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Show BEAT. RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1940 FAG3 TvQ Future Farmers BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Take Many Prizes At the State Fair Entered at the Postoffice at Tremcmton, Utah, as Second Class Matter Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of Each Week JAMES WALTON, Publisher L P. WALTON, Editor and Business Manager TIrst West Street Phone f 23-- J Free to ?vMk $ whw catalogs and The only r'&'fc Jvertiinr nuitc erverinjT i:y;r;i of butne or product tin e t?ta ni i ree rd Without InautfrVU Library Obligation i ti A" Vr'rtte lor - A Mia you iotoretc2 ir. feitne ul IcproA'ptly AHERICAK tXlu5TR'L LISSA3Y Kn4inii-u- g Unlldini. CUoaSo. Illlsoi .NATIONAL IWTORIAl ASSOCIATION 93 5 i TN f To Your Town J i as well as to your Country ft t 4. A A Jfcumii irsin m tJhmSI VOTE PATRONIZE YOUR t LOCAL MERCHANTS ' 1 -- rl in4 li t i I 1 for money. V First place in tne tarpon division, fashing tournament, was captured by Vilhs Capo oi St. Augustine, Fla., who bau'ed a I2l pound Silver ICmg 45 minutes to hang (for the 1940 record A I I. ." ' '.- :- 1 l- ' i - .1? J." i ' - (J ft Si- r11 -- ''''- V i.illY! -- i r. Z. Y. EREKSON Tl " -'ft 'J w 1 The returns from the state show Bear River upholding the stac. dards of previous years by takiu their share of prj :. t r u-- Award I $2.00 $1.00 50 '.v.af t' J1 T' Two Year County COMMISSIONER EC0N0MC granting deferment to men with HIGHLIGHTS 3 HAPPENED GS THAT AFFECT PAILS, DIVIDEND AND TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL. NATION- - jrilE DINNER 'CHECKS RAL AND INTERNATION AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE fTUBJ LOCAL WELFARE. S the draft bill officially call ed the selective military service act "When for-set- came before Congress, It was known that the great majority of the Amer ican people favored it. So did all the leading' commentators. So did most public men, including both President Roosevelt and Contender Willkie. The country looked in wondering amaze ment at what the totalitarian powers Eurwere doing to ope, and was grimly determined that every possible step should be taken to make sure that nothing of that kind would happen here at home. Un der those circumstances, it would have been a reasonable forecast that the draft measure would go through in jig time. But it didn't Congress has seldom given more time to debating any mea sure. And there is a very good reason for that. Congress did not want th draft bill the great majority of the Senators and Representatives voting for it did so with deep regrets. They supported it, in brief, because they It doesn't make a pleasant picture. felt that dire necessity demanded it And draft is, certainly, a peace-tim- e And they knew that, once the bill became law, a great and as yet unreal in principle, opposed to what this ized change would have come over kind of a country and government stands for. But few oppose the action the American scene. or Congress in adopting it This country has always been dead in modern war, become eas set against compulsory military ser soldiers, soldiers. ily slaughtered vice in peacetime. It has always felt that forcing men to take up arms when we were not at war was in diOne exceedinclv important chance rect violation of the democratic pro- in the draft law was made by the cess and the democratic tradition. It House, after the Senate had Dassed has looked with a mixture of pity and its version. The change involved the contempt on those European nations industrial conscription clause. As or d where for centuries every iginally stated, government could have man has been required to give a year taken over any business and no proor two of his life, war or no war, to vision was made for ever returning it learning something about the craft to private ownership. The clause was of arms. And yet, despite that, once so generally worded as to make it the menace of dictatorship became possible to use the power to commanclear, the country reversed its pre- deer for political purposes to punish vious stand and decided that the peace political enemies and reward political time draft was the lesser of the evils. friends. The new clause is considered far The mechanics of the law are simam nrnvHuH . .. -. u nrrainrt UliW uv ple enough. Next month every man better. C!hprks and 21 the nation of between in political favoritism. A com the ages graft and 