OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3132- 7AGESCC f - FINEST OF ALU LX)VE'S MISSIVEfl They're ELWOOD BICENTENNIAL ' v. " I r THE OPENING OF THE BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION ' r vast a. 9 Mil & :E: Funeral services for Beth Marie, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hun saker, were held last Friday at one o'clock. Bishop Hansen conducted the service. The speakers were J. P. Christensen, E. H. Cornwall, of Walter E. Fridal of this place and S. Pond of Ogden. Special numbers were violin solo by Dr. D. B. Green, solo by Edith Hunsaker. Three quartettes by Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Christensen, Walter E. Fridal and President Hoover will officially nation-wid- e open the George Washington Bicentennial celebration at noon (Eastern Standard time) February 22, when he will de6 ' liver his George Washington address before a joint meeting of Congress, assembled in the House of Representatives in the Capitol. The Judges of Mrs. Aw A. Munns. the Supreme Court, members of the Interment was in the Tremonton 4 Cabinet, foreign diplomats and many cemetery. other distinguished visitors also will Mr. and Mrs. Joe Green, Mrs. Rebe present, and the address will be becca Jacobsen and Mrs. Dot White carried to every corner of America of Salt Lake City called on J. Walter hook-uover a nation-wid- e Green last Thursday. Jennie Miller was hostess to the Following his address, President Hoover will be escorted to the East Apris Midi club at her home last Fristeps of the Capitol, and will give the day. Progressive games were played signal for the singing of "America" ' and delicious refreshments served. Mrs. Jack Erickson and Miss by a chorus of ten thousand voices. It is expected that millions of people Erickson spent Wednesday and will join inj this "sing" as it comes Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. over the air. at Corinne. The ladies did The great chorus gathered at the some shopping in Brigham City. Mr. and Mrs. Clem Jensen and Capitol will be conducted by Walter Damrosch and will be accompanied by daughter, Margery, of Ogden, were the United States Army, Navy and dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. WalMarine bands which will play as a ter Green Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Dodd of Harunit under the direction of John Philcalled on Amos P. Hansen last An crowd is Sousa. per, "inaugural" ip expected to be on hand for these cere Monday. Mrs. Eva B. Hansen also went to East Tremonton last Monday monies. After luncheon, President Hoover, where they celebrated her father Geo. accompanied by the members of the Brough's 78th birthday anniversary. United States George Washington Bi- All his children enjoyed the celebracentennial Commission and the Dis- tion. is a snap. It's all done Miss Norma Andersen in company trict of Columbia George Washington with the aid of cans. Ovenready bisBicentennial Commission will go to with three other girls sang a quarcuits, mixed, cut, canned, the newest Mount Vernon to lay a wreath on the tette at conference Sunday morning, contribution of science to the art of the housewife, have made cooking of tomb of the Father of His Country at Garland. today easy, the boys say. in the name of a united nation. Amos P. Hansen went to Brigham The day when every man will be 3 P. M. there will be exercises City Monday to attend a board meetAt his own chief cook and at the Washington Monument under ing of the Stohl Brothers Furniture is not far in the offing at this rate. the auspices of the various patriotic Co. Left to right: Marshall Newman, Robert Anderson and Leonard Visser societies in the District of Columbia. The basket ball league team playIn the evening the George Washing- ed the Bothwell League team here last preparing a grand canned dinner. ton Colonial Costume Ball will be Thursday in a good game. Elwood held at the Mayflower Hotel under the was again defeated. auspices of the United States George Virgil Francom went to Whites Valerate volume with about three fifths Washington Bicentennial Commission ley Saturday. Vermer Carlson left for Salt Lake of the total consisting of Southern and the District of Columbia Bicentennial Commission. No effort is be- Tuesday to visit his father and other which amount Hemisphere shipments to reproduce the Colonial relatives there. ed to 9,634,000 bushels during the ing spared The atmosphere for this occasion. Bishop and Mrs. V. L. Hansen visitweek, about evenly divided between affair is being managed by experts ed with their son, Vernon and wife Argentina and Australia. Black Sea and every State will be represented by at Plymouth last week. They also visited the school while up there where shipments totaled only 584,000 bushels especially invited guests. of which 408,000 bushels was of RusWhile the celebration officially op- Vernon in Principal. sian wheat. At the close of the mark ens on February 22, Sunday, FebruVerian Anderson came home from et February 5, Argentine Barusho ary 21, will be an active day in the Salt Lake on a vacation last week. wheat afloat was quoted in Liverpool District of Columbia as well as in The Gleaner girls of the M. I. A. at 64c and Australian wheat from every city in America, The United were entertained by their teachers, New South Wales at 56 per bush- States George Washington Bicenten- Mrs. Amos P. Hansen and Mrs. Ira el. No. 1 hard winter for February nial Commission has suggested spec- Anderson, last Tuesday evening, where shipments from Atlantic ports was of ial religious services for George Wash proper table manners were demonNo. 