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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER I EAST GARLAND tiy Mrs. David Larson Hollywood, while on their national tour stopped to visit their relatives, the Petersers. They have toured the! northwest and Canadian Poekits and! i t w rii ;I7? year. -- Emma Gardner left Wednesday for taking a beauty culture course. Mrs. T. R. Ault is improving at the home of her daughter, Mrs. John J. Becker of Ogden after a week's illness. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gardner were visiting Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dewey in Ogden on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gardner had as their guests on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Hadfield of Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Cleone Hunsaker had as special Sunday guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Benson and family of Ogden, where she is sponsor of the contest. Her winning costume was a navy blue wool sport suit with red blouse and blue accessories, costing $18.25. She won over 160 other county contestants, selected by county and state extension agents. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hansen of Ogden visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dewey have moved to Richfield for the winter months. Bishop and Mrs. M. J. Perry had Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Berchtold are ' as their weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. a a of Mr. of visit brother enjoying ; !;!; Theoll of Ogden. Berchtold, whom he had not seen A number of the Deweyvilie citizens since he moved to the west many will have a big smile when they come years ago. back from getting their deer. What might have been a serious Mrs. T. li. Ault, unable to do her accident happened Tuesday evening own has dictated it so that as the people were going home from there writing, would'nt be a first time to miss M. I. A. as Mrs. Beulah Staufill was sendmsr her write-up- s in twelve years returning home, a bunch of horses Some record eh? d the road in front of her car causing cue of her passengers, Wayne ; ! I y'or, to ie thiown to the gutter. Though we were given to understand ho was not rericusly injured, he was quite shaken up and his eye glasses wore picked up the next morning. The t'-- ses were some that had strayed in to Penrose and they were not in- jured. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Fredrickson entertained at a party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hansen, of Boar River City, on Thursday of last week, Messrs. Jess Petersen, Leonard Petersen, Fred W. Petersen ;nd 'ew-trthvir Oliver left Mcndyy to with Uk deer iumtus V :.Ir. a.;d Mrs. J. I low-p- .. ' ; : ;: ":: i.!:i'. i are f e son :it th r.t Sal' Lake City. William M. Miller re; spending a few days M. I. A. NEWS ! : Bra j j j j The Tremonton ward Mutual Jnv provement Association will have its Tuesday, October 27, firt Open m.Xite, one act piay has been A at 7:30 p. arranged for. which will be followed iw a Hallowe'en dance and refreshments. Evervone is invited to attend. j t.-.- o !re li : v.n; :,! r .::'.;.' Itr. v,', t'irce yccjs that in n pat r it' :ou , Wadpworth. Mr. and Mrs. 1). ne ' : : Miss Delia Petersen ftw weeks at East Oarlnn !.;, Orvi": Among the youv'g OCTOBER 23rd and 24th i "Secret Agent" "Song of the Trail" "FLASH GORDON" "DARKEST AFRICA" '"t,; Granger a.nd Jesa Grover, from Creek, Utah. r,;i: N. W. Taylor is in business. Mrs. Starlin Stanfill spent Monday j in Ogden on business. Mrs. Lewis Lillywhite visited our. Primary association on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ward and Oneat Shurtz were visitors at the M. I. A. meeting on Tuesday of last week. , j "The Girl on the Front Page" CHIROPRACTOR Office at RESIDENCE - BOTirW ELL Appointments Made by Phone CALL 7S5 26th - Two Good Features: "One Rainy Afternoon" 10i & 200 Matinee Sunday WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY - OCT. 28th - 29lh "Don't Get Personal" "Wild Mustang" vl , DR. WILLIAM ELI ILWVKINS - th-;- AiUn A. C. George L. Miller Wain from the B. Y. U. and Cran-- ! Ch-uvford Taylor, who is teaching 27th MON. - TUES. - OCTOBER 25th Saturday arga in s 9f - PEANUTS ... ... ' ....... .t, w SALMON 19t miff. , RADIO SERVICE TURKS AND ACCESSORIES TESTING FREE ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION AND WASHING MACHINES SERVICED AND REPAIRED GENE HOLLADAY Tremonton, Utah TOONE if r I 7- I5ROOMS v - 14C and The largest Stork of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables in Tremonton Must I5e Sold Before Severe Frost .... .... It Will Re Economical On the Part of Thrifty Horse Wives to Lay In Their Winter Supply of Cabbage, Carrots, Etc. and Other Vegetables . . . . 