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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, JTTO Box Elder Teachers CXAB EIVER VAIXET LEADEB at the Foetoffke at Catered Utab as Second Class Matter. Published at Tremonton, Utah, on fbcndajr of each week. xa Aided Ship SOS Signals NowAuto-AlarBy Radios New Elect Officers n, AFiuu is. DEWEYVILLE By Mrs-- Thorua m Mr. S. W. Beecher, chairman of the nominating committee of the Box El- By der Teachers' Association, reports the following officers elected for the com$2.00 ing school year; 1st vice president, $1.00 J. Douglas Gunderson; 2nd vice pres60 ident, Rulon H. Manning; secretary and treasurer, Frank Stevens. Mr. Clifford L. Frye, who was elected 1st vice president last year becomes the president of the Teachers' catalog and The only place In tl U. S. whira Association. dverti.ina- natur covering any line at buaineM And obtained rrae Without b or product can The present association officers, Obligation ia the American Industrial Library. Write for Busines Advertising Matter you are with F. Joseph Law as president, wish interested in; same wiil be promptly forwarded. to compliment the teachers for their A&EBICAI IX9DSTSIAL LIBRA1Y splendid professional attitude, and for aria Ii mil din A. Caiaa. Illini the exceptional type of service they have given in the district this year. All the teachers of every school in VARIATIONAL I DITCRIAl the Box Elder Districit are enrolled I r,ll i ASSOCIATION one hundred per cent in the local, 'fegff gylLeMAL state and national associations. As a result they receive the latest research material on progressive education, which enables the children of our county to benefit in their school work. A remarkable feeling of coopera and understanding exists among tion as well as to your Country the patrons, pupils, and teachers. Subscription Rates One Tear (in advance) $ix Months (in advance) rtree Months (in advance) J. F. 7Suh-- r. ''. ...-- .. Interns! Orr; jndence School of Radio, Scliooli Free to Pjibli'c - might funcIn the above illustration is shown how the radio auto-alartion. The ship in the distance is In trouble and sends the SOS distress nearer ship is not signal. It is assumed that the radio operator on the station up the signal shore picks the listening at the moment, however, which brings to attention and resends It after sounding the auto-alarthe radio operator on the inbound vessel. effort is being made to the signal may have gone unnoticed EVERY radio watch foolproof. Progress at stations where continuous Is especially evident in the radio was not kepV Today the automatic rooms of ships that sail the oceans. alarm announces a distress message the bell on the house teleAn outstanding example of recent Just asannounces an incoming call. phone development in radio is that of The SOS signal of today Is pre"auto-alarm,-" an improvement in- ceded by the automatic alarm sigstalled on ships having only one nal which operates a bell or other autodevice This radio operator. at indicator every station equipped a when an alarm matically sounds distress message. the receive to distress message comes In on the The operator is thus called to receiving set. "listen-in- " and receive the details The SOS or distress signal of the of the message. sea is well known. It means "Come Where the distress signal is weak and help us." The familiar tone of because of distance or low power, it may be relayed, or repeated, by of the International Morse code a more powerful transmitter, on can be readily recognized by any shore or ship. In this way the autoradio operator who is at his listen- matic alarm is sounded on any ship ing post. that might be near the disaster, but But suppose the operator is not has not responded to the weak siglistening, what then? In the past nals of the ship in distress. 9J5 To Your Town YOUR PATRONIZE LOCAL MERCHANTS n UWIVU .1 S SI V JH T What Flowers for Your Garden? Ault During the current school year teachers of the elementry schools of the Box Elder District have again voluntarily divided themselves into study groups. Teachers have read widely from school journals, from the newer books, and from time tested educational works, in their efforts to understand the major problems of the schools of today. Each study group has met weekly to discuss the findings of its members. The fact that these studies are being made while schools are in session has increased their practical value, for new ideas can be carried out while the teacher's enthusiasm is fresh. At the same time the frequent group discussions serve to prevent hasty or unwarranted changes in class-rooprocedure. Reports of the studies are present ed at Teachers' Institutes, whenever the work oof several groups has been completed. Rcently two reports were given at a meeting at the Box Elder High Schoo, to which parents as well as teachers were Invited. The teachers of the Central School at Brigham r reported on their study of of number A Relationships." brief talks, illustrated wiith charts, were given by parents and teachers of the Central School P. T. A. The report ended with a brief skit summarizing the points which had been brought out. A report from the Corinne teachers on their experiment in the use cf par ent teacher conferences to replace report cards followed. They presented a playlet in two acts, contrasting the jealousy and misunderstanding which frequently come as a result