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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JULY tAGE TWO ABE MURD0CK There Shall Be .No Hunger arawwBaBav1-- UP- BILL VOTING the dawn of history hunger and the fear of human hunger have driven men to war. And nations have had to have food to defend themselves. No nation has ever been so secure In its supply of food and fiber as America is today. Never has a nation been given such a guarantee of abundance as that assured the United States by the American farmer. ov- (Continued from Taze One) to any breach of treaty engagements of render fair treatment to nationals counfriendly powers lawfully in this advisoi me makes law legal try. The Exonly to the President and the ecutive Departments, and my predecessors have held that they could not with propriety also render legal opinAmerica's granaries are full to for ion to a separate branch of the erflowing' with food and fiber,oran-ary America has the that stores the abundance of fat years against any possible" scarcity power, I can not, as head of the Dein the lean years. The partment affected by this bill, ans-- v rr with anything less than emphatic granary is on millions of farms, in thousand, of roadside tins, and in d;Kapproval, your request for views countltss elevators and wareh.ou.scs. upon it. Wheat and corn and cotton to feed The Congress has almost unlimited and clothe the multitudes are then.. powers over aliens. It has embodied Three times the normal supply of its policies in general laws. If it is wheat has been put into this storage, convinced, as 1 am, that recent ex and added to the niAV tiop it grvis periences show the need for additionus more than a billion bushels for al safeguards ,by all means let us the coming year half again as much htve them. We, who are adminisas we would nonr.ally c nsume. tratively responsible for dealing with The Granary for com these problems, have advocated greatholds three times the usual cany-oveer legislative precautions. But there and the corn means pork and lard, is no condition, existing or threatenbeef and mutton, milk and butter, ed, which need3 arbitrary legislation poultry and. eggs. prescribing no rule of conduct, but If there were a cotton crop fail- merely imposing banishment by legisure, we should not go without lative fiat. The interests of this sercause the Granary now vice can be best protected by enactment of clear and fair rules of conthan a full year's supply. h3 moreAmerican farmer is the most duct that aliens may know, so that The fficifnt on earth and he now has those who obey may be unmolested the most efficient storage system on and those who disobey may be ex earth. America's bursting bins of food pelled. And let any man be heard in and fiber are the fanners' reply to his own behalf before he is doomed the bursting shells in Europe. Come to exile. what may, the American farmer with Harry Bridges may be all that this his Granary is ready for bill implies of him. But certainly he does not deserve a place in our his the defense. tory as a martyr. He is insignificant compared to the issues presented by Commissioners Proceedings this bill. Our forefathers objected to a government where "whatever pleas(Continued From Page One) ed the Prince had the force of law." of the Utah State Road Commission The report of the House Committee-comeclose to reverting1 to this when had informed them that they were ready to proceed in the construction it says that deportation "without of this sidewalk at a time when the assigning- any reason is inherent and commissioners were desirous of co- asserted by this bill." As a nAmencan I would not, for operating and assist in a measure in As an American I would not, for said construction. The commissioners Informed this delegation that they protection of our uniform and were in Immediate favor of constructlaws, and of fair hearing said sidewalk and further assured ings to even the humblest or meanest this delegation of their whole hearted of men. As an official of the United cooperation. Whereupon the commis- States I can not in good conscience sioners instructed C. Henry Nielsen da other than recommend strongly to forward a communication to Mr. against this bill. With personal regards. Abbott of the State Roard commission, informing- the commission of the Sincerely