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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1931 Penrose Back to the Simple Life I 0O0 Mr. and Mrs. Perry Stanfill and Mrs. Nettie Grover were Salt Lake visitors on Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Call of Salt Lake is spending the week with their daugh, ter, Mrs. Engvar Peterson. Mrs. Harmon Granger and son, Hor-le- y, spent Saturday in Logan with her daughter, Hellen, who is attending the A. C, Miss Wanda Peterson has gone to Salt Lake where she has employment. Mr. and Mrs. Starlin Stanfill and Mr. and Mrs. Perry Stanfill were Og-de- n visitors on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Miller and Mrs. W. M. Miller spent Wednesday in Plymouth with relatives. M. I. A. hallo we'en dance on Fri-y- y evening was a great success. Everyone had an enjoyable time. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Miller are Salt Lake City visitors. M. I. A. conjoint meeting held Sunday evening was very interesting. Bro. Elmer Anderson and Mrs. Caddie of the stake board were in attendance and ppoke words of encouragement. Several of the Primary officers attended Primary Union meeting at Garland on Saturday. Leonard Peterson was among the lucky hunters to bring home a deer. LaRue and Howard Nelson of Brig-hawere Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Berchtold and family. German Remedy Stops Constipation 30-Ye- ar "For 30 years I had a bad stomach and constipation. Souring food from stomach chocked me. Since taking I am a new woman. ConstipaAlice tion is thing of the past." Burns. Most remedies reach only lower bow el. That is why you must take them often. But this simple German remedy Adlerika washes out BOTH upper and lower bowel. It brings' out all gas 3 rids you of poison you would never itve was in your system. Even the FIRST dose will surprise you. Srott (Adv.) Drug Co. Tremonton, Utah. Ad-leri- When You Think HARDWARE ka ( Are we reverting to those good old days when individuals and tribes swapped skins and foodstuffs without having to count the change? The Federal Farm Board, with a burdensome surplus of wheat, is giv- -, ing 25,000,000 bushels to Brazil in change for 1,500,000 bags of coffee, a commodity which has been dumping in to the sea for disposal. The logic of the transaction is as simple as it was in tribal days. We need coffee which grows "by the grace of God" in Brazil, and Brazil needs wheat which grows here in spite of locusts and Farm Board exhortations. So we swap. Nor do the complications of modern trade interfere with the deal. Brazil has an import tax of approximately s of a cent on every two and pounds of wheat and, while we have no tariff on coffee, Bra zil does maintain an export tax of about S2.50 a bag on that commodity. These factors seem to have been shrug ged away by the two countries which for their completed arrangements brotherly exchange. If tariff barriers are so easily surmounted in this instance, why not in others ? Why not give our extra cotton for sugar and tea? Why not procure that extremely necessary commodity, rubber, from nations that can produce it by giving them machinery or food they must import? All the ponderous trade devices of civilization; all the tariffs, cartels, and monetary systems of international exchange which the peoples of the earth have built to facilitate trade, seem but to have clogged the wheels. Now in a great quagmire, we look for something simple; as simple as letting things grow where they do grow and trading what we have for what we MAKE GOOD OR WE DO Fronk Chevrolet Co. Phone 21 Tremonton, Utah More two-fift- Review need. One defect of vision is far sighted-nes- s. Good many people seem to be able to see a store bargain in1 some distant city, when they can't see an equally good or better one in their home town. You can't get people out to an entertainment, unless it is in some way publicly announced. And similarly you can't expect to get people out to see your bargains in a store, unless you announce them through The following record of industrial activity lists items showing investment oi capiiai, employment of labor and business activities and opportunities. information from which the paragraphs are prepared is from local papers, usually of towns mentioned, and Ogden Hodgson & Under New Management of L L. GLENN McClenanhan, week, will be entitled to a guess on the weight of the Big Cheese Three prizes will be given for the three nearest guesses. Make your guess. Get you a piece of the Big Cheese. II I i Wjfefer Mfflry Kifchell Merrill Copyright by the Bobbs- - American Food Stores Company ... Edward had been a fool He knew he had been a fool and 4 is told in this unusual story by this unusual writer . . . You will like it because you will find in it many of the condi. Just why tions that parallel the lives of you and yours or your friends It is a real American ... . . . POPULATION FOLLOWS MONEY People in a community like Tremon ton are anxious to see their home town make progress. They want to see it grow in population and business and wealth, and are keenly disappoint ed if it fails to do so. One way to contribute to such fail ure, is for these people to spend their money away from home. It the mon ey leaves the town, people have to leave it too. No way has yet been dis covered, in the ordinary community at least, to create advances in popula tion and business, while large amounts of money are