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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1931 DeweyviUe Riverside ! Mrs. Howard Evans and little daugh ter, of Payson, Utah, visited at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Marble, of this place. Mrs. Sarah Chidester, of Ogden, visited relatives here the week end. Mrs. A. A. Loveland and daughter Edna, returned to .Salt Lake Sunday. Mrs. F. S. Harwood and little daughter, Bessie Lue, of Salt Lake, were week end guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Lish. Lowell Burbank had as his guest, Marion Harwood, of Salt Lake, Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John Becker, of Ogden, were guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Ault, Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Ethel Jensen and son Erial, of Thatcher, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Jensen, here for a few days. Mrs. Victor Burbank had as her guest Saturday and Sunday, her sister, Annie, of Ogden. "jOSaturday Miss Violet Gardner had her guests, Mr. and Mrs. Keller, Mr. and Mrs. bandalls and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Price, All of Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Burbank, of Brig nam, were calling on relatives here .Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lish and family motored to Logan Decoration Day. Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Lish, Mrs. Lester Pierson and Mr. and Mrs. Duett Loveland motored to Brigham City and visited the Brigham cemetery. Mrs. R. C. Fryer and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stefferson and daughters, of Salt Lake, were guests of Mrs. Andrew Neilsen, Jr., Decoration Day. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Chidester, of Salt Lake, were calling on friends here "Friday. Mr. William Beeton passed away early Monday morning after a few weeks illness. He was at the home of "his daughter, Mrs. Ed. Bigler, at Col-linst- Mrs. Annie Chapman, of Salt Lake, was calling on friends here the week end. Saturday, at two o'clock, a short program was rendered in the Dewey--vill- e cemetery and the graves were decorated. Pres. Garence E. Smith, of Garland, gave a splendid talk which Ys enjoyed by all who heard it. A Uuvnber of songs were sang and Miss "Virginia Dewey, of Tremonton, gave a reading. Mrs. Rulen Gardner has as her guest, a sister, from Bear River City. Mr. and Mrs. 0. G. Harwood and children, of Ogden, spent Decoration Day here with relatives. Saturday afternoon, Decoration Day two games of base ball were played on the Deweyville diamond. Garland and Dewey at 11 o'clock, Dewey was victorious. Malad and Deweyville at 3 :30 Deweyville were victorious once more. T5ut at the game played at Malad on Sunday Dewey's team were loosers. Mrs. Lester Pierson and son, Dewey, of Bothwell, are visiting relatives "here for a few days. Maxine Orme, of Honeyville, visited "here with her cousin, Cleo Norr, and her aunt, Miss Tillie Dewey, the week I Edward Tubbs, of Ogden, spent the week end here with his mother, Mrs. Francis Tubbs. Mrs. Glen Walker and daughter, Betty, returned Monday after spending a week in Salt Lake. Mrs. Lloyd Cravens and small 6on, returned to their home at Salt Lake during the week, after spending two weeks at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hales. Miss Ardis Farnsworth, of Idaho, is visiting with her sister, Mrs. Rorfild Hales. Howard Capener visited at the U. S. A. C. last week. Mrs. Ross Rhodes entertained the Cleo Circle club at the home of Miss Peg Capener Thursday. Seventeeen members and five guests were present High score was won by Mrs. Dean Coombs and low by Mrs. Van Fleet. Mrs, Leo Coombs was voted in as a member of the club. Miss Iris Lillywhite, of Brigham, is spending the week with her sister, Mrs. Tracy Welling. J. H. Ward and son, Frank, went to Willard Friday, on business. Roy Grant and family, Mrs. Annie Grant and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Gilmore of Honeyville, spent Sunday at the Wm. Bowcutt home. Mrs. Effie Welling and children, Dale and Afton, of Brigham, were here for Memorial Day. They returned home Sunday. Mrs. Alice Angles and two children, of Rigby, Idaho, are visiting with relatives in Riverside, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Walker and daughter, Betty, went to Idaho Falls. Tuesday morning. Tracy Welling and son, Newell, were in Brigham on business, Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Howell