskiniO'ib (brand! Vi , a Tablfts. Eton; cal.conrsnwait YViC l. tA n .f . 7r!'hr, tTi - j RADDLE BY, DICK MOOKfc 1 d half-poun- NANCY VOU MATE ME . .DOkJ'T VOU ?" su. I'M JUST OL CROOKED MAG? fAM'T BLAME A MEAkJ . NOULL TAL - 3E Mui deseave By Ernie K IM WMEtsi IM mo8odn A MAMGiM' MOSODVLL CARE -- MOT EVENl DAUGMTER.. SHE'LL BE mo GOOD , like tme ' 11 I D'iCwNv 1 ! others; " |