yours, ROBERT H. JACKSON request of this delegation, and the commissioners. attitude of county Attorney General Don R. Laub and Keith Lamb of Plymouth armeared hefnr th mlssloners and iremieated tho inataiin. tion of a bridge across th Maiid Hvtr at a point along the section line of jsecuon iu. i nis request of these gentlemen is an identical reauest of nm- vious meeting made by T. F. Coombs. The condition of the ground at the point wnere tne bridge is suggested to De piacea was discussed. The commissioners informed these 'renMemon mat a Dndge had been purchased to CROP and LIVESTOCK LOANS at be located at this Mint, hnwpvw a 4 J per cent For livestock and crop quicksand formation would not per loans at 4 J per cent per annum see mit tne installation of bridge at this Norman Christensen on Fridays at point. Whereupon it was decided that the National Farm Loan Associa- further investigation as tr th tion office at Tremonton. Thus ser- bility of placing bridge at this point vice starts Friday, June 12. Utah wouia oe maoe Doth by these gentleFarm Production Credit Accociation men and the commissioners. Mervin E. Holt, treasurer of the 4 tf town board of Fielding, appeared betinted fore the commissioners and requested LOST Pair of n glasses. Reward. Otto Nye, Phone the permission to use a to in a assist road graded 125.W, Garland. building tip program at Fielding. The commissioners to consented loan Fieldinea hnrs FOR SALE Pie cherries, 3 cents a lb. Pick them yourselves. James drawn grader which is now at Bear uiver uity. Mr. Holt further explained Walton. that the town of Fielding had purchased a piece of property which was FOR SALE Plymouth, 1937 DoLuxe now being used for the disposition Sedan. Completely overhauled. New of earbaere and refua nnri thsw.hu tires. Looks and rides like new. eliminating the dumping of garbage Terms if required. Gamble Store, and refuse in the barrow pit along tne roaas. Air. Holt further discussed Tremonton, Utah. the possibility of obtaining' a nroWr FOR SALE Modern home, except to drain the area parallel with the highway from the center heat Newly papered and paint Full or ineienng to the canal bridge. basement apartment, double garage, A to good location. Priced for quick sale. the communication was presented commissioners from Gus P. Black-ma23-this office, Inquire phone executive secretary of the Utah commission, wherein Mr WANTED Horses for mink feed. Centennial Backman the commissioners to Call collect 40R-3- , North Ogden seiect anaurged name a committee from Exchange for best cash prices. No Box Elder count v who wonl.t nin a dead or sick animals. Hot Springs development and recommend to the Mink Ranch. tf uian centennial commission of in Box KUler INSURANCE Hail, fire, auto, health Backman intimated in the correspon- and accident and life. J. H. Miller. mat tne cnairman of the comPhone 59.0-- 2 tf, missioners should act AS fhnirman There should be representatives of one FOR SALE City lots by Jame3 or more or the civic clubs, women's Brough and Bear River State Bank organizations, beautification commit or Victor Smith, at Kemmer, Wy. tf tee or the L. D. S. Church, and such other individuals whom the commisCANVAS Truck covers, camp cov- sioners may determine could contribute in recommending a beautificaers, irrigation dams, anything made tion program for Box rciW nmmtv of canvas. Tremonton Harness & A communication was presented to Accessories. tf. tne commissioners from David O. McKay, chairman of the Utah Centennial FOR SALE Baby chicks, started lAimmission. wnere Mr. in be pullets, and roosters, all breeds; half of said CommissionMcKay nvumota Welner pigs and brood sows. o statement from Box Elder county as Hatchery. Brlgham City, Ut. to the events, fenturrnttiPtirr,o tf or special programs which Box Elder county desires to offer as a part of e centennial plan. Paid FREE DEMONSTRATION Electro-lu- x the Cleaner and Air Purifier. Spe- statement requested on or before Sop- Kequest of this com cial new low price. Parts, supplies eemncr i, munication will he tnv..... ........ u- and sendee. See this machine be- vlsemont and disposition mnrfa in mn. fore you buy. H. D. Thomas, agent. with the request of Mr. Back-majunction Thone 133.0-- 1 for appointment A communication was presented to CASH PAID for dead and useless the commissioners from the Bonrd of cowa and horses. Call Maple Cttek Education of the B. E. School District Trout Hatchery, Brlgham setting forth the proposed levy for next school year. It is: Reverse Charge. 