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Show SMITHFIELD SENTINEL The SMITHFIELD Smithfield; 28. 1938. Ftbreiry ruined men the are of 10, with instruc- - member the maimed and that.! for whom the war is net yet over. over kill everyone to Cons renounce war because of what i Far from launching into a denuncia-j- l j compels us to do to our enemies I tjon 0f that American general, their mothers in villages, his state bombing to im much mvre tempted 'esse f:r him. Why rot? Connnt Efrving their children by blockades, ? laughing over our coffee cups about (Continued from page 1) fc,..a in(j gjrU of 10 fire a gun mask of a human face which h?d kill everything over 10? every damnable thing we have been detached itself from the skull. War That ja war past, present, end fu able to do to them. I renounce fwar ' harnessed the idealism of the Un- Au that our modem fashions for its consequences, for the lies known Soldier to that! done is to make the necessity it lives on and propagates, for the have Do I not have an account tu settle the slaughtering children not the undying hatreds, it arouses, for between my soul and him? They of the in it harmless place and puts dictatorships ccmparatively simple th-tent men like me into the camps to jn S mar of shooting some democracy, for the starvation natter awaken his idealism, to touch those of lhem 0ne by one, but the t, stalks after it. I renounce war and! holy springs within him so ale detructitn of children, starving never again, directly or indirectly,1 that with devotion, fidelity, loyalty, impoverishing will I sanction or support another! by millions, and he might go out them( spoiling the chances of un-t- o O Unknown Soldier, in penitent rewar. O War, I hate you moat of nerations of them, as in the paration I make you that pledge. all for this, that you do lay your ... OOP war. Qn& hands on the noblest elements in TEXAS CENTENNIAL ,n My fnernU,1 nof human character, with which we might make heaven on earth, and mlk? Dallas Texas, We Space has been nt yo you use them to make a hell cn taken at the Texas Centennial Exone ,lde. tlu the earth instead. You take even our h,ave position here opening June 6, by science, the fruit of our dedicated the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter c e ha but h01' e t intelligence, by means of which we Day Saints. A special religious exCaa ,par! y of. unt7' might build here the City of hibit will be maintained by this Tnov natJnm and. using it, you fill the earth ev,ery group which had a similar display at any h'pe stead with new ways of .laughter. at the California Pacific Internation-- ; w Coort' You men. take our loyalty, cUr fupport tag al Ekpoition in San Diego. ? Ration, unselfishness, with which vre might Although definite plans for the but make the earth beautiful, and uxtag exhibit have not yet been announced fornad teadftUy FW these our finest qualities, make being dravm into so- it is belived that the Tabernacle choir death fall from the sky Lid burst other ,war 0 ,t3y from Salt Lake, a group of over 200 up from the sea end hurtle from will come to Dallas for a warI D Witbdw CTery voices, unseen aquacade. 60 milea away; concert season at the ' tbat or $25,000,000 mainta1in you blast fathers in the trend. Worlds Fair here. with gas while you are starvii pacjfot. J Htheir children at home with block- business the of ades; and you so belived the world . . y b?fineM Sm ? ?ae that 15 years after the armistice my oul! stay out we cannot be sure who won the THEwar war, so sunk in the same disaster j are victors and vanquished alike. If ' At nT rate, I will myself do Riehards Mortuary best I can to settle my account war were fought simply with evil Unknown e reSoldier. I thiis, like hate, it would be bad Owned and operated by enough, but, when one aeea the. Bounce war. I renounce war because what it does to one own men. I deeds of war done with the lovelieta JOHN M. RICHARDS faculties of the Hamm spirit, he have watched them coming gassed I from the front-lin-e looks into the very pit of hell. trenches. I have Office 53 Wot 1st North ' e long, long hospital trains Suppose one thing more that the Ridence 35 So. 2nd West with their mutilated bodies. I Unknown Soldier was a Christian. Maybe ha was not, but suppose he have hear! the cries of the crazed LOGAN, Phone 210 Was a Christian like Sergeant York,' and