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Show 1837 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, nhw. LKAJMCB JCXAB RIVER VALLEY Tre-irnit-rr. at pabUshed iBorsday oX Tremonton, Utah, on each week. Subscription Rates One Year (in advance) fStx Months (In advance) Offeree Months (in advance) --- $2.00 $1.00 50 --- TU only School Board Authorizes Archi - , " . - IKSDSTRIAL LIBRARY BautfaeerlaaBniiaiafc CUeMo.IUiM AUEB1CAM ECONOMIC f D1TOP1AI AL AND INTERNATION- ! '1 as well as to your Country m PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS wrresiaent '""J fiuJfL We look back JTp HE girl who was to become the, mother of George Washington Jwas something of a belle in her jnative colony, Virginia. Mary Ball, descended from a good English f amply, was .called "the rose of Epping; jForest" in her girlhood, Epping forest "being the name of the Ball (homestead. Orphaned early, she had las her :guardian George Eskridge, ja wealthy Virginia planter. At twenty-twMary Ball mar-frie- d (on March 6, 1730) Augustine' Washington,, then .a widower with ftwo little boys. Her first child she named tCoorgo after her old iamily friend. Five .other children were hoTn of this marriage, four of whom survived. When Augustine Washington died, she was left with a brood jof youngsters to care for. George i ' .; v - :r . s $4 ' ty?,-- , '"fit f it a ' - I , ' " r:f, i . ' tv - 1 Acts Like a FLASH t'i . Ifa different it's faster In actloiv-t-find-Ires compoundedIn on tuperlor, medical fact thli country. new Is MIXTURI (trip! acting) 1UCKLIY1 end cold the name of thie amaiini cough free from prescription that is so pure and I can child teka a harmful drugs that nd ttop coughing. One little sis and tha ordinary cough to eased a few doses end that tough old hang on cough is seldom neara again ly It really wohotttui to wann iww hard, lingering colds sre put out Of business. tUCKLCY'S MIXTURl Is now on ai at all good atort guaranteed. -- h-l- 'Mm 5 s;1 j3 Miry Ball at 22, When She Wed Aufustine Washington, was alive or dead. Yet she maintained outward calm and courage. One of her sayings was, "The mothers and wives of brave men must be brave women." The members of her household knew, though, that every day she went off by herself with her Bible to a quiet spot called Meditation Rock. At last Cornwallis surrendered in 1781 and the revolution was won. iEver mindful of his mother's for him, Washington sent off at once to bear her the courier ja 'news. Mary Ball Washington lived to be over eighty, mentally keen and unfailingly cheerful. She died in 1789, the year her son was elected first President of the United States. an-'xie- This Paper For One Year and IPOTlKlFIWESi Issues of new designs in braforms, the bras- up the roster of distinguished East siere with attached dress shields, and West coast designers, who took', Invented by Harry Kleinert, which part in this spring style forecast' "The British Empire and France constitute the first line of defense of North America," says Raymond Buell. We paid too well for believing that sort of propaganda in 1914. While it is true that i ' wardrobe. Stressing the necessity Elizabeth Hawes, Sally Milgrim, of adequate protective accessories Charles LeMaire, Sydonia, Con--; In the truly fashionable ensemble, stance Ripley and Orry Kelly made all the St. Peter Will Allow Everyone old vices are still with nearly us, it is not To Enter the Gates March 12th trj ty (Courtesy B. R. H. S. Searchlight) "Heaven . . . I'm in heaven . . . when we're dancing cheek to cheek," and those who attend the Junior Prom on March 12 actually will be in heaven, for that is the place selected by the committee in which to hold the annual Promenade. The decorations will be simple, yet gala and effective. Upon descending to the gym, the pearly gates will loom up at the east entrance to the dance floor. St. Peter will be expecting a good crowd, and will allow everyone to enter. The inside of heaven will be a fantasy of cherubs, angels, and star dust clouds, lighted with myraid colored glows from softly reflected lights, will decorate the sides. A rainbow will sparkle across the sky ending in a pot of gold at the north side. At the south end will be Jack Bowering and his Rhythm Aces from Hotel Ben Lomond. Refreshments will be served from behind a huge quarter moon. J. T. Abbott heads the committee as Prom chairman, with Beth Cannon and Dick Welling as assistants. Others on the main committee are: Blanche Richards and Stanley Johnson, advertising, dance programs and invitations; Lois Cook, refreshments; Melvin Manning and Harold Capener, entertainment; Fanny Hall, Ardes Saunders and Stanley Castleton, dec orations; and Dallas Getz, electrician. The Junior class fee collectors are Homer Shurtz, Lucile Jensen, Maxine Farnsworth, Reed Taylor, Ted Alice Leavitt, Oleen Josephson and Von Holt More than a mllHon readers3 throughout the C country read PATHFINDER regularly for a $ complete, timely and unvarnished digest of the news. Are you overlooking