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Show Behind The Scenes In American Business Bishop and Jensen Win Leads In Senior Play NEW YORK, Jan. 16 BUSINESS Though the new year is still so young that many persons are yet writ ing- "1938" by force of habit, evidence that 1939 will be more prosperous Will continues to pile up. Mr. and Mrs. Consumer, the back tone of industry in the final analysis, are spending a lot more money than at this ume a year ago. Department stores throughout the country are benefiting, with particularly bright reports coming in from the middle and far west, where sales are running 10 to 18 per cent ahead of 1933. A national trade estimates that sales of electoaster, irons, is. trical appliances clocks should be at least 20 per cent Keid Bishop Thola Jensen better this year than last. And pro- -, ductlon in the automobile industry, according to latest reports, snows ness. no signof dropping below the most optimistic advance estimates for DOUBLE FEATURE An increasand ingly large number of schools other civic organizations in recent WASHINGTON Bv an odd ouirk years have been taking advantage of of chronological circumstances, the! the U. S. Bureau of Mines motion value of the patent system to the' picture library to learn something of American economy is going to be In- the marvels of science in industry. to vestigated thoroughly by Congress Aa a result the bureau has had over to films U. of of the stock 150th the its 1939, year during step up S. Patent Office's existence. Long reals, which interested groups transAmeriof as the claimed protector may borrow by paying only the can inventiveness and ingenuity, the portation costs. Recently added to the "double feature" on Patent Office, recent figures reveal, has granted some 2,152,000 patents the aluminum industry. Two reels tell since 1790, or about 1.7 patents every the story of "Aluminum: Mine to hour. Last year 38,076 patents were Metal," showing sources and mining issued, including the basic patent on of bauxite, the ore, and its converelectronic television. Others granted sion to aluminum. Two other reels, in 1938 included: electric bulbs using titled "Aluminum Fabricating Prono filaments but lit by radio waves, cesses," describes how the lightweight harnessing the sun's rays to operate metal is worked and shaped into var engines and refrigerators; a method ious commercial forms, such as sheet, of obtaining transparent paper from foil, rod and similar products. Other cell which essential units of modern industry feabeans and a indicates the degree f water hard- - tured in the government's film mart include sulphur, water power, gasoline, spark plugs, storage batteries, glass, oil and abrasives. safety STEAM ROLLING Rehearsals for "Smilin' Through'' To Begin Be Staged February 22 and 23 Tonight; photo-electr- ic STOHL ELEVATOR CO. Phone 41 Tremonton, Utah try-ou- ts house-keepe- r, life-tim- j at once. "SmiThis fantastic comedy-dramlin" Through," is the story of the spiiit of a woman who returned to help a pair of young lovers achieve the happiness she had, fifty years before, been thwarted of. On the eve of her wedding night she fell victim to a bullet meant for the man she was to marry. The shot was fired by a rejected suitor, and over the ages a great hate has existed between the two families. The spectacular manner in which the boy and girl of the present generation are united and find their happiness is a thrilling and gripping climax to the series of incidents which precede. It comes as one of the outstanding plays ever to be presented at this a, THINGS TO WATCH FOR Borrowing the principle of the auto windshield wiper, a novel compact for milady cleans the mirror everytime it is opened. . . For gunners:, special e optical lens goggles, providing full protection at various shooting angles. . . Skis that will not slide backward when the skier is climbing a hill. . Automatic camera which will give pictorial record of an aii plane crash to determine the cause of accident. . . A new speedometer, op school. c cell, which e rated by a anti-glar- EXPERT RADIO SERVICE Gene's Radio Service II. IL S. Searchlight) (Courtesy Reid Bishop and Thola Jensen wen held Friday leading parts in for the senior class play, "Smilin Through," it was announced today by Lloyd Newcomer, dramatics coach. Reid will play the part of John Carteret, and Thola, the