OCR Text |
Show CXESTWQ BSAB RTVEB VALLEY LEADER ", Entered at the Poetoffice at Utah as SecondjCIa&s Matter. Published at Tremonton, Utah, on ffconday of each week. Tre-ffnt- Subscription Kates One Year (in advance) fjix Months (in advance) jThree Months (in advance) Wl'DEK MEMORIAE DA Y OBSERVANCE IS URGEIl 7 " '.'&--, JSSW vdt - ' inmirrt'tti'iiT. W-'-- J,,, $2.00 fl.OQ 50 f JR RIVERSIDE NEWS IN PICTURES A ' . I A canning uadfield demonstration the leadership of Mrs. - , der of the Relief Society, and MnfK Welling, of the Farm Bure1 held Friday of last week at th of Mrs. Jack Foresberg. Tuentv t6 ladies were present. Mrs Forsil served deUcious refreshments fn ing the meeting. Mrs. Rayola Walker and Ward of Pocatello were Sunday 12? of their parents, Mr. and Mrs V w' Ward. Mrs. Jesse Davis attended the union of the students of the Box fT der high graduating class of which was held in Brigham Saturdal Mr. and Mrs. J. o. Hadfield ami daughters, Arlene and Fay, ping in Salt Lake and Og'den Satu? day. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Capener return ed to their home in Salt Lake Tuesday after a weeks visit here with children, Ray and Leland. Mrs. Ls. land Capener accompanied them to Salt Lake to remain for a few days Mrs. Edna Ward attended a Farm Bureau executive meeting at Salt Lake Monday. She also visited in 0g. den with her sister, Mrs. Ora Hyer Mrs. D. P. Jensen entertained at a childrens party Thursday for her daughter, Mary. Lawrence Davis spent the weekend at home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Forsberg returned home last week after spending the past two months in California, A ' , Helen 110w- Free to Publifc elloi and TKe only nUce in tk U. S. vrhe'e - obtained Froe nd .Without or product can fcTAmerican loduttrial Library. ObKolion u the aro Mattet yoo Write (or Biuineee Advertising interested in; came will be promptly forwarded. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY Eaiiaaerin S B nil din a. CUcaio. IlUao i c 1 Ml. Auburn NATIONAL EDITORIAL Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass., burial place of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. u ASSOCIATION ALejrLeA- - 19 3 5 THE Your Town Tp as to as well Z I your Country week ending with Memorial vl? tf'&4$T Wii"' V7 W tS J XSvZi May 30th, waB designated, this year as "Memorial Week" In) many communities in accordance with an appeal made by a group) of prominent Americana seeking wider observance of the occasion.! The group, known as the Memor-- , ial Day Committee and composed, of seventy-flvoutstanding eduand heads leaders cators, religious of patriotic and cultural societies,1 declared in part: "One purpose of this suggestion is to meet the danger that the true; significance of Memorial Day may' be overshadowed by the holiday spirit A week generally recognized as an annual period for me-- j mortal exercises will tend to encourage greater participation in these observances by organizations and individuals and prevent the, hurried and sometimes perfunctory celebrations sometimes due to the very human impulse to spend Me--i mortal Day In holiday pleasures." The establishment of a Memorial Week, moreover, would give great-- J er opportunity for Americana to1 decorate and memorialize the graves of their own departed relatives, as well as the national and local heroes of the community. The committee Includes such national figures as Bishop Benja min Brewster of Portland, Maine; Dr. Abraham Cronbach, secretary! of the Peace Heroes Memorial So-- , elety; President Georg B. Cutten' of Colgate University; John Greg-- ; ;ory, President of the National' Sculpture Society; Dr. Robert H. jHame of Union Theological Seminary; Mm. Mabel T. R. Washburn, President of the National Historical Society f and Gorg Mead jHoldan, President General of the Oeneral Society ct the War of 1813. sAi'' W'Eleanor Powell, lamed dancing star of motion pictures keeps fat lor her strenuous cinema routines by drinking milk regularly. e PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS ' If C d Xon. ji Ajf? V" '$ ' V"X vraCTa lD,v.r recovers a bottle o milkTrT shipwreck near Bo- Tests showed no trace ol salt water in the milk. ML32 'Kfy ' - v X " -- 'tat -L r- AJi LI Science double checks the supply. Testing lor buttere cIement tha , n;mi1 jvg've8richnesg:J I I y I , ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS 0 HAPPENINGS THAT AFFECT THE DINNER PALLS, DIVIDEND CHECKS AND TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL NATION- AL AND INTERNATION- AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE FROM LOCAL WELFARE, "Congress just now is thrilled with what senators and representatives are beginning to call their 'parlor revolution,' " says the United States News. "Reference is to the experiment in kicking over party traces, indulged by members of each House for the first time in four year." Whether this unlooked-fo- r example of independence on the part of the legislative branch will become a revolt against dominance of the Executive, remains to be seen. However, the seeds of dissent have been sown, and it is no longer strictly accurate to say that the President can get whatever he wants, with hardly a ripple of opposition from a su pine Congress. Mr. .Roosevelt may still get what he wants in every particular his influence and prestige may still be strong enough to make congressmen swallow bills they heartily dislike but he is not going to get it without a real battle. And that fact alone, whatever the outcome of pending "must" legislation will be, marks a far cry from what the country has been witnessing the last four years. The President stirred up a hornet's nest when he introduced his judicial reorganization proposal. Senators whose faith in the New Deal was considered unquestioned, have taken the lead in aggressively battling this bill, which is unqestionably the most important one yet sponsored by the Administration. Senator Wheeler is the prime example of this no conservative has used stronger words or showed more determination in opposing what he regards as packing of the Supreme Court with Executivocon-trolle- d justices. As matters now stand, half a dozen or moie Democratic senators have recently announced that they will vote against the bill. Administration majority is unquestionably less than five in the Senate and that is a remarkable thing in the light of the fact that any and all Roosevelt-backe- d bills used to go through with an ll chorus of "ayes" and the merest scattering of ineffectual Republican "nays." The judicial proposal is not alone full-fledg- an-vi- ed (DIMHAWH THE BEST BUY IN Milkman to the rescue during the devas fating floods. And delivery in a canoe mentators feel that, like the proverbial rolling snowball, it will grow. No one expects that Congress will By Miss Annie Hurd at adopt a consistently titude which did so much to rum Wilson and Hoover politically but Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Cox, Mrs. Geo. they do think that the period when Skidmore, and Mrs. Chester Arbon the President ran the whole show is spent Sunday in Weston with their coming slowly to an end. parents. 0O0 Mrs. Elmer Anderson of Garland Recent business news has been was a guest of her sister, Mrs. George quietly favorable, with prices appar- Skidmore the first of the week. Mrs. Wells Sanders is visiting with ently stabilizing in some important fields, and with Industrial output at friends in Salt Lake City this week. excellent levels. Miss Nona Arbon was a guest of The astounding automobile industry her sister in Salt Lake City over the continues to produce units and sell weekend. them at an almost unbelievable rate, now that it is at least temporarily free of major strikes. Chevrolet 'v whose epic battle with Ford for dominance of the lowest-priceclass continues unabated is raising its capacity to 7,000 cars daily. Ford is also expanding. Residential construction has notably improved, leads al other kinds of construction in volume, according to F. W. Dodge reports. This, says Business Week, is happy news to manufactur ers of furniture, to whom new homes mean new business. Furniture produc-- ! tion is around 50 per cent ahead of last year at this time. Business is making more money as well as producing more goods, accord- ing to a National City Bank survey of 270 corporations. First quarter earnings of these representative concerns were 53.5 per cent ahead of the TTTirTl!r( TITTf 1936 first quarter, for a net of more w than $352,000,000. Leaders in improving profits were steel, paper, railway JN equipment and merchandising SNOWVILLE anti-executi- i $1,500,-000,00- Mowers Plows TO BE SOLD AT A LIBERAL DISCOUNT CALIFORNIA WINE J5T Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Cutler, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Larkin, Mr. and Mrs. Golden Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Moroni Arbon, Miss Anne Hurd and Mr. and Mrs. William Hurd Jr. attended the graduation exercises at