3 Manitoba from ington to be held w'herever fered at 59 people strated. Vancouved afloat sold at Londan at gather to worship. Response from the Mr. Vernon Rhodes was a mutual 581c per bushel. Good native milling various church organizations to this visitor here last Tuesday evening. wheat was quoted at Hamburg at project has been remarkable. It is Milton Anderson and Mrs. Maurine at Paris $1.66ic, at Milan probable that practically all of the Hansen spent the week end from the $1.55 and at Copenhagen at 232,000 churches will hold speciel ser- U. S. A C. College at Logan. at $1.56 56 78c per bushel. American Durum vices honoring the First President on Oh, yes, Elwood is surely proud of was quoted C. I. F. Marseilles at 83c this day. our college student, Milton Anderson, arid C. I. F. Naples at 78 written especially) who registered during the fall term at per A for the United States George Washing the U. S. A. C. with 19 credits and bushel. Domestic cash wheat markets flue ton Bicentennial commission Dy rercy received an "A" on 18 of them. Contuated fith futures and closed c MacKaye will be presented at Con- gratulations Milton, keep it up. He also had won the scholarship to lower than a week ago. Marketings stitution Hall, Washington D. C, on of winter wheat increased, influenced the evening of February 21. This the college. NOTICE QX- by the approaching increase in freight masque is being produced under the Mrs. H. P. Rasmussen has been aprates effictive February 20, and by auspices of the United States George the colder weather which improved Washington Bicentennial Commission pointed Registrar of Vital Statistics incountry roads. Receipts at the prin and the District of Columbia George for Elwood precinct, which also cipal winter wheat markets totaled Washington Bicentennial Commission. cludes East Tremonton, to take the The masque is entitled "Wakefield", place of H. P. Larsen, who has 3,497 cars, or 470 cars more than for the previous week. A part of these named after the birthplace of George receipts represented the transfer of Washington, and portrays in symbolic storage wheat from Interion points from the story of George Washington. Richfield $31,000 armory opened. to terminal markets. Offerings at Five hundred adults and children are Salt Lake City Utah's 1931 proKansas City were materially larger being rehearsed for this production duction of commercial poultry and and the market Weakened. Elevators and the music will be furnished by the products was valued at poultry were fairly good buyers of ordinary United States Marine Band. The to annual report of according the is being printed by protein wheat to secure freight bills Utah Producers BiPoultry Cooperative for use later in the season but mill de United States George Washington mand was rather irregular. At the centennial Commission for use in oth- Association. K. Price P. Nielsen acquired com- close of the market February 5, no. 2 er cities. It is expected that this masof plete ownership all be in the will produced large hard winter ordinary was quoted at que Milford Beaver Copper Co., near 12 percent protein at 51ic cities of the United States during the here, to open up in spring. g3ic and 13 per cent protein at 55ic-57- c Bicentennial Celebration. Vernal Triangle Cafe to move to week the of 22, February During per bushel. The average protein new location of the cars tested during the first sev motion pictures depicting principal Brigham City Plans underway to events life in the of George Washingen months of the current crop year was 11.88 per cent compared with 12, ton entitled "Washington the Man and install gymnasium at Armory. 44 per cent for the same month last the Capitol" and produced by Warner season. Ninety percent of the Janu Bros., will be shown in the Theatres such a showing, and, undoubtedly,, Bipractically every motion picture theaary receipts graded No. 3 or better. of America as a feature of the Demand at Omaha was rather scatter- centennial Celebration. Hundreds of tre in America will be booked to show ed but current arrivals were readily theatres have already arranged for the life of George Washington. taken. High protein brought increas ed premiums but prices on ordinary quality wheat were unchanajed to slightly fower. No. 2 hard winter or : FOR :- dinary protein was quoted with 12j per cent protein bringing 541c per bushel. No. 2 yellow hard ordinary protein sold at 49c per bush el. No. 1 hard winter quoted at St. Louis February 5 at 561c and at Ft. Worthr-deliver- ed group 3 points, at 57Jc-58- c per busheL 14 per cent proat the tein was bringing 60 latter market where country offerings increased as a Tesult of the approach AND HOME ing increase in freight