double part of Kathleen Dunganncn and Moon-yee- n Clare. Raymond Hansen will assume the double role of Kenneth Wayne and Jeremiah Wayne. Erma Holland will be seen as Ellen, the and Evan Iverson as Dr. Owen Harde friend. Others of ing, John's the cast include Geraldine Walker as Mary Clare, Lane Palmer as Willie Ainley, and the wedding guests include Grant Smith as First Man, Stanley Anderson as Second Man, Hartley White as Third Man, Dora Atkinson as First Woman, La Vaun Tolman as Second Woman, and Leone Korth as Third Woman. The dates of presentation of the play has definitely been set for Feb. 22, (Washington's birthday) and 23. As yet, the production taf f has not been chosen except that Lane Palmer is advertising manager, but Mr. Newcomer states that the staff will be chosen during the next week. If any seniors are interested in any part of the production of the play, Mr. Newcomer requests that they contact him 15. 4,-0- 00 - . Rnnvc Hr. n PVHpnil Sucrar Quotas Dairyman Reviews ivuio Will Assure Domestic vicuna, Food Factors In Producers of Market Place After 33) Milk Production Every person in the United States a result mainly eat an average of 104.2 pounds of will of two things: feed and care, and the sugar in 1939; that is, in law value, inheritance or ability of a cow to or an equivalent of 97.38 pounds of conproduce milk, Lyman Rich, extension refined beet sugar. The totalwill be dairyman at Utah State Agricultural sumption in the United States Milk production is college, points out. As far as feed is concerned, on Utah farms ample roughage is the cheapest form of nutrient. Alfalfa hay of good quality when fed alone produces amazing results. Two Utah herds, one in Circleville and one in Paradise, which were fed nothing but alfalfa hay, a month of fall field grazing, and a few potatoes, established "almost unbelievable" records with their ration, Mr. Rich points out. Statistics on these two herds are used to show that alfalfa, when put up young and grown on good land, is very high in tctal nutrients, in protein, vitamins, and the necessary minerals with the possible exception of phosphorus. However, statements regarding economy of feeding roughage should not be interpreted to mean that grain feeding is not economical or necessary. The cow's great capacity to hold roughage is still Insufficient to hold the necessary nutrients generally for her best production, says Mr. Rich. George Q. Bateman, superintendent of the Utah Agricultural experimental dairy farm, has shown that a cow giving large quantities of milk must gather 150 pounds of grass per day to meet body and milk requirements, so concentrates are added. He has also shown that a ton of barley will give an additional 100 pounds of butter-fa- t if fed to good producers. The barley can be sold at nearly double its present market price by converting to butter fat. Mr. Rich discourages the purchase d of materials. These mixtures, costing from $10 to $13 per hundredweight, are not only unnecessary but even harmful, he says. If animals chew bones and sticks, it is due to an evident lack cf phosphorus. Steam bone meal is rich in phosphorus, and along with common salt it will meet about all mineral needs. Wheat bran and cotton seed meal are good sources of phosphorus when the price justifies addition to the ration. high-price- Continental Oil Co. To Use Newspaper sounds an alarm when a car goes t r . to Some i-- The "dice golf ball," marked with six numbers, which foursomes can use to pass the time when waiting at lees. . . Invisible marking for laundries; only by using the rays of a new "seeing eye" lamp can these markings be . Portable seen. canvas swimming pool for the lawn this summer. . . The "Honette," new musical instru ment resembling a clarinet but with distinctive tones, which a novice can play after an hour's practice. C ... New Home Furnishings . or . . . Floor Coverings If you know QUALITY and can recognize Genuine BARGAINS when you see them, then our furnishings will appeal to your sense of thrift .... HEADLINES IN NEW YORK Shipments of steel from U. S. Steel piants in December highest since Oc tober, 1937. . . William O. Douglas, chairman of the SEC, recommends paid directors to rule American companies. . . December sales of Montgomery Ward 11 per cent better than year ago, and highest month in history. . . U. S. postal receipts for final 1938 quarter