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Show 7 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1930 PAGE THREE Pleasant Grove Wasatch Gas ComBrigham City Eddy Drug Store protein principally for mixing purposes. Re per bushel with 13 received franchise to pipe dur of Francisco San wheat at over pany about improved. ceipts 2'ic premiums bringing gas through here. these prices; No. 2 hard winter with ing April totaled 6,739 tons compared Fork Sixth annual Utah naturalLake Spanish Satl City Efforts being made 11 protein was quoted at Omaha at with 4,721 tons last ApriL Slightly County Livestock Show held here. to build sidewalks for pedestrians in VoMc and No. 2 hard winter at Den- over one half the April deceipts this Excavation and leveling Ogden with highway construction-Sal- t c ver at per bushel. Premiums year were of northern wheat Wheat completed for $10,000 auto parking connection Auto - Ramp Lake Los declined about City at prices on soft winter wheat were the largest Angeles and service station to be con- Garage, 32 West formally Broadway, on the crop at St Louis where No. 2 os per 100, largely as a result of lib- building street structed at Twenty-fourt- h opened for business. soft red winter was selling at 15c over eral offerings; No. 2 soft white wheat extend to Preparations underway Helper Road improvements underthe Chicago May price, which was from Washington and Oregon was Western Air Express line from Salt to townside dugway. cwt offered way at per equivalent to about $1.16 per bushel. being Lake City to Cheyenne, Wyoming and Helper Excavation started on busiThe The increased premiums were the basis Los Angeles while No. 2 hard from Salt Lake City to Butte, Montaness house to be built north of Mounresult of the very light offerings of was offered at $2.15 per cwt Local na. tain States Telephone exchange on No. 2 was at white wheat soft and a wheat quoted good quality soft winter Enough sugar beets contracted to Main Street good nulling inquiry for country run $2.05 and hard spring frost damaged assure capacity run of Gunnison East wheat from Utah and Idaho at the Logan Plans laid and machinery grain. Milling demand at Cincinnati, same Sugar Company's plant this fall. set in operation for organizing crop southern with price. was however, quiet Roosevelt Construction of $70,000 association in every mills practically out of the market; combined chapel and tabernacle pro- improvement county or district of Utah, No. 2 sofe red winter was quoted in here. posed UTAH INDUSTRIAL REVIEW that market at $1.09 $1.10; No. 2 Price Controllers of 50,000 fleeces Denat was white wheat soft NOTICE TO CREDITORS quoted Gunnison Crane Shoppe opened for decided to sponsor local and indepenver at per busheL Estate of Selma Catherine Stenquist, business in building one door south of dent wool pool for 1930. Tooele Plat "C" residents petition, Deceased. Spring wheat offerings were very Gunnison Bakery. to extend sewer to district east of ed Creditors will present claims with was but demand active; milling light Brigham City Plans underway for vouchers to the undersigned at Tre12 protein No. dark northern was Annual Dairy Celebration to be held Broadway. Parawan Bids received for build- monton, Utah, on or before the 20th selling at Minneapolis May 2 at 3c May 3. tool house at city cemetery. ing to 6c over the May price of $1.01; day of June, A. D. 1930. Ogden Five tennis courts will be Sidewalk construction underCarl A. and Augusta Stenquist, c Nephi over 13 was bringing protein in condition Pacific Union for put Executors of the estate of Selma way here. c the May; 14 over, and 15 athletic meet Delta Telluride Power Company Catherine Stenquist, Deceased. v over the May; No. 1 dark St George Dixie Power Company purchased controlling lease on Pah- Lewis Jones, Esq. northern was quoted at Duluth at 1 Attorney for Executors. and No. 1 northern at reconstructing entire transmission vant Power & Light Company. here at cost of approximately Cedar City L. N. Marsden negoti Date of first publication, April 17, A. 9 per bushel. Lake ship- system ating for location to operate clothing D. 1930. ping was officially opened during the $25,000. Date of last publication, May 8, 1930. Delta First livestock show recently store. week and some wheat began, to move eastward from Duluth by boat Durum held here. Milford Plans nearing completion wheat had some independent strength at times during the week but prices for improving American Legion Park. Plans completed