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Show C1C3 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, MARCH TTTQ 'fill BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Entered at the Postofflce at Tremonton, Utah, as Second Class Matter c Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of Each Week JAMES WALTON, Publisher L P. WALTON, Editor and Business Manager Phone First West Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES ONE YEAR '.In Advance) SIX MONTHS (In Advance) THREE MONTHS (In Advance) Free to Ppblfe Jm dJ The ci.I y r ! r in llie U. S. wkere cat dvertning n.ailrr cowrinjj unyiine of biire J Without w prod ui t can be obtained tree Obligation is the Americn Ir.duairisl Library.a "Write tor Businei Avertuir.g Matter you at interested in: cams wl be promptly fcpidea. I lk i 23-- J $2.00 $1.00 ... 50tf - ' v' ' ' y. :'!'- ': ' ,. , v- ; '. . ' v ; i 3 . - - : . , ts ry port-of-ent- tax-grou- i' i ,v r, , ;j f sr-ia- ' J . i , ,' ff i 5 it tant i Minister, Bernard Segal, who is Jewish Chaplain at the i I ? ! -v-j-; ? 6 1 h- - 1 ,i sj "Since Utah has been vrv ful in carrying out thes; tions with the federal agency Wyoming are interested in Helping glamorize the new Kelvinator "Moist-Master- " models is glamorous Carol Bruce, new glamor girl of stage and screen. This refrigerator is de-- ; signed to glamorize the family food supply, make it more appetizing and shelves. attractive. It has : i G r.. "s""" L. M 1 n u- t .,' f u'A pri.v',! & ? - .. , T t"", Protes- lie -- w 1 ll. The bureau engineer related gress on four investigations under direction in which Utah is particukf interested. The proposed would transfer water from the aZ t' all-gla- ' rJl Fort, ? River or tributaries through tnfl i y lend-leas- TASTE TESTERS One of those tasks romantic little of American business comes to light each year about this time when the United States board of tea experts meet in New York. These gentlemen, who taste several hundred samples "tea party," set during their the standards for all tea imported during the coming 12 months. Many other industries also employ profes sional tasters, whose jobs depend on the efficiency of their "taste buds," sensitive little nerves on their tongues Coffee, distilled spirits, chees, wine, olives, pudding, ice cream, even soap, must all pass the test. Taste experts must make allowance for variations in tastes in different parts of the coun try. For example, Dr. A. J. Liebmann technical director for Schenley Distillers corporation, found tliat people in some areas prefer "light" blends of distilled spirits, while richer blends are favored in other sections. His special tasting board takes into account such consumer inclinations when preparing new blends. As for the tea tasters, they still don't know why green Nagasaki tea is especially popular around Albany, N. Y., and in certain parts of the midwest. j I four-motor- "v ' a!; ; " ' :t'--" - v rl f : J v n t- a " - vt V'V f straw hat as protcc- tion against too much sunshine' Along with her thirty charming companions, Kay may be heard every Sun- - y & '" ' J night at 10 o'clock on the 'Hour 1 cf Charm" over the red network of NBC. I f ? pean countries, have done so already . . . a new type of wall outlet for gas, that fits flush with the wall just like rean electirc plug. . . a frigerating engine for trucks, operate ing independently of the truck motor, it can be used to maintain refrigeration on trailer tipeks parked overnight. ' 600-pou- PUBLIC HEALTH COLUMN I i ! j , - tJ y - " . " J ,i--CTK' fp: ,,, WV- - - -- - " "Z- - , sters were in families from which adult cases of tuberculosis had been previously reported. The venereal diseases gonorrhea and syphilis show an increase over the previous week. Other diseases reported were as fol-- I lows: chickenpox 92, influenza 22, measles 32, pneumonia 12, mumps 30, scarlet fever 16, whooping cough 92, other tuberculosis 1, . gonorrhea 10, and syphilis 27. Eleven of the 29 counties in the state report "no diseases." VOw (Left) Show Globes regarded as symbols of the drug stores had their origin during 1 Caesar's invasion of the Brit- JO I Local health officers' reports sent to the Utah State Board of Health show a total of 452 cases of communicable diseases for the week ending March 14. This is a slight reduction from the number of cases reported during the previous week and approximately 200 cases fewer than were reported for the same week in 1940. German measles leads the list of communicable diseases with a total of 109 cases, 35 of these were reported from Moab, Grand county. One case of undulant fever was reported from Ogden City. The attending physician reports that his patient