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Show PAGE FOUR BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY. APRIL TRACK MEET HELD Bear River SENIOR CLASS TO PRESENT COMEDY "PEGGY PARKS," FRI. a Box at Brigham FORESTRY TREE DISTRIBUTION ENDS River track meet Monday, Bear River was defeated by five points. The fin al results were the following: 100-ydash Tingey (B. E.), Gard ner (B. R.). Karnely (B. R ): 11. 220-ydash Laub (B. R.) Brag ger (B. E.), Shuman (B. E.): 58. 880-ydash Maero (B. E.), Iver- son (B. R ), Hadfield (B. E ): 2:21.5. Mile Holmes (B. E ), Abbott (B R.), Capener (B. R.) :5:41.1. High Jump Gardner (B. E.), and Hall (B. R.) tie, Bragger (B. E.) and Johnson (B. E.) tie. Broad Jump Gardner (B. R.) 19.6, Hall (B. R.) 18.7, Hawkins (B. R.) In HIGH LIGHTS Elder-Be- ar SNAPSHOTS i d. comedy, "Peggy Parka." a three-ac- t will be presented by the senior class in the B. R. H. S. auditorium Friday night The story centers around a small western town. Three chorus girls land there without jobs or money. They take over the management of a rundown tourist camp. Complications arise when the mortgage on the camp ?f d. Jr' If d. comes due. Hope Chrtstensen will play the title 18.6. Pole Vault Harris (B. R.), Hall role, and Arthur Johansen is the juvenile lead. Other members of the (B. R.) cast include Helen Johnson, Reed Oyl-e- r, Shot Fuller (B. R.) 39' 1", Wlntle Ruth Melster, Alice Christopher-son- , (B. E.) Reeves (B. E.) Clara Korth, .Orpha Heppler, J. Discuss Braegger (B. E.), Wintle Bourne, and Sara Woerner. (B E.), Reeves (B. E.) xx Javelin Wintle (B. E.) 142, Hal! (B. R.) 130, Gardner (B. R.) 127. TENNIS SQUAD WINS Holmes Low Hurdles (B. E.), FOUR OUT OF FIVE Breaegger (B. E.) Winzeler (B. R.) High Hurdles Hall (B. R.), Braeg The Bear River-Bo- x Elder tennis tournament resulted in victories for ger (B. E.), White (B. R.) Medley Relay B. E. 4.18.2 minutes. Bear River, four out of five. Three 880 Relay B. E. 143.5 sec. one double match were singles and won by Bear River. The singles were: Christensen B. R., vs. Harmon B. E. Hallday, B. R., vs. Glenn, B. E. Andrus, B. R., vs. Nelson, B. E. The winning double match was Christensen and Harris, B. E., vs. Harmon and Robinson, B. E. The other double was Castleton and Andrus, B. R., vs. Nelson and Owens, B. E. other than I Toby! ' Win. who., c r e e n appear--' have noes at- - d yyC - A" High scores for Bear River were 18 points, and Gardner, 16 points. Totals were Bear River, 61 points and Box Elder, 66 points. xx 'i i SPRING TENNIS TOURNEY BEGINS ? ROBERT L. the Wagner BUI pending in Congress to make the government a muster-ergea- nt dustrlal ooets and JEWELRY a r .yw r i C 1 .rA-1- V 'jfTTJ if?' M f '1 - imti(um-ht- k i 1 FLOATING POWER Aids Tests for Radio Compass William G. Lear, Inventor of the new Lear Radio Compass, proved the Efficiency of his new equipment before installing a unit In a plane. A complete radio unit was Installed In a Plymouth sedan and for weeks the car rode the "beam to the desired point." The new simplified Lear device makes the radio compass feasible even for the "sportsman" &s IV (Make your appointments NOW) HIGHEST CASH PAID FOR YOUR OLD, DISCARDED GOLD AND W0RN0UT JEWELRY - Estimates FREE Robert Simonsen Jewelry Co. cVimilri ' Ki and fitness to do the work required, they find that the public is abmtJ and even with those qualifications, a hard thing to pleasing do. on. Universal Car illlllililllll year. Running against these three were Howard Shurtz of Garland, for presi dent. Hazel Manning of Garland for vice president, and Melba Jones of East Tremonton , for secretary and historian. Successors to W. E. GETZ, Jeweler -- XX- WWWHWWWWW.:w4 FEDERAL FARM LOANS Interest rate (now) - iy4 GARLAND NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSOCIATION BROUGH Tremonton, Utah GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY SEARCHLIGHT STAFF TO REVEL WEDNESDAY The annual party of the Searchlight Wednesday evening This year, instead of the usual meet Ing at someone's home, the party will be in the form of a banquet and to be held in the cafeteria. It will be quite formal, according to Mrs. Griffin, Searchlight adviser, and several other journalistic workers besides the staff members will be Invited in. Committees were chosen last week to arrange for the banquet. Wanda Mason is in charge of planning the menu; Nelda Pederson will plan the games; Blain Bishop will arrange the program; Beth Innes will send out in vitations; and Helen Johnson will ar range for table decorations. Each chairman has several committee mem bers to help him. staff will be held next I ( One name comes quickly to mind when you think of "The Universal Car." The description is distinctively Ford. No other car is used by so many millions of men and women in every part of the world. Everywhere it is the symbol of faithful service. . . .That has always been a Ford funda- mental. Something new is constantly being added in the way of extra value; Each year the Ford has widened its appeal by increasing its usefulness to motorists, . . .Today's Ford V-- 8 is more than ever "The Universal Car" because it encircles the needs of more than other Ford' ever people any built. It reaches out and up into new fields because it has everything you need in a modern automobile The Ford V-- 8 combines r performance, comfort, safety and beauty with low first cost and low cost of operation and There is no other car like