35, inclusive, will go to a place mandeered business must be returned of registration and fill out a blank. to private ownership after five years. Some 16,500,000 men will be involved, And no business can be seized until and by early next year it is estimated a number of high officials testify, with that 900,000 of them will be called adequate proof, that no other solu- ic able-bodie- n. ' ' :4 (Paid Political Adv.) - GOSSIP-GRAM- S WHEN " By JimJLcppcr the "Hour of Charm" took , the air for its c v. weekly broad ""e$ cast on Sunday ,J 1 J X v- - - - evening, tember regular of over CBb br; y ",g Thel ielav0tue shown lhe course gams of the 1940 World Series I standing iirYifiti ninWISi i XT" E . tW , ; r6 Jerry, the duck, has a terrible appetite. Wh?n , his friend, Shep the dog, j B, is given food, he merely inserts his bill into the dog's jowls, behind the last molar, and snatches the food that is already on its way down. Shep, however, is such a kindly soul that the duck is still living. They are real pals. es, a slight increase over last week. The total number of cases reported for the corresponding week in 1939 was 74. Two cases of infantile paralysis .0 were 9 reported from Ogden. One of Reports of cases of communicable these cases resulted fatally. disease to the Division of Epidemiolo Pleasant Grove reported one case gy, Utah State Board of Health, from of undulant fever and one case of local health officers totalled 109 cas tularemia was reported from Grand PUBLIC HEALTH n p- COLUMN - Mu-tu- rastinsr Svstem I officials will soon j&jf name ui nieu who ara to pre- - J. p. Spang, Jr. sent this exclu- sive coverage for them. "We will do everything possible to select the most talented announcers." said J. P. Spang, Jr., president of the Gillette Safety Razor Company, in accepting the sponsorship again of the World Seiko. ?100,000 was paid to organized baseball for . . , dollars prize money. Springville took first place with about 75 dollars prize money. All these prizes, will probably make Bear River a runner-u- p for the gol cup awarded to the chapter of Futurt Farmers winning the largest tote! amount of prize money on their exhibits at the fair. - t county. A total of 52 cases of tulai emia have been reported in the state so far this year. Only two cases of measles were re ported from the entire state, which is an all time low record for this disease. The greatest number reported for any one week during the year was 718 cases for the week of March 22. Other cases of communicable isease reported were as follows: monia cough 13. sports Broad- Hiiiiiiii fea- cry "Play Ball!" resounds the diamond for the first announcers. 1; ii the "House the necessity for immediate cooperative action on the part of all types of business and industry in the current defense plans. will be described ft for a nationwide audience by oul-- l in . sf In farm mechanics, Bear River again ranked second jyith , .about rjm Sep- J Company, spon- sors of the show, the thrilling. colorfnl spectacle of base ball's classic!! runnwwrii ... - : 1, Magic" dl8CUBsed llars. V ture yielded to the vital topic of, National Defense as Charles E. Wilson, able president of the General Electric Chas. E. Wilson r v ""vyA. and Views on - the ASover - 5 " jf-- - :- Air Personalities I piize money. In the swine division, LeRoy Oyle;! took first prize for his Future Farm f er barrow, which netted him abou'J 15 dollars. j In poultry, LeRoy Roberts exhibited sixty-fiv- e chickens, consisting of four-teen different breeds. He netted abou! 25 dollars prize money in the Futunf Farmer division and about 25 dollar J In. the open class. In crops, Bear River got second iif amount of prize money with a total! of 51 dollars and 50 cents. Box Elder t coming first with a total of 63 do- .. 