the prayers of those who want-Wh- o, to die and could not, and I r at the beginning, intended to.d lake Jesus so seriously as to re- fuse to fight but afterward, other Njriae persuaded, made a real aaldier. For these Christiana do make sol-- I diera. Religion is a force. When religious faith supports war, when, aa in the Crusades, the priests of Christ cry, Deus vult God wills it and conforming ordinary motives, the dynamic of Christian devotion is added, then an incalculable resource nf confidence and power ia released. No wonder the war department! wanted the churches behind them! , l Suppose, then, that the Unknown , "r Soldier was a Christian. I wonder what he thinks about it now. Pr:c-- . j tic ally all modem books about war I emphasizes the newness of it new weapons, new horrors, new exten- elveneas. At times, however ,it seems to me that at ill the wont things ft I about war are the ancient elements. In the Bible we read terrible pas- ges where the ancient Hebrews , thought they had command from JervrT hovah to daughter the Amalekites, both men and women, infant and I suckling, ox and sheep, camel, and SCHENLEYS aae. Dreadful! we say, an ancient and appalling ideal Ancient? Ap--i palling? Upon the contrary, th t ia war, and always will be. A mili KENTUCKY STRAIGHT WHISKEY tary order, issued in our generation!. For that Down South richness by an American general in . the I Philippines and publicly acknowledge in highballs and juleps people are by his counsel afterward in a mill-- , tary court, commanded his soldiers finding they need a real Kentucky to bun and kill, to exterminate all straight whiskey. This is it! capable of hearing arms, and to make the island of Samar a howling wfldemesa. Morever, his counsel that he had specifically named HORRORS OF WAR nCDIPTCn IN CDCCPU ws SENTINEL tub. NO FOR RADIO SEliVi'T SEE LLOYDS ' I Eicry Friday at Smithfield, Utah FlibHihod EittiW at the Pretoffice at Smithfield, Utah, aa Second Clam Mail Matter VOLUME Radio Service Co. LOGAN PHONE East of Post Office 317 j tHUBBRSSOssm whole-secre- Adveitiaing Kates Will Be Made Known Upon Application self-sacrifi- ce FACTS TELL A TRUE STORY In the welter of talk ami argument, blast and counterblast, coace the vague utility problem, there is danger that the verbally deluged citizen will low sight of the power indutsrys achievement an achievement that is proven by cold figures. Here are facts: In the 22 years between 1913 and 1935, the cost of living, according to the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statictics, row 49 per cent. The cost of doing business while exact statistics are not obtainable, obviously increased as much or more. Wages, materials, supplies, taxes everything that goes into an industry's operating, ex pense account row in price, and in some cases, notably taxes, r-i-ng In spite f that, the average cost cT domestic electric power in July 1935, was 5.6 cents per kilowatt-hou- r as compared with 8.1 cents in 1913. In other word while costs in general rose about 40 per cent the coat of electricity dropped 31 per cent. The American people receive Hie beat power service in the world. In no other country does the average home use so much current. In no other country is the average home aa well supplied with electric labor saving devices. These devices now in use in America number 1 04.000,-00- 0 including such luxuries aa 6,000,000 electric refrigerators, 1,225-00- 0 electric ranges and 3,250,000 electric sewing machines, which are almost unknown save to the wealthy abroad and the total is constantly growing. Keep these facts in mind when you reed n blast at the mythical power trust. -- Ooflt- TTe future of life insurance is brighter and more secure than it has been at any tints in Its century old history, wrote a life insurance executive recently. Setae of life insurance are showing a constant increase, and life insurance assets a constant growth. Further, the last few years have witnessed significant progress in policy forms. A modern life fnsruance company has an extremely wide range of policies, designed to fit almost any conceivable need; and the modem agent, instead ef just tiying to sell insurance ie equipped to give the buyer the precise kind of policy that fits his problems. It is not only important ihst .one should be Inaured it is equslly important that one should have the proper kind