7 .3-- 8 CABBAGE - cwt. - - $1.00 GRAPEFRUIT WATER MELONS P01 lp Large, Arizona Sweet SWEET POTATOES dozen 42 10 lbs 37 DATES v a mg W 10 lbs. W WALNUTS CRANBERRIES 205 17( rcg. 25c pkg. per, lb. 2-l- j b' ORANGES - doz. 1 - 9c up .... New, Ivower Prices On Every Item .... .... We Will Appreciate . . !i Zd(' A . . . . Graver. heri" for the weekend we f. Ha Hey - - .... JJecause of Cold Weather, We Are Of fering Some Cood Bargains On Produce .... 't iii iei; yirg it. 1. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY "Scat-face,- -- Eat 4 Tremonton, Utah : t....,w. f Orpheum Theatre i one-doll-ar CHEESE a i A - n ' GRACE HAW .aUEXE SCOTT SUN. prearcr 'rrruhi? demorri'cy i Si-- , li!'!' dav.ght'.'r .SSL liiiiile : :n ; : ( JUL. l:.-.- s n t FLAKES iu2 conservatism v Tremonton, Utah ! e. Hon-eyvill- PENROSE ( U ? &? Skz se Latest styles and colors .... Perfect to wear now and straight through the Winter also .... HATS, 3L0USES, LINGERIE and ACCESSORIES 51 i Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Burbank entertained on Saturday at a dinner in honor of their son Lorin, Melvin and daughter Mrs. Thurlin Mimmott of Ogden and little Ha Jean a granddaughter, all of their birthday happened the same day. The fall opening social was held by the Relief Society on Tuesday afternoon. Work was scheduled for the 4-- Autumn Dresses if1, - By Mrs. Thomas Ault JUNE CARLISLE, 15, of Mill Creek, will represent Utah's 4400 H club girls in the National Style Revue, to be held in Chicago, December 1, as a feature of the Na tional Club Congress, to which she receives an trip from the Chicago Mail Order company, It's a merchandising feat to offer these exceptional values in . Hallowe'en Miss Holt's room all made pictures for hallowe'en. There were owls, and witches. There are other hallowe'en pictures too. We hope everyone has a good time on hallowe'en. Dorothy May Petersen 4th Grade. We have been studying Camel about how people go from one place to another on the deserts. They cannot use horses or automobiles like we do. They use camels because they can go without- water or food for a . long time. Jerry Petersen 3rd Grade. Prevention of Fire This week is "Fire Prevention" week. We should think, "Safety First." People shouldn't light fires where it will catch on to something else. Remember to put COLUMBUS DAY Last Mon-.- y out all fires and to always be careful was Columbus day. It was 444 years with firecrackers on our fourth and ago he came here. He and his men ar24th of July. rived on October 12, 1492. It took him Orin Adams 5th Grade. 70 days or 10 weeks to come. He dis Our room covered a new land and did not know Going Seed Hunting it when he did. spent our science period seed huntMarie Petersen, 5th Grade, went We canal the bank and up ing. COVERED WAGONS The third, within a half mile of the school buildfourth fifh and found least different kinds grades are making at ing fifty covered wagons out of shoe boxes. of seeds. we get the wagons made we When Floy Christensen 6th Grade. are going to make horses or oxen. . Debate Friday the eighth grade Arlene Christiansen, 4th Grade. had a very good debate. All the room listened to them and we think they JUNIOR CHAMBER OF were very good debates. Donna Stokes 6th Grade. COMMERCE HOLDS Last week our room started a new POSTER CONTEST Social Science unit on Southwestern Public places throughout the county Asia. We have been writing refer- will display from now until November ence books on the board and have 4, posters made by the school found good material in all but one arts classes, the purpose ofhigh these posvolume of our new Compton's pictur- ters being to urge people to perfoi-ed encyclopedias. It is an interest- their duty in the coming