'j w REPUBLICAN TICKET News i Living up tofaa. ily tradition, Keith! Anderson exhibit' the grand chain, f pion Hereford bin! of the fair, and hj cows and heifepj also did well. Htt will get from 75 td t on de- pendents and families deferment Is specilically granted only to those who in the opinion of the President, are filling important Jobs In industries and callings which are essential to defense. It la believed certain, however, that, men with dependents will not be called unless war comes. What will be the effect of the draft on our economic order? Only time can answer that question fully, but some of the results can be easily The bulk of healthy, single men will be temporarily taken away from the society they are used to. They woa't he marrying and building homes They won't be earning good wages and spending them. Their places will be taken by older men, or by men whose physical status makes them unfit for military life. And when, the year's training over, these young men are released, another dislocation will take place. The draft law provides that every employer who is able to, must take the conscripts back, and put them in the same jobs at the same wages. That will mean that men taken on in the meantime to do the work must be discharged. In some cases, men who have spent a year in the Army will be slow to get back again into the routine of their jobs, and that will Involve loss of time and money. All in all, the draft law will unquestionably create many a problem for industry no less than the Roberts 100 dollars in NS Y J Lel&oy U-"- Candidate for fo the colors. The men chosen will serve for a year, and will be paid $30 a month. There is nothing in the law Race For Gold Cup V SUBSCRIPTION RATES ONE YEAR (la Advance) SEC MONTHS (In Advance) THREE MONTHS (In Advance) Dear River Chapter In the V 26, diptheria 1, mumps 3, pneu 4, tuberculosis 4, whooping 36, gonorrhea 6, and syphilis": I Fifteen of the twenty-nin- e counties, in the state reported "no disease." A combination of coal with air and water can now be m ade to prodw ammonia used in making artificial ice and also It's a case of going off in different directions whenever research feels like it, we's say! anti-freez- e. the broadcasting rights. tion is possible. Large share of the credit for this change must go to Wendell Willkie, who instantly pointed to tho dangers in the first version of the industrial conscription clause. The House acted swiftly after Mr. Willkie spoke, and the Senate concurred. vjl t X v X . f . " it S'iiZ' ; SHOP THROUGH THE LEADER ADS FIRST OSEY JENSON for COUNTY COMMISSIONER Democratic Ticket And Why? Mr. Jenson has served in such capacity for the last two years and has shown himself to be very capable as such i! Ever ready to serve the county and its interests for the best, having utmost in mind to wive the taxpayers of the county any unnecessary expenditures. Mr. Jenson has NEVER, and will NOT now make any promises for special favors to ANYONE in the county, but has been found fair and square in his deliberation at all times. Mr. Jenson is a believer in the principle of Democracy and a real supporter of the Democratic party in Box Elder County and has demonstrated in the past, his belief in the Roosevelt Administration and a progressive County Admin- istration. If you want to continue to have a county commissioner that has in the past, and will in the future, conduct the affairs of the county for the benefit of the tax payers VOTE FOR OSEY JENSON Alka-Seltz- cr, LiM quick-steppin- two-ton-e DeLuxe models. A new responsiveness. Performance 4 ways! And youll has been ttepped-u- p "hair-trigger- " want to try new Powermatic Shifting, a great new driving feature available at slight models. extra cost on even the lowest-priceThe New Plymouth gives generous values. d pain-reliev- ing Alka-Seltz- upholstery in the Special e hood that locks from the driver's seat. New counterbalanced trunk lid. Spring covers on all models. Famed Oil Bath Air Cleaner. In alL 19 Major Advancements that give brilliant new performance, more comfort, greater beauty, remarkable economy new for 19411 New g the fa today-disco- ver eagerness of the New Plymouththe new Come Alka-Seltz- er it (Paid Political Advertisement) FOR YOU TO SEE, TO DRIVE THE AMAZING When Acid Indigestion, Gas on Stomach or Heartburn make you feel uncomfortable or embarrass which conyou, try tains alkalizing buffers and so helps counteract the associated Excess Stomach Acidity. But the relief of these minor stomach upsets is only a small part of what you can expect to do for you. You will find it effectiv for Pain Relief in Headacht, Neuralgia, Colds and Muscular Aches and rains. It contains an analgesic, (sodium acetyl salicylate), made mors prompt and effective in its action by alkaline buffer salts. When lurd work or strenuous exercise make you feel tired and dragged out, enjoy the refreshing effect of a glass of sparkling, tangy At Draff Staff la parkaf sid ( 4rnff stor soi fMBitaJas y the one-piec- Winzeler Motor Co. er. Tremonton, Utah r ,? f i I A if r-- ,r.-- -- t, ,5 .f !, ... ',. , ' d- chick-enpo- "3 |