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Show am am tUtmiA m JUKE X MSA SMITHFIELD. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH. FRIDAY. i frHEPOCKETBOOK: of KNOWLEDGE The SMITHFIELD SENTINEL I 1 ms uhttso Every Friday at BmithfiehL Utah PentoMce at Sarithfield. Utah, aa sWoad Class Mail hibliM Intend at lie cwtkhmw himest nr. 0VMER-JSjlp- WEALTH OM EARTH Matter tmopuap THU Advertising Bates Will Be Made Kaowa Upon Application AV HUCV W4f WfALTM At TUP bubals f winter wheat in 1933 seres than last year, Frank Andrews, state da have decreased 1,400,000 and rsseni:r agricultural statistician, since the peak year in 1932, jn 745 000 acres smaller than last year, nounied recently. Harvestings 1938 Aoirid be 761,000 the Dominion Bureau of Statistics - Utah for than the average f,.r ,nTrmwlH last week. Estimated seet- acres greater Mr. Andrews imrs of Canadian farmers. for tnajthe past ten years, acres predicted. The ten yar average is 1938 season are 24,105,900 bushels, last year's cr ip compared to 24,851,000 last year 8,001,000 talro 2,820,000 bushels end 1933 harand 20,640,100 in 1932. vestings should be about 3,762,000 will acres. mohair producers Wool and 1937 ho sole to get loans on their and 1938 clip under the new agriculto Creditors administration tural adjustment announced through was 4t program recently. the AAA headquarters IN TOE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OP THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND due fhll 31 will signed after July on May 81, 1939. The program ia FOR THE COUNTY OF CACHE Commodbeing administered by the finanIa the Matter of the Estate of ity Credit corporation under Fin G. Low, also known sa Reconstruction f Margaret the cing by to Margaret Griffiths Low, made be will Loans Corporation. Deceased enable farmers to hold their produce NOTICE TO CREDITORS until a mill demand for it develops. Creditors will present chima with Utah farmers will harvest 942,000 vouchers to the undersigned executor, the Cache Valley Banking Company, at Logan, Utah, on or before tile 30th day of September, 1938. Notices Legal CACHE VALLEY BANKING COMPANY, Executor uf the Aice !77f THE ROAD BACK GETTYSBURG LIGHT I I g)MMS FROM ASAUCf A WJS IN AS SMP MANNERS ACCEPTED IN FACT, A COLONIAL TIMES 'thecuP PISH VWA9 BT?AP0f AWHINM k evEy window. wwonx 1UE CURIOUS WlMEtSI OIMTCHC AM AWWNSr PROVIDCP FOR -- a diner to srr in while "THE SAUCER tho ITmrnnu SIFPEP FROM Probate It ia expected that Frrsident Roosevelt will dedicate the enfernal light peace memorial oterloi&ing the battlefield at Gettysburg, Ienn, aa July X This light will be a symbol of the eternal peace between North and Kouth. One of the inseriptiiAis on this monument will say: "An enduring light to guide ns to unity and fellowship. The sight of that light burning forever in peace and quiet will he a strange contrast tot those dreadful daya of July 1, X and 3, 1863, when 155,000 Federal and Confederate suldiein met in deadly combat, in which early 35,000 men were killed or wounded. Whrt cannons roared and men groaned and sank into death, now visitors will hear ttaly the quiet singing of birds and are only the beauty of n national park and the peaceful resting places of the heroic dead. The United States ia vast country, almoet the biggest one nn.eaith. Its different sections include different types of people, with more or less conflicting interests. They are located so far away from each other that it ia easy for misunderstandings to develop. North and South and East and West have wrong ideas abAit each other. E.ery section at limes docs things that are against the welfare and just claims of othen sections. What can be done to produce the entcrnal friendship and unity which this light ia supposed to symbolise? Human sympathy and understanding are necessary. People must be as ready to listen to just ciAnplaints from their fellow countrymen living thousands of miles away as they are to attend to the needs of their own neighbuVhoods. If this spirit ran but prevail, the eternal light t Gettysburg will not he a mere symbol, but an object that esprcsaca a living reality, and the affection and enthusiasm of a harmonious natidh. en t AG NEWS IN BRIEF Ring. They tell us to scatter seeds of sun shine. The boys in the cornfields of Utah will soon be wanting to scat-- 1 Chopped hay may scon replace eur-te- r some seeds of cloudy shads. led hay s cattle feed, a Kansas automobiles are Farmer" report states. Pointing out (Although many said to worn out, some of the heads that chopped hap takes up .the steering wheels aren't ex- siderably less storage space and is enough to wear them muih. much easier than the common the wedding march is a gured hay, the report states that very glorious piece nf music, it is