OCR Text |
Show VOL. 5 No. 40 David Keith Bldg., Dial SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, OCT. 31, 194 j Published by C. N. Lund $1.50 PER YEAR Some Advice far the Cwmimj, Crisis PROGRESSIVE OPINION EDITORIALS By C. N. LUND We Have Said It Before. Now They Say It. England will emerge from this war as "a sort of poverty stricken bourgeoise semi Socialist, semi-stati- st nation, with those below moving up and the aristocracy ended." Sir Phillip Gibbs, K B, E , journalist and author of more than 5o books, has sopredicted. On Englands future he said: "After the war we of England will for a number of years have to pool all our resources in such moves as m6re public works and a big scheme of colonization to prevent unemploy-ment. '"The old caste system we've had for so long will be done away with but I'm not going to shed any tears over that. The Lords will 1 ave neither tnone'v nor estates taxa-tion starting at ,50 per cent on very moderate incomes and going up to 60 or 70 per cent on as little as 3000 pounds (15,000) will take care of that." Signs of Times Drift Of World Events Advice That May Be Unheeded-Unt- ill too Late The following is in line with much that this paper has said. It was first stated by Roger Babson, and later by a prominent U. S. Minister of the gospel. Read and Ponder 1. "Pay all your debts wh'ile you can. 2. Collect all that is owing you, while you can. 3. Get an acre of land somewhere within 25 miles of a city where you can grow enough to eat. Get this off the main high-na- y so you won't be too much in line of starving, ravaging hordes from the city. 4. Learn to live simply on corn meal and cabbage and soy beans, and prepare to raise most of this yourself. 5. Talk these things over with your neighbors and get them to help each other wrron the crash comes. Buy together, work together and if possible, sell together ever so often. 6. Keep, through all, a firm faith in Divine Providence ' and in the ultimate triumph of right You may lose every-thing you have and be hungry, ragged and cold before the storm passf I, but on thj other side of it all is somewhere, som-etime, a bright new day for humanity tbe brightest the world hajever known - x Some Items Of Personal Interest Burrell's Press Clipping Bu reau of New York is a good sub scriber to this paper and sends clippings from it to all parts of the country. They are a fine organization, with eighty very fair young ladies searching all the newspapers for items. It is said that they get more enjoyment out of this paper's it-ems than any other Good luck to all of you girls the men are lucky enough to be around you Wanted a middle aged lady to do light house work for two adults. Phone 4 4914, nights Progressive Labor League meets every Tuisday night at City and County Bldg. Mr. T. R- - Schroder will speak at a public meeting of the Saturday Evening Forum at 7:30 Nov. . City County Building. THE NEXT 1VINE YEARS An Analysis and a Prophecy by i Winy Anderson ' First Printing, July 1938 In evaluating the Bible as a source of prophecy covering i this era, we must not fail to consider the book as a collection I of manuscripts gathered over several centuries. Together, they , make an astrological allegory and it was no doubt the intent of original compilers, when writing the stories of the Son and twelve disciples, to convey astrological secrets of the Sun twelve members of the Zodiac. Ludwig B. Larson, in his KEY TO THE BIBLE AND HEAVEN, has given a very ithe interpretation of Bible astrology as it pertains to the States, especially the West Coast. Many of the therein are confirmed peoples are prone to narrow their horizon to only themselves in their views of these times and to over-look people of other religions. All continental, racial and re-ligious barriers were swept aside when the earth entered the Kosmon, or Aquarian Age, and if one is to gain a true under-standing of events in the next ten years he must widen his horizon to include the whole planet and all its peoples. During this age we will find that what affects one religion and one people affects all peoples, and if we see new phenomena in one country we may soon expect to see similar phenomena appear in every other country. We are in a new cosmic age, and must accept what this new , age brings. It is the attempt to hang on to the old and prevent its disintegration which is bringing grief upon humanity. The old age is dead. With thanks for all good things it brought the race, let us welcome the new. PROPHECY OF THE GREAT PYRAMID I There are many thousands of people who have implicit con-fidence in the prophecy built upon the measurements of the Great Pyramid of Cizeh and its known passages. According to those who believe in the prophecy of the Great Pyramid, Sep-temb- er 16, 1936, was the formal ending of the Old