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Show 9 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY PACT SIX 20. 1936 , New Coast Plant of Studebaker Doubles Production Schedule l Still Lags Behind Orders ADVENTURERS' CLUB of coast-buil- d Steady employment, increased pay rolls, large purchases success is the this outstanding etc. storyj tires, batteries, springs, bumpers, f""-- 6 fit studebaker s new racinc oasi iacwry wmm additional dot- - until on February 1st unfilled order j lars into circula were 49 creater than at the bcr.ai tion each week nine of the year. throughout the "Within thirty dayt after mm western states, nouneed our new coast jactory thus contributing UmnVm mwtmmA 4tlT itM mMftiOM the to materially enthusiastic response or prosperity of this motorists showed us tMl (M had region, in the greatly underestimated this market opinion of C. K. and that in all likelihood we would Whittaker, Pres- be compelled to double our original ident of the Stu- - production estimates," Whittaker' stated. "Plans were accordingly forwe C. K. WHITTAKER mulated," he vontinuedr-unCorporation. situation ha4 of the now face happy Pacific the on sales Automobile current deliveries fall suhstani Coast will lead the per capita sales ing hfihind this already doublea tiallv first for the nation as a whole for the l schedule. quarter of 1936, Whittaker predicts, production " feel sure that generally in and to support his contention he refers to his factory's deliveries, which proved economic conditions here onj innortant factorsl for the month of January were 21 but I feel, success, of our on in cars number the than present greater order January 1st, which number of too, that the beauty, smarny smem performA cars it had been planned to manufac- interiors, and i,itm nt mi nretent ears, as ture during that month. Despite this increased production on the part of emphasized by the recent Gilmorel the factory to meet dealer needs tconomy nun, are onngmg throughout the territory, the bank of baker much favorable attention from .unfilled orders continued to increase discriminating motor eat huyorf, True loveliness is beauty unadorned. lit1' Cairo I Excitinr Citv Cairo. Kgypt's capital and lareest city lu Africa, is one of the most ex,1 By Phyllis Summers citing cities in the world. The minarets are the most Beautiful in the Levant Mrs. D. B. Marble and daughter, There are 500 mosques in the city. lu Delora and Maurine, were weekend the building of one. Garni Sultan Has Simmons A. of J. home at the guests sail expended $3,000 daily for three and family of Brigham City. years and when it was completed, cut I.r. and Mrs". Leslie Allen and off the architect's hand so that he daughter, Lois, and Mrs Wilma Mills could not create another like it. The were visiting in Ogden Friday. Citadel, built about 1106. contains m Mr. and Mrs. George Payne and mosque of oriental alabaster. The family were Sunday visitors at the mosque of Tulin, built in the Ninth home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Firth. century, stands on a hill whereon Mrs. Ed Rock and Burt Peterson of tradition asserts the Ark rested after Brigham City were visitors at the the flood. Out in the river lies Rhoda home of Mr. and Mrs. James Sumisland, where it is said the pharaoh's mers, Saturday. daughter found the infant Moses in thi bulrushes. Miss Wilma Mills spent the weekend in Ogden. While there she at-- , j tended the funeral of her uncle. were Forest of the Sea J. Mrs. Newman J. Mr. and Trunks of seaweed eighteen inches visitors in Ogden Monday. . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Thompson enter- - in circumference, with branches and tained at a very delightful wedding leaves like a tree, were discovered resupper in honor of their daughter, cently by a botanist in the Antarctic ocean. It remains to be proved wheth Mrs. Herman Eberhardt, Jr., formerly Miss Leora Thompson. The, guests er they can be used as B re wood. Un mapped Jungles of vegetation lie be were Mr. and Mrs. Chris Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thompson and neath the waves. The marine explorer daughters, Grace and Lois, Mr. and glimpsed a real forest of seaweed Mrs. Herman Eberhardt, Sr., and when Investigating, in his bathysphere, daughter, Gertrude, John Eberhardt the continental shelf off the coast of and Miss Shirley Nielsen, Carl Eggli Chile. Some of the stems towered to a height of 600 feet, three Inches higher and Miss Nina Eberhardt. than the world's tallest tree. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Larson returned from a trip to the east Tuesday. While there they visited Mr. and Mrs. Banned Unfair Competition Floyd Stokes. On their trip they vis-- 1 During the Middle ages, Belgiui: ited many places of interest. Mrs. had very strict laws to prevent wha; Larson was formerly Miss Marjorie it considered to be unfair competition Stokes. Mrs. Kenneth Pasket of Henifer is In at least one town, craftsmen jmr visitirs with her parents, Mr. and vendors of goods were not or:!y for bidden to advertise but they were not Mrs. Eli Anderson. , Lowell Summers, a student of the even allowed to stand in their door ways for Cear tFey might blo.v thei: A. C, at Logan, spent the weekend noses or sneeze in order to att;:;et th with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarattention of passers-by- . Isaac Hers.'i ence Summers. '.v i:i Colour" Vnr!; Miss Melba Williams spent the week kowitz. Weridy end at the home of Mi:s Delia Newman of Thatcher. Mr. and Mrs. Nels Anderson were scr.'catives in a quandary. She war. in Ogden on business Monday. to have unofficial observers permitted Mrs. LaVon Williams entertained who have no voice. Was she to conat a birthday party in honor of her sider this conciliatory or irony? son, Leslie. Twelve guests She evidently was a bit chagrinned were present. Games were played to note that when she. mad and a delicious lunch was served. picked up her dolls to got go home, noFriday night the Bothwell ward pri- body cried and the game wasn't bromary will sponsor an apron and over- ken up. all dance at the ward hall. Papers all over the world are reMrs. Irvin Summers spent several minding Japan that all acts have in Thatcher with her mother, their consequences days and if she doesn . Mr.-A. N. Wight, who is ill at this begin playing the international game time. with a little respect for rules she must blame no one but herself if she gets excluded in the future from some JAPAN'S WITHDRAWAL games she may want to play in. BOTHWELL 'is First end By FLOvD G:E Famous Keadiins time, boys and girls, it's Harry Schweinsberg who tells us the sad tale of his greatest thrill. It's a sad tale, mates, because Harry .failed in what he set out to do, but if you ask me, it takes a brave man to admit failure, and even if Harry was scared to death I think a lot of us would have been the same in his position. Skip back, through the years, to the day when aviation was in its swaddling ciotnes. in those days 1911 an airplane was a makeshift contraption of bam doo, canvas and piano wire. The pilot and passengers If one was foolish enougn to go up sat on small wicker seats with no floor under them. The motor was in back of you and pushed you, instead of pulling as they do today. Very often those motors pushed co hard that they pushed you right into the ground and you stayed there until they dug you up and buried you somewhere else. Nevertheless when Harry beard that Glen Curtis that grand old pioneer of heavier-than-aflight wanted student fliers, he Jumped at the chance. Harry was living in Cleveland then and Curtis had tal ' n over the Municipal Baseball park on the lake front for his landing field. ir Hair-Raisi- ng El-va- n, . - panic-stricke- n wide-ope- of the seat he was so overcome. Somebody gave him a shot of brandy and then Curtis took one look at him and Harry's air training was at an end. Harry's Cc.:ijn:;a Iow to Stay on Ground, "Not fitted for "You know," hr ground thoujlit v. 2 v.i flier glum!;. "Yep," he said, "an And that, boys sn.i cryptic comment. i;:.-n'- s fl.vin:;," him. - ' - .j," . !:' '": But I wouldn't vo... si in the "supreme tt t." great flights sacntianl their i S By ; --4 d '8' Saturday. Albert Bessinger Coal Company spent the i AND UP AT Tremonton, Utah PENROSE - FRIDAY - FEBRUARY i '.U.H. 11 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 of Tremonton, Utah A Good Time Assured H 1' HIH1MI II 1 1 1 1 new low prices now make it easy for you to own a big, STARTLING It takes co little gas styled new Studebaker. to run and so little oil you'll wonder why you ever thought the lowest priced cars were economical. And talk about roominess and beautiful interiors this 1936 Studebaker has It all over any cur you've seen. The body, finished in high visibility lacquers nine coats deep, is built like a battleship . . . smooth seamless steel from top to floors reinforced throughout by more girders of steel than any other car. rich-lookin- g, box-sectio- n It's the world's only car with the unique automatic hill holder which keeps you from rolling back after you come