8 tf. Support and maintetmnce of JCver-Korm- ' aaa a, RIGHT OUT OF THE AIR HELD ON BRIDGES Sbn.ce 4, 1940 American Business" ti EARLE FERRIS for strfne auartet will Erskine. Little Marilyn by actress heard on "My probably get its first playing QuarSon and I" opposite Kingsley Col- - the famed Coolidge Stringmember Berezowsky, ton, played m five Broadway stage tet. Nicholas and also an outstand-in- g of the group composer, first urged Willson to make the arrangement Although he's at the New York Fair daily, Don Voorhees. noted conductor who is pictured World's TOOT-TOO- successes before she was seven. She's pictured here. ! Ellery Queen may soon be available to his followers in four different mediums. Long a favorite of readers of books and of radio fans, Ellery will be seen in movie shorts to be made in the fall and there is talk of staging an Ellery Queen melodrama on Broadway. Cecil B. DeMille, anxious to end the biggest season of the Monday night Radio Theatre with a flourish, negotiated with Spencer Tracy Ever-Norm- al r, al -- Ever-Norm- al - n, J. 6-- 6 beau-tificatio- ut-iic- e 5-- 4-- Utah-Idah- - 1 state-wid- iy-w- OUR --J' ..It. - schools Building funds erection and maintenance n, aJmImm MAKE GOOD OR WE DO fa' Co. PrprLCIievrolet . Cfji Max 28 Debt service Total 9.07 mills 0 93 mills 0.84 mills 10.04 mills France was the fifth best customer for United States farm products during 1939. Farm products were nearly 30 per cent of all U. to France in 1938 and over 17exports per cent to 1939. What th. be lnc capitulation la altuauonii a conjecture. a or- Diesel-electric- loci al motives. Generally, locomotive Skilled workers WASHINGTON who have been forced into the army of unemployed during the depression, or into less attractive other jobs, were reassured last week that jobs for which they are suited will be held cpen for them so far as Government national defense work is concerned, "before increasing the limits on hours of labor allowed." President Roosevelt told AF of L leaders who complained about men on an project at Jacksonville, Fla., being kept on the job as long as 56 hours a week, that all the country's skilled workers would have to be "absorbed" in industry before there would be any relaxing- of hours limits. Just how the work-wee- k to find these workers and whether they will measure up, after their layoffs, to the degree of skills required is a problem; but it appears the Administration is holding the door open to all who are sincere about getting back on payrolls at the sort of jobs for which they were trained. Bing Crosby will be a lone hand in K.M.H. during July when Bob Burns wraps up his bazooka for a vacation. Bob will be back on Aug. 8 and then Bing takes some time off. the featured singer with the new Abbott and Costello show which Meredith Wlllson's newly com- started in Fred Allen's Wednesday pleted "Swallows of Capistrano" NBC spot, July 3. c se "after-though- t" seven-week- I Mr. and Mrs. Mathew Wallaces of Salt Lake City, spent the weekend with Mrs. T. V. Summers. Albert Dinenger returned home Sun Is a spring stock show feasible for day from the hospital after an operation for appendicitis. Box Elder County? Mr. and Mrs. Leo Stokes and Mrs. There is a great move on foot late Ted Stark visited last Tuesday in to of the livestock ly improve quality in the state of Utah. Many agencies Brigham with Mrs. Sam Mills. Mrs. are cooperating in an effort to ac Mills has been ill for some time. Miss June Firth entertained at a complish this purpose. Recently Sears KoeoucK & ejo. purcnased and donated birthday party last Thursday. a registered Hereford bull to the Utah State Agricultural college. This bull Jm may be used at a very nominal charge by farmers who desire his service on purebred Hereford cows or heifers The Utah Horse and Cattle Growers Association have entered upon an ed ucational campaign to stimulate better livestock. Recently about seventy Utahns joined in a beef tour of im portant Colorado beef herds, with the idea in view in mind of improvin their own stock. For several various communities have sponsored special livestock shows. Perhaps Spanish Fork was among the first of smaller communities to sponsor a local show. Delta, Richfield, Vernal and other localities and counties have their shows. These shows are all for an educational purpose to stimulate better livestock Improve Livestock ; hot-dog- wide-sprea- T T T 2. 