and children, of Pocatello sent Memorial Day with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. M. Ward. The families of Lorenzo and Geo. Bowcutt attended the funeral of a rela tive at Rigby, Idaho, last week. John Bowcutt returned home with them. Mrs. Clara Welling and daughter, Yvonne, were the dinner guests, of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lillywhite, at Brigham, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. M. Ward and Mr, and Mrs. D. J. Jensen made a business trip to Brigham, Monday. Tracy Welling has gone with the National Guard to Jordan Narrows for two weeks. The family of Jesse Anderson and Mrs. Paul Jones, of Malad, motored to Provo Friday to visit with relatives Miss Evelyn Arton, of Provo, a niece of Mrs. Anderson's accompanied them home and will visit indefinately at the Anderson home. Elders Korth, Sorenson and Grover, of East Garland, were the Sunday evening speakers, also J. O. Garfield and K. H. Fndal, of Tremonton. Mrs. Mary Tingey spent a few days in Salt Lake during the week. Joseph Hadfield is visiting at with his daughter, Mrs. Coll-insto- n, w g, shoe-repairi- dm tea prlae-wlnnl- ng lace-maki- ic g, U 0 H. G. Scott Djmg Co. Tremonton, - - Utah for Those Good Fountain Drinks PRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST PHONE 47 UNBELIEVABLE NEVERTHELESS TRUE Dear Friends: You advertise Kruschen Salts for reducing, so I finally tried them and when I started I weighed 219 pounds and when I took them for a year and 3 weeks, I lost exactly 102 pounds. I am 23 years old and I look at least 5 years younger now than I did when I was fat. I have a picture of myself before and after so if you want to see them let me know. I am always telling my friends about the wonderful salts. I am always advertising them. I took 2 bottles every month for a year and 3 weeks. It amounted to ?2.ri for reducing 102 pounds but it was worth it. If I can be of any help to you let me know. Yours truly, Miss Nellie Simpson, 1903 Wayne Street, Swissvale, Pa., ALMOST rtriM p ' j ' " i.i. i '' 11 ifrjg Designs Prize-Winni- fame as a seaport la world wide, will greet visiting globe trotters with artistic beach houses made of modern American building materials, sccord-In- g ..J to B. O. Wallace, director of sales and advertising ol the Masonlte r'lvrned concrete forms, and for a great many Corpora ti c other practical purposes. More than from an tv ie ' 450 similar bathhouses constructed of "Prompt: S of mhtp the same material will be built alongn i;inctng the Alexandria beaches by the Egypt-Iatrf s to Alexiiuruol beaches. government in the near future." iu tb: ..rewjueness Oct. 31, 1930. THE MODERN SAFE WAY RIGHT WAY TO LOSE FAT Just take a half teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast. You can hasten the reducing action of Kruschen by going lighter on potatoes, pastry and fatty meats. Unlike other Salts, Kruschen does n't reduce by rushing food thru your system. Rather it's an ideal blend of 6 separate mineral salts which help every gland, nerve and body organ to function properly. Women everywhere are overjoyed with this marvelous reducing treatment. Frequently pound by pound of surplus fat leaves and soon you possess that trim, slender figure you've always craved. An 85c bottle of Kruschen (Lasts 4 weeks) is sold by leading druggists the world over so start this SAFE method to lose ugly fat TODAY. The Wallace Drug Co. ..Tremonton, Utah sells lots of it. (Adf.) JEXB2 Mr Can (From The Printers' Album, published so thick. by The Challenge Machinery Co., Grand Haven, Michigan) Judge (in Chicago): "The officer said you were doing sixty miles an How's Your Brain? hour." so don't say we This is a trick Defendant: "Yes, sir. But I had didn't warn you. Read this sentence: just stolen the car." FEDERAL FUSES ARE THE REJudge: "Oh, that's different. Case SULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIFIC dismissed." STUDY COMBINED WITH THE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS. Mike and Pat were in the hospital Now, count the F's in that sentence. from a motorcycle accident. recovering count back once don't go and Only said "Mike," Pat, "when you saw those them again. two lights ahead of you, why did you Elsewhere on this page you'll find " the answer, and it will tell you some- say 'Watch me sneak through here.' thing about how good your brain is. There are six F's in the sentence you read in the paragraph above. An wise are fools certain, Bibby; "Only