totaled $210,000,-00e or an record for any period. . . Fisherman and other boating enthusiasts will buy between $9,000,000 and $10,000,000 worth of outboard motors from American factories in 1939, according to the National Association of Engine and Boat Manufacturers. . . Moving up in the business world: John A. Stevenson made president of Perm Mutual Life Insurance Co.; Raymond N. Ball and Paul S. Achilles elected directors of Eastman Kodak Company . . . Looking at the earnings reports; higher Madison Square Garden Corp. and Bellanca Aircraft; lower Reynolds Tobacco and A. M. Byers Co. 0, all-tim- We Recommend You Visit Our Store and COMPARE PRICES AND VALUES 4 P $mf& imaasoM. Y MORE HEAT For Your Fuel Dollar . . . Call 35 ... for the Clean DUSPRUF COAL that costs no more than ordinary coal and yet furnishes more heat and is SO CLEAN three-mon- th FltANKFUIiTHEB APPOINTED - WASHINGTON President Roose velt again exhibited his determina tion to liberalize U. S. institutions as much as he can by nominating Law Professor Felix Frankfurter to the vacancy on the Supreme Court left by Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo. REAL ESTATE AGENCY INSURANCE LUMBER "Zig-zag- J j Cullimore, AllenJ Wassom Lead Attl I (Courtesy With Cullimore leading tv ges, the Bears fought thL-'- i undisputed second place in tTv One hoop contest, v.ten the Logan Grizzlies a T"7 ; at the Bear River gymiajt " iimiviuuai sennntr wwii Standing of Team South Cache Bear River . Ogden Box Elder .... Logan North Cache Weber lecting unu a total of pine a v. TeT 3 I 3 i 2 i i 2 2 2 1 2 0 i m 12 jiunurs. Mess good brand of and bail guard posts with r fri' Taylor noticeable points. Another game was the effectivt. ui Audi, wno at tve ume Lxyiticieu points for be honors. Baily held scoring honois having bagged 7 points. The almost inpenatrable fo, defense, and the outstandings sive teamwork of Wassom, Ccj and Allen seemed to be the deling factors of the game. By virtue of their r over the North Cache Bulldog; Friday, and last night's victorv Bears have moved to the top only to South Cache, who ten g.3 yet lost a game. Bear River is scheduled t fo-t- he ; 1 S their time-honore- d rivals, the Elder Bees at the Btar next Friday night. The gane ises to be a thriller from finish. Pave'-- f the style advances tt motor boats .as previewed nual Motor Boat Show in y.m The new boats have taken a tip' in 1 their land-goin- 1 cousins, feature g creased visibility and laminated l ty plate glass protection . helmsman. Stressing and runabouts izon" visibility, models have slanting windshieli year, with side posts cut dour side window areas increased up: per cent. Cabins feature radios, with short wave communication!, ities. Doors are widened to make: ier access to cabins and galleys, i trie refrigerators, running wa'.e: atories, and even shower baths added attractions on many maritime bungalows. for "around-tt--- e s: W. C. T.U. NOTES At its January meeting the local Woman's Christian Temperance Union urged its members to write our congressmen, both in Washington and Salt Lake City, asking their support of legislation which will promote temperance. The brewers and distillers of the nation are spending millions of dollars in advertising the sale of alcohol with its terrible toll of ruined lives. Let us urge the passing of legislation against the advertising of alcohol, both over the radio and in our printed pages. The liquor traffic today is being indicted on moral, social, economic and scientific grounds. of SHOP THRU THE STEAM i LEADER ROLLINS STOHL ELEVATOR Phone 41 - CO, Tremonton, w Tremonton SPECIAL SALE If you fail to take advantage of these values you will be passing up an event that cannot be duplicated anywhere - Look Them Over. $1.00 St. Regis 60c 49' ALARM CLOCKS 79 Large ALKA-SELTZE- $1.49 Sandwich 98 79 TOASTER $1.00 St. Regis VACUUM BOTTLES $1.00 St. Regis POCKET WATCH 50c Tek TOOTH BRUSH 79 51 for 25 29 39 Packages Pound 69c Favorite HAIR BRUSH R 35c VICKS VAPO RUB Jar 75c BAYER ASPIRINS 100's 35c Groves BROMO QUININE 25c Woodbury Germ Free CLEANSING CREAM $1.00 JERGENS LOTION 29f 59f 24 19 79f Large 75c Norwegian COD LIVER OIL - Full Pint 59' 50c PABLUM 43f Pre Cooked, Cereal ..13c 25c MAVIS TALCUM POWDER CLOSE OUT. I TAII L . These Items Priced Below Actual Cost BUILDING MATERIAL GLASS AND CHINA WARE "YOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET" n, line-avo- iding