of the use of report cards, with the sympathetic and constructive attitude which can be fostered by parent-teachconferences. That the impression of a child's progress conveyed by the traditional report card has often been vague and incomplete where the conference can be specified and vital, was pointed out. Reports of Box Elder study groups scheduled for the near future are as follows: "Literature in the Elementary School," Bothwell and Thatcher teachers. "Democracy and Educa tion," Garland teachers. "Mental Hygiene," Tremonton teachers. "Social "dit-dit-d- h t" National Automobile Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Heusser are spending two weeks with relatives in California. Friday afternoon, the Daughters of the Pioneers held their meeting at the home of Mrs. J. P. Barnard. A kitchen shower was given Cleo Marble at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Peter Marble, Thursday afternoon. Friday, Mr. and Mm A. R. Burbank and sons, Odell, Douglas and Kenneth, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burbank. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dewey have returned to Richfield. Misses Ruth Snow, Genieve Gardner and Cleo Marble were in Salt Lake City taking radio auditions on a talent program. Mr. and Mrs. N. Peter Marble announce the engagament of their daugh ter, Cleo, to Grant Erickson, of Beaver Dam, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Erickson. The marriage will take place Thursday, April 28 in the Logan Temple. A wedding dance and shower will be held in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Erickson April 29 in the ward amusement hall. Their friends are in vited. The Harris Novelettes will fur nish the music. Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burbank and Mr. and Mrs. James Burbank visited relatives in Richmond. Edward Quinlin and children, of American Falls, Idaho, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Snow Jr., of this place. Dale and Pearl LaJean Quinlin will be guests at the Snow home for a few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Burbank and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Lish Jr. and children visited relatives? in Salt Lake City on Monday. Relatives from Kaysville were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Bunch on Sunday. S flowers of 1938. Well, there are new flowers every year, actually new kinds, never before grown. For example: This again Is going to be a great marigold year, because of the new types of marigold. Why are they new? Because until last year, marigolds all had a strong odor In their foliage which many people did not like. Last year appeared the first odorless marigold, and von mense popularity as well as many prizes. This year we shall have three more odorless marigolds, one of clear canary color (Yellow Crown), one typical collarette type (King's Ransom), one superb im- carna- tion-flowered Gold m L"4 r Tl V ! i S7 4 f r L t 4. ""t'l rZ2ff3 ' aW SI Aboout ten per cent of the grass hopper eggs in Utah had already hatched on April 1, a recent department of agriculture report states. The hopper's close relative, the Mormon cricket, started to hatch in January in parts of Nevada, in February in Montana, and last month throughout Utah and other parts of the West. No other insect infestations are listed as probable in the deparment report, however. Rulon Cannon, who is working in Ogden, spent the weekend with his family. y1 nie A national wheat acreage allotment of 62,500,000 acres has been set under the provisions of the new farm act, according to department of agriculture bulletins. State allotments have set, as a base for the payment of soil conservation stipends under the Utah's farm wages of employees act. Congress has been authorized to who got their board as well as a cash appropriate half a billion dollars to payment averaged higher last month the conservation fund. than in any other state in the union, a bureau of agricultural economics "It is common sense to recognize report issued recently said. The state the risks of and forwas forth high in the actual cash paythose A. risks," tify against Henry ment to farm help, the report said. of agriculture, anWallace, secretary Farm workers in Utah get $40.50 a nounced in a recent radio bioadcast. month and board; an average of $2.05 to agriculture, the insura day. The national averages are "Applied ance principle now permits farmers to $23.86 and $1.20. Monthly wages of set up a joint wheat reserve to draw farm workers in the state who do when they suffer crop losses, upon not get board as well as pay of whether those losses are averaged regardless $55.75 a month; $2.60 a day as com caused by drought, floor, wind, hail, pared with $34.81 or $1.63 a day for insects, lightning or plant disease," the national average. Wallace said. been- - wheat-growin- g NOTICE TO FARMERS i tS Indicates INCREASE Indicates c Rj We Also Buy TS Surety Company furnish to v 1 f j; SHOP THROUGH THE LEADER ADS FIRST i ' Is v 4 data naticev by mf pared with lh report were received oe-i- od of 1937, in the 34 state from which fatality I T' AND LENGTHEN FIELDING By Enid Welling Mr. and Mrs. Owen Hess spent Tuesday in Ogden. Bishop M. A. Garn and Oleen Garn spent Tuesday in Ogden on business Leo Farnswortli took a bus load of Seminary students to Salt Lake City Saturday. The group spent the day in the temple, being baptized for the