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Show ... I.I OCTOBER 21, 1937 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THUSSDAY, I fl . ,PSAB BIVER VALLEY LEADER Entered at the Fostofflce at Tre-Monto- n, Utah as Second Class Matter. Pnbllshed at Tremonton, Utah, on fUursday of each week. Subscription Rates J2.Q0 Dee Year (in advance) $1.00 OLt Mentha (in advance) Three Months (in advance) - - - - 50tf --- --- ree to niDiic The only plncoio the U. S. wiiere catalog! end dvertiin matter covering anyiina of buitnow or product can be obtained Free Ind Without Library. Obligation the American Industrial Write (or BuaineM Advertiaing Matter you are inter tsd in;aame will be promptly forwarded. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY Illlooia En4lneerin BuUdin. EDITORIAL NATIONAL Wtfl ASSOCIATION ciUA- mil - 193 5 WHO ARE YOU? ECONOMIC The Romance of Your Name HIGHLIGHTS By RUBY HASKINS ELLIS II ArFENIXGS TILT AFFECT HIE DINNER PAILS, DIVIDEND CHECKS AXD TAX BILLS OF EVERY INDIVIDUAL. NATION- A Thompson? arms here shown wat THE coat toof this country by John Thompson, who left England and went to Holland, and then came to America to 1C34, settling In Long Island, lie was the son of Rev. William Thompson, ot County Lancaster, England. The shield Is that of the barony of Haverehaw, now extinct, but once belonging to the ancient family of Herts. The motto of the family is "shine in the light." It has been estimated that there are 20 or 30 distinct families by the name of Thompson in New England alone, and many In the Southern and West' em states. A great many of the Thompsons in America trace ancestry to the Thompsons who came from Ireland. Thesf High Temperatures A 1 nams in b to 10 We CUBS' CATCHER CONFOUNDS POET 1 . In line with Dresent.ria,, -to hurry nature, State "jand"wife pZTIj workers have found a way to prj tr i --- AL AND INTERNATION-A- "aged" hams Southern style 10 weeks instead of the custoit year or two. The studies werefc" by the Maryland Agricultural EjS ment Station in cooperation with .t United States Department of J I culture. In rural districts of the South are aged for a year or more aftercare cured and smoked. During time they become partially rjry 5 develop characteristic flavors i5 lean meat has a sharp, pungent sy flavor, and the fat is modifiecj I that it becomes The Maryland workers discovert! method of producing some of tp characteristic flavors in hams fel relatively short time 6 to 10 WeJ by holding them at temperatj from 107 degrees F. to 125 degreej alter curing ana smoking. The and flavor of these hams mcrea4 with aging up to 10 weeks. Chemical studies of these qmj aged hams showed that there viajl increase in the free fatty acis of 4 fat; that there was an increase! total soluhle derivatives of pwJ and that there was loss of moistf from the lean tissues. These chacJ are characteristic of the aging pf 1 cess in hams. L PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE FROM LOCAL WELFARE. j (C last piose' ofhea prpug' o Va ncioi in. Pre cannot wtthot President Roosevelt's speech on tujetio world affairs, in which he castigated Soi a and virtual proposed dictatorships cow's is of bellicose perpowers, quarantine organ haps the most important international not fa event of many months. It was greeted ve!t's with almost unanimous praise in this ret'-afof all political country, by papers wiich filiations. It charted a definite course has fc which this government is apparently was follow. to As agIt direct, prepared net in gressive and, for the head of a governtemps ment, extremely daring. In the view of the experts, it is believed certain is .in that the British and possibly the fe i pride French foreign offices were consulted before the speech was made, and that speech to!whi the laid of down action the plan of by Baseball PoetiGuest Teaches Edgar "Gabby" Hartnett edJ" President is approved by the three ilen to Edgar A. a great democracies of the world. rpHERE'S a lot of poetry in pitched ball, according Kent, Mr. Roosevelt's suggestion is as "GabL Guest, the popular pott, shown in the picture above with mpst t simple as it is revolutionary. In efCubs. the of catcher famous Chicago necesRoosev be he said that it Hartnett, fect, by" might save my life," says Eddie, "1 expres sary to place a towering commercial "Though I couldn't hit a baseball to ified" are re which exnations wall around the as of the baseball a height poetry game good surely consider tb jo; sponsible for today's war scares and makes one of his beau- friend When 'Gabby motion. in my America Abraham Lincoln!" t zens r war prospects. Peaceful nations would pressed Daughters of the Confederacy gastl COtt ii tiful throws to secon; or waiiopss- see anytmng very poeuc auoui refuse to export to these countries, Said Mrs. Lamar: "It was iustVl told b; a high fly in an arching parabola baseball. and they would not import from them. and as It's lovely the of to" the those slips." sky. too move on fast as hand Little by little, against supplies "Things usually fcrbadc expressive as any poem." l'or me to worry about