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Show The LEADER entertained at a party at the Hansen home Saturday evening for a large group of their College friends and their partners. Games were played and tasty refreshments served. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Mason ac companied by Mr. and Archibald and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lamb of Plymouth attended the wedding reception for Mr. and Mrs. Montie Archibald at Bear River City Friday FELDINC By Florence Hanson Lions Club Entertains The Fielding Lions Club tertained their partners at the ward recreation hall Thursday evening. Club President Horace Peck presided. President Abel S. Rich of Brigham was the guest speaker for the evening. Movie films were shown by Wendell Welling. Special guests were President and Mrs. A. 8. Rich, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Baird, Mr. and Mrs. Noble Petersen and Mr. and Mrs. Gale Welling. Mr. Baird and Mr. Peterson are now new members of the club. A lovely dinner was served. Mrs. W. L. Allred and son, Clair, of Bountiful spent Saturday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Anger and family. Weekend guests at the home evening. The Bock Lore Club met at the home of Mrs. Horace Peck Fri- day evening for their meeting. Vice President Mrs. Helen Severson reviewed the book, "The Little Princesses," by Marion Crawford. Tasty re- f reshments were served. Guests were Mrs. Oleen Garn and Mrs. R. H. Peck. Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Garn were Mr. and Mrs. Preston Garn and family of Ogden. Mrs. Hansen was a lun of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Suther- cheon Wynn at the Ambassador guest Walter Mrs. land were Mr. and Club Lake in Salt City Saturday. Sutherland and daughter, SanMr. and Mrs. John Owen at dra, of Pocatello. tended the Cutter Races at Hy Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Hansen rum Saturday. spent several days of last week Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Severson a ten ding Hie Wool Growers Co- entertained at a dinner in com ntention at the Hotel Utah In Salt pliment to Mr. and Mrs. Evan lake City . Rudd and son, Bradley at their Mr. And Mrs. J. D. Munson home last week. spent last Friday and Saturday Sunday guests at the home vtetttng with Mr. and Mrs. David of Mr And Mrs. E. C. Mason were Allen and family at Perry. their children, Mr. and Mrs. Les Dinner jpimu at tfa home pf lie Voorhes and family of ClearMr. anA Bra, Leonard Standing field. on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Hansen George Bowcutt and iamfly and were dinner guests at the home France Standing of Ogden. Mr. of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Drew at Tremonton Sunday. and Mrs. Dennis filler "and of Trnonton rttteo at Mr. and Mrs. Earl Skinner and children, Karen and Steven the BtandiaS: home Sunday. Scott Hansen and R. H. Peck spent Sunday visiting with Mr. fca-t- semi-mon-th- ly oy RIVERSIDE at Ogden. Mrs-Georg- en- and Mrs. Lyle Hess and family and children spent Sunday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Vern Mr. and Mrs. Earl Holt spent Hess and family at Ogden. Monday at Logan. Mrs. LaDene Zundall and dau Mrs. W. J. Garn and daughter, ghter Marsha Ann of Snowville Dayle, and Mrs. Parley Petersen spent the weekend visiting with and children spent Monday at Mr. and Mrs. Rozal Zundal and Brigham. family. While she was here she Mrs. Keith Moss assisted by received a phone call from her her sisters, Mrs. Dan Kent and husband, Wynn Zundal, who was Mrs. Hazen Gllgen of Ogden and In Japan on a few days leave Mrs. Tom Parry of Malad enter- from Korea. Wynn reports that tained at a Trouseau Tea at the he is well and expects to leave home of Mrs. N. F. Vanover at for the states within the next Malad Sunday in Compliment to few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle their sister, Noreen Kent. Those Cutler of Snowville visited at the attending from Fielding were Zundal home Monday and Mrs. Edith Udy, Mrs. Elsie Well- and baby returned home ing, Mrs. Rhoda Welling, Mrs. with them. LaPriei Secrist, and Mrs. Nina Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Munson Owen accompanied by Mrs. Alta son Forrest spent Sunday and Johnson of Tremonton. Mrs. Verl Udy visited with her at Logan. Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Wood and aunt, Mrs. Chlvers at Malad on of Tooele and Lamoine family Friday. Hess of Ogden spent Saturday Mrs. Sara moss attended services for Sam Mansfield visiting with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hess. at Malad Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Udy and Mr. and Mrs. Rex Richards and Mr. and Mrs. Steven Potter left children, Barbara and LaMar, and Mrs. Rheumina Udy spent Monday morning for a vacation at Ogden. trip to Los Angeles and San Monday Mr- and Mrs. Owen Hess of Francisco. They plan to be gone Sahara Village visited here Mon about a week. La-De- ne Myrie Udy - Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Nlsh of Lo- day. Mrs. J. S. Hess spent Monday gan visited with Mr. and Mrs. Rozal Zundal and family Sun at Logan. Six couples from Ogden atday. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Garn en tended the souare rianro Sat. tertalned a group of friends at urday night 'and presented a their home Saturday evening. A very Interesting floor show for hot dinner was served to Mr. and we memoers of the Special Group who enjoyed the Mrs. Dean Coombs and Mr. and Mrs. Ross Rhodes of Garland, event. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Packer of Mrs. Janet Nelson and family Tremonton, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer of Logan visited Sunday at the Coombs, and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Coombs- The evening was spent Lee W. Hunsaker home. in playing Pinochle with prizes 8wetpUtMs going to Leo Coombs, NaVelle The Alabama sweetpotato erop Is Rhodes, Richard Packer and larger this year; prices are more Ruth Packer. Nish Zundall of Logan spent attractive to consumer! ; and Octowas the major harvesting the weekend with his parents, ber month. Mr. and Mrs. Rozal Zundall and In-tere- stt - son of Huntsville visited with with Mr. and Mrs. LaVoy Udy. The ladies are sisters. Mrs. Elvira Silvester and Mr. and Mrs. Van Peterson and son Jackie of Ogden visited with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Silvester on Saturday. Mrs. Silvester and Mrs. Peterson are mother and sister of Mr. Silvester. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ward spent the weekend in Salt Lake . . Sunday School Reorganized Glen Udy was sustained as Second Asst. Superintendent of the Sunday School to take the place of Ron Hales who resigned some time ago. Vesta Davis returned from a weeks visit in southern Utah with her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kinz of Teasdale, and in Provo with her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. three LEADER WANT ADS BEING RESULTS Japu's Racial Orsfer The social order in Japan hadn't changed for centuries until occupation. The old families with their spacious homes of oriental splendor, their heirlooms passed down from feneration to generation, their old schools of thought, made up only a small part of the nation. The shopkeeper eking out a bare living in his abode, the coolie and the serf in his rice paddy, and millions of others on the islands existed on a daily bowl of rice and a piece of dried nsh. Mae-Arthu- r's two-roo- m Roy Davis. - , Thursday, January 31, 1952 Bishop and Mrs. Leland Cao- ener and family returned for the weekend from Salt Lake where they are living this winter, They returned to Salt Lake Sunday night. Paul Forsberg accompanied Ihem. f Russell Capener who is spending the winter in Ogden spent the weekend at home with his family. Mrs. Rule Macfarlane and daughter Ardene arrived home from a month and a half vacation in California. They report a lovely visit. The Jr. Birthday Club met at the home of Cleo Macfarlane in honor of her birthday and also honoring Helen Capener for her birthday Friday night. Fifteen club members were present and enjoyed a very lovely evening., . and Mrs. Deloa Udy Mr. ac- companied by their daughter, Barbara spent the weekend in Salt Lake with Mr. and Moss and Daughter. They left their boys in Corinne with Mrs. Udy's mother, Mrs.' Rader. Paul Forsberg spent the week' end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Forsberg. Mr. and Mrs. Oleen Udy and Mrs-Murra- FOR PEAK RESULTS FEED PDRirm nnr:GE BREEDER CHEGItEnS With Extra Vitamin "A") (Fortified , y .. AID REPRODUCTION v LESSEN CALVING TROUBLE BOOST MILK FLOW GET 'EM HERE y Boar River Farm Supply GARLAND PHONE 3 " family. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Moss and children, Micheal and Janie and Mrs. Verl Udy spent Tuesday at Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Grover and 1 family and Mrs. George Manning of Farmington spent Sunday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Her- FROM TREMONTON ' 6:25 a.m. 3:45 a.m. Eastbound 10:30 p.m. 2:25 p.m. Westbound 8:26 p.m. 11:05 sum. Tremonton ERNS CAFE man potter and family and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Parley Petersen Phone 2641 mum f. "Outof thin y comes f" fflffl in Buick history "What does it take from an oil company to run an airlift?" of 1950, Ever since military activity in Korea has called for mid-summ- er heavy transpacific air traffic by civilian cargo planes. Over one of their routes they fly a round trip of 13,450 miles some twenty-si- x times the length of the famous airlift into Berlin. Hundreds of companies help supply this operation. Maybe you'd like to know what . it takes from an oil company to run an airlift. . Standard's part in the Pacific airlift shows that it's a big help to have large companies on hand when the going gets rough. Our work is focused mainly at Wake Island, that pinpoint some 4000 miles from the U. S. West Coast After World War II, Wake was a refueling stop for commercial airliners en route to the Orient. But then came the struggle at the 38th parallel I -jr 1 re- - ber multiplied many times. We'd Deen supplying gaa to tne isiana; when the U. S. asked us to step up deliveries, we were able' to do it. As a big, integrated company, we called on our own tanker fleet. To secure the special loadings neeaea - When you talk about "miles per gallon" you t Ai air activity-steppe- up even more, Wake needed larger vy me grouna equipment rews, a Standard ship picked up the Canton Dearest available at Island. And at U. S. request, we . valve-in-hea- d A MM ground crews. Again, Standard's bigness facilities ff helped.Using in Honolulu, we quickly helped build new storage facilities .along Wake's runways. trained men, tripled our Wake manpower. ' think of fuel, because that's what you buy. for every gallon of gasoBut air's f ree-a- nd can gulp more than 8,000 line, a busy engine gallons of air. The problem is to deliver air in the right proportions, throughout the full range of speeds at which you drive. A carburetor-b- ig enough to supply the air be wasteful in needed at full throttle-c- an driving. A carburetor sized for in thrift city traffic literally smothers your engine when you really give it the gun. So Buick engineers developed the Airpower automatic and carburetor a works. here's how it stop-and-g- To keep Wake and the airlift on a regular ubbib, supplied Standard drew once more on its tanker fleet. We now operate a shuttle service to Wake from the Pacific Coast. Again, being big and having our own facilities helps us serve. I Of course, the transpacific airlift starts in America, and at home on this end of the route Standard keeps some 10 airlines supplied with aviation gasoline. It would take a stack of drums a mile high to hold our increased daily output for this use. At the same time, we're also supplying military needs . . . and our usual volume for motorists. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA X pbu s!stad to serve you better play-feed- we didn't have to build a new engine. Fireball We took Buick's Engine which makes the most of high compression. We drew on 12 patient years of Buick carburetion research. And we came up with more might, more, out of thin ait, in more miles, from gas-ri- ght one. than ways Before trouble kindled in 20 a week Korea, only TIM i. lFl planes t e far-o- N thrift and smoothness that's out of this world. As you pick up speed, the "stand-bys- " not just more gas, ing come into but more air too so you keep getting maximum power from each drop of fuel. You have 170 effortless horsepower when you neerj it a tremendous reserve ready to go into instant action at the nudge of your toe. You have the satisfaction of knowing that you get this power with a frugal use of gas. At 40 you use less gas than you formerly used at 30. That's the story of Airpower carburetion in facts and figures straight from the factory. But statistics can't tell you the breath-takinjoy of heading for new horizons in a ' new Ro ADM aster. When can you do that? Better come in soon. Lots of other folks are flocking into our showroom these days to see the greatest array of new Buicks we've had in years. Stuipwunt. mion, trim ni wudttt mn mm ''. g great-powere- .. o four-barr- el , Loafing along, two barrels are working, two stay closed. And you get a low-spee- d w Sun is me hr'52 ,btTM. mm Fronk Chevrolet Co. Phone 2311 Tremonton 4 d |