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Show Thursday. January 28. Award Top THE LEADER, Tremonton. Utah 1954 NEW UNIVERSITY CLASSROOM UNIT Ratings in Ufah 4-- H STRIIfGFELLOW GETS AWARD watches were awarded club members in Utah achievements in the 1953 National Leadership profrram. The winners and resumes of their records follow: ATTRACTIVE 1 el 4-- H r r r? Club members in Utah Two have been named boy and trirl state winners in 1953 leadership program, for outstanding1 guidance of club and community projects. They are Rex Richins, 17, of Pleasant Grove and Ruth Peterson, 1 7? of Fillmore. activiIn his six years in ties, Rex has centered his interest on the dairy project. Starting with one Jersey heifer in 1047, he has acquired a herd of four milk- and has been a junior leader for three years. A for eight years, Miss Peterson has completed 17 projects, given 16 demonstrations and has been president of her club for the last four years, and leader for three years. She carried on her own Bewing program while teaching a group of girls cooking and sewing. At the 1953 county fair she won first place in the Dress Revue and the same year ing cows, three yearling heifers, was awarded the Carl Raymond ne heifer calf and two yearling Gray scholarship. In 1952 Ruth received the county award in Leadbolls and four bull calves, all registered Ilolsteins. His exhibits at ership, Achievement and Live Stock. stock bhows have won 12 chamA wrist watch was pionships, three for the best dairy presented to each by Edward Foss project and eight fitting ana awards. Rex is president Wilson, Chairman l the Board, f his "Linden Dairy Club" Wilson and Co., Chicago. All these programs are conducted under the direction of the Cooperative Extension Service. 4-- H 4-- Work was bffun last Wfpk rm an SlftfiO HAO o kv,vvv classroom building at the University of wm ww.. nit wuning icpwtc many of the temporary wooden buildings the University is now using near Fori Douglas, TK, ,r iiic new LLl u r w,;n Hi ilUUDC XclLili Lit: i XUl Lsuixuxiig H FIRST IN show-m&nsh- ip In a message to Chicago food dealers, Ed Wimmer, Vice President of the National Federation of Independent Business, states when current government investigation of high meat prices ends there will be red bureaucratic faces. His analysis, while pessimistic over lower meat prices, esta bushes that 4-- H DONNA FREDMCKSON WILL GIVE RADIO TALK Donna Fredrickson of Gar-Jan- d will give the talk on Mrs. Axel Fredericksen's WCTU radio program Sunday at 8 a.m. over KBUH, Brigham City. Bear River Stake Hoopsters Ready For Final Tilts The last gamos in basketball competition ktacffUGt&T for n&mvm Dr flating prices. have that h, flavor "just-picke- AND Iceep precious vitamins? You want a Revere Ware Sauce Pan! 31 owing copper for quick, even steaming stainless ItMting d steel far beauty. easily-cleane- B.LUSTRATED, Jtaww Wr S qt. fouff Pin. nd 3 at. CC CAMY r. at vim J lira. Can be purchased as a complete set or as individual pieces. Terms S 1 .00 down and $1.00 per week only. Palmers Jewelry Phone 3601 Tremonton R. Nielsen, both of Ogden, en- tered pleas of guilty to grand larceny theft of a truck load of wheat, taken from the Howard Glenn ranch at Blue Creek on December 20, According to evidence, the wheat was sold for $518. The value plus damages resulting to $641 and on promise of restitution and agreement to adult probation, Judge Lewis Jones suspended the 1 to 10 year penitentiary sentence. He ordered them confined in the county jail for an indefinite period with a stay of execution until Monday noon. . WOODHEAD - STOKES AMONG REGION SCORERS Bob "Woodhead's 14 points against Ogden Friday kept him in third place among Region One scoring leaders, WillysP Station Wag on It will take you most anyplace on business- -it for will get you through pleasure. Neither roads nor weather will stop this vehicle , . . powered all steel, by the New Hurricane "4" Engine. Room for 6 adults ... or 98 cu. ft. for cargo. Give it a test ride . . . then order your Willys Station Wagon soon. prk-e- s . rffc "Fat prices during the war trailing South Cache's