midwestern fcimsre are chopping said you pan t sometimes tell the sf-- their hay in the field and using an ter the honey m con" march to shop ordinary silage blower to feed it into and office, from the tunc uf the their barn storage space. Others are old cow dred on. chopping feed fca store in cir-ulaThe children, it re said, need father- - corn cribbing in the field. ly advice. They may take i, if the fact that it conies from Father ran The department of agricultures be concealed. ;crop reporting board has estimated Much said about the revolt of the winter .wheat crop this year to youth. They don't revolt so far awav be the sesvnd largest on record, it from home that no money is avail- - announced this week. A 754,153,000 able to buy gas. bushel crop is predicted 28,000,- Disinnce is said to lend enchant- - 000 more than the board estimated ment to the view. Tbit seems to b? it at a month nro. For the last ten the way the modern world looks at years, winter wtiett crop has aver- the s. jaged 5 16,000,000 bushels and last nn 'year the yield was 085,102,000. This FEDERAL INVESTIGATION Bl'R- year's estimnted production is more EAU OFFICE CHANGES HANDS than 200 million bushels greater than the ten-yeaverage, and almost 70 Salt Lake City (UP) Jay C. million bushels mure than in 1937. r ar V. MEALS SCORCHED URU AS 5 can bo controlled RECLINING DOWN "ITS EASY TO oven my ELECTRICALLY , littlo giil - ;V ITS COOK can cook - i. AN . wH v INVESTMENT THAT PAYS Eloctxidty FOR ITSELF $5 LAWN CHAIR A MONTH will put as ELECTRIC RANGE in your home is Cheaper Than Ever Now v These Art Actual Statements About Electric Cooking Which Have Been Made By Housewives In This Territory ' WHEN BOUGHT IN COMBINATION WITH A QUART OR MORE OF Mufti-Serv-ct 6njcifi&ytJEiUiq icilli Cheap Sta&uatqV 0303 -- Os VARNISH . : G. Law, OF COURT THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN, - AND FOR THE COUNTY CACHE. 1N TOE DISTRICT Newman, who graduated from the OH YEAH COLUMH State Agricultural college, re- turned recently to Salt Lake City take charge of the local office Public works may be all right. of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- though what the modern world seem, tian. tD expect is public plays. Newman relieved Val Zimmer, who Some folks count the money they are able to borrow as one of their had aerved ss acting agent in charge several months. chief assets. to serve in will continue Zim.ner that people They used to oemphin wee, the Salt Lake City office, tbs did not get heme until Newman was one of the Federal small hours" of the mominr. Those she. wounded when officers iar-some-shai hours may have grown with the midwestern despera-Th-e ger by the time they get home mw. it out tire Little Ho-th- e people used to vise early in do, John Dillinger, at Wisconsin. One of in hernia lodge on themselves and pridemorning New- being up and coming. Now at the' the gangsters bullets struck same hour they are likely to be down man in the forehead. He has been with the Federal Burand going, back to Slumber! and. A beautiful poem is entitled Sal eau of Investigation since 1925, and utation to the dawn. The modem has been in charge of offices at world doesnt salute the dawn much San Francisco, Denver, St, Louis by rising early, but does so fairly and Detroit, often when getting home in the mor- - sun-Thou- AS Guardianship Notices SUMHOHS con-behi- for tho boat estate of Margaret & also known as Margaret Grit, fiths Low, deceased. George C. Heinrich Attorney for Executor Date of first publication May 27, CONSULT THE COUNTY CLERK 198, OR THE RESPECTIVE SIGNERS Date of Hist publication June 24, FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 1938. i OR BURNED re SnatfimaJ-lil- - published by the Boys Bui youth in the Toili"', a little book juit Third, in connectD. Rockefeller, John mu. a..sociaI..egency..with..whkh. man of a famoue hearted kind thin yyung ed. tells of the experiences of Mr. Rockefeller hae offenders. to youthful in.. help his..sXemjti family.. the reasons why boys go spent much time studying prison life, and life. wrong, also trying..to..help..tbem..back to normal The "road hack" can be found, if the youth who has gone wrong would te less..diffi really winti. to find it. It is not an easy road. It who are sincerely try those cult..if..people..were..more..gnerous..toward .. . .. ing to find it. The graduates of prisons an not the only ones who need to find tne arroad back. Thousands of young men who are wandering aimlessly of full home left eager it. should seek They usually ound the country desire to find work, and with a feeling that any place wae better thvn the dull old home town. Now they hate to go back and take what their home town hie to offer, because it would seem as if they had failed, Many