it. BEAR RIVER CITY By Mrs. C. W. Brallsford 1 at Garland'Tremonton Milling Co. j for Sale MICKEY TELLS JIMMY HOW Mickey Cochrane, catcher and manager of Detroit, and former catcher of the Philadelphia Athletics, chatting with Jimmy Foxx of the A's, who succeeds Cochrane, as catcher for the team. Some people advocate a "Back to the Farm Movement" as a cure for social and economic ills. Most of those who advocate this policy invariably advocate it for somebody else seldom for themselves. Some of the people they want to send back to the farm are not very enthusiastic about it and often think it an insincere attempt on the part of one section of society to define the conditions within which another section will find 2. Palmer DeLong, Beth Allen, and. Ada Hansen will serve as studentbody officers next year. They were announced as winners of Monday's elec tion at the matinee dance Tuesday in honor of the occasion. Palmer DeLong, the new president, lives in Wheelon. He has served as president of his freshman class and secretary and historian of the student body in his junior year. He is well known on the football field. Beth Allen ,the new vice president, is from Union. She was vice presi dent of her sophomore class and a member of the Junior Prom commit tee this' year. Ada Hansen, the new secretary, and historian, is from Elwood. She was vice president of the junior class this DR. DON C. JAMES, Optometrist, will be here Saturday AT GARLAND fnr nnhlii nffir fQr thejr intem 204,-00- 1930-193- 5. NEW STUDENTBODY OFFICERS ELECTED Expert Watch - Jewelry - Optical Repairing Have Your Seed Wheat Cleaned and Treated MYn More than 54,000 small forest trees have been distributed for farm planting In Utah from the forest nursery this year, according to Paul M. Dunn, forester for the agricultural extension service at Logan. Shipments for the 1935 season terminated Saturday, said Mr. Dunn, because of the advanced growth, with the total exceeding the 1934 tree distribution by 57 per cent The small hardwood and coniferous trees of 14 species were planted on 306 farms in 26 counties of the state, the report shows. This is an increase of 48 per cent in the number of plantings. Siberian elm is the tree that was most in demand with more than 19,000 planted. Russian olive, blue spruce, ponderosa pine, honey locust, green ash, black locust, black walnut, golden willow, catalpa, Austrian pine, Scotch pine and oriental arborvitae follow in the order named. Salt Lake county leads all other counties in the state with 19,491 trees being planted in that section this year, reports Mr. Dunn. Box Elder county is second, Utah third, Millard fourth and Cache fifth; and more than 3,000 trees were planted in each of the above counties. This brings the total number of small trees distributed from the the 0 nursery at Logan to more than during the past six years, The trees have been planted on farm land for windbreak and wood lot purposes, says Mr. Dunn, as a part of the farm forestry project under the direction of the Extension Service. The nursery is maintained by the Utah State Agricultural college as result of cooperation with the federal y government under the law. The school of forestry has the nursery in charge. Requests for trees are still coming in, Mr. Dunn says, but the orders will be returned because of the advance of the spring weather. The trees will be available next year and plans are being made to increase the capacity of the nursery. , Clarke-McNar- - tennis racket. Finals will be played May xx DIAMONDS, WATCHES and JEWELRY All Kinds of Seed Grains jff J U ..v s& started last Monday with 20 entrants. It is a straight elimination tourna-- , ment. The winner will be awarded a te stock of -- ' SOOTHES OLD JUMBO Sahib Joe Cook, the ole elephant tamer, featured in the weekly broadcast, "Circus Night in Silver-town,- " by the B. F. Goodrich Company, certainly has this elephant's ear, and probably yours, too, every Friday night. (Vou might say that singing to an elephant Insures a jumbo audience!) With Cook are B. A. Kolf e and his circus sliphorn tooters, Tim and Irene, comics, Phil Duey and Lucy Monroe. I JAMES " HONORING HEROES CY PEACE The Memorial Extension Commission urges Aiiierioutis to memorialize local celebrities and their own IkIoviiI dead. Photo hows Memorial Day tribute by a Uoston Are chief ft a predecessor. SIMONSEN JEWELRY CO. up-to-da- kffJC vJv!S 27 of the who will carry a complete and jsrk -- rjT Announcing the Opening Saturday, April production Injure the farmer by raising the price of his purchases." ,,,L vr' pilot LUND, that has stated The spring tennis tournament, be tween the freshmen and sophomores lJ hri I wide attenuoa. Hall. U - for labor unions will increase in-- I ROBERT 25, 1935 Mrs. C. W. Brallsford snent the weekend in rrovo, Utah, where she attended the funeral services held on Friday for her niece, Fae Ann. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Brallsford. Attorney and Mrs. J. Aquilla Neb- eker of Ogden, announce the safe arrival of twin daughters, born Sunday April 21. at the Dee Hospital. Mrs. Nebeker was formerly Miss Minnie Holmgren of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Moore and two children moved to East Garland on Saturday to make their home. fine-ca- up-kee- p. FORD J fcy iSJ!ifc1hr0p-S,an- V-- 8 rouP '"eluding bumper, and .pare tire extra, Small down a,?c",or Credit Company. All body typei have Safety Gla.i throughout at no fmTct |