average intelligence recollects three of men hesitate." them. If you spotted four, you're of "Are you sure that, Pop?" above average. If you got five, you "Yes, certain of it." can turn up your nose at most anyIf you caught all six you're a body. Tourist: "Is it an offense to park and a lot too good to be wastgenius, on Main Street in this town?" Native: "No, sir; by gum, if you kin ing your time on foolishness like this. park on Main Street here it's a mirBids opened for grading and suracle." facting 12.846 miles of highway be Magistrate (to prisoner): "How big tween Logan and Garden City in was the brick you threw? Was it as Cache National Forest. Cedar City Local tennis courts big as my head?" Prisoner. "Yes, your honor, but not - Bowers. Pigs and Hair Cuts hair-cuttin- Alexandria. Egypt the Egyptian government recently back to the conducted a contest (or modern and earltae ages of civilisation and whose artistic bathhouses to be built along the shores of the Mediterranean near that city." said Mr. Wallace. "Hundreds of models vers entered In the decontest. The two signs are shown in the accompanying illustrations. These structures were built almost entirely of presdwood. which it made at Laurel, Miss, by exploding chips of waste lumber in sawmills under terrific steam pressure and then compressing the fibrous Into thin, strong, smooth boards. This material Is extensively used as panelling in homes, counter and table tops, movie sets, poured CHICAGO. whom history Del-be- rt Karl Ward was a Logan visitor over the week end. nd. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Davis attended Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Norr and chil- a party at North Garland Saturday, dren motored to their farm at Blue for Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis. Creek Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Jensen motored Fruited Ice Cream 1 junket tablet to thpir home'in Nebraska. They left 1 tablespoon cold water liere Sunday morning. 1 cup sugar Mr. and Mrs. Ervin .Stohl, of Ogden, 1 pint milk were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cleone Hun y2 pint cream saker, of this place, Sunday. cup marschino cherries Hyrum, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. V2 cup crushed pineapple Srble, was taken to Logan Sunday where he was operated on for appencup marshmallows 2 tablespoons lemon juice dicitis. Mrs. A. F. Loveland, of Logan, visPut the junket tablet in cup and add ited here daughters here Saturday and 1 tablespoon cold water. Crush with Sunday. Mrs. M. M. Gardner, Jr. and spoon to lukewarm NOT HOT, stirMrs. N. Peter Marble. ring until sugar is dissolved. Remove Mrs. Horace Gardner is visiting from stove. Add dissolved junket tabrelatives at Thatcher. let, pour into freezer can; let stand in warm room until firm. Cool, pack in ice and salt, and freeze to a mush. Add chopped cherries, pineapple (allowing some of the juice), marshmal-loPorto Rican school children learn (measured after being cut in and small pieces), lemon juice and cream, Finish freezing. Recipe during half of each school day. whipped. The other half is devoted to reading, makes 10 to 12 servings. writing and arithmetic. Other Chocolate Marshmallow Sundae subjects of instruction in1 package chocolate junket clude furniture-makin1 pint milk and raising pigs, chickens, rabbits, marshmallow topping pigeons and goats. This sort of learnPrepare junket according to direcing is designated to supplement the needs of the PortoRican family and tions on package. When just ready to to prepare students for jobs in the serve add 1 heaping tablespoon of marshmallow topping to each dessert. United States. How One Woman Lost 1 02 lbs of fait Egypt to Beautify Beaches With Houses Made of American Boards NASH Here Is What Race Drives?) with Life arid Victory at Stalio Have Decided About Tireo FOR twenty-on- AV JL Wviation demands Twin-Ignition- ? e two years the and a one-ha- lf mile circular brick track, surrounded by a concrete wall to keep the cars from dashing off, has been the crucible where at white heat automobiles' and tires have been tested. Thou sands of men have risked and some have sacrificed their lives, and manufacturers have spent millions of dollars, to the end of making better automobiles Louis Schneider and mechanician Saturday won this race in a heavy eight cylinder car. He made an average speed of 96.629 miles per hour. On the straightways, and in passing cars, he touched one hundred