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Show J PROGRESSIVE QPRUOM jViri iteciew of Current Event Treasury Financing OF THE SECRETARY CONFUSED CONGRESS President Returns to find His "Must" Measures Are Session Facing Failure of Passage in the Pcesent EXPERTS IN OFFICE OPERATING I WASATCH PRESS Worlds Busiest Street? mad IS fipublic hi plana tor December nancing operation!, aggregating ns.g7a.a00 at lower interact ratea than the governmental flaeal exon pert! found it advisable to place comparable lecuritlea in September. The offering Include! $230,0011000 WHERE YOU GET GOOD PRINTING FOR LESS Important Announcement 3C9 If you take a life membership in the 2V4 or thereabouts, of eight-yea- r per cent treasury bonds maturing in 1943, and $200,000,000, or there1 per cent abouts, of to be of series notes treasury sold through the federal reserve banks tor cash. In addition, holders of 2 per cent treasury notes of series maturing next February 1, ere offered the privilege of exchanging thoae securities for the new bonds or notes at par with an adjustment of secured interest as of December IS. The amount of the February 1 maturity notes outstandp five-ye- ar standing between utilities and the Stormy Days in Capital administration, Wendell L. Willkle, from his fishing trip president of Commonwealth and Returning waters with an in- Southern corporation, proposed a fected gum. President Roosevelt general truce between business and was confronted with a situation the Roosevelt administration. Wilt that was decidedly disconcerting. kies company has been involved in What has been called the Roosevelt some of tha bitterest controversies with Washington, depression was becoming still mor depressed and congress seemingly couldn't make up its mind what to Come Back do about it The demand for tax Lindberghs revisions that would assist business AFTER two years of exile in England, COL out of the slump was' insistent, and so was the necessity of balancing and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh rethe budget. Passage of the tour turned to tha United States. Premust measures sumably they came over to spend administration appeared to be impossible during the holiday at tha homa of Mrs. the extraordinary session. All of Lindberghs mother, Mrs. Dwight them were opposed by various blocs Morrow, in Englewood, N. J. Disof the majority party as well as by patches from London said tha colonel also had some business to the Republican minority. transact to America. He la assoto seemed bill form The senate's have the best chance to get through, ciated in an advisory capacity with Airways. but it differed so radically from toe The landing of fits Lindberghs at house measure that it was certain a conference committee would have New York was accomplished with such secrecy that they almost esto try to find a common ground. caped the notice of reporters and was Wallace reported news Secretary One of the photographers. and senate both dissatisfied with which they on liner of officers the to house bills. One official close to return to him said Wallace might urge Pres- came said they planned after ident Roosevelt to veto any bill England immediately finally enacted which approximated either the senate or house measure. Democrats were so badly split Infantry Comas first WAR operations on land toe Inbill that hope of over the wage-hou- r fantry is still tha most important passing it before the regular session of congress wai about abandoned. branch of too service, says Gen. Labor, too, was divided concerning Malta Craig, chief of stall of tha this measure, the A. F. of I, oparmy, In his annual Lessons posing it and the C. I. O. advocating report learned by skilled Its passage. The federation offered observers of too civits own version, calling tor a flat 40 il war in Spain and cents an hour minimum wage end a tha 40 hour maximum work week. The war have modified house bill was finally rescued from the American de- the rules committee by petition. fenae program, but House Majority Leader Sam Bay-busays the general it Democrat Texas, went ahead is still tha infantry with plans to whip administration that renders toe desupport behind the house measure. cision in too final He said that fewer than 100 votes would be cast against the bill to its analysis. Airplanes and tanks are valu-uabi- e present form but warned that auxiliaries to toe infantry, but amendments which would make its wage-hou- r provisions more rigid they cannot bring about' decision might shunt the measure back to in land operations. Inventories of armament motorithe labor committee and delay a vote indefinitely. zation, mechanization and equipment in the light of the lessons abroad, show several vital