for extension of declined about lc and May durum at Duluth closed May 2 at 90 c There Telluride Power Company lines to was some export inquiry but sales supply electricity to towns of Junwere only of scattered lots; No. 1 ction and Circleville. Tooele City International Cleaning amber durum was quoted at Duluth at od and & Laundry Company may rebuild 90c; No. 2 mixed at 85c-92- e No. 2 red at 87 c per bushel. Cana- laundry recently destroyed by fir. Manti Port.il rims erected on Candian spring wheat markets were also lower with No. 1 Mantoba quoted at yon Roads at National Forest Boundary in Manti and Twelve Mile CanWinnipeg May 2 at $1.05. , Pacific coast wheat markets were yons. Price Carbon - Emery Fish and dull and lower. Future markets at Game Protective Association organizPortland and Seattle followed rather ed at recent meeting here. decline the markets. in eastern closely Manti Mutual Investment and Cash prices held about unchanged on Finance Corporation organized here. soft wheats but declined about lc per Corporation bushel on big bend blue stem hard received bid for construction of road white. This wheat was quoted at from Juncto LaVerkin Toquerville Portland May 2 at $1.17 per bushel tion on Zion National Park Highway, for No. 1 sacked; No. 1 soft and and road on Harrisberg bench between western white wheats were quoted at Cedar and St. George. $1.05 and No. 1 hard wniter, northern Zion-M- t. Carmel and tun spring and western red wheats at nel wiu De dedicatedHighway July 4. $1.03 per bushel. Local mill demand Heber Switchboard was quiet and export sales consisted phone office be improved. of parcel lots totaling about 8,000 Salt City-B- ids received tons, mostly to the United Kingdom, for air mail rontracts being 0n two most about equally divided between hard important routes out of here winter and soft white wheats. HoldMonroe Sevier Board of ers where not selling freely notwith- Education acceptedCounty completed Junior new were standing crop prospects High School building. materially improved by warm showers. American Fork A. W. Pulley & borne new wheat was reported sold for Sons spent $3,000 improving feed mill. Cannonville July delivery at $1.05 for white, wheat of 3,035 feet Depth and $1.03 for red wheat. The slow reached at Butler Valley test of Utah export inquiry was reflected in the Oil Refining Co. on Butler Valley smaller exports out of Columbia River structure, near here. market. These totaled slightly less Cisco Drilling operations underthan 850,000 bushels for April com- way at Utah Southern Oil Refining mMwttmmt fc Infer pared with a little over a million Company's State No. 1 welL . . . No. 442 bushels last April. Exports for the! Salt Lake City Bids will be opened IIdd to u . . . widi I period July through April this season April 28 for construction of psychototaled 17,419,000 bushels compared pathic ward at Salt Lake County Hoswith 20,871,000 bushels shipped out pital. ole tad wy y tot gtsi. WS during the corresponding period last Daily passenger service over West dim, mxt tUSka textu year. Demand at Seattle was almost ern Air Express lines between Salt tW mb W the colon entirely from mills and was of small Lake City and Los Angeles resumed, 1 No. white and red wheats volume; Salt Lake City Mrs. Sarah y fiMOUBag4Ml MMQM mo ccfvwnt were quoted in that market May 2 at Mt of construction WDM plans $40,000 $1.06 with big bend blue stem hard three-stor- y building on site of old wbuc Bar pmt OB winter selling at $1.17 and 14 No. Vienna Cafe, 159 South Main Street. . mi 1 dark northern Provo Sutton Market building sold spring from Montana k 'durabU ibeer at $1.12 per bushel in bulk. Cali- to W. W. Ercrvnbrack. fornia wheat markets were very dull. Riverton Five carload shipments Prices at San Francisco were practi- of certified seed potatoes received cally unchanged but the tone of the here for growers of Salt Lake County. market was weak for both milling and Murray Vine and Center streets feed grains, mills were buying but and Wasatch Avenue will soon be little wheat and were reducing stocks. paved. Mixed feed manufacturers and other Spanish Fork First shipment of users of feed wheat also were reduc- 1930 cockerels to leave this city shiping stocks because of the approaching ped by Booth and McKell. new crop offerings. Local wheat was Springvillf! Egsr collecting and 7 neing ottered at per cwt poultry food distributing plant, locat- i or sso. l nard white and No. 1 soft ed at J. O. White building on South white. Northern wheat was being Main Street, began operations. Utah State Agricultural quoted at $l.9a-$- 2 00 per cwt sacked, Logan oeiivered aacK at ban Francisco for College approves budget for 1930, No. 2 soft white. Mills were buying calling for expenditure of $830,000. 