forty miles and better. He drove on 6.00-2- 0 Firestone high speed tires with raging treads. He had no tire trouble. He used Firestone tires w HMHSHeaaSjannaanl Fire$tone Air Commerce Regulations, issued by the United States Department of Commerce, absolutely require two spark plugs per cylinder oa all commercial aircraft motors of over 40 horse power. Aviation demands perfection in power. And so two spark plugs, twin sparks, are employed in aircraft motors to burn the gasoline more efficiently to provide power, speed, safety and economy beyond the reach of single ignition. For the same reasons, Nash engineers, in Nash and Eight-8- 0 Eight-9- 0 motors, also provide Twin Ignition. Of course, you can get along without Twin Ignition. But here, in engineering figures, Is what you are missing: The same motor, with Hum Ignition instead of single ignition, produces 22 more power, 3 miles an hour more top speed, and 2 extra miles of travel from every gallon of And, the pricei of these motored Nash Straight Eights arc 00 higher than the prices of other cars without this Important improvement! Twio-Igoidoo- ed HEITZ & WINZELER AUTO CO. Tremonton Phone 16 ) for tafely, mileage, speed and endurance. for twelve consecutive years they have won the 500-mil- e Indianapolis Endurance Race. were on the winning care in the Pike's Peak Race where a slip meant death, -wereontheG.lM.C.Truck, carrying a two 'ton load, that hung up the coast4o coast endurance record. were on the Studebaker car which on a board track in Atlantic City in 1928 went 30,000 miles in 26r 326 minutes. on 125 buses of the Washington Electric & Railway Company, ran 3,674,266 bus miles during 1930 with only 13 tire delays. on 150 trucks of Safeway Stores, Inc., Firestone cause Firestone experts and engineers have, through 21 years, taken this race as a challenge to tire making. From this race they have developed those vital improvements which have given to Firestone Tires the world leadership in Safety, Mileage and Endurance. 1. Tires ng had to be stronger and able to stand the heat of a hot red brick track at high speed. Firestone met this by developing and perfecting the dipping of cords through a rubber solution to insulate each fibre of every cord to overcome heat, and give the cord greater strength and 58 greater flexibility. This is the patented process used in the making of every Firestone Tire. g 2. The was developed by Firestone to permit greater speed with comfort and safety by increasing road grip, and absorbing shocks. It was made possible by the added strength and flexIn the ibility given by 1925 race some of the drivers tried some of the then new Firestone Balloons; the others stuck to high pressure tires. Peter De Paolo, on Firestone Balloons, made a world's record. All prize winners came in on Firestone Balloons. Now the Balloon Tire is everywhere the standard. Cunt-Dippin- 1 , j " Pneumatic Truck Tires ran 1,500,000 miles in one year without one single hour of delay ' Gum-Dippe- d 3. Double Cord Breaker The higher powered cars and the in speed demanded still more tire toughness. At 100 miles an hour the circumference of m tire and increases by more than this added to the centrifugal force tended to throw off the tire treads. Firestone met this by developing the patented double cord breaker, which give a 56 stronger bond between the tread and the tire body, and also gives a 26 greater protection against punctures and blowouts. Those are some of the great lessons thai Firestone has learned on this racing track, and so the men whose lives and fortunes depend on knowing tires always buy Firestone Double Cord Patented Breaker, High Speed Tires. There were 72 entries. Of these, 40 survived the elimination trials and every one of them was on Firestone Tires. And every tiro was bought and paid for We give von the benefit of al the lessons Firestone has learned from these races. Yon can get from of all the strength and safety la tfarts that the racing driven bay. step-u- ' d ord on road and track be- Cum-Dippin- Gum-Dippe- Tire$ hold all world1 rec- - Balloon Tire NASil OWNERS CALL IT INDISPENSABLE! irittcifiiirmifiil Om Otitav J 3 and better tires. Gum-MHppl- mm (Dwunei? p on the road. 10, Gum-Dippe- Take Advantage of Our Liberal Trade-I- n Plan. Avoid the Rik of Blowout, Accident or Delay. Priceo on These World Record Tires era d, UTAH AUTO & IMP. CO. Phone 28 I the Loudest in Uiom torff Equip uocr Cur Not9 for ScA? Stnmir Driving 1 WINCHESTER j SERVICE f Phone 103 . ( . |