Dispensat-ion and the official entrance of the world into the New. There were those, however, who were not posted on the subject, and 4 who thought that all our troubles as a people were to end on :his date. Naturally, since nothing of the sort was the case, these people now are disposed to doubt all Pyramid findings. There has never been any agreement among scientists as to ivhy the Great Pyramid was built or by whom. Little is known 1K jf how it was built and most Egyptologists dispute any con-nection between historical facts and pyramid measurements. There seems to be but one book in existence which tells ;js under what inspiration the Pyramid was built, by whom, iW'or what purpose, and by what mechanical means the great nasses of stone were quarried, transported and moved into jlace.. This book is OAHSPE, a volume claimed to have been E lent humanity from the higher heavens of the earth and whose n'storical facts were taken from the living histories of the JJ leavens of the earth. If such claims are true, and critical jnts of the book have been forced, by the internal evidence of lhM:he book itself, to admit that every attempt at verification "'Jronfirms such claims, then we, with confidence, accept the ""story of the Pyramid as given in OAHSPE, as being a true ac- - rtf th'ic mnruplnui strurture. SW' To the President. , President Roosevelt, the testing time for America has come You were raised up for these times as much as any man evir was raised up for a mission. You have suffered affliction and have been through the valley of tribulation in order that you might the better preside over a broken country and that breaking has begun. All the signs of the times pruve it. May you be equal to the herculean task. Look to God and His plan as given in Holy Writ. Editorial (CONTINUED) double the sales of the same month last year. In cold cash this state is spending $14 per capita for liquor. There will be over 4,000 deaths from auto accidents this year, and most of these haye their roots in the liquortraffio. Cannot some-thing be done about it? To Moral and Intellectual Leaders Men and woman, moral and intellectual leaders of Utah, the sales of liquor for the month of September, 1941, were Continued In Next Column ... --rnKgm To John L. Lewis John L Lewis, you have nowstruck one of the first and hardest blows at your country Now just stand still and watch for what will happen The condition which you are helping to make will lead into such a hell that the worst of the present will seem heaven in comparison. You will yet cry out in despair. You for whom the country has done so much, are one of the first to dye your dagger red in the heart of America. Of course Morgan & Co. also have blame Sen. Nye speaks the nazi language as good as Hitler. He outdoes the nazies in denouncing American government. NOTICES FOR AGED PEOPLE TOWNSEND CLUB MEETS The local Townsend Club No. 1, meets at The Legion Hall, 404 So. West Temple St., every Friday night at 7:30., A social dsTicejol-low- s the meeting. All invited. OLD AGE PENSION MEETS The Utah State Old Age Pen-sion and Assistance group meets weekly as follows: Wednesday evening at 7:30, at City Hall, room 404 Every Thursday at 2 p. m. at 41 Post Office Place. Come one, come all. Time to Turn to Things Spiritual For a long time we have believed with a Lib rty Maga-zine editorial fhat most fiction stories today are frivolous. And no wonder, as it says that over a period of two years the production of fiction stories has dropped fifty per cent. A (Continued or page four) John B. Matheson Goggin's Progressive Record Is An Able City Commissioner P. H. (Goggin) has consistently suppor-- His work of four . ! past years ted old age pensions since 1923 when . . . v , has proven him to be 2 HONEST he defied severe criticism to support old S FULL OF INTEGRITY and age pensions. EXECUTVE ABILITY As commissioner ot parks Pat Goggin 3S prq iRFpoRD has added 160 acres to the park area; M. v C I 200,000 was spent to convert Fairmont I Stamps Him as u vr n tor I Park Irom a dust heap to the most beau- - f 1 City Commissioner tiiul recreation center in the west. Ti I .,1 I and worthy of I Pa Goggin has spent thousands of dol-- I U 1 YOUR VOTE I lars in construction and maintenance . I S "One Good Term Deserves Another"' Of ROtarV"Y. M. C. A. BOVS ClUD. . L;. Let's Givft Him a Vote of Confidence Be Stlf C"-G- O With Goggin Pi Paid Political Advertisement N Paid Pliotical Advertisement ilee !!' ' ' r n -- iw MWMwrtw-- TT n Uitt. i a a mmmuumtt mmnrr---m- aa 5 Vote for I 1 (T(l Gus Fernley VOTERS, CITY AUDITOR I Your Fricn(1 Richard A. Reid 2 Trained AuHitor--experience- e executive islOOPer CentQuailifed lor Your - I Vote. Make a tross tor nim a" e jj beJ v 2 and I I ;iv H i iiiiiiriMiwiMitii '''omwmmawmm!mmmmrrT--mmmimmmmmimiMmmmmimmm- m' , iw mMaM r. |