WHltatR girl became ia rebellious against home influences, that for they went out "on their own. Many went to onlarge cities, hopingThose girl strangers. ambitious carpers. Life in big cities is hard who hove failed to obtain satisfactory occupations should go home, but many are too proud to do so. Husbands and wives whi have been separated by their faults and errors, should take the road back by a resolve to live henceforth in tolerance and affection. The road back from any kind of mistake or fault, is always hard to take. Countless people have taken it, and found happiness. The world forgives faults, if they are acknowledged and the effort made to atone fur them. HO Can-mo- Police WHOUWOttP for it cooks automatically Seedinn of spring wheat in AT REGULAR LIMIT ONE TO A PRICE CUSTOMER SMITHFIELD, UTAH A. O. JACKSON, also known as ALMA O. JACKSON, JR., Plaintiff, vs. Robert Jackson, Emma J. Facer, Neeve, Vilate Bankhead, Bertha Thomas L. Jackson, Minnie Kidd,1 Lydia Obray, Ann J. Chipman, Char-- 1 les W. Jackson, H. S. Jackson, F.j Laura C. Jackson, E S. Jackson, J. Jones, Annie Hess, Esther Rudd, Elisabeth Nielsen, Elms R. Bradshaw,' Jerome J. Remington, Henry Clark Remington, William J. Remington, Elwin J. Remington, Stella Remington, AKa Roylance, Kenneth J. Remington, Jesse J. Remington, Leslnd S. Rigby, Rulon R. Rigby, Venice R. Hopkins, Fava V. Rigby, Belva R. Smith, Thomas K. Jackson, Amanda J. McArthur, Lorin Jackson, Ireland Jackson, Merlin Jackson,1 Mildred Brown, Roland Hoiford and Vanita Hoiford, only known surviving heirs at law of Alma O. Jack-- ; son and wife, Emma J. Jackson, both' deceased, and Bessie W. Jackson Cow-- 1 ley, deceased; and against John Dee1 Jackson and Jane Doe Jackson, unknown heirs at law of Clark Jackson, deceased and against John Doe j and Jane Doe, unknown creditors and claimants of Alma O. Jackson, snl wife, Emma J. Jackson, and Bessie W. Jackson Cowley, all deceased; and against Thomas Oldham; and against all other persons unknown, whether heirs at law, creditors or devisees, claiming any right, title, estate or interest in, or lien upon the real property described in the complaint, adverse to plaintiffs ownership, or clouding plaintiffs title thereto, Defendants. SUMMONS THE STATE OF UTAH TO SAID DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after service of this summons upon yen if served within the county in which this iction is brought, otherwise within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in ease of our failure to do so, judgment will be rendered againgt you according to the demand of tha complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of the above entitled court This Action Is brought to recover judgment quieting plaintiffs title' to the following desairbed property situated in Avon Precinct, Cache Cfeunty, Utah, i Beginning at a point 10.67 chains' South of the center of Section 11, Township 9 North of Range One East of tha Salt Lake Meridian; thence South 86 degrees 35 minutes West X58 chains; thence North 76 degrees 18 minntes West 0.82 chains; thence North 86 degrees 40 minutes West 1.50 chains; thence North 69 degrees CO minutes West 3.60 chains; thence South 47 degrees 40 minutes West 0.80 chains; thence Ncrth 77 degrees 20 minutes West 2.40 chains; thence North 80 degrees 50 minutes West 1.45 chains; thence South 84 degrees 45 minutes West 6.40 chains; thence North 6.14 chains; thence West 2.50 chains; thence North 5 chains to a point on Paradise Irrigation Company Canal; thence down and along said canal in a westerly direction 18 chains, more or leu; tiience South 16.13 chains; thence Sautii 84 degrees 50 minutes East 12.85 chains; thence South 6 degrees 55 minutes East 4.38 chains; thence Eart 26.56 chains; thence North 9.50 ..ft Plce of beginning, fej1? containing 52.50 acres. L E. NELSON, JUNE S and 4 THE TRAIL OF THE LONESOME FINE With SYLVIA SIDNEY, FRED Mac MURRAY and HENDY FONDA A magnifkiemt picture of the (fatdoore in Technicolor MATINEE FOR CHILDREN AT 2:30 SATURDAY' PLUS 7TH CHAPTER OF BLAKE OF SCOTLAND YARD Admission SUH.-M0- 10c N. JUNE 5 and 6 A SLIGHT CASE I MURDER WITH EDWARD G. ROBINSON AND NEWS ALSO -- 000- P. SUNDAY MATINEE AT M. BARGAIN PRICES UNTIL 6 P. M. TUESDAY JUNE ONLY 7 COUNTRY STORE NIGHT PLUS FLIGHT FROM GLORY WITH CHESTER MORRIS to-w- it: SS? rWnUtt Post Office Arimo Block, Logan, Utah. ' publication: May 6. 13, 20, and 87 and June 8, 1988. WED.-THU- R, JUNE d and 9 DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM GARDEN OF ALLAH With CHARLES BOYER snd MARLENE DIETRICH Scenes form the desert and coriven ts in Technicolor They loved each other with fierceness of those who have been deprived of lrtt NO. 2 FORTY NAUGHTY GIRLS WITH JAMES GLEASON sad ZASU PITTS HOT SEAT HUES Gash Prizes |