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Show JPJLGE BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEAD STL TSUESDAT, ATFJL 21, 1853 FOUR Bv DWIG SCHOOL D; Uncle Jim Sags 1 EAST GARLAND By Mrs. David Larson A very interesting Easter program was presented in Sunday School, Sunday morning in place of regular class work. It was the first Sunday School held in the new chapel. The day from a week's visit with tives in Salt Lake City. Hr Grant Wild accompanied he? v1 ho. returning to Salt Lav T i Mr. and Mrs. JOCK ' x., Salt LAk ritir ar. John Oyler Sr.. of Garten dav guests of Mr Oyler: and .. I Mr- - e , aun- - ar, 'Joseph ' "n m Ert Mr. and Mrs. Parley Jamea, Mr. and ham City, Friday. little and Larson Mrs. D. Conrad Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Korth daughter, Lou Con, and Miss Clarissa daughter, Bessie, of Garland 7, Larson, all of Salt Lake City, were M. I. A. here Tuesday evening Easter Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. contributed to the program St J. W. Larson, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul was on people and customs Larson. On Thursday the Relief Society sosponsored a special program and cial in the new Relief Society room. The ocassion was the annual daughters meeting day, which is observed near the birthday of the late general Relief Society president, Mrs. Clarissa Williams. The splendid program was followed by a lesson on home gardening, by Ida Rhodes. After the meeting a social hour was enjoyed. Dainty refreshments were served to 35 guests. Mrs. John Oyler Jr. returned home last week after visiting for two months with her three children in California. Mr. and Mrs. Walt Rogers, of Ogden, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Oyler. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Larson and Mrs. Hilda Peterson were Ogden visitors, Friday. Mrs. R. L. Shaffer returned Sun- - Uncle Sam's wheat supply varies from year to year, but consumption stays fairly stable. A plan to level out market supply looks like good business. NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT Curlew Irrigation and Reservoir Co., Principal Place of Business, Snowville, Utah NOTICE is thereby given that at a meeting of the directors, held on the 8th day of April, 1938, as assessment of 10 per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation, in the East and West Canals, payable on the 12th day of April, 1938, to Jesse Arbon, the treasurer of the company, at his residence at Snow-vinUtah. Any stock upon which this assess-memay remain unpaid on the 12th of May, 1938, will be delinquent day and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 28th day of May, 1938, to pay the delinquent assessment, togethed with the cost of advertising and the expense of sale. EDMUND KURD. Secretary Curlew Irrigation and Reservoir Co. e, of ; NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, General Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, March SO, 1938 NOTICE is hereby given that Robert Haslam Stewart of .Brigham Utah, who on Feb. 27, 1933, made add'l homestead entry No. 049881, for Lot 2, SEiNVVJ, SJNE1 (or SiNJ), Section 6, Township 13 North, Range 6 West, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed to make final aatahUsh claim to the land above described, before Ernest R, Hansen, Notary Public, at Brigham, Utah, on the 10th day of May, 1938. Claimant names as witnesses: Orlando Allen, of Blue Creek, Utah. W. II. Barnard, of Brigham City, Utah. Howard B. Glenn, of Tremonton, Utah. Guy Ballard, of Tremonton, Utah. THOMAS F. THOMAS, Register. notice of intention p, 4-- I t5. 5-- 5 7 Vt I , , uassmed Ad Column ij FOR SALE: First crop hay. 43.0-1-- 5. LOST Black Envelope purse. Finder please return to Leader Office. t3. 4-- 5-- 5 LINOLEUM felt base 28c sq. yd. Nationally advertised burlap back Inlaid, new 193S patterns, $1.23 sq. yd. Guaranteed low prices on all qualities of rugs and carpeting. Ogden Linoleum Co. 23G8 Wash. Klvd., Ogden, Utah. tf, 3-- FOR SALE-S- cd barley, fresh load of quality draft horses. C. Richardson FOR SALE Choice building lots, 1 block from Main Street. Inquire James Walton. Phone Residence. S9.a-1-; business, 23 J. tf. CASH PAID for dead and useless cows and horsca. Call Maple Creek Trout Hatchery, Brigham Reverse Charge. 8 tf. 493-J-- 2. OUR MAKE GOOD OR WE DO Fronk Chevrolet Co. Tremonton, Utah . Phone 28 Residential and farm customers of the Utah Power & Light company began April 1st receiving benefits of the new cheap electric service rate ordered la3t December. Reductions affect customers in Utah and Idaho and bring the average home rate to about 3 J cents per kilowatt hour, compared with a national average of 4.43 cents per kilowatt hour. "Under the new schedule the home rate will be as simple as A B C," company officials explained. "There will be but one schedule for all residential and farm users in the territory served by the Utah o Power & Light company's interconnected system, regardless of the uses they make of their electricity. "In the past different schedules have been used for service supplied customers having refrigerators and thoso having ranges and water heaters, and again those using only lighting service and small appliances. These various schedules have now been discarded and all residential and farm customers in the territory designated have been placed on one simple rate." Utah-Idah- FOR ICE Beverages & Coal SEE- - BESSIN6ER BROS. 1L