95c-9C- c 84c-94- "DOCTOR TOWNS" SAYS $2.00-$2.0- 5 GET SOLD ON THE PLACE WHEREJ5TOU LIVE The problem that confronts every community is one of selling; you have to sell your town sell people on your town. It sounds simple and it is simple when you know how. A few years ago I had the pleasure of conducting a campaign to sell a state. In partically every town someone would say, "That's simple and sounds like a good idea, but who'll buy it?" The procrastmator and the fellow who was satisfied with things as they were would say, "This is a pretty good town; why sell it?" And the knocker would chime in with, "That is a good idea. Sell it and get rid of it" Then there was the individual who said, "Wal, we been gettin' along all these years without it, why should we change now?" to selling Tremonton but Perhaps you think the same as pertains nevertheless lemains that fact or the feel of how think, you regardless live you must sell it sell people on Tremonton if the place where you is to keep pace with modern times. For Tremonton to be modern it must keep up to and ahead of other communities. If others make rapid strides to the betterment of living and working conditions, become more attractive and inpeople are happier, more teresting places in which to reside, ifto the Tremonton to profit by their content and more prosperous, it's up experiences and not only do the same, but outdo them! Selling a town or community is like selling anything, else: First, is there a market? Second, is it marketable suitable for sale as is, so that when sold it will stay sold? Third, to whom is it to 11besellsold it whoU buy it? Fourth, how can it be sold ? And fifth, who the sfllcs force ? Answer these five questions; know the facts, and apply the knowledge to your town, and all problems of growth, progress and prosperity will come as a matter of course. These questions can be answered will be answered in this column, step by step. If you will read them, study them, and do your part you will be the one to gain. In fact, it's up to you? You are to your town the same as a salesperson is to a store. The store may have good goods, excellent stocks, right prices, a good manager, and everything that a first class store should have; but if the clerks are indifferent, not interested whether they give services or not, do not know the stock and dont sell you the way you like to be sold, sooner or later and competition with salesmen and saleswomen who "know their stuff"back serve you the way you want to be served will put the store on a 6treet or completely out of business, and the clerks looking for another ''.." job. Your newspaper, service clubs, chamber of commerce and other civic organizations can spend thousands of dollars and months of time, s business: but in the end it depends on YOU. It's not a duty alone don't. business if do business if you poor you good Yours is a good town can be made a better town so you sold on it. Copyright, 1929, A. D. Stone. Reproduction prohibited in whole or part This editorial Is published by the Bear River Valley leader in with the Tremonton Lions Club. if Weekly Grain out-tur- Market Review Grain markets week mostly lower during the week ending May 3 and prices of May wheat in future markets reached the lowest point of the season under the influence of improved prospects for both winter and spring wheat and continued slow foreign demand, according to the weekly grain market review of the U. S. Bureau Feed Economics. of Agricultural grains were meeting a fair demandde-at most markets but prices generally clined slightly, in spite of the moderate offerings. Rye was lower with wheat while flax had independent weakness. Crop developmens were the principal influence in the wheat market North American wheat prospects were much improved during the week by good general rains which greatly benefited winter wheat in Texas, Oklahoma, and most of Kansas and furnished an ample supply of moisture for germination of spring wheat in most parts of the Northwest. In some areas of the southwest the moisture came too late to more than check deterioration, according to trade reports. Private estimates give the condition of winter wheat May 1 at from with an abanto around 80 77.5 this donment of approximately 70.5 