has been drinking raw milk. Eight cases of tuberculosis were reported, 6 of the patients were under 16 years of age. Four of these young I Farm Bureau News The March meeting the the Ladies Farm Bureau will be held Friday, March 21 in the basement of the Utah Power & Light building. The subject will be frozen foods ar, i canning. All interested women are invited. SERRA CARD OF THANKS I. been reading" where there is talk I sincerely wish to thank the Trabout raising the speed limits to 65 emonton Firemen and their reaiscita-to45 in now California. hour It is per their for a are sure snail's speedy and efficient sepace. They just rvice in slow pokes, those Native Sons only reviving my husband and a45 miles imagine. ssisting him to the hospital. Mrs. Miles Goss and Family But you stand along side a busy highway and you will see, at 45, how you will clutch at your old MONEY TO LOAN At 65, you would be as featherless as a chicken after a cyclone. REAL ESTATE According to the new 1940 census a had increase in FARMS OR HOMES they big population in California. Maybe it is something: BROUGH like rabbits-r-yo- u can have too many. AGENCY With a 65 limit they may figure on solving their problem automatic. FIRE AND AUTOMOBILE But we have been talking about it INSURANCE here at home and one of the boys, TREMONTON, UTAH Clark, he says a feller told him that r sky-piec- Q 65 idea is being sponsored by the coffin folks. But I don't know. It might be the tow car people, or it might even be the embalmers-y- oii can't tell. Yours, w ith the low down, this THE LOW DOWN i er the ish Isles. Dr. J. Leon Lascoff, past president of the Amerik can Pharmaceutical Association and holder of the Rem, ington Medal is pictured with f a show globe presented to him by Owens-Illinoi- s Glass t Company lor his work in pharmacy. 159 , 3 . r TtiT s Case-Wheel- lf d , ,,v;V kvl 1I , - - He said that invesUgations hJ been made of the state's underwater basins together with locafc all existant wells and determirt their output. More than 700 srJ; reservoir sites were investigated, tsf saia, ana xne mrormation made to the bureau of reclammatia. placing Utah ahead of all other western states in her readiness to par. sn& ticipate in the reservoir program. Mr. Humpherys also advised official from Wyoming that boa houses of the Utah State legislate has acted favorably on H. B, 137, a bill which will authorize the state engineer to act as agent for the state in negotiating pacts with neighboring states for distribution of the waters of the Bear River and other interstate streams. 1 X ' , . - day ' - ; j partment. ' 5. i ioraWir.tervacat.cn she wore a huge I - $ J sff - - ? i Secrets This tow Pomeranian's foster mother lends an attentive ear. She has kittens of her own, but finds room for a puppy too. . t " y v . . J , - f- K , mountain diversion into the Beam f t er, he stated. The state engineer disclosed tiJ the WPA had, during the paat bienniums ending June 30, 1940 $232,055 in Utah on investigaujf conducted in cooperation with his I v I all-gi- O vxjC) I x- - five-da- y I h-- (Above) When pretty Kay Louise Smith, top trumpeter with Phil or- Spitalny's chestra, went to Miami Beach this week with the band behind-the-scen- long-soug- : 'success- - of , . can-lonme- TRADE BARRIERS, DOMESTIC VARIETY While Europe's war has spotlighted the many international trade barriers it has built up, we've bitter had a quiet, but "border" war going on right here at l.orac. It costs us money, too, this battle of laws that crimp the free flow of commerce among the states. Most of us know them as state laws, special truck licenses and regulations, state "use" taxes. A survey just completed by Economics Statistics, Inc., New York research organization, shows that 87 per cent of the marketing", finance and economics professors and state p officials giving opinand ions held that chain stoie taxes also are trade barriers that hamper interAt THINGS TO WATCH FOR state commerce at the expense of the last the telephone company has perdevice that will consuming public. Such levies are es- fected a pecially out of place today, one expert automatically reject "phoney" coins said for, "with increased expenditures j in phone boxes it's a magnetic device for defense and the threat of rising that returns any coin in which there prices, every effort must be made to is a trace of iron. . . a new plastic lower the cost of production and dis- heel for women's shoes styled in tribution, and any barrier to the de- such a way that the wearer herself velopment of a distribution system can snap on a new one when the old that can keep pace with our produc- one gets worn or cracked. . . a new tive system is an obstacle