flowing out of town. Cost MILLING CO. iro rcturci 9 c QUEEN'S TASTE 15c 15c NOODLES 3 PKGS. inuui 'inrtiui ium.v nini wm Your heating problems solved and at a Price you can afford to pay. CIRCULATING HEATERS Now for Only 29.50&37.50 SEE THEM IN OUR WINDOWS Wilson Lumber Go. "Everything To Build Anything" Phone 11 Tremonton, Utah QUART CANS LARGE CATSUP 17c QUART CANS 3 3 STRING BEANS w. s. Beginning Next Week SWEET CORN K.K.3cans 25c FANCY KRAUT b p Farm Bureau News Mr. and Mrs. Ciril Wright of Og- The survev made hv U. S. Ai C den and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hansen judges in the home beautification work of Bear River City, visited relatives was recently made and Garland was here last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elias Anderson great ly enjoyed the wonderful program given to parents last Friday at the U. S. A. C. at Logan. Mrs. Frank Aggvecola and children of Ogden, visited relatives here LARGE PORK & BEANS dm 4 H&aisins 4 seedless 3 Elwood Garland 4 We seek hail iltt - Unusual Bargains 7th was glad of it. . . Inc. - Tremonton judged as the winner of the silver loving cup, which had been won the two previous years by Portage. The following towns: Garland, Tremonton, Portage and Deweyville were the participants, being judged on the removing of dead trees and stumns. back yards improved, fences improved, fences painted, homes painted, trees planted, care of manure, lawns and flowers, homes beautified, trees nrun ed, lawns well kept, lots cleaned of Mr. and Mrs. James Wade and daughters, Thelma and Jennie Marie Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Wade and baby Wallace Dean, Miss Amy Robins of Stone, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. weeds. rrn Leo Petersen Monday. ine louowing points were given Mr. and Mrs. Royal Petersen and these towns: Garland. 8800: Tremon children of Perry, visited relatives ton, 6060; Portage, 7820; and Deweyhere Sunday. Mrs. Amelia Parkins re- ville, 3240. turned with them for a few days. The Kings of the Kitchen, club Mrs. V. L. Hansen, Mrs. Kelstrum boys delightfully entertained their and Mrs. Atkinson, teachers of the mothers at a breakfast Wednejwlav junior girls served a breakfast to the evening at the homes of their leader. girls last Tuesday evening demonstrat Miss Mae Taylor. Mrs. P. E. Ault, County club advisor ing their class work. Miss Dorothy Christensen organized was also a guest These boys had a music class in school among the prepared a menu consisting of apple grammer grades. She entertained the compote, grains of gold breakfast food class at a hallowe'en party at the cocoa, eggs au gratin, muffins, jelly school house. All had a very fine and peaches and cream, and they servMiss Pearl Mortensen was on the ed their guests in a splendid manner. sick list last Tuesday and Wednesday The club members are Reed Taylor, Mrs. Vera H. Hunsaker of Honey- - Richard Anderson, Keith Holdaway, ville took her place in the school room. Junior Anderson, Whitney Bates and The Apres Midi club had a real hal- - Shirley Beard. owe'en party at Mrs. Gladies Niel A short program was given at which sen's home. They had a very wonder time Mrs. Dick Anderson tnld ttt. ful time. what club work had mpjint to her hov. Miss Johanne Johnsen and Dorothy and Richard responded with a short Hansen came up from Salt Lake Mon taut in what It had done for him. Mrs. Ault nrp&pntvl Aarh hw with day to attend the funeral of grandma Hansen. Miss Johnson just returned a beautiful club nin an a reward for from a nursing trip to Boston. She id their completion of a successful year's chum of Mrs. R. P. Hansen and will woric m a 1st year foods club. All the mothers exDressed their annrwiation visit a few days. The Hallowe'en dance was a great of the untiring efforts of the leaders success in good time and financially. and wished the club might continue Another dance will be held here Fri another year. An official board meeting of the day. county Farm Bureau was held at the Midland Parlors, Monday evening, and Castle Dale Telephone ard power transacted all business pertaining to ine pole on West Street mr ved from the closing of the year. Arrangements center of street to new focatfm at side were made for the annual meeting to rvt - n -a r of street, preparatory grading l.itc- V.l noomii n?iuJ bi il. ine commercial iiuo Btreet. Monday evening, Nov. 16 at 8 o'clock.1! SODA CRACKERS f , 3 POUNDS B. P. FULL GALLON HONEY REAL NIPPY CHEESE POUND Mothers FANCY RED 2 LBS. LARGE FANCY CELERY 35c 89c 25c china oats 29c 4-- H ,wiYXMJiiir On Cornor North of Ford Garage Everyone making a purchase Saturday at the American Food Store, or during this have never offered our readers a better one. $1.60 vfiraiT TREMONTON WRECKAGE COMPANY IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS Make Your Guess story about American people PURINA DAIRY RATION viMifjJi architects, drawing plans for U. S. Department of Agriculture forest building; structure estimated to cost !. oOo hs Milk-Le- ss GARLAND-TREM0NTO- N Utah Weekly Industrial four-tenth- THINK WILSON "Everything To Build Anything" Phone 11 JAGE THREE CRISP FRESH LARGE 4 FOR 80's 29c 5c 25c This Will Be the Last Chance This Year For Good Tockay Grapes At Such a Real Low Price. FANCY T0CKAYS GRAPES 3 POUNDS BUTT DATES nuuU SALMON POT ROAST CHOICE YOUNG BEEP PER LB. 10c 15c 29c STRICKLY FRESH POUND 16c BACON PORK ROAST SHOULDER CUTS SUGAR CURED rOUND PER La I7c |