needs of ' Tax Setup Needs Revision the first line forces. General Craig These include better of declared. DANIEL C. ROPER,thesecretary entire tax weapons to combat aircraft and says structure of the United States should tanks, as well as more efficient guns tor toe planes and tonka. be revised. He was speaking at banquet of the BusiChlno-Japane- - ness Advisory coun- cil in Chicago, end his statements appeared to meet with general approval. "A general revision is necessary to simplify determination of tax liability, to distribute the burden of taxation more and to equitably, RPOf broaden the base of taxation to include a larger percentage of our earning population, Secretary Roper said. He asserted that the undistributed profits tax had not antirely fulfilled its proponents expectations that it would bring about a higher velocity of money through larger and more widespread distribution of corporate earnings." Mr. Roper expressed confidence that a constructive approach will be found to tha solution of the utilities dilemma and that ignMc1d results will be forthcoming." That this confidence has a sound basis was indicated by two announcements made the same day by prominent utility executives. Fhqrd L. Carlisle, chairman of the Consolidated Edlaon company, told tha New York state public service commission that his company plana a $23,000,000 expansion program. The development came during hearings concerning a proposed $30,000,-00- 0 bond issue. Back from submitting to the President a formula for better under Mouse Queen Has 10,000; Many Others Intonated Mrs. E. D. Blowers, secretary cf to National Mouse dub of England, aaya there are over 1,000 British breeders of mice, a large number women. Mrs. Blowers herself keeps habitually about 10,000 mice, and is tha recognized British mouse queen. Hundreds of women are inseparably attached to their little mouse friends and carry them about in their sleeves followed, no doubt, by puz O'Mahaney 7 1 JUST LOOK at that traffic roaring byl Yes, sir, thats New York's famous Fifth Avenue looking toward 42nd Street And tha lady in the stylish white shirtwaist and the snappy littlw straw skimmer had better be careful when she gets to the comer, because you know how those horse-lacarriage drivers swing around the turns. With the national automobile show approaching, Consumers Information dug out this picture, taken in 1907, to show what a difference SO Tha BorahO'Ma-hone-y years can make. The picture below scheme is de- shows Fifth Avenue as it la today. Adsigned not only to vertising, which created the demand, eliminate monop , and research, which perfected the oils tic practices but : to boUgh chnd u-- J ss bor, prohibit discrimination against women employees, guarantee collective bargaining, serve as a basis for legislation dictating toe wages and hours at labor, and regulate toe financial policies of corporations. The measure would require too Immediate licensing of all corporations doing business in interstate commerce and would direct toe federal trade commission to submit recommendations tor a federal Incorporation law. Under existing statutes corporations era created only by too states. 8 F Poland Chocks Delboi ii MM If won, aim M M beautiful extra heavy colored glass iEI dinnS, plate , and product, are credited with changing . the picture from that of 1907, when 1 - Inter-Stat- e only a few thousand cars were on too Aeso iation will IllCooperative with of to that today, country's roads, for their in this manbargains members, which small paper weekly The lew almost 30,000,000. ufacturers of 30 years ago advertised special interest, also will be made known, whrre to pui to sell their primitive ears, which cost them. Because of the Inter-Stat- e . Associations mat ef0 enlargement coupon around 63,000 for a medium-price- th you will get wholesale prices on practically everything h and consumed. This will be the best investment you ever . and is costing you nothing, because you receive men. valutt the amount you pay, but act before Dec. 1st, 1937. Write or call at mom 217 David Keith Bldg., iSalt htol " You Must Help in 4e8 ion, iV ave fV, ieB the Fight For Justice 6 Months $1.00. fjecl ave One yearj .?; lay Paper to U ly Address N Enclosed find A Th ith SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE Rates: 3 Months 50c. 7)1? ioi ? buying d model. They created a bigger demand than they could fill and so bigger factories, increased employment, end constantly better automobiles resulted. And today we can buy an infinitely superior car tor about one-fifof the price, while half a million men ere directly employed in the industry, compared to a few thousand at the time this picture was taken. Ojsl further Please i 5 