in the road kind of biead especially designed for of national prosperity." breakfast use because it's "tailored for toast" it features a slight honey WHAT PRICE? ETC. Here are a sweetening. . . for husbands who alfew figures to help illustrate just how ways have trouble with butter being too well chilled to spread easily, some new electric refrigerators have a spe cial butter compartment where butter can be kept at "perfect spreading" temperature. . . a campaign may be ABSTRACTOR launched to adopt daylight saving Established 40 Tears time the year around instead of just BRIGILVM CITY, UTAH in summertime, as a national defense measure Canada, and most Euro- ss - ' rw, 'rKW Ministers of three Army Chaplains Confer Fort Dix. N. faiths, serving as U. S. Army Chaplains here, confer on religious and morale service for soldiers at the big in New Jersey. They are (left to right) Chaplain John Duggan, Catholic Minister, who is head chaplain at tne rosi; vnap-lai- n Butten-baum- , big seven billion dollars the initial e is: You appropriation, could buy 120 Empire State buildings for that sum; or the same number of s battleships; bombing planes cost around $250,000 each yet for seven billion you could buy 28,000 of those giants! Look at it another way; That money would pay all the costs of education in the United States for three years; or it would buy a $50 bond for every man, woman and child in the nation. Or, if you broke it up into $10 bills and laid 'em end to end, they'd reach times 67,602 miles or around the equator! first-clas- y ; ! engineer and WPA L'i rt 3 water and gram. Saturday the office of State '" T. Humpherys. Rex J. Reed of p; ?" oming, engineer in char River invpsticrr,t;,, Wyoming for the IT. lamation, sought details cooe perative program. Mr. Reed also m.tt with r eler of Denver. Colorado, uie bureau ad bureau officials while in' Sa't He left for Wyoming . ' ' ::. i y. 9J 5 lend-leas- ,' :; i j . and Chaplain NEW YORK, Mar. 17 BUSINESS e bill, Passage of the imRoosevelt's President with along an mediate request for appropriation cf $7,000,000,000 to put it Into effect, will not have any noticeable effect on the general tempo of industry, which continues upward but can no longer show such rapid spurts because already our productive mechanism is geared up, or is being geared up, to full capacity. But it will mean a speed up In application of priorities, with respect to men, materials and machines. These priorities were coming, anyway, and in several cases have already been applied. Most obvious and most quickly apparent to Mr. and Mrs. Average Citizen is effect of priorities applied to aluminum. Typical to the Office of Production Management efforts to counterbalance work restrictions in consumer-good- s industries thus affected is the fact Robert L. Mehornay, chief of O. P. M.'s defense contract service, has scheduled meetings with the aluminum utensil manufacturers to discuss for getting defense them, so as to give employment to their skills and their tools. A - : invpQtio-ct- 5? PATRONIZE YOUR iLOCAL MERCHANTS uuiiiumiitirimHtMimiHiUMkt " iu!..-..- ' , i v "y G'-c- t as well a$ to your Country "Behind the Scenes In American Business" vr ative - "" ' v c..i, Utah Official Water Pt? y T - ' Enirinppr The appaient v" 1 : . s none-the-le- I." : T : "' ;-- f (OS y c-- L - P 5 wr . r ASSEBICAB INDUSTRIAL UBSASY . ' r To Your Town VAyNATIONAl CCITOriAl LEEWEU ' I 20, e. JAMES A T T T Xjir S. NORMAN LEE TP PTT aajsjiL-t- IN ACCORDANCE WITH SECTION 57-7-64- CHAPTER 48, LAWS OF UTAH, 1935; A THREE MONTHS' PERIOD-MAR- CH 15th to JUNE 15th, 1941 HAS BEEN DESIGNATED FOR THE INSPECTION AND ADJUSTMENT BY OFFICIAL INSPECTION STATIONS OF BRAKES, LIGHTING EQUIPMENT, STEERING MECHANISMS, HORNS, visit 5T0 San rrancisco Chicago Detroit Salt Lake City l oniana V $13.95 $25.30 $27.60 .... $1.45 .. ,Ur to Showi in both face and tnannr You ara not fit company for yourself or anyone tlcn wh-you ara Tonwi, Nervous, "Keyed-up- ". Don't mlsj mit on your ahare of rl food times. Tha next time nerves make you WakctjL Rstlcss. Irritable, try th soothing v ,r;,ufcfc rr?: ot ddvtnJ o c. ' k,t 'ha --r- a r?" ' I i it ON ALL 5! TRAILERS AND ovw-tnxe- aFHeflect I f of DR. MITES KTRVIVE Dr. Miles Nervina is a scientific formula eom pounded under tha super vision of skilled chemists in on of America's moat $n. MIDLAND HOTEL Tremonton, Utah rhrave 88.0-- 1 WINDSHIELD WIPERS AND OTHER EQUIPMENT NERVOUS TENSION thorpiae f. i modern labors torles. 1T) Whj u .TV!""' don't roa try lit R(t1 ti t Saall Batlla , It At roar Drof I tor tarr MIRRORS, RESIDENT-OWNE- MOTOR VEHICLES, D SEMI-TRAILE- RS IN THE STATE OF UTAH. STATE ROAD COMMISSION W. D. HAMMOND, Chairman -- 7 |