whether a 4 dwindled, the belligerent powers would Hartnett and the poet are great throw or a pitch is poetic," says will ft find themselvca lacking in the raw When the spark plug of Hartnett. "Still I guess Eddie pals. gifeate and finished materials which are es a as I We In common. lot a and have the Cubs appeared recenlly sential to life both in peace and in historj enguest on Eddie's Tuesday night both give people a thrill, and Attn war. Thus, faced with want and radio show, he was as big a suc- tertain them. I I do know one offerin diaEddie can on the teach he is as on they would find it impossible the air cess thing maybe j to chance mond. "Gabby" (his given name to play baseball, but I'm sure he pursue their dreams of conquest. :t can never teach me to write a is Charles) admits that u: s. The President did not mention any verse!" Quest is a great poet, but do with C country by name. But it was obvious IN ALL VARIETim ing Sti that he was referring to three powers : tais Mr. in Roosevelt's a has ed, Ir far the of stand, by the Japan, Italy, Germany. Italy disapproved authority ken over Abyssinia, in disregard of better position to be a major influ- PWA to make loans and grants to 20 promp all treaties, by armed force. Japan is ence than at any time in the past towns for municipal projects. Chicag alcohol vicresurrect to some Presidi to of and similar five a achieve years, attempting by volume I stfcgir tory in rich North China. And Ger- its lost prestige. cist po many, with Hitler as its spokesman, Summing up, in a union of the de- SLIP OF A DAUGHTER I makes no secret of the fact that it mocracies is designed to achieve two a of If MACON, Georgia Daughter to colonial ends. as maintain One, peace. Second, expansion regards GOP if that fails, to make sure that the the American Revolution should end The world effect of such a declara- ensuing war will be swift and ruinous a Fourth of July oration with a burst of praise for George 111, her audience tion of potential policy would have to the dictatorships. been nowhere near as great had it oOo would be justifiably startled. In Macome from the head of any other The Supreme Court has been more con, Mrs. Walter D. Lamar last week out of country. We are remote from all other in the headlines than ever, due to startled a convention of the Georgia major powers. We are peacefully in- the appointment of Justice Black. division of the United Daughters of clined. We are one of the two nations But this session the Court will have the Confederacy with an indiscretion which are economically self contained much less to do with national affairs no less dramatic. Climaxing a rhethat is, which posses within their than for three years past. torical eulogy of famed Rebel Jefferterritorial borders the resources needReason: Of the 450 cases on docket, son Davis, Mrs. Lamar said: "Let the ed to provide every necessity aria very few involve issues of wide politi- world know the wisdom, the kindness, most of the luxuries of modern life. cal or social interest. Only one New the justice of the great and only PresAnd, for the past few years, we have Deal law is certain to be approved or ident of the Confederate States of been the great question mark in inter i. m national affairs we have moved slow f would ly, said little and have kept aloof t consid' from participation in world events. E.CaveE The President's attitude, roughly to'holi described, is that we could not escape t being involved in a major war, that AX.V.1 we must therefore cooperate to prei vent war. He gave anproval to AmerFAS ican cooperation with the League of the A Nations which, sijrnificantly, is shun vglzed-Navaned by Germany, Italy and Japan. Out of this has come the belief that been o in the immediate future the world will COmm: be divided into two camps the demfleet, I ocracies end the dictatorships. On the lers, v, Fide of the democracies there will also navy's be the only dictatorship which is econ6 Su Russia. omically appoin The strength of an alliance between tary C democracies and the U. S. S. R. is ; Admin impossible to exaggerate. From either mande the econcaiic or military standpoint, detach they aie immensely superior to the Was dictatorships. Japan, Italy and Gernapoiis many must import tremendous quandart's tities of the basic commodities in orold der to exist. They must export their ftlishe own specialities, such as silk and olive j Mtval oil and wine, in order to obtain foreign comm credits. Close the world's markets to B. R. 52 tiai y; them, and at the same time forbid 1934 ti the n to buy in the democracies, and McCALL'S MAGAZINE 12 lia Roc they would be ruined. And, should ' W to VI elect they fight, every recognized militaty cxpeit n co; tain that they 12 ) would be doomed to quick and crushing defeat. The U. s. and England GOOD 12 have the greatest navies afloat. RusI ,; sia has the largest and best equipped HOME 12 ( standing army in the world. The' dicAJvivi juuiCiM tatorships have nothing to match these instruments of force. The President's address has already ,$5.25 YOU $2.25 achieved results. Japan has started a campaign to justify in this country ONE FULL YEAR, and if you are al,.Vrl. . SSEN its war in China. Mussolini is talking tu ui incse ,rt u' afivhw your present suhscrintion will I)e publications, more softly than is his usual wont, exienaeo one ti linear. Mail or bring the coupon below to our office AT ONCE. ruuer speaKS or peace. And the n,! von vrill ma leceive each iiiu, hauaLXLS and THIS NEWSPAPER Mrh month, League of Nations, given new strength magazines and newspapers 121 issues in all for only $3.00. ORDER AT ONCE because we may soon have to withdraw this offer, nr advance ilia nftAn 71 ItV u..a semi-transpare- v 1 aro--f To Your Town jf.".::iZC.