the rht phi Beli anki Do your buying A Day in a Big Fruit Auction Market Cooperatively DELBOS, French foreign minister, in toe court of his visits to tha allies of France in cen- yvON and by SPENDING EARN tral Europe, went to Poland in tha hop of aligning Polish foreign policy with that at France against fascism and naxiism. He was given tha Order of the White Eagle, Polands highest decoration, but that was about all he got in Warsaw. He was informed that the Polish viewpoint la that under the Franco-Polis-h alliance Poland will help France if It la attacked by Germany, but until that moment arrives Poland will continue to follow an independent foreign policy, evi though It runs counter to French interests in other sections of Europe. Some Sample Prices 4 lb 3 Raisins, rFese stock, 2 Large Ripe Olives, Pint 1 And Clapp's Baby Many Would Buy Farms administration THE form credit tost nearly 10,000 requests had been received by flic federal land banks in tha last ten months for loans to bo applied in the purchase of farms. A. 8. Goss, land bank commissioner, said the amount applied tor totaled $38,000,000 and the requests came from every state, although most numerous from Tens and in toe Omaha, Wichita and Louisville form credit administration districts, where in each instance the number of requests exceeded 1,000, Panchen Lama Dies FROM India comes tha news that Lama, spiritual ruler of Tibet, died in a town in westr ern China at tha age of years. His millions of followers believed he was a reincarnation of In 1024 he became inBuddha. volved in disputes with the delal lama, temporal ruler, and went inEdgerton Backs Water to exile. Since then he had been CONFIRMATION of too appoint-'- J planning to return to Tibet and modmeat of Henry W. Edgerton of ernize that country. Cornell university ea associate Justice of too District of Columbia Court of Appeals was endangered Bus Strike Settled because It wu thought from his INCREASED pay for drivers but shop were main feawritings that ha did not believe in Judicial review. However, he ap- tures of tha agreement by which the strike of 1,300 drivers of tha peared before the eenate consisting of Senators Borah, Greyhound Bus line was brought to Burke and Van Nuya end repudiated an end. The strike had disrupted his previous utterances. Of the pow- transportation in tha northeastern er of courts to declare legislative section cf too country and was acenactments unconstitutional he said; companied by numerous Incidents I regard It as not only thorough- of violence. Tha wage increase, efly established as n legitimate part fective next July 1, will be of our constitutional system, but of a cent a mile and no minwhich was Intended by toe great ma- imum mileage la guaranteed. jority of the men who framed our Constitution. I think It wu properly Unde Sam established by John Marshall and Snaring Great Britain is seeking I havent the leut criticism of any THAT as wen as economical court tor any declaration of tha from toe proposed trad validity of that part of our consti- advantages pact with the United States was intutional system. dicated in an address by the eerl of Derby before the Liverpool ChamLuviathan to Be Junked ber of Commerce, of which he is a bid tor the president He told the chamber that JAPAN madeliner seized from Ger- America cannot keep out of Eurohuge many in toe World war, but the pean entanglements and predicted United States Lines rejected It and that toe trade pact would tighten sold th vessel to Metal Industries, the links between the United States Ltd., of London for $800,000. It win and Great Britain. go to England under Its own power Derby's speech followed one given and will be Junked. by Herschel V. Johnson, American The Leviathan cost ten millions to charge d'affaires in London, during build and tha American govern- which Johnson warned indirectly ment spent more than eight millions that the Americans would not perto recondition It; and also paid Ger- mit the pact to have political many $16,088,000 for Its seizure. string. fifty-fou- six-da- y one-four- th zled and hungry cats. Nina hundred mice were on view at a show recently. They seemed to be of any color almost except the coin of too common mouse tost some of us ere too well acquainted with. There were red, white, black, chocolate, blue and champagne mice, but the latest color is a dova tan, a cross between n black and a champagne. Some have spots, others patches, and there ere longhaired chlnchillai and silver fox mice with black coate. four 1 st "a WMKKSmMH Uafa' r. ' O'Mahoney of Fictared above from left to right are gemater William Borah ef Idaho, SENATORS Borah of Idaho IntroW. Frofeaaer and Edgerten Henry Beaator Edward B. Barke ef Nebraska