Tommy Parker, and Bob Browning. Weber. Clair Stokes is just one point behind fourth place Art Bramwell of Ben Lomond in total scoring for six games. Woodhead's total is 81 and Stokes has points, scored 73. Parker, the leading scorer, has 93 points. BLOODMOBILE AIDS rOLIO RESEARCH Blood given by the people of this valley when the Red Cross Bloodmobile comes here Feb. , 15. will be used for gamma new vaccine the being used in the prevention of polio. The value of blood donated for this purpose is beyond 'st inflation, and it costs the donor only a few minutes time. Mrs. Quentin Allen, chairman of the blood collection for northern part of the county stresses the extreme need fo. filling the local quota, and asks the people to plan their work so that on Feb. 15. they may give blood. cents per pound. Now fats are so low that a small packer who formerly received $4000 per month for fats, now gels on the same tonnage $281 per year. Low fat prices effect cost of the rest of the carcass. were To Good Driving With one round remaining to be played, Tremonton Third lead the South Ward Bear River Stake basketball tourney with an unspotted 0 record. Next Monday Elwood, with two wins and four losses, wll make a last effort to trip the leaders in the final contest before the stake tournament on Feb. 9 in Memorial Gymnasium. Bothwell is second place, with one defeat. The junior division tournament will begin Saturday at 6:30 p.m. Teams from Elwood. Tremonton First, Devveyville, Second. Fourth, and twaftoams from Third ward will compete. Four games will be played each night beginning at. 6:30 p.m. in McKinlcy School gym Weather or Roads Won't Stop r V" A A-- L on dressed bee have been so C.W. Harder low that even big packers would have lost millions in past few years were it not for their huge as marvolume in garine, butier, condensed milk, cheese and other Items. Small and medium size packers, lack these products to fall back on." Good Sense Important Upon arraignment in district court Tuesday morning, James Virgil McFarland, Tremonton; William G. Stoker and Spencer 8-- A COMPLETE LINE OF REVEIE WARE HisfV I Trio Pleads Guilty Of Wheat Theft 6-- ... I L "Net Ends' Schedule: Sets Tournament M-M- mead lows; So. Bear River Want vegetables to look naoggungr plus monopoly M-M- were scheduled for Thursday night, with the stake tournament to be played Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 4, 5, and 6 at Boar River high sehool girl's gymnasium. Last week, Garland Second ward defeated Riverside to preserve an unbeaten record and remain league leaders. East Garland and Beaver Dam are tied for second, with Fielding in third place. PALMER'S JEWELRY government Plain old "horse sense" isi not enough these days. Traffic being what it is, you also need "horse power sense" or automobile sense or just if you please. good judgment, Old timers can remember when the country doctor, coming home at dawn after a sleepless night of calls, could fall a- sleep at the reins and his faithful old nag would bring him safely home. That was horse sense. But your automobile, miraculous as it is these modern days,, just won't do that kind of a job. That's why ypu have to use your good judgment and stay alert while driving. Horses seldom got into trouble, either, unless they panicked and ran away. But insurance people say that about two tenths of one per cent of today's accidents, killing 60 and injuring about 3,000 are caused by automobiles running And even those were caused by bad driver judgment. Most accidents, in some degree, are causeed by lapses of a driver's common "horse-power- " sense, exceeding safe speed limits, .driving on the wrong side, passing on the wrong side, or on a hill or curve, and similar chance taking. But there's one thing that hasn't changed much. A horse used to do some of the work of taking care of himself for example calling for outside repairs only when in need of the blacksmith or the veterinary. A car will do some of the work, too recharging its own battery as it operates, keeping itself lubricated with its oil pump, and so on. It's up to your horsepower sense to make $ure your car gets the kind of care that will keep it in safe operating condition. 