elections. ing study and resembles Egypt in The posters were made In response many ways. to a contest sponsored by the Junior Florence Christensen 7th Grade. Chamber of Commerce cf Brigham Our Program Last Friday our City which offered four cash prizes ; student body presented the second for the best work. There is a first program of the year. All the grades prize of two dollars and three were present and enjoyed the splenprizes. ' did performance. Wayne Nelson had charge of the Cecil McNeely 7th Grade. contest which closed Wednesday. The We are making a play house. It is names of the winners have not l( n big enough to get in. We are mak- announced yet. Al'io Make Hallowe'en Posters There will be ing some furniture. Various Hallowe'en motifs decotat-c- d chairs and tables. We will play in it. posters made by the same art class Alice Ray 1st and 2nd Grade. cr, under the direction of Miss MtKay The first horses we HORSES for another poster contest sponsoed ' read about were very small. They the Stake Board of the Mutual were the size of a cat. They had four by Association. Improvement toes, while ours have only one. They These posters will be displayed in ere web footed and lived by water the various wards of the stake for We are glad our horses are larger-todaof advertising the SUke the were than they many years M. purpose A. I. ball to be held Hallowe'en Reta Grover, 3rd Grade. ago. November 23. tonight, Friday, Last Tuesday when Mr. Jackman went to town he secured some good library books. Among the most inwas by D'ora G. teresting -. Cecil McNeely, 7th Grade YeageThe students of our school are al! subscribing for the "Wekly Reader," except for the seventh and eighth grades, who are taking the "Current Events." We shall take a half hour each week to discuss certain topics Lge. Pkfr. in these papers. We are all very much enthused about them. CORN . Jenne Eldredge, 8th Grade. The U MBO SIZE Lb. MOUNTING PICTURES decorating committee jur.t finished 15 mounting and putting up re.r.looic room It makes our pictures. 4 i.'s. man GRADE more like fall. ...4' Marjorie Roche, 6th Grade. SHORTENING Some of the students of our school 1 b. have been staying out of school to MILD work in the beets, since Columbus .... JLV day, i;tit iv on? arc conJrig bark every Z Cium GOOD GRADE FINK day. We hope we shall have a perfect attendance after all the beets are j DEWEYVILLE 3 Proving High Fashions are not High Priced! Leo Adams, 7th Gra. The eighth grade students are racing to present a play on or before Thanksgiving. We hope to make enough money to buy the school a raCio. Juanita Adams, 8th Grade. Mr. Jackman is spending half of r1? noon hour with the band students, so we will be able to accomplish mo.e when Mr. Watkins comes out. Sherma Stanfi'l. In school we have been studying about South Western Asia. It has been veiy interesting for we have learned many things about this far off country. We h?.ve. learned how they farm and build their hemes a. id biddings. Today our room made some of their old fashioned homes End bt out of clay, while others made a sand map of South Western Asia wrote a story of the Hebrews. Leone Peterr;va. i,cl-in- '0fi The quarterly stake conference was held here Saturday and Sunday in connection with Relief Society and M. I. A. convention. The meeings were well attended. Those of the gen- eraj boards present were Mrs. Hazel H. Greenwood, Relief Society; Mrs. Baxter, Miss Roland and Elder Williams, M. I. A. The M. I. A. stake boards were reorganized. Newel J. Cutler was sustained as superintendent, with Joel A. Smith and Melvin S. Atkinson assistants. Mrs. Ada L. Smith is the new president with Floy E. Cutler and Pauline Atkinson as counsellors. Mrs. Christena Haskell of Burley, visited here at the home of her brother. E. M. Nelson, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Neal motored to Cgden Sunday. Liven Neal came heme from Ogden, Monday. Mrs. Anna Larkin and children of Smithfield, spent the weekend hero with relatives. Bert UXown, Jr. went deer hunting Monday. 4 ! hauled. jack-o-lanter- ns something!" SNOWVILLE Miss Annie Htird By Claiu.iug to be the .argest single famil unit in America the Rashid of Lafayette. 