TREMONTON, UTAH : 36: 6 KAMLCCfi The new schedule for all domes tic consumers in the territory men ? much enjoyed by the 35 geology any and forestry students who Vit'l u - i , inv. Mr. and Mrs. VA Mrs. Alfred Jensen motored Friday, where they visited and Mrs. Samuel Clark. I W. anato Lome with L Ladies Silk Hose, Men's Unions Shorts, Shirts and Socks In Munsia. J wear uui'g Clothiery. SHOP THROUGH TM LEADER ADS FIRST 1 All Kinds of Beautiful Handwork and Rugs for Gifts for any Occasion AT RELIEF SOCIETY ROOM tioned is as follows: For the first eleven kilowatt hours in any month., 90 cents ( Min imum charge). For each of the next twenty-fiv- e kilowatt hours, 5 cents. For each of the next 164 kilowatt hours, 2.5 cents. For each additional kilowatt hour, 1.5 cents. The charge based upon the num ber of rooms has been eliminated. The reduction to home and farm customers is part of the $350,000 saving ordered by the public ser vice commission to become effec tive during the year. The savings affec tings all classes of power users will bring total reductions since December 1933 to approximately $850,000. On Display Each Second Monday of Month, But May Purchased Any Day at Home of Mrs. H. N. Stohl .fr.H''H'''M"M"M'H If your Business can employ some of our dollars profitably in line with sound banking practice we feel that it is out business to lend them to Bear River STATE BANK SHOP THRU THE LEADER ADS 4- - LOW PRICE NEVER BOUGHT SO rirrnns"! I iNfiimif llMllEiV II t 1 II I LUAUH I ULI UIlLl l 1 1 E Ry "- -- SZf' , " -- m I, ,mi m WXi TUDOR SEDAN . . . h h wheelbase, springbase, 85 h.p. of Diagonal front scat back gives easy access to rear . folding . . Luggage compartment reached from outside . . . Mohair or DE 112-inc- ii ii. broadcloth upholstery. SpfTftOO u lL xj) F0R CARS DELIVERED Leader Ads Get Results 123-inc- ... DETROIT PMlTi IiIHkh, IN TAXES EXTRA E(U,PMENT INCLUDED Price " for Fofd Tuor De Luxe 85 H-Sedan illustrated, fully'equipoed. 111 BXJRA comfort WW STRIKING BEAUTY; TODAY'S DE LUXE BODIES TAKE YOU RIGHT UP INTO HIGHER STYLE FIELD, IN EVERYTHING BUI COPj VV,7H FXTRA mothers of the land. What Mr. Hoover in some penal Institution in the land. If he were dead there would be a feeling of grief and regret because of his absence, but the situation is not so merciful if he is alive. His wrong doing Is a pall on every meeting of the family group, a pall that time and passing years does not yocu We Welcome All New Business J. Edgar Hoover says that crime begins In the American homo. That is checking It up to the fathers and say is doubtless true. It is also true that the home itself pays a big price when crime claims one of its mem bers. It is often said by officers that the innocent members of a family suffer more than the guilty member of a family who may be arrested and sent to the penitentiary. In every meet ing of the family there Is the vacant chair and the heartbreaking thought that this son or brother is doing time Be BUY YOUR GIFTS HERE Ladies Silk Hose, Men's Unions, Shorts, Shirts and Socks in Munsing-wea- r Cliffs Clothiery. p m ? f SSI? identity of interests and HISTORICAL associations, serve to create and foster a spirit of international amity between the Western States and Canada's Pacific Province, British Columbia Many thousands of Americans visit this scenic section of the Dominion annually and almost everywhere along the highways they find evidence of the happy fashion in which events have shaped themselves to draw the two nations close together. In the sketch map (left), a tew examples are Indicated. Between Blaine and Douglas, the international gateways north of Seattle, stands the Peace Arch, a structure which the pennies and nickels of school children caused to be built In commemoration of the long years of unbroken friendship between the two countries. At Quesnel on the Cariboo Trail a tablet records a high adventure in communication. After the failure of the Atlantic Cable in 1858, an attempt was made to connect America and Europe by telegraph across the Bering Straits and Asia but the successful laying of the Atlantic Cable in 1866, ended the overland route at Quesnel to which point wires had been strung from the border. At Prince George, a cairn recalls the epochal Journey of Sir Alexander Mackenzie across the mountains to the Pacific Ocean in 1793, twelve years prior to the equally famous trip of Lewis and Clark through the Rockies to Oregon. Had Mackenzie's record of his trip been less complete it is possible that the feat of Lewis and Clark would have r raited in the xi whole of the British Columbia coast becoming a part of the United States. Prince George also was the scene of many of the activities of John Ogden, the trapper, after whom the city of Ogden, Utah, is named. It is the gateway to one of the best hunting and game fishing areas of Canada and to Hazelton and the Skeena River districts which are famous for their Indian totem poles. The making of these poles Is a lost art among the Indians today and the Canadian Government has taken vigorous steps to protect and preserve the fine sped, mens that are to be found In this part of British Columbia, particularly at Kitwanga near Hazelton. 1 IOreiSa countries. Mr. and Mrs. David Larson daughter, Rhoda, motored to tJt1! Sunday afternoon to visit their and brother, Willard, a student at A. C, who had just returned from 1,400 mile trip into Southern lC? 2ND WARD RELIEF SOCIETY ! j i nt HIGHWAYS OF HISTORY I V ri |