something? Today, economic and political affairs are at their Every new turn of events is apt to affect your pocket-booEveryone's asking, ".What's it all about, and how much is it going to cost me?" Before you can answer that question you must be able to interpret the news; and before you can interpret you must have all the facts clearly explained. JkJi3 90 PROD i rrMTCn xt.. IttAni with its reliable, d and news reviews in words, pictures and charts. Its condensed form presents a lively and intelliciblo survev f rnrrrnt i events throughout the world; ils impartial analysis and explanation of h i '"tcrpretation, mo news enables you to think and talk straight, utber weekly news magazines sell at $4 to $5 a year. Pathfinder sells for f 1 a but for a limited time we can oflcr you year, n KftnAriKst vaHM.a t.'t. on a com- uurKuin 'cuuj--i "Jw Ar, mnauon oi mis paper nnrfprice PATIIFlKDFn Drop in and see samples or write and take auvanxage or tnis special otter without delay. Insure your economic future bv assuring your complete grasp of current alTairs, easy-to-rea- .. t!..- mimi4 1 1 f X Path find or sv.: nd the one-sixt- Demo-- j et ex -- t fta 11 si iMliiaii iiiejajM i hi No. 167 Rye No. 64 Bourbon i K t QUART No. 166 Rye No. 63 Bourbon JJj' When your head aches; when Neu ralgia tortures you; when Muscular Pains make you miserable take a Dr. Miles' Anti-Pai- n PilL Mr. Smith is one of millions who have found this easy way to prompt relief. He says: ',. "1 keep Dr. Miles' i4nti-PoPills in my pocJcct and when I get a dull heavy jeeling in my Kead, I take a Dr. Miles' pain passes ojf." ta DR. MILK S3' -A-NTI-PAIN PIUS STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY PINT Leader Ads Get Results I ch f. ALSO AVAILABLE topsy-turvie- st k. .1 Air-cast-le Lin-for- d, ONLY "Man proposes, God disposes." That ancient adage can be apUy applied to the problem of flood control. First flood control measure in this country was taken by New Orleans in 1717, when a levee was built. First at least 20 years would be rwiZl Federal action came in 1850, when to complete such a program. a In the meantime, 270 Congress appropriated $50,000 for different cos. that Since trol projects have been authorized at survey of the Mississippi. been time billions of dollars have a cost of $300,000,000 by the FvJ spent by various units of government vumiui Ati, ui loou, iliey will affprt in attempts to curb the destruction every state, and be located in caused by great rivers on a rampage. states. They include reservoirs for th Since the great 1927 flood alone, sev- Merrimack River Valley in Vermont eral hundreds of millions of dollars and Massachusetts; levees along have gone into dikes, levees, reser- the Susquehanna; another series of voirs. It was widely believed that the reservoirs in Pennsylvania, Virgin flood menace had at last been elimin- and Kentucky; levees along the upnw as so important Mississippi in Iowa, Illinois and far, ated, at least centers of population were concerned. souri; levees, reservoirs and debris dee Then came 1937, and basins in Southern California. vices again proved inadequate. 0O0 As a result, flood control, past, pres It has been widely forecast that thii ent and projected, has again become would be quiet and peacefm Congress ata national issue, is engaging the would follow the President's wish, and and men engineers tention of public es witn little opposition. alike. But now the stage is set for oae Most flood control projects, as of the longest, most acrimonious mj Nicholas Roosevelt writes in the New most important congressional battla York Herald Tribune, "are dealing in years. Cause is the President's m with results, not causes. They are sage on changes he would like made is seeking to curb the damage of the our judiciary system. waters, not to curb the waters themCertain phases of the selves." If the waters are to be curbas the proposal to empower flu must ed, land now given to cultivation Chief Justice to shift lower be returned to grass and woods, in judges about in order to expedite order to hold rain and prevent exand to lessen the time requirej cessive run-ofExperiments have to take cases involving Constitutions! is a shown that where the run-oquestions from lower courts to flu cent nine cleared lot it per grazed, Court will meet with agr in a similar watershed Supreme the run-of- f ment of almost everyone. But which is ungrazed and timbered will thing is the proposal that woii h of one per big be as little as authorize the President to cent an additional Supreme Court Justice I Obvious question is, Why, then, for every justice now on the court I have we spent millions for dams and whose age is 70 or more. levees and reservoirs when we might That has split party lines wi I have curbed the water at its source ? open. Leading Democratic newspape In 1927, according to Time, army have come out against it. A engineers pointed out that to reduce cratic bloc, under Senator Glass, hasl a Mississippi flood one foot would re- been organized in the Senate