331 7 1MB IPUIB EACH FOR ONE YEAR The Bear River Future Farmers and clubs have for years more or less dominated the Junior Livestock exhibition in the state. They have won many prizes and have created a great deal of envy throughout the state on th part of livestock men on the op portunities or livestock production. In spite of this fact, it is felt by many mat mere is sua much room for im provement, ine question is, now can we best make this improvement? Would a local stock show help? Do our adult livestock breeders and and Future Farmers feeders, our produce a sufficient quantity and quality of livestock to justify conducting a local show? Would a show stimulate more feeding or the feeding of a better type of animal ? Would the, show improve the feeding practices? Would it be of an educational vaiuo to our nvesiocn men and cur young men, to aid them in the pro gram oi livestock improvement? The above questions are vital ones, and it is hoped that they arouse seme discussion in the valley as to the feasibility of a Box Elder county, or a North Utah Livestock Show, which could be held in the late spring. As for the Future Farmers, they would welcome such a show, and would furnish animals to make it in teresting and worthwhile starting. A TOTAL OF 164 ISSUES! 4-- H 4-- H Here's What You Get! BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER C0LLIER'S (Weekly) WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION WOMAN'S WORLD HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE AMERICAN POULTRY JOURNAL FARM JOURNAL and ! here, was married June 25 to Carl Vincent Rebb. They will make their homo In New Mexico. Miss Phyllis Summers spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Ruth Summers. , Mrs. Ell Anderson, who is a member ef the Midland Camp of Daughters of Pioneers, spent Friday at Promontory. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Andersen spent Sunday at Crystal Springs At the Allen reunion. vEI?!BfAndfrson ,eft Monday for Girt Scout camp In South Fork. Issues Issues Issues Issues Issues Issues 12 Issues FARMER'S WIFE VALUE $6.50 ALL SEVEN FOR ONE YEAR 1 s. yr. Instead of Collier YOU SAVE $3.00 YOU GET ALL SEVEN publications for ONE FULL YEAR, and if you are already a sub- e scriber to ANY of these n publications, your present subscription will be extend-office AT ONCE, and vou will receive HVE BIG MAGAZINES each month, also COLLIER'S and THIS NEWSPAPER each f 52 and 164 issues in all for only $3.50, newsPapers I ONCE before we have to withdraw this UkDbK A Wxl?,Wzines advance the price. or offer, " well-know- f""'ta:Je '"""''"iM1ii.iiM,n1..mll1, , ,, , Mjm nmm ((im(m USE THIS COUPON AND SAVE BOTH WELL Mrs. Rudy Scholer and Mrs. Mablc Stokes took the graduating class of tne iTimary to the Temple to be baptized for the dead. They did 300 names Ueva vickers, former school toacher 52 52 12 12 12 .... 12 If you prefer, you can have LIBERTY Magazine or LOOK (picture magazine) S ,,,, ..., , $3.00 Date m w err J v?Sma,ccept your mazine offer befono it is withdrawn. r,nuuM-- rtAn? to the follownew or Uv J.SLL,YMENT for ONE YEAR'S v -- " uvuvMVlVilO subscription, COLLIER'S (Weekly) WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION "v.una o VVUHiilJ My ) ( ) Name Is Town - renewal, I REAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER ( 1 t ! I ? I S I I f j ! Move Started to J order? this year run to the units used for switching a clue to industrial activity reflect- stepped-u- p ed in more making-u- p cf freight trains runs to plant spurs, and so forth Diesel-electri- ! ONE FOR RIPLEY You may find i it hard to believe, but a tax bill (a(t I least it was labeled as a revenue pro- - I ducer) has met death in Washington. I A House Ways and Means last week killed the Patman bill designed to put the larger interstate chains out of business. It even amenrejected an dment that would have "frozen" chains at their present sizes. The action brought cheer to agricultural, industrial, consumer and labor groups, all of whom had indicated their own stakes in preserving