to a stop going straight-lin- e hydraulic brakes and finger-tiuphill. Feather-touc- h steering, too. New 1936 - 21 LAUB'S ORCHESTRA I Costs just a trifle more than the lowest priced cars and gives surprising gas economy! Forget about Studebaker price as they used to be. This big, powerful, surprisingly economical new Studebaker sells for just a little more than the lowest proced cars and It has everything you ever wanted in a car many things you never dreamed of getting. car Write for folder telling why a Studebaker is the best for the farm home. 0 SPOT DANCE Everyone Invited THE FACTORY p, Read the Want Ads LEAP YEAR Q G STUDEBAKER! weekend at her home in Brigham. Supt. J. M. Gaddie left Tuesday for Salt Lake City where he will attend the U.-- I. Sugar company convention. Mrs. James Timme.man is visiting with relatives in Salt Lake City this week. Mrs. George Henrie and Mr-- . Clyta Gunn are spending the week in Salt Lake City. Miss Tubbs of the district school faculty, spent the weekend at her home in Riverside. Mrs. Josephine Harris and Mrs. Polly Smith were business visitors in Brigham City Monday. j Mi3s Bernlce Christensen MONEY-SAVIN- GOOD-LOOKIN- G Service llv. cr.d Mrs. Lewis O. Johnson were in Brigham City Sunday where they attended funeral services for a friend of the family. Mr. and Mrs. V. Wm. Johns were Ogden visitors Monday. Mrs. Amy B. Johns, mother Johns, came home with them and will visit here for a time. P. C. Petterson returned from the Dee Hospital Saturday. His eye is much better. Mrs. C. J. Wood and Mrs. P. C. Petterson were Ogden visitors Fri- CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS day. The United States Civil Service Mr. and Mrs. Glen Baron and son, Leland, visited with Mrs. Baron's par- Commission has announced open com ent", Mr. and Mrs. George O. Nye on petitive examinations as follows: Associate Curator (archeology), Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Capener, Sam $3,200 a year, National Museum, Capener and Elmer Hall were business Smithsonian Institute. Associate public health engineer, visitors in Ogden Monday. Mrs. George O. Nye and Mrs. John j $3,200 a year, and assistant public W. Chambers visited with relatives health engineer. $2,600 a year, U. S. and friends in Brigham City Satur- Public Health Service, Treasury De partment. day. Full information may be obtained Miss Helen Garrett spent the week end in Ogden visiting with her friend from the Secretary of, the United States Civil Service Board of ExamMiss Ruth Jensen. Mr. and Mrs. Will Procter of Pan- - iners at the post office or customquitch, were guests on Sunday of Mr. house in any city which has a post and Mrs. M. T. Furlong. Mr. Procter office of the first or the second class, or from the United States Civil Seris a brother of Mrs. Furlong. Miss Mildred Lund attended the vice Commission, Washington, D. C. 3.vwball carnival at Brigham City, your home. It saves money for you by giving mere heat for your fuel dollars. Use ONLY it in your present furnace or .50 heating stove. No special equipment to buy. Order a PER TON DELIVERED trial ton or two today. GET A BIG people in the plane thought so, too." "s s::d story of his first and last nose dive. jiayhe you were lucky you did fail who blazed the way for today's 'li (i:lilg it. " GARLAND Sirs. Geo. A. Beal It is cleaner . . . makes no ash and practically no soot or smoke. Dustless delivery. Eliminates the job of hauling ashes oat cf Surprise the Family Bud tried to console "50 per cent of those people on the . j c. Harry looked at the daredevil NC Petroleum Carbon produces 23 more heat than average coal . . . burns steadier . . . longer .. . requires less attention. Tremonton, are visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Adams. Mr. and Mrs. MaiU Dayley and Mrs Ellwood Bingham and little daughter of Twin Falls, returned home on Wednesday after spending the past week with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Korth. Mr. and Mrs. George Coombs, Jr. motored to Salt Lake City over the 'weekend to visit Mrs. Coombs' sister, who is ill. David Larson accompanied his son, Glen, to Los AngeleTltteojiay. trip. Glen will remain for a short term of school work. They left Salt Lake City Friday. Miss Helen Atkinson spent Sunday afternoon with her sister, Mrs. Leland Watt in Thatcher. Last week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Korth, were their con, from Spanish - Fork, daughter, Clara, who is attending the B. Y. at Provo and Miss Charlotte Yancy of Salt Lake' City. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Oleson, daugh- -' ters, Edith and Bertha, and son, Lyle, Mr. and Mrs. William Korth, Ray and Ella Korth, Mr. and Mrs. John Bates and Mrs. Danner, all relatives of Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Kcrth were here Tuesday evening at the dance in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dayley. The shower and dance given in the hall Tuesday evening after M. ward was being tuned up and he looked forward to the day when he would be called A. in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Mark on foe the "supreme test" The "supreme tesfvvas the name they gave yowi I. Dayley, was largely attended. The first trip In the air and took the place of the present medical examination. newlyweds received many useful gifts. "At last the day came," Harry writes. 'Bud Mars, famous pilot Mrs. Dayley wos formerly Miss Mabel of his day, was to give me my baptism of the air. I was strapped Into Korth. They will make their home the passenger's seat behind Bud tandem fashion. lyjrythlns tFSllQjf in Murtaugh, Idaho. me wae wide open with no protection from the wind for passenger er Mr. and Mrs. Fred Petersen and "The plane was a biplane, of the early Curtis type, with three wheels ffiti family were called to Brigham City s landing gear, in triangle lorm. une lone wneei in me triangle was in ppnj Saturday by the serious illness of under the elevating planes and a network of piano wires ertti ctossob In all Mrs. Smith, mother of Mrs. Petersen. directions about me. Willard Wood, Dr. T. E. Betensen and Chester Boss of Garland, repreDive Earth. a to Beginning senting the Seventies quorum, were Twelve men held the frail craft on the ground while Bud raced the motor. speakers in church service Sunday The whole contrivance shook like a leaf In a storm and when they let go we Mr. and Mrs. Evan Gee, alevening. bumped along the runway and shot into the air." so of Garland, pleased with vocal Well; sir, Harry goes on to say that he got the thrill of his life numbers. flying like a bird, but when the plane, after reaching a height of about Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Adams spent 1,000 feet, suddenly dove straight for the earth his thrill turned to a the week visiting with their daughchill. .. The earth was coming up to him at an alarming rate and he noticed, to ter, Maud, in Salt Lake City. The regular monthly work and busi his horror, that a crowd of about 2,000 people, gathered to see the flight, were ness meeting of the Relief Society was now directly in the line of the plane's fall ! held Wednesday afternoon at the The Plane Miraculously Straightens Out. home of Mrs. E. S. Hansen. There Harry's heart came into his mouth. He yelled his head off, but even if was a large attendance. A social Bud didn't have wads of cotton in his ears he never could have heard a voice hour followed the business meeting at over the roar of the motor. So Harry went" berserk, grabbed him by the which a dainty tray luncheon was shoulders and shook him frantically and pointed to the ground. Then he threw served by the hostess with Mrs. Mahis strapped body around wildly from side to side in a frantic attempt to sway bel Oyler and Mrs. W. E. Hansen as the plane to an even keel. He knows differently now. , sisting. crowd and When the plane was almost on top of the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Oyler and If there is one thing harder on the a made Bud sudden to death, suddenly Harry had reconciled himself were Sunday din- nerves than "the sweet unrest of the of children Ogden, quick gesture and the old ship came out of it with a shudder and gracener guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph wild country places" it is the bitter fully straightened up and fluttered around the field to a nice one point restlessness of those who set the pacOyler. his believe He couldn't eyes. landing. Harry pinched himself. n Goss and email son cf es in the Miles Mrs. city places. out to lift Harry Well, sir, here comes the sad part of the tale. They had i -- ' . Harry says he soon completed his "ground course," which consisted mostly 1 FORT-CLEANN- By Mrs. David Larson I f hard labor pushing the planes around and holding them when the motor BE SURE AND READ THE ADS ESS COM ECO NO MY EAST GARLAND "Ground Course" Is Simply Lots of Hard Work, ld Greater i all-rou- ' j For d . r.r. '"PHIS j Japan's withdrawal from the Naval Conference put her repre- - Iv-r.t- ew 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i .1 STUDEBAKER Utah Auto & Imp. Co. |