rates. Demand at Denver was rather dull, particularly from local mills. Inquiry from the West Coast was fairly active and fur nished the principal outlet for the current offerings. Prices declined :- sligHly with no. 2 hard winter 13 per : c and 15 cent protein quoted at per bushel per cent protein at f.o.b. Colorado country points. Soft winter wheat prices weakened with other classes under the Influence of somewhat larger offerings and a slow mill demand. At the close of the marGood ket February 5, no. 2 soft red winter was quoted at Kansas City at 61c, 35 at St Louis 54kl561c, and at Cinc cinnati at per bushel. y ASS StxrV a WASHINGTON Dough-Boy- s! nine-month- J s, Tre-mont- r I r n p. Sa-bi- la ! Lewis-Larso- THAT makes a Valentine. A baby beauty, and flowers, and love And why hadn't he written? Why hadn't she? Each had thought the other of course now cared for some one else when letters were not answered at first letters which were uever received. It was only natural to think that. But he had heard, only two months before, when he had been Fine Old Saint down In South America, from some one who had seen her. She was not married. She wasn't supposed to be engaged. And he had come all the way to get her. Nothing would do but that Oh yes, there still was romance. And St. Valentine was a mighty fine By MARY GRAHAM BONNER HE bad been ill, quite 111. When she wag getting a little better some of her friends, conscience smitten, said each unto herself : "I must go and call on Sally and ask her what I can do for her. She's all by herself. II suppose It's the only decent thing to do and I don't believe she'll need anything much now." So one by one they telephoned and this Is what they said : "Oh, my dear, I didn't know you so 111 I thought It bad only I bad been I been a slight cold, and not having heard from you I thought I'd call up I'll come to see what bad happened and see you If I may, I wish I bad ;Anown you were 111 before, I might havt been able to bring you something. But I'll com up today, and see, what dear. I II can do for you. Qood-by- , a so relieved little better, you're jam i Now don't do too much. I simply snint! B by WeBtern Nawgpapar Union.) OVERS beware I A wealth of cheery little red hearts and rampant cuplds are flaunting tbelr charms from shop windows to lure even the wary Into the endearing ways of St Valentine. Asd Just what chance have young There's men and t heir -- tweet hearts when one of these paper arrows may reach home 6r a plaintive verse, as sweet as a sugar plum, succeed In entwining Itself around a lose tendril of a wistful heart. t It Is safe to announce that there Is many a girl who laughs at the loving tricks of her grandmother's day. That would be the kind of honor with a bunch of flowers, a bar pin or a dainty locket. But while girls shorten their dresses and tnit their hair and while fashions In valentines come and go, the heart of the maid Is generally as susceptible to valentines and tbelr verses as that of the lady gen- 1 'p won't bear of , . It 1 g Oood-by.- " a week, one of them at least dropped la to see what ; So, every day for ould be done. i : And this Is what they did: They let her get up and make them tea (when they called around teatlme.) ; They let ber get them Just the "simple lunch she would have had herself' (she wouldn't have had any herself, 'not feeling strong enough to get It!) when they came around lunch time. They let her make coffee and sandwiches when they came In the hoop-skirte- And as they left, at different times, each said approximately the same. II was this: , ., "Now don't do too much, dear. 1 , bear It If you got really 111. l couldn't Tou're looking so much better now. Oh don't bother to thank me. . It was pleasure to do what I could." v Yes, she felt SRdly disillusioned. ' Life seemed to her a very sordid proposition. , She remembered when she was pass-rin, a jewelry shop one day. She had aeen a sign In the window: "We furnish the license free to anyone buying a wedding ring from us." Fancy their having such, a sign! 4 And there must have been people who had responded, or they wouldn't have ucb an advertisement ., She could fancy the mortification and embarrassment of having one's "prospective husband suggest such an ... 4 economy. f Alas, though, something had gone entirely wrong with her romance In llf& Now, Valentine's day was ap- proachlng, and once more she knew - she would have no flowers to wear, while all her other friends had them. . It had been bard. Illness, and nothing now to buck ber up. She was lonely and young. It was worse, she -felt sure, than being lonely and old. Ber mind went back to the days , when she was sixteen. There was Geoffrey Pratt, , .They bad talked of tbelr future together but they were very young and Geoffrey bad , both s gone away that ' next year. .She had ever seen him since; It was over ten . To think of being able to ( years. peak of something as having ten years before. It made her jfeel so old. JM.., Suddenly ber mind was aroused from these thoughts by a ring at the d erations ago. "What are those things?" questions a mystified buyer, pointing to a row of eve-alng- lacy confections. "Would a girl