to i quire the holding out of 7,000,000,000 the measure. Influential Senate I of water. If Norris, who sees eye to eye with t to 11,000,000 acre-fe8,000,000 acres of reforested land held President in most matters, has back just a half inch more water than pressed his disapproval. would flow off cultivated farm land, It has long long been known flat I a flood would be reduced a half-inc-h the President has been coEsiderijjl various plans for curbing the poire j necessary for any one person to prac- of the courts to annul laws pas tice all of them to hold down the by Congress. Now the issue is in open at last. ff of the foremost designers TEN Hollywood and New York assures protection against the ravhands recently to stage a ages of perspiration and underarm joined "Parade of American Fashions," a cosmetics, were shown as compledramatic presentation showing the ments to these new spring creaimportance of impeccable grooming tions. Hattie Carnegie, Helen Cookman, as the guarantee of a long-live- d Celestial Scenes Will Characterize Junior Promenade sea-che- st GoughsOoIds - style parade. ht alf-heart-ed d" control, message-su- Mary Ball Washington was sixty-eigwhen the revolution began. Since communication was then so primitive, she often did not know for months at a time whether her son then only eleven.. Fortunately, For Bronchitis i of the lovely creations displayed at tha "Parade of American Fashions," is this dusty rose crepe dress with tassel trim. The model seea herself, with the fashion approved method of protecting clothes, a lace braform, with attached dress shields, also Introduced at the why. So may those who look back on us a thousand years hence. But still, we have some good points. ' m man-mad- On ty of the "dark ages" and wonder Ihowever, states a writer in the Indianapolis News, the husband had (provided for them amply. George Washington was still a oung boy when he became pos- essed of a great desire to be a idshipman. His mother had been about this plan at all imes, but finally (so the story goes) was being car-hen his ied down to the wharf by a porter, he refused to let him go. He ac cepted tier decision with good grace, jand devoted himself to surveying (instead. His activities in the next years often took him far away from her and gradually prepared him for the great role he was to play in " American history. long-tim- 31 i , ' r at the fiendish cruel o, iwas proposed to promote a coordiim e program dealing vrtth" vention of soil erosion, etc., all sures which would steady the fi0wq water to the sea. The evidence U B complete that our past activities ha been too scattered to really solve th problem we must adopt then sew tific approach. It is estimated m Mother of Our First AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE FROM LOCAL WELFARE. oS worth of This gives some idea of the of the problem. And the imsh!" is, according to Turner CatlpT levees. forestation, - To Your Town purf A HAPPENINGS THAT AFFECT THE DINNER PAILS, DIVIDEND CHECKS AND TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL. NATION- te, ASSOCIATION . HIGHLIGHTS " ' ' I (Courtesy B. R. H. & Searchlight) Students returning to school next September will find that tne oia crowded shower rooms are no more. In their place will be new showers, spacious, and convenient. Band students will una mai mey no longer have to swarm onto the stage amid pieces of scenery and stage property. They will have new quarters of their own. Ail this was announced yesterday by Principal C. E. Smith when he told of a visit to the school last Tues day of Superintendent Hervin Bunderson and Mr. Joseph Nelson, county school architect, who took measure ments of the proposed improvements. Mr. Bunderson said that the archi tect had been instructed to construct plans for a new west entrance to the gymnasium with a two story build Ing in connection. On the lower floor will be shower ruum rooms ana a visiung-ieaAbove, will be headquarters for the band and orchestra. In addition to these improvements the stage is to be renovated with a new hardwood floor and with light ing system revamped, stated Mr. Bun derson. Mr. Joseph Nelson is the architect under whose direction the science building was constructed. He has been in Washington, D. C. studying pew methods in his profession and has now been reemployed by the Box Elder County School board. aloae Interested in; Mine wili be promptly 1 - tect to Construct Plans For Building obt.uied Fr.e eW rtbut or product en bSAmerican Industrial Library. ObUfatioo i the Business Advertising MtW ws wo Unto forwarded. NATIONAL r " Free to Pjiblit trt id ple in 18 U. S. where Noted American Designers Point Way To Proper Dress Protection Band Room and Showers Prom-- : ised Next Fall Ottered at tha matofflce at Utah as Second Class Matter. and no more. Similar brought out by the army to the ing of headwater reservoirs-- it? said that at least $1,000,000,000 W(Z be required if spent for this to do as much good as $300 THE OLD QUAKER IAwMNCIBUIIG, r. IN RYE 1 |