Garland Saturday evening. Five from our town were among the graduates, Wayne and Ethel Arbon, Lola Robbins, Ellis Richardson, and Joseph Hurd. S. Cutler, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William Hurd Jr., and Mr. an4 Mrs. W. C. Pack attended the graduation exercises at Brigham Sunday evening. On Sunday, May 16, Mr. and Mrs. John Neal and family, and Mr. and d A Rare Offer to Our Subscribers Don't Delay This Great Offer Will Be Withdrawn After June j 30th FIVE MAGAZINES AND j The Bear River Vail ey teaoer nnmi nuitiva ri at iuu um ALL SIX A THIS Relief Society News Relief Society teachers meeting was held at 1:30 Tuesday, May 25. Regular meeting was at 2 p. m. France imported $42,694 worth of American fishing tackle last year. m mr-T- T i EWSrArER Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 Year 1 McCALyS MAGAZINE PICTORIAL REVIEW WOMAN'S WORLD GOOD STORIES THE COUNTRY HOME REGULAR VALUE $5.00 Easy Pleasant Way To LOSE FAT MAKE an even keel. requires steady nerves in stirring up opposition. The President's spending policy is in grave danger that is, Congress is nowhere near as willing as it used to be to give him a blank check. His farm tenancy bill, which would cost a vast unpredictable sum to carry through to a successful conclusion, couldn't win approval from the House agricultural committee. More important, 0 when the President asked for for relief, to be spent at his discretion, for the coming fiscal year, he ran into the direct opposition of some of his best senatorial friends. Senator Byrnes, always regarded as a 100 per cent Administration man, is fighting for a ten per cent cut in all expenditures, and other senators are known to be figuring on cutting the relief budget to a billion all of which means, as the Washington observers have been announcing with convincing regularity and unanimity lately, that Congress is getting "economy minded." The size of the national debt is beginning to frighten and worry many a congressman who voted in the past for maximum appropriationsand other congressmen can see no reason why emergency spending should be continued in a period when business is rapidly expanding, is practically back to "normal" levels in most lines, and is obviously encountering an actual "boom" in other lines. Congress' new attitude of independence may be a tempest in a teapot so far but most unprejudiced com- - ay Rakes 1937 Mrs. D. J. Cutler and family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Neal of Holbrook. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Andersoa were Tremonton visitors Saturday. How would you like to lose your fat, increase your energy and improve - FOR ONE YEAR YOU SAVE $2.00 REMEMBER You get all six publications for one full year, and if you are now a subscriber to any of these publications, your present subscription will be extended one year. ALL READERS of THIS NEWSPAPER should accept this rare offer before we have to withdraw it. FIVE BIG MAGAZINES Each Month, and THIS NEWSPAPER each week 112 issues in all. - .... four health? How would you like to lose your Get the Seasonable Implements Now, . . . Our stock of Beet Thinning Hoes is complete First Quality Grade - .... We Accept Prosperity Bonds double chin and your too prominent hips and abdomen and at the same time make your skin so clran and clear that it will compel admiration? Get on the scales and see TOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET THE BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, Tremonton, Utah y how much you weigh then get a bottle of Kruschen Salts that cost next to nothing and which will you 4 week. Take one half teaspoon! ul in g glass of hot water in the morning cut down od pastry and fatty meats--go light on potatoes butter, cream and sugar end when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. Notice also that you hare gained energy yon feel younger in body Kruschen will gWe any fat person a joyous surprise. Refuse imitations safeguard your health you lose fat SAI'LLY the Kruschen way. NOTE Many paepla find that the nly dlst ehanga. MCMsary white UN. regularly Is LESS. at b Farmers' Cash Union USE THIS MAGAZINE ORDER FORM AND SAVE $2.00 Date I accept your generous offer and enclose $3.00 IN FULL PAYMENT for a full year subscription, New or Renewal, to the following SIX publications: This Newspaper Pictorial Review McCalFs Magazine Signed 1 1 1 Year Year Year Woman's World Good Stories Country Home Address e wnn.......M i State 1 1 one Year Year lYear |