FIRE AND AUTOMOBILE THEMONTO.V, ed secretary Win Over GLASS GOES TO SEA L on the seaways as well as a is also authorized to highways." seems to be trie ' prescribe practices for preservation and improvement of soil fertility. In 1938 the producer was given his choice of the following practices, per acre of beets: maintain one acre of alfalfa, clover, or perennial grasses; seed one acre of such grasses; plow under one acre of green manure; apply eight tons of manure on land adapted to sugar beet growing; apply 75 pounds of available commercial fertilizer to each acre of beet land. 39c HOSPITAL COTTON FARMS OR HOMES JAMES BROUGH Farmers' Cash Union eye-strai- 2 on QUALITY MERCHANDISE off-cho- re 13c KLEENEX - 200's MONEY TO LOAN 09 Wallace, United States secretary of agriculturle, estimates. Beet growers in the 48 states will be able to provide about 23.20 per cent of the total amount required, and cane sugar growers in the states, 6.28 be per cent, leaving 70.52 per cent toand island possessions provided by Ordinarily the foreign countries. United States imports about 75 per cent of the total. To avoid domestic surpluses then admisintra-tioAgricultural Adjustment beet factory has given each sugar a quota in bags of sugar which it has been may produce, and this quota acres netranslated into number of cessary to produce the allotment. This disacreage is set for each factory comconservation trict, and county mittees will divide the allotment among beet growers according to productivity of soil, record of the farm-of er in past production, and number acres planted in sugar beets on each farm during the past 10 years. Utah's 1939 acreage allotment is 55,173 as compared with 54,000 in 1938. The lowest acreage of the ten year period was 37,000 in 1936, and the highest was 76,000 acres in 1933. The quotas have been established to guarantee a definite portion of the domestic sugar market to American producers. This was not accomplished through tariffs, as increases in tarcompetiiff merely shifted tion from one country to another, authorities point out. All beet producers who do not plant in excess of allotments and who meet certain soil conservation and labor payment requirements will receive federal payments of about $1.80 per ton of sugar beets produced. Under this program 6.931 Utah producers received $1,0G3, 655.80 in federal payments up to November 30. 1938 for their participation in 1937. Labor requirements state that no farmer who receives payments may employ children under 14 years of age, and no child between 14 and 16 years may be employed for more than eight hours in one day. Wage rates are set by the secretary of agriculture. These labor requirements do not apply to the farmer nor his own fami- "Zig-zag- 2 . . . Home and Farm Supplies FONCA CITY, Okla., Jan. 16 Newspaper advertising will again be the backbone of Continental Oil company's 1939 advertising program, the largest in the company's history, it was announced here today by A. J. Rabe, advertising manager. "While we feel that we have a program for the year," said Rabe, "assigning a fair appropriation to every important advertising medium, by far the largest share of our 1939 budget will be spent for news paper space." Continental's current newspaper advertising presents the new form of " reading. In this proposed reform for relieving the type of each second line of copy is arranged with words in reverse order so that the eye can read from left to right on the first' line and from right to left on the second the strain of long eye sweeps between lines. This " advertising is not intended as a reform but is presented merely as an interesting game or contest for readers. well-rcund- 6 832,157 tons, raw value, Henry A. lyThe For 1939 Advertising photo-electri- $ $ 19, 1633 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JANUARY PAH3 EIGHT CLEANING - CHOPPING n -- STEAM ROLLING STOHL 4 ELEVATOR CO. Silhouette Cleansing Tissue, 200's ... 9tf 4711 Bath Crystals, Genuine 39 25c Williams Dental Powder 9? 25c Mickey Mouse Castille Soap 5c $1.00 Household Thermometer 29 Certified Clinical Thermometer .. 49 30c Household Oil 15 3-i- rhone 41 Tremonton, Utah n-l FREE SAMPLE RUX COMPOUND An Improved Preparation for jjf Relief of Simple Muscular laiM ten Referred to As Rheumatic Jj iM.'rMcn.'iM.'ii nil Mf M TO SERVE YOU AT ALL f 1ST TIM 1 s |