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Show Thursday, November BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, TREMONTON, UTAH Page Six Utah Farm Commanded U. S. Navy Units in Biggest Victory War News (Continued From Page Three) averse per cent above the for the same periol Calf slaughter for the period reached 6.228,-87- 4 under federal inspection, an record and 54 per cent above last year and 40 per cent over the average. Cattle and calf slaughter in Oce high for tober was at an the month, even exceeding the drought year of 1934 when large numbers were slaughtered on government account. Only months of higher cattle slaughter were August and September of 1934 when I - :::.,:.v. ' " ' . all-ti- . u .,. ( condi- unusual local transportation tions. 23, is. longer required to issue invcic sales of less than one tnn ,J tfcii -' AAmtvirifir , Vim : affi Less Paper Work required on sales of one more of alfalfa hay for enfn OX Small Sales no ment purposes, OPA advises are of alfalfa Retailers hay i i k 'J Y-- e ar t all-tim- ; ' y 4 , 1 r: 1: V! a - i - , v 1 v i YOUR OLD ' V - - ' f , ' '' ?i on MATTRESS V. '" - MADE NEW . 1" - ' ' ' nil v - " 1 ta: .17 'jv ; - "" I v trc Ur U-- L2i -- "'"J' States flee s , These are the three men ho were in charge of the United o left Shown 8uch disastrous consequences to the Nipponese Rear Adm. G. L. VVeyler. U.S.N., and Rear Adm. Robert with a 58 Japanese ships were destroyed, seriously damaged and hit, in history. the teen to have greatest believed was The loss in Japanese lives ..fUT Roll-Edg- Mattress at Pick Up and Deliver Regularly 80-R- 2 and eur driver will call. EVERTON MATTRESS CO. 51 E., 1st South Brigham NEW LOW PRICES! American Fruit Grower $2.75 American Girl 3.50 American Home, 2 Yrs... 3.75 Q American Poultry Journal 2.65 Aviation in Review 4.00 Better Cooking & Hmkg 4.00 2.65 Capper' Farmer . ,. Child Life 4.00 Christian Herald 3.50 Coronet 4.50 Correct English 4.00 Country Gentleman, 5 Yrs. 3.00 Etude Music Magazine 4.50 Farm Jrl. & Farmer's Wife 2.65 Flower Grower 3.75 Household 2.65 . 3.75 Hygeia 4.00 Magazine Digest National Digest Monthly 4.00 Nature (10 Iss., 12 Mo.).... 4.00 Open Road (12 Is., 14 Mo.) 3.50 Outdoors (12 Iss., 14 Mo.) 3.50 Parents' Magazine . 3.75 Pathfinder 3.00 3.50 Photoplay 2.65 Poultry Tribune Reader's Digest 5.25 : Redbook 4.25 Science Illustrated 4.00 Scientific Detective 4.00 . THE BIG 7 VICTORY SPECIAL! THIS KE17S?il?P. 1 YEilHj AND six gssst mwm 0 THE EISDEST VALUE TRUE STORY PATHFINDER SILVER SCREEN HOUSEHOLD AIMER. POULTRY JUM FARM JOURNAL S: FARMER'S WIFE YEARS!! 1 Yr, Yr. J 6 Mo, 1 ALl I lYr. SSVEN 1 Yr. ( 1 rt h FR riS" ;f J . ijj" L ONLY 2 Yr. " 1 Check n one of these in place of True Story if you prefer! 1 Yr. AMERICAN CIRL Q OPEN ROAD (Boys), 14 Mo. 02 Issues) CHRISTIAN 1 Yr. PARENTS' MAG HERALD lYr. PROTESTANT I Yr. VOICE (Weekly) milFMAV 5Yr. ScrecnLind Silver Screen Sports Afield n TRUE COMICS CHILD LIFE U. S. CAMERA Yr. 6 Mo. 1 Yr. SCRF.ENLAND 1 . .l lYr. 1LLUS. .. 