18 to 22 "Xow consider the charge that the three big soap companies have been setting the price for tallow, and despite their combined expenditures of almost a quarter billion dollars per year on "soap operas" they are showing huge profits, despite fact that with the use of billions of competition killing coupons they are driving all independent competition out of the soap business. "In addition, the costs of do- ing business have zoomed. "la recent months, the tele- phone monopoly npped rates Nxloaal Fcdmtton of Indvndnt de- - BiuUww and GIANT 3-- D WIDE SCREEN el garden-fres- 1 Congressman Douglai R. Stringfellow, Republican, of Utah' First District, is (hewn , (left), with Vice President Richard M. Nixen, es they lock at the JAYCEE publication . "Future." The U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce recently named the popular! Utah lawmaker as one of the ten outstanding young men in the United States for ( 1953. The award was made on the basis of Stringfellow's outstanding record as( a legislator, and agent of the OSS during World War II. students. There will be 35 regular classrooms, a large lecture room seating 400 persons, and three other rooms of 100 seating capacity each. 1,625 -- M spite their claims of a few yean age that mechanisation and more users always meant lower SUNDAY. MONDAY. TUESDAY. Jan. 31. Feb. costs of doing business. Not only are home phone users paying more, bnt the transporter, manufacturer, Jobber, processor, and retailer have to add these coats to their selling prices. ."In addition there are increases in transportation costs, high taxes, high maintenance costs. In one plant in Cincinnatti alone, water rates jumped this year more than $300. per month. rs : mUmkf TECHNICOLOR Keieasa) Uira UNITED 2 iiO TREMONTON, UTAH n , yff ws A inv ns .iiieir.iiK Affairs of & Gst a Willys Station Wagon UP Mr. and Mrs. John L. Siddo-waand Mrs. William Siddo-wa- y of Vernal are guests this week at the Leland Hansen home in Tremonton. y PHONE 2351 mn.inmiiiHiw ' j urn M3 TUt j""" ) M Co-H- it PRISONERS rm Tin I i low Hq l OeWlO SCOn ."- - wt y wimH,mpimi n Ihu j W j tV p.2h 9T 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 10 11 12 13 14 15 1 17 18 19 20 I6T 21 22 23T j25 26 27 28 29 30p - tntort UK ) SHTUASm uwm All The Brothers Were Valiant" and MIDNITE SHOW "Robot Monster." !ssW House Frocks GEPHARTS were fortunate to obtain 30 dozen Ladies and Childrens HOUSE DRESSES from a prominent manufacturer who was forced to vacate his huild- - rrv ALL 3.98 1MLUES Now select yours in 2 big money saying groups. Group 2 2.79 mm STORES'G TREMONTON, UTAH SAM i NEXT WEEK FACTORY CLOSEOUT OF 1.99 1 GOODIE WILLIS In the meantime, closely controlled commodities that food packers need such as tin, glass, sugar, and salt, are kept at high price levels by monopoly control. The two biggest factors in the ever increasing food prices are taxes, and the prices of commodities under monopoly control. 1 6 jss iove-happ- SALE! Group , ARTISTS WEDNESDAY Ihru SATURDAY. Feb. 3. 4, 5, BIG DOUBLE BILL gob-ulin- XT 1 iiemrnto Paradise RmttmU Sstitb 5us "The price level of meat on the retail counter is just the first of the hot issues that will develop on prices. Only a few people protested with increased social security taxes, bigger pension plans, more foreign boondoggling was prescribed. But when these factors start increasing further the prices of milk, bread, other basic foods, the howl will be the greatest in history. Mr. Wimmer made this statement on the meat situation because bureaucrats, alarmed by growing resentment, have tried to establish a whipping boy. ' Even tender meat today is filled with tough tax li ers while bureaucrats have fun giving U. S. tax dollars away all over the world, and to support a globe trotting State Department which in few short years has grown from 900 to 42,000 employees. But despite the evidence there is a concerted drive to pass a manufacturers sales tax, which will be passed on to consumer! 1. 2 TIIONE "Buy for Cash and Pay Less' 4141 ; n 3-- D i I. |