of insurance! The investment portfolio of the average life wftnpany is likewise being steadily Improved; The old motto ef Safety first profit second. is never forgotten. Life insurance investments present n cross of all thst Js vital end sound in our national economic life Yes, the life insurance industry's future is secure as is the future f millions of citizens who have token advantage of the invaluable service it renders. see-tuf- ei --OOP- GIVE CREDIT WHEN DUE If the following isnt a national record, it la at leant a remarkable achievement: Driven of vehicles of the Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company have In the last ten yaera, driven 38.000,000 miles without a fatal accident. Th J" Y11 w driving around the earth at the equator 1,250 times, or nuking the round trip from New York to Los Angeles 6,500 times, or Z6 years of continuous driving at 400 miles a day. If anything were needed to prove that the terrific death rate charged up against automobiles is unnecessary, these facta are the evidence required. , H The rules and regulations of the Oklahoma Gaa and Electric Company which govern its drivers from the standpoint of inspection of rquip-men- t. or training personnel, examination of eyesight, etc, coaid be followed by every driver in the land. If were followed, the drath rate from automobiles would be practicallythey eliminated. , . E ,raUy Je 6bt iP jssSim. BLUE BLAZE GOAL - The second is that the construction of the Panama ('anal Involved the expenditure of hundreds ot millions of the public monev to crest tares! frm f omprti,ln wl,h ,he MUreado frr transcchinental bus- - hV,Kef" nwM,,y- - whn were dirterent than they are now.' was deafened to rorra.t ,h" an? Mtablish fair rate romnrtit! practices. Today the clause wk. just to the opprel"e brr,M' o fair rates and equitable it d,"r,n,ln,rF working against one career and rompetitk. thus indirectly other benefiting carrier It delaya railroad development hiida hack majr con-amo- na pr,,yiM nnn r.irss;rnt It df great aignificanre ta imoualy that all unprejudiced experts seem .m.. to believe that the claae should be repealed. About the has come from sources bene! fd!oca,n i( 0f d prejudiT r AnVIlISr entirely ed. important, the great boU, of informed public oolnl StT1 "tan Norr QUART No. 4 6o IpQTHERVBi GjVALUE ! Old Quaker BXAND STRAIGHT WHISKEY Old Quaker gives you a barrel of quality ia every bottle sad it doesnt cost a barrel of money to buy it, Americas favorite straight whiskey. PINT No. 167 (Ryo) No. 64 (Bourbon) QUART Less ASHES To S!fi With -' PINT SCHENLEYS -- smrrr i ff Sf: Bss2eBBassasaKsl lh. Executive, Magazine of St. Louis observed ' Logan, Utah I ogo- Bilk which would repeal of the Transportation Act, la W.'he COuntry nd 'Uvd: Two reasons power- ihe ra,lroad' rwuw,t tor h' legislation. MORTICIANS Cream of Kentucky wf ,he Uettengill F CnBT ?!.',edlong-inshort haul clause IT And SUNS 1 PASS THE PETTENGILL CLAUSE -- G. W. LINDQUIST I co-op- s, d CONVERSATIONS or funeral aervices are rare and the subject, oftentimes, ia avoided until emergency action becomes necessary. In such a thna Of need LINDQUIST Morticians ate ready to serve you. Our dignified, reverent services are always complete, never lacking in sympathy or the little details ao necessary to satisfaction. Our charges are low. ' 1,rar h,11" l! ?mt "i, efprtye 193j as it has in almost every other year since its inception. Almost 8.000 associations engaged in marketing farm commodities during the year. They had a total membership r 2.490.000 farmers, and did a total volume of business of SU43.000.000 a gain of 14.2 per cent over 1934. cpwratives was in the North Central n of business transacted, dai.-- y products constitu-to- d the most important commodity marketed hy followed hi order by gram, fruits and vegetables, livestock, cotton and products, poultry and pndurta. In a recent cdi'orlal. ?v atu ' 1935 A report by the Farm Credit Administration shews that the agrkul-- : marketing movement made substantial progress in -- cJ ,n $d FACING A BRIGHT FUTURE COOPERATIVES IN J BLUE No. 166 (Rye) No. 63 (Bourbon) At you prefer... in BOURBON or RYE BLAZE COAL BLUE BLAZE COAL IS SCREENED THAT MEANS SLATE AND OTHER ELEMENTS ABE REMOVED. THUS YOU HAVE LESS ASHES TO DEAL WITH YOU n.AVE MORE HEAT AND AT LESS G - COST. W. H. 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