6 Mo. WOMAN SCIENCE The Woman True Story Yr. Yr. Sp0RTS AFIELD nTIIE Q 1 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.15 3.35 4.00 V. S. Camera Walt Disney'i Comics. Your Life NEWSPAPEI AND YEAR, UNLESS 1 MAGAZINES TERM SHOWN K I! ThisItespp2r,lYr. i,... - . ' ., ALL FIVE sgso TRUE STORY 6 Mo. FOR ONLY O MOTHER'S HOME LIFE.1 Yr. AMERICAN FRUIT 1 Yr. GROWER AMERICAN TOULTRY JOURNAL . lYr. TOULTRY TRIPUNE 1 Yr. FARM JOURNAL tc 1 Yr FARMER'S WIFE NATIONAL LIVESTOCK PRODUCER IYr. HOUSEHOLD MAG. 2Yr. PATHFINDER SIvsuci CAPPER'S FARMER I Yr. BREEDER'S GAZETTE 6 Mo. 1 l& PAGES OF FUN AN'D FROLIC... Ill FULL COLOR J! Get Your hi a request tor reinstatement or pn earlier action that was postponed due to a variety of war condi- til an to: u BUY BOLL II di( Elag olHlod wi of B All dressed up in a pretty dotted dress with a great Otl Varions sizes and shapes, plain and brightly colored! For hours and hours of fun! big bonnet to match. Composition. videt pathi Braz I Braz Braz: For the Littlest Folks yft&U&At 3 ar set-asi- j I I I espec I mind. I only I tina; I but n Two Little BEAIIS 1.98 ach r I cally I The J they I were A wonderful gift for a little child. It's a "Shoo Fly" with a galloping tors design. Strongly made. Cuddly percale bodies, and faces, hands and feet of sortest wool, cunning costumes. I Resi i U It's Streamlined I 1.93 s You put 'em igether and paint "em. Builds five to- - things jever t Jtary I dolls. Set includes paints and Ameri Sumne every- - needed. Freight Train enclose with coupon. . PlcaM tend me the offer chetled, with a year's subscription to your paper. NAME, STREET OR RJ J). posTorncE. N01 States 'gate a j C0XC1 1 A lo hand i "includi Locomotive and tender, gondola, box car, flat car 'with lumber, caboose. ,high-- u .nostica J some f I Hep. mt? tits ,'Iiean, ;age coi .men th ;Octobe Adm. j Everybody Can Join In I dieted, for the MAGIC SLATE de '1.00 ; in- - a8ain, "wasn'i be over Gen. air fore dieted . .over by f , mmmmmpm BINGO 1.19 Has eighty cards and three hundred counters. Fast i lift Bp the top and your writing disaf ri pearsl Gaily adornedPon Mickey Mouse and JTnst Jim 1 "The w ' Gen. 1943- 8bee I .two yea; j Herbe "CerU Duck. moving, lots of fun! .,tages 0 Raym, farmer-produce- ietirei nd bors," Fascis imacy New OPA Definition Help Sexl Growers OPA has extended the definition of "transportation cost" in the legume and grais seeds regulation to include truck hauls of more than 100 miles which will benefit Check magazine Centlemen: I enclose $ patht south succ Cobs with Not I 1.79 Outlook Good For Dairy Producers Tost-wa- r cheer for U. S. ds.irv still struggling to pull producers even with demand for their production is offered by Tom G. Stitts. chief of the Dairy and Poultry branch of WFA's Office of Distribution, who believes that the reconversion of our dairy farmers to peacetime production probably will be more orderlv and require less disruptive adjustment than that of any other major group. From 1943 when the first programs were enacted thru December, 1944, the government will have purchased 749 million pounds of butter 464 million in 1943 and 285 million in 1944; 740 million pounds of Cheddar cheese, and 586 million pounds of non-fdry milk solids. U. S. military and war services have received 551 e million pounds of the butter with most of the remainder going to the Russian army, primarily for hospital use, Post-W- ai Assorted I lot tbi is tions. Ai iy no ceilings allowed. Unless adjustments have to be made for crop damage, retail prices will be ap proximately the same as those of lost year after the crop was brought une'er control. From the beginning of the season through March 31, the ceiling on 100 lbs, TJ. S. No. 1 potatoes, graded, sack ed and loaded on the carrier, f o.b. rr.untrv shipping point, will be $3.35 for California and $3.95 for all other areas. Ceilings will change twice monthly from April 1 until the end of the season. Lower Freight Rates Requested For Wool Alleging that present freight rates on wool "in