condition and abandonment would indicate a crop around 35 million bushels below last year s harvest. Seeding of spring wheat in the U. S. is practically completed with a rein duction in acreage of about 7 in durum acbread wheat and 15 Cool cording to trade estimates. weather has retarded growth of early seedings but has favored the development of a stronger root system. Canadian spring wheat seedings were 60-7- 0 completed favorable, although the may not equal the unusually large harvest of 1929. Conditions are good in the Scandinavian countries and northwestern Europe but growth has been somewhat retarded by low temperatures. Conditions are about average in Russia with the acreage sown to wheat reported slightly in excess of that a year ago. Seedings in some areas ar backward. Harvesting is now beginning in North Africa and although some local damage has occurred the general situation is favor able. New crop wheat from these countries usually begins to move to market in June. Foreign demand for North Ameri can wheat continued disappointing notwithstanding that southern hemr sphere shipments decreased material ly. About lYa million bushels were shipped from Argentina during the week and about the same amount from Australia. North American ex port sales were estimated at about 3,700,000 bushels but these were most ly of Canadian Manitobas and durum. Several parcel lots U. S. wheaS were reported sold to the United Kingdom from Portland and about 250,000 bushels of hard wheat, from the Gulf were included in the sale reported. United States No. 2 hard winter for May shipments was quoted in Livercompared with pool May 2 at $1.14 for 63 pound quotations of $1.14 for No. 2 Manitoba rosa fe, $1.25 for Australian afloat and $1.20 French wheat for Mav shipment. wheat was being offered for export at 99c per bushel c. l. f. England, borne Indian wheat was reported sold for May and June shipment to Ireland at $1.19 per bushel. Moderate amounts of wheat from Russia and Danubian countries weer also being offered in competition with American wheat. Stock"bf grain in the continental ports of Hamburg, Breman, Rotterdam, Antwerp, Genoa, and Naples totaled about 3,617,000 bushels, a re duction of about 90,000 bushels during hte past two weeks. Liverpool port stocks totaled 4,864,000 bushels. WHEAT: Domestic cash wheat markets were relatively firmer than futures with the limited offerings of good milling wheat bringing slightly higher premiums than a week ago; No. 2 hard winter ordinary protein was quoted May 2 at Kansas City at at the close of April in Alberta, Saskatchewan with seeded in Manitoba, acabout 80 cording to reports to the Manitoba free press. General grains improved soil condition in the prairie provinces. The condition of the winter wheat crop in Europe continues generally Recent warm rains in favorable. Danubian countries have been beneficial and crops are well advanced. The outlook in the Mediterranean countries of Italy, France and Spain is ns -- 90c-$1.- 02 bc-S- 7c-9- 8c-1- 0c $1.03-$1.1$1.01-$1.0- Our Nev FuH-fasteon- SILK ... is one of the outstanding events in a person's life. Give your boy or girl a WATCH and they will have something to remember hte occasion all their life. We have Watches made by firms who have stood the test for years. Beware of the many cheap, inferior makes on the market. STOCKING Merritt-Chapman-Sc- t For Only 98c pk ad m Car-the- J.CPEMKEYCQ ?2.05-$2.0- CLEARANCE SAL Candy for F course, even a com-'monpla- Mother Many Arc Taking Advantage ce box of Candy OP OUR would please Mother because of the sentiment of the gift. But if you present her with a box of candy from Scott's, she'll be simply delighted. It's always a welcome Mother's Day gift. SPECIAL PRICES ON Implements SPECIALLY Graduation CHIFON ALL OF WHICH MUST BE SOLD BOXED for Mothers' Day 50c to 3 JSSW Spreader, the best spreaders ever built, at a price never before quoted. THEY MUST BE SOLD. Also J. I. Plows; U Case sulkys, gangs; Oliver Bar and Wood bar Harrows, also Single and Tandum Disc Harrows; Western Land Rollers, etc.; Osbourne Mowers, Rakes and Binders. Beet Cultervator 20 per cent off. Bargains never before offered in 24 years New Idea Manure y Buy from someone who knows. We have sold and repaired watches for over 22 years and know the ones that will give you service. H. G. Scott Drug Co. Where Savings Are Greatest Phone 47 - Tremonton, Utah 2-w- ay like sales now being made. A dollar saved is two dollars earned. PHONE 35 Farmers Cash Union Tremonton, Utah |