duced n new federal licensing bill of Condi aniversity and formerly ef the antitrust division ef the for all corporations engaged in insubef Justice, as the professor was about to appear before a terstate commerce. committee ef the senate Judiciary committee. The eomaiHtoo examined It la designed by its the professor to determine whether they believed him a It appointee to authors and other wae He Columbia. District ef ef the ef Appeals the Vailed States Court senate "liberals" ea eeurto to declare ef legWatlvo suspected ef not bdleviag to the right an answer to the adunrimstltv1"1 But he declared he new regarded snob deministrations of ear constitutional system. Judicial review as a legitimate part mand tor revision of laws too anti-truto curb monopolies. SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'! S WEEK gl 1st, I yeafs subscription to this paper, I large eight ounce bottle high grade I si it ior Corporation Control PicLuuL before January for $2.50 on or you will receive: ing Is $276,879,000. LaaJcA W. Ml ;; Cecperitive Association Inter-Sta- te Value ef Babeeea The current monetary value of a baboon has been reported officially to th authorities at Capetown, South Africa. For 1,723 baboons the divisional council at Graaff-Reinhas paid out $1,073. They were destroyed in that district in six months. Baboons, "Curie of tha Karroo," infest tha region In thousands and a fortune awaits the man who can cause their final extinction. They are a source of continual worry to sheep growers. et Food,cieanup3 cans Brooms, 5 tie,Fondy59c PHILADELPHIA, PA. More thee l.tOt.SM square feet of warehouse apace ia used hy the ten member eompaalea ef the Americas Fruit and Prodaee Auction Assoc ia Uoa te handling toe 166,666 carloads ef cltrw and decidnous fruits said through these snctlona a nasally. The largest af these warehouses b that af the New York Fruit Auction in New York City, n partial Interior view ef which la shswn at top These vast dbplay facilities, together with toe highly efficient system af sales sad bundling ezn played, make possible toe rapid delivery sf the tremendous velums sf perishable fruits said dally through auction In Bootee, Chicago, It. Louis, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Ctacinaail and New Yarfc City. Kerman C. Ives (Inset, top photo), Philadelphia, ciation. Watches Once SmuB Clacks Watches originally wero small clocks and were worn hung from th girdle because they were too largo for the pocket INTER-STAT- res, Irish h an !y no IN MERCHANDISING wor ssion vena PAYSI th si 11 ph ill de Phone your Order To Sloi Call Was. 4864 3 Bhi tract he la Utah Consumers Di retar 860 South Main Sreet ride ublic itual iaiM , flyuset fromj You Pay Taxes levied on manufacturers are a part of their eoat of operation and art included In toe price af their products. In too end yon pay them. For example, one and cents of the price of a loaf ef Meed Is Federal taxes. It helps te pay tha high cost ef New Deal two-thir- d Lteda Grave Jenny Lind, toe Swedish nightingale, ia buried In Malvern, England. COOPERATIVE E ill be the Attention! The 39cl Co-operati- on Picture N. I shewn buyers picking up catalogues cf the days offerings, preparatory te their Inspection sf the fruit to be sold through a action. After tab Inspection, (N. 3) they attend the auction sale, a typical scene ef which b chews In photo N. 4. Immediately after the fruit b sold, it b tended to wagons and motor tracks for delivery (S and 6). d, irkei )k ai ndagi uld r ilted b president sf the Asso- Draught AM As Governor of Kansas, AH M. Landon whipped together a workable program for movement of livestock from larger forma to suitable am) toe hlpmt g grazing feed end water te the small-herone family farms. Each 20c ASSOCIATION wants capable persons, interested in the cooperative movement, as WaJunatoft B'AffiiHilFJIINIDElf! Oldest, Most Widely Reed News Mao offooka no important event personality. Crisply . , . dramatically b?iI down for you everything that fl jiving you both the plain facts and enlerlaining sidw, verified and interpreted. PATHFINDER, fresh fro cenb-- r of world interest i the choice of more than J , fulljMnfonned subscribers cvcry,-FlNDEivs nineteen illustrated sure to inform and entertain you Other Weekly news magazines jl a year. PATHFINDER sells for $1 -' AI for a limited time we offer you duefd combination bargain price This and PATH FI " iSrS ii e !t s1- 3 Nswspapsr fenar ttlanc ppt Agents for a membership drive during the comming months. For people who mean business is a future included. Contact for further information, immediately Mr. II. ALDER, 803 Fifth Ave., Wasatch 37G0-J. in indii of th. 'onfu and moam wisih i indiv 'n this r thr 'ice of |