the trrease" in bags are. grossly ineauitable," the Secretary of Agriculture and the Wfr Food Administrator have petitioned the Interstate Commerce ComTiisFfon to make a general investigation with a view towfr-lowering the freight rates on this commodity. They were joined bv 25 state Tnblic Utilitv Commissions ard State Departments of Agriculture who endorsed the petit'on along with 41 wool growing and marketing groups. The present petition in Free Copy Today v Eary Spud Ceilings About Same as 1944 Ceiling prices for early white potatoes from the beginning of the season through June 30, 1945, are based on the same average return to the grower as last year's S; , AND FOUR BIQ MAGAZINES d Seventy-Fiv- e set-asid- ECONOMY OFFER P r enough in 1945." Despite possible surpluses at the close of the war, there will be no food dumping such as after the last war, Mr. Marshall adied. at THE SUPES ala A nt ing the war. Prices of domestic wool are now being supported at a considerably higher level than the price of comparable foreign wools by the government's purchase and sales program, and mills are purchasing domestic wools only where specified for government orders. Unless government support is continued, prices of domestic wool probably would decline. pei roe 14 Inches of Sweetness! 1 z:i not re- dom-ine- Decline Continues In Sheep Numbers The declining trend in number of breeding ewes on farms and ranches has continued in 1944 so that the number will be further reduced on January 1 from the 35-- 1 million of a year earlier which was down from 37.7 million on January 1, 1943. The trend has re Can't Rim Risk sulted from more profitable re- Of Shortages turns from other enterprises and the fact that war a scarcity and high cost of labor i3 Emphasizing wasteful by its very nature, W. for handling sheep. F. A. Director of Distribution Lee Marshall said he had no apologies Government Policy for certain surpluses in the naImportant In Wool tion's war food program during the USDA calls attention to the fact past year. "We can't take a chance LOW COST TO YOU Phone 23 or that government policy with is . i) having enough food," Mr, Marshall said. "Just because we spect to wool prices may be a factor in the domestic price got what we needed the past year situation for 2 or 3 years follow- is not assurance we will have around 50 per cent of the total waa for the government Only month to exceed October's 919,599 calves slaughtered under federal inspection was August, 1934 when 989,983 of which 475,542 were for the account of the government. Send it to us and we will clean and rebuild it into a e new comfortable VAvl h IK rs flnd country er than Ration." ' Senato Democr, WOSt wdure t Sun F buf-er- s in some western areas such at Idaho, Oreron, Montana, Utah. Arizona, and New Mexico which have truck hauls of more than 10O miles, where carload rates cannot he determined. Formerly no cost allowance of this kind was permitted sellers of these seeds if there were no applicable carload rates, hut now sells may add the applicable common or contract carrier rates for such hauls to the'r ceil-'- frWs. Perioral or district fVM off'res are fllo Tvrmitted to make neccsKary adjustments for CO r do n( 'i lative Alphabet 1X9 Blocks lias seventy pieces includ- ing alphabet and numerals. Blocks can stand alone. PAINT SET Jetween year 2.19 ' Henry 3icted Has colors in cups and in bottles. Also crayons, chalks, color book, etc., etc raonth;s. 3y FrOnK Chevrolet ft Thone 20 Tremonton y atoi 21, in Be aonthj, j |