-f?- ss vvell cs to yourCountry PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS I t ,) l l I 10 L rt srcxtcnsion r. work STATES TO GRADE TURKEYS Seventeen states will market turkeys under Federal grade this year. Grading schools will be held during October and November in 12 or more states in Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Ohio, New York and probably California. Attendants will be taught free by representatives ef the Bureau of Agricultural Economies the technique of grading birds according to Federal Standards. Bureau poultry marketing officials estimate that about 30,000,000 pounds of tut keys woe graded last year, or about 25 per cent of the birds going Thompsons were originally Scotch, but during the reign of James I they were among those who were given liberal grants of land to settle in the province This was of Ulster, In Ireland. about 1716, and those Thompsons responsible for a great many descendants of the name In this country were William and Margaret, who, with their seven sons and two daughters, settled In their new Irish home, Coleraine. Their home In Scotland had been In Argylshlre. However, this family did not tarry long on the Emerald Isle. After living there a year, during which time William Thompson died, his brave wife and her nine children sailed for America. The story of the voyage across the sea is a dramatic one, and how starvation was averted by the providential discovery of the body of a sheep floating upon the sea. The family located in Windsor,1 Conn., where later settled other Scotch' families, the Scotts, McKinneys, Mo Kinstrys and Spiers. There was also John Thompson, what settled In Chester cotraty, Pennsylvania, In 1785. This family was also from to the big central markets. The use of the Federal turkey grading system lias greatly increased in recent years, In each state the local agricultural extension and marketing officials in the turkey grading work. Fewer hogs going to market this fall than last, but a considerable increase in the 1938 spring pig crop were reported in prospect, thus week, by the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. And in view of the somewhat smaller tonnage of hogs to be marketed this fall and winter and with fairly high levels of consumer demand for meats, the Bureau expects hog prices to average at least as high as a year ago when the average price a t Chicago was about $9.00 a hundred pounds. A "very favorable" coin-hoptice ratio was reported in view of the larger supply and lower prices of com this fall. g WHEAT, CORN ESTIMATES The Government's wheat and corn crop estimates were revised slightly upward this week as the Department of Agriculture predicted yields per acre of all farm products harvested ' will average- higher than in any recent year." A 2,561,93(3,000-bushe- l co. n crop was forecast and an wheat crop. - M CASH ?JN!0N Trcmontan's E vclus1' vc "Castle (Sate" Dealer PHONE 3: "NY Middle Initial In America "N" is probably more widely used than any other letter as a meaningless middle initial in personal names. Many having it are World war veterans. Their enlistment papers, says Collier's Weekly, had a space for a middle name and, they had none, "None" was inserted. Afterward None was contracted to N. ! 1 mg r HIS DITKIirA'TinwS 1 a Total off 124 Issues -- nt fi-- i Here s What You Get! All Seven For One Year VALLEY LEADER Issues Issues I'lUIUKlALKHJ Vlii Issues WOMAN'S WORLD Issues STORIES Issues THE COUNTRY Issues i nv, r lz Issues REGULAR VALUE al u Miles' Effervescent Nervine Tab- let, a glass of vxiter, a pleasant, sparkling drink. Nerves relax. You can rest, sleep, enjoy life. At your drug store. 25c and $Loa t I ft. . SAVE - vnfhat 7 USE THIS COUPON AND SAVE $2.25 HEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER TREMONTON, UTAH "nervp;s' 0 .i NERVES" A Dr. ffa P"ion.Cor :Vi : i:.:.1 a.u ?wt u Here's a good way to quiet blween Portland Spokane, 5a!t Lakt, Omaria, Chi cago UNION BUS DEPOT midland hotel - phone jw.o-- i WINE Ec!-- Each for One Fear FEWER HOGS THIS FALL fctt'i ii m'w aihn WiffAVik pxi-vatio- . $3Y0C0 indFm folKspl VwS? R Date J'Tfcfr before jt is withdrawn. Enclosed YEAR'S subscription, new or renewal, to the iihh nivi.u VALLEY LEADER - - 1 year McCALL'S MAGAZINE 1 year PICTORIAL REVIEW i year WOMAN'S WORLD 1 Mynameis Town GOOD STORIES COUNTRY HOME THE FARM JOURNAL year ...Address ....-- .. state .... 1 1 1 veal year year |