111., held the' annual conclave a few days ago and voted to put their collective strength it 450 persons behind the Democratic candidate for President. "We've decided to :hrow our hats Into the Roosevelt ring," declared the family spokesman. "Every adult member of our family was separately questioned, and without a single exception they were for Roosc relt. Which certainly onght to prove 1 Florida. Their house on wheels in furnished with every mod-- ; ein convenience necessaiy for luxury! and comfort, such as running hot and cold water, bath room, kitchenette, refrigerator, electric lights and heat and beautifully furnished living room. The interior is done in Philippine mahogany with chromuim trim. Messrs. Leland and Herbert Mitchel of Los Angeles were in another trailer similarly equipped. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Potter had as their guests Wednesday, her mother, Mrs. E. B. Rucker, her sister, Mrs. Fred Robinson, Mrs. Kenneth King and son, Kenneth all of Salt Lake City and Mrs. Smith of California, mother of Mrs. King. Stake Sunday School Superintendent Albert Meldrum, Misses Augusta Brough and Orpha Heppler were visitors at the local school, Sunday. Miss Verda Johnson spent the week end home from the A. C. U. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Bingham of Twin Falls, Idaho visited relatives here last weekend. Mrs. Bingham was formerly Mrs. Ethel Korth. THATCHER SCHOOL NEWS 450 Hats Thrown In Rins r Mii:mi, tSb PAGE FIVE ' STYLE QUEEN 4-- H were continuing on to scenic places ilr. and Mrs. I. L. Isaacson att- in Utah and Eoulder Dam, thence to a of Mrs. funeral niece, ended the Hannah Mullins, at Provo, Saturday. Hr. Isaacson returned home the same (iay tut Mrs. Isaacson accompanied to Fountain Green for a iv.a-- -.i visit. brief Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Shaffer and Mi-- L'cra Shaffer a;e visiting relatives in Southern Utah this week. The Relief Society members quilted two quilts at their work and business meeting last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Lane Gleason of Pasadena, California were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Oyler Jr. On Friday the Oylers attended a dinner nven iQ honor of Mr. and Mrs. Gleason by Mrs. David Wood at her home in Fielding. Mrs. Norman Larson left for Salt Lake City Sunday evening after a short visit with relatives here. She was a guest of her brother and family there for a day and then returned to her home in San Diego, California. Word received by Mrs. George Som-er- s is that her son, Fred, a Rhodeds scholar, had a very hazardous sea voyage enroute to England. The captain was at the helm some of the time and said that In his 37 years at sea he had never before encountered such a severe storm. All were glad to land safely. Mr. and Mrs. George White, son, Jeanette, of Tom, and daughter, Smithf ield, were calling on Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Larson Sunday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer James and Mr. and Mrs. M. Nuttal of Salt Lake City were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Larson. Monday's rain storm came just in time for many of the younger farmers to decided to leave their unfinished beet harvest with a clear conscience and go deer hunting. Quite a number had just finished with their beets. A large number went hunting. Mr. and Mrs. Ruel Nielsen and Mrs. Sophia Larson of Idaho Falls were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Holman Thursday continuing on to Ogden Friday where Mrs. Larson will visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Nielsen returned Saturday and spent the weekend with the Holmans. Of unusual interest to the community was the advent of two luxurious house trailers here last week. Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Nelson who have a beautiful home at Hollywood Knolls, 22, Your Patronage .... HIGH QULITY PRODUCE FOR LESS Save At Christensen Produce SPECIAL! All For JELLO 16( .". 1 Vka. Any Flavor ( OI.ATK PI DOING HILLS P.iiOS. Lb. Can COFFEE 28 liliOOIi FIELD'S QL Salad Dressing 2 ii. BANANAS V. S. NO. 1 SM4 50-I- Iiwg b. ONIONS 49 JCMBOSIE Buiwh CELERY j 9tf!i l! QUALITY MEATS lb.1 FRANKS and BOLOGNA Mim.u.11 ' SIRLOIN STEAK Lb. j 19; Lb. POT ROASTS SLICED Lb. BACON Morn-H'- s lfy: Pride . . . Surety Oj Purity 28 ;' |