efficiences of mass distribution by testifying against s heathe bill during the ring. Said Mary D. Learned of the Massachusetts Committee on Consumer Education, "Womn buyers in partiSecre- cular are grateful to Congressman KITCHEN COMFORTER McCormlck and his committee for Alof the J. Swensson Stuart tary refusing to accept this deestructive be should Wares Association uminum which would unquestionably measure a popular figure these days with the in higher prices to consumers.'' American housewife who has read result A hnaincica vipwmoint wtis erven bvthc tViot- urrnnen ahrnart hnvp huA to turn Manufacturers' Institutes American over their favorite cooking utensils to their governments for remelting in- - general counsel, Charles Rosentnum, .4 b to metal for use in armament If she wno smu common has secretly wondered if ever "inaction as "a victory for sense." whose Swensson, here," might happen organization includes leading cooking THINGS TO WATCH FOR The utensil manufacturers of the U. S., sets her fears at rest She will not be "personal" radio receiving set nine asked to turn her aluminum pots and by four by three inches, weighing four that pans into defense weapons, he says. pounds. . . paper match-boo- k He cites a survey which shows that, folds neatly into a toy airplane when s d use of the matches are used up. . . with the present aluminum in so many different ap- "collared" like cigars, with paper plications, cooking utensils consume bands. air-ba- and Mickey Rooney, shown here, to repeat their memorable portrayals in "Boys Town" on July 8. The top dramatic hour of the airwaves returns early in September. . 2. T ! Despite the grim world outlook the nation still finds time for humor. That's evidenced by the amount of fan mail received by Arthur Godfrey, the radio philosopher, following programs in which he pokes sly fun at th Washington bigwigs. ' n. 4D3-J-- . - - horse-draw- network gram over the NBC-Re- d Monday nights, and directs the music for "The American Jubilee," big stage play, at the Fair the rest of the time. Benay Venuta has come out of a retirement from radio due to a tonsilectomy to become indis-criminato- ry gold-rimme- d, here, has yet to see any of the exhibits. He conducts the 'phone pro- six-wee- - 7-- e.. j r,. ai Classified Ad Column I tUttimufllumii..., BUSINESS less than 6 per cent of tht NEW YORK, July , tal. Some years ago, when T, democra-this big tt Slowly, but surely, rv it bestirring itself to meet the metal was not so widely emr,whu vsc reduction for industrial or defense ,.t inHnctr-ia- i eqbut and slowly, national defense re is ually surely, the effort anu being in- duction that went into of total prr aiuc pots flected in job, payroll was more than double tho n..', creases. Employment in piesentficr ure. industries in May was a round million above the same month in 1939, Rail roads are and now totals 35,000,000 persons. In going the 30 days from April 15 to May 15 to town with orders for equipment 240.000. of was a gain alone there May needed to assemble materials and Payrolls for these industriesto inmanufinished products in the defense were up 12 per cent. Next facturing, job increases were largest gram. And there's no time like Vl in retail stores. This bears out how in steel prices. They're buvCof even "spotty" gains in industrial acother affect out to equipment at tne best late sice- - 'w4 tivity are spread lines and other regions for, reversing last fall. Norfolk and Wosttrn the slogan of a couple years ago, spending $8,000,000 for rails, coal care "Jcbs make sales." Also, incoming and box cars; the Pennsy lines have expenditure of S1OOO0000 business ta manufacturers showed a including 25 locomotive tenders and distinct upturn in May from other cars for moving rru months of this year, new business ag- same extra-lon- g if you must knrw nitions almost with (all cent, right, nine per gregating all major industries participating in cannons ) And Santa Fe has just dered 10 steam engines an ' two the advance. . 1 ever-noim- ?! Ever-Norm- imiuiuiuiuHiiimuttNi HuiuinwHtiuuJ 1 year 1 year 1 year J rear HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE AM. POULTRY JOURNAL FARM JOURNAL and FARMER'S WIFE Check here if you want LTRFTiTV Check here if you want LOOK one year instead of Collier's. Address State .... 1 tar 1 1 .vot'ar |