really like one of them?" Like them I She couldn't help It ; e they were the very essence of the valentines. Through a paper lace gate was visible a graceful lady In billowy skirts and a pair of love birds, shaded In delicate lavender. Quite a contrast to the satirical and humorous concoctions which were popular a few years ago..; But any older woman will say there Is nothing new about them. They are Imitations of the and fanciful expressions common years ago. , old-tim- hand-wroug- Little Old Lace Br i WILLIAM HERSCHELL ,'. w ..w, il , r ' 1 '." is 4 bap-open- Was she dreaming? Could It bar; f "Why Geoffreyr she stammered. "Is It your ,. j "Such a question," be laughed. And then but why pry lnte those precious moments of berst lie bad come back I In real life, too, and clad In the armor of romance. And tomorrow 8 1 Valentine's day Be had bad , they were to be married. dreadful time getting back for that pedal day I rf U Um mImHh a( AuU Lnf Stm, LITTUt Yh kr m ScrU O the (U4 cnit, turn Un Drawainf la faur U a Hnr Yuth M) toU. k itinatl hMtU aywit Umk OY (till laac At ka alia vaa la OrTa aaaki WaMa ta aat Ika M aurartoa BaamtAff trmm aarapturaS ayaa. AO ha cravas la Ju ta kaaw Naaa but kJa cauld alaaaa bar atl cafl It CYNICS rinf CaaTt auppy-lav- a, Iraaa aaara baavaa uwtt van Tkaa tha kaart Ikraka bars al yaw, LMtla ali laa vahatlaa, HarMat af AuU Lai Byaat Mul-fW- w in mil "fW'rtfirfr Weekly Grain Market All Hearts Bow to Good Saint Valentine i tarn When the little woman decides to go home to mother, the college-brea- d man of the future can be nonchalant! A course in plain and fancy cooking for men has been decided on by members of the Alpha Delta Phi House on the University of Chicago campus, just to strike a blow at old man Depression. On "cook's day off" they cook their own. The boys even bake their own biscuits these days. But the course in ht Grain Markets Unsettled; Strength Early in the Week Offset By Weakness Later Grain markets were unsettled during the week ending February5, inf fluenced by the disturbed situation in the Orient, rapidly changing weather conditionsin the domestic wheat belt and further offerings of new wheat from the Southern Hemisphere, recording to the Weekly Grain Market Review of the United States Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Wheat futures advanced rather sharply early in the week when severe weather in the Central West threatened damage to winter wheat but later declined when the weather moderated and trade reports indicated no serious crop injury. Rye, corn and other feed grains mostly followed the fluctuations in wheat. Flax was weaker under a continued slow demand from crushers. WHEAT: World wheat markets while somewhat irregular, strengthened slightly with some improvement in European demand following the relaxation of milling restrictions in France and Italy. Price advances, however, were held in check by continued liberal offerings of new crop wheat from tde Southern Hemisphere. Liverpool prices advanced slightly during the week and continental markets developed a firmer tone with more active buying of foreign wheat. Italy has been a liberal purchaser of foreign wheats, particularly from the Southern Hemisphere since the change in the milling quota and stocks of foreign wheat in Italy have increased while stocks of domestic wheat, particularly in Southern districts, are reported low. Spain has purchased Argentina wheat during recent weeks with supplies of native wheat reported relatively small. French purchases, including principally Manitobas have become larger following the increase of the allowance of foreign wheat in milling mixtures to 10 percent. German trade in foreign wheat continued unimportant but the relatively light offerings of native wheat were readily absorbed by domestic millers. Australian business in foreign wheat was restricted by the insufficient allotment of foreign currency. Crecho Slovakian markets were very dull with buyers showing little interest and prices tending lower. Moderate trading in spot Russian wheat was in evidence in Belgian markets with some interest apparent in American hard winters and Danubian wheat A good business, particularly in Argentine wheat was reported in Dutch markets. Oriental grain markets were" inactive under the influence of disturbed political conditions. The wheat, flour and cotton exchanges and most of the Chinese banks in Shanghai have been closed. Shipping Is disrupted and wharves congested, according to Agricultural Commissioner Dawson. No American wheat, exclusive of flood relief irrain, arrived at Shanghai during January. Two cargoes of Australian wheat arrived at the last of the month and one cargo of Canadian wheat was reported sold. Arrivals of native wheat at Shanghai continued to be a small fraction of last years arrivals. World shipments continue of mod- - biscuit-bakin- g bottle-wash- er 5-- 8c c. c, 5-- folk-masq- 7-- 8c ue ( lc-2- $10,-040,0- folk-masq- 00 ue "News-Advocate- ." 51c-515- c, 49c-49- 1c Hardware-Lumbe- r Coal lc-61- ie FARM SUPPLIES PAINTS AND VARNISHES SEE 43c-44- 60c-5- 2c Farmers' Cash Union "Your Phone 7lc-59i- Will Our Best Asset" Tremonton, Utah I |