dead. Approximately fifty stu dents made the trip. Mrs. David Wood spent Saturday in Salt Lake City, visiting with rel week and report having enjoyed the trip and the reunion immensely. atives. Mrs. Amy Gross, of Spokane, Wash, Mrs. Lot Hess and two sons, of Brig who has been visiting here and at ham City, visited Friday with Mrs Garland and Tremonton with relatives and friends, left last Wednesday for her home in Washington. NO SUNDAY If SINCE Dean Grover was visiting in MEADACHCS Saturday and Sunday. iPOIlOUH DAY AQU WAY J Mr. and Mrs. Frank Durfey and children, and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bourne spent one day last week visiit-in- g with relatives at Lava Hot Springs, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Dalton, of Shelby, met them there and enjoyed the day visiting with the Durfeys and Bournes. Willard B. Smith and wife and two grandchildren, of Salt Lake City, vis ited Sunday as guests of Aunt Alice Ann Smith. Mrs. Smith is a sister of Don't let HEADACHE, Acid Willard Smith. Indigestion, Neuralgia, MuscuMr. and Mrs. Carl Skinner and son lar, Rheumatic, Sciatic Pains, of Salt Lake City, visited with Lyle, rob you of healthful recreation. R. E. Skinner and family over the weekend. Take Alka - Seltzer. Find out Mrs. R. E. Skinner has been visit for yourself how quickly it will ing in American Fork, Utah with her relieve your every-da- y aildaughter for the past ten days. ments. Farm-ingto- n ALKA-SELT2E- R relieves pain because it contains an analgesic er (acetyl-salicylat- FOR SALE: Old Newspapers e). Alka-Selt-te- r's vegetable and mineral help to neutralize cess stomach acids. ' 1 At yonr 130 -s2- -'-0-S. BIG ICE CUBES FOR at local average electric rates O Others may claim econ' cmy , . , Kelvir.atot gives these actual, unbeatable ECONOMY-FIGURE- More fos- - S Your Money ! COLD MAKING POWER? O K3ivinaior'8 grea; "POLAR POWER" Sealed Uni; sets new records fo.' tow operating costs-y- et gives all the refrigeration you'!, fcvei' need , , t as much aa you'd get from 1QS0 pountL tfict a week' LOOK AT THIS? O Kelvinator lets you pack jn more food! Amazing new adjustable shelf arraugemenj gives plenty of room for melons, turkeys and big-ges- other bulky objects, Na other refrigerator has it .' CUBES POP OUTS O Iteivinator'n qjw SPEEDY-CUB- E Raleas iairly pops ioe cubes out ot their trays! No struggle-n- o splashing -j- us; iift a jevev. ex- drug fTwTtsW'M soda fountain, and in 30 and 60 packages for home use. CO 1 1 ECONOMY? COME IN TODAY! f We Now Have a Sub Station In Tremonton GEORGE TRICE, Agent I V4 The kbove chart howi the and loaser state in the gaint now being waged (at highway tafetv During 7firtwidetwocampaign month of 1938 automobile (atalitiei decreased 29 as com Leader Office HIDES - PELTS - WOOL jj,v:;-- j in Automobile fateliu'e states failing LESSEN SPEED I Tremonton 56.al5 & " i in Automobile f ata!itiS Alka-Seltz- Just Ring BY-PRODUC- CsauaJtj " Marigolds were chosen for this intensive breeding work because they have most of the qualities of the ideal flower. They are hardy, bloom early and long and late, they have long stems and are ideal for picking and arranging in bowls and vases, and they most generously reward the gardener with a wealth of warm light in the garden. UM We Will Call for and PAY CASH for DEAD or WORTHLESS HORSES & COWS COLORADO ANIMAL SMaa ':iibdicateDECREA Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Cannon and Science," Collinston, Deweyville, Hon eyville teachers. "Science in the El- children, and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. ementary School," Fielding teachers. Cannon attended the family reunion Wallace has just approved a program "The Exceptional Child," Portage of the Angus Cannon family, held in to encourage the use of American teachers. " A Health and Physical St. George last week. They returned butter in the Panama Canal Zone, de- Education Program," Mantua, Willard to their homes the forepart of this operation from the present time to Juno 30, 1D3S, the Panama railroad company is expected to purchase butter from American producers and wholesalers for retail resale to Central American consumers. " f er partment of Agriculture notices state. and Perry teachers. Under the program, which will be in . W. K. Welling. after kind called Burpee the man who developed it. Dr. Philip Newell Youtz, Director of the Department of the Pacific Area for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition, is the author of many books on art and architecture. "Parent-Teache- Restoration of the old practice of awarding a dowry along with a bride is advocated by O. E. Baker, department of iagriculture economist as a method of stemming the declining national birth rate. "Since they have "been accustomed to the comforts and even some of the luxuries of life," Baker explains, "the tendency of young folks with low incomes is to postpone childbirth and in most cases reduce it." Baker was lecturer at a Utah State Agricultural college school if philosophy a few years ago. 11 Primitive methods of mining gold and iron in the Philippines will be displayed at the 1939 Golden Gate Isjand in San Francisco Bay. Fatality Cliari i'k;x.s Florence Sullivan likes the new odorless marigolds. -NJEW flowers? Who ever heari of new flowers?" Such might be the answer of an unknowing person on being told to experiment In this year's garden, with the new m J 5. t KJ |