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Show rAGS TWO CAB BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY. MAY RIVER VALLEY LEADER Bureau Anaylzes Farm Production, Price Situation Entered at the Postofflc at Utah as Second Class Matter. n, Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of each week. . 5, 1938 (business man.prince defends ! Modern bndia j " Farmers may expect decline in the general price level during the coming $2.00 season, a report issued this week econ- Jl.OO from the bureau cf agricultural of Federal states. the Effects . 50 amics Commodities corporation's Surplus work will be felt, howeve-r- , and price will probably be beneficially affected by its activities, the report pointed out. US. where and catalog TJia only rUt in da dTartiiina' matter cnwnnf any lice of buainea Analyzing the dairy situation, the or product can be obtained Fraa and Without bureau indicated that Industrial though prices American Library the ia Obligation Write 'or Buainea Advertiaini Matter you are will be decidedly lower than a year interested in; aame will be promptly forwarded. ago, activities of the governmental AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL LIBRARY commodities corporation surplus EaalaeerlntBoildiat, CUoa.o. IlUaoia would help to maintain a fair price. The relationship between butterfat and feed prices is almost as good as TIONAl EDITORIAL A for the period from 1925 to 1929, it i ASSOCIATION 193 5 was pointed out. Total dairy product manufacturing was about 8 per cent larger in February this year than in 1936. It reached a higher total than for any single month in the past five years, but consumption of products was lower than a year ago, the report pointed out. as well as to your Country A further decline in hog prices may be anticipated in light of prospective large marketings of hogs and low consumer demand. Hog prices weakened PATRONIZE YOUR in late March and early April in spite of relatively small total of hogs LOCAL MERCHANTS slaughtered during the month. Saor-ag- e stocks of pork as of April 1 were lower than those of March, but stocks of lard on hand increased. Fruit and nut trees passed the win-te- d without serious damage, and good soil maisture conditions as well as temperature climatic conditions have 4 resulted in early blossoming of trees. Strawberry acreages are expected to be about 14 per cent larger than last year, but not greater than the av erage for the period from 1927 to -- rtne S Free to Publit J d - t. eV ttn ifn&kt iiiiin s Crop insurance, which enables a farmer to have a sure crop each year, will soon be available to the wheat farmers of the country, an AAA bulletin issued recently points out. The AAA meeting will be held at Pocatello on May 10 and 11, and county meetings will be held soon to explain the plan. Insurance premiums will be paid in bushels, not dollars, and indemnities will also be arranged for from a grain two-stat- e aft-terwa- rd reserve. Almost every Utah county will have a Future Farmer and club entry in the second annual Intermountain Junior Fat Stock show to be held in Salt Lake City from June 7 to D, state youth leaders announce. Designated to encourage the production of quality fat stock by young breedrs., the show is not a profit venture. Premiums will total at least $3000 and exhibitors fees will be minimized, show officials announce. 4-- H college officials report. Farms in an area in which such crops as oats, barley, and rye as produced will be known as class A farms. Farms in areas which, in general, have no surplus of these crops will be know n as class B farms'. Utah will come under the second classification, it was said. I, 'Anandi Prashad Kaicker Tells How Hindus Combine Caste Traditions With Modern Business Methods discussing India, most foreigners and some few native writers X refuse to 'give the devil his due'!' says Anandi Prashad Kaicker, ranking Indian prince who was interviewed recently during a business trip to the United States. Mr. Kaicker, as he prefers to call himself out of deference to the American custom of doing away with titles, asserts that Indian business methods have kept pace with India's outstanding culture and philosophy. I'eople speak of 'backward In-- $ dia,' " he said, "yet throughout ing mark being a caste mark high the East, which represents in on the left side of his forehead. population and area more than His wife, however, dresses in a half the world, India is referred native robe of blue silk, banded in to as 'the golden sparrow' because gold, and in her nose is a small of her fertility and her importance diamond symbolic of her faith. A as a market. Japan, for instance, red dot between her eyes, renewed gives first place to our country each day with cosmetics, takes the when it comes to her exports. We place of a wedding ring. also import a large variety of The Kaickers, who have a home American products. Radios are in Delhi as well as a palace in common and air conditioning is Agra, the city where the famous Taj Mahal is located, left a family f Many Hindus of high ranic now of four school boys behind them engage in business. Mr. Kaicker in India. Their eldest son is enhimself is. manager for the Rem- rolled as a student in St. Stephen's ington Rand Company In Delhi, the College in Delhi University, and capital of India. "Our office has like his father, is preparing to gt worked out a system for the sale into business when he graduates of typewriters which Is similar to The other boys, sixteen and four your installment plan," he explain- teen respectively, attend schoo; ed. "The person who buys the and lead a normal boy's life, play-inmachine pays ten rupees a month, hockey, tennis, cricket and which Is roughly the equivalent of football as well as native games ten cents a day. This means that Mrs. Kaicker. who understands we are selling more and more type- English, though she does not writers for individual use, where it, smiled and nodded whenspeak her formerlv. th mnrhl iuuiiu husband said that the three bovs exclusively in government, military were left to share the responsibil- ana Dusmess omces." ity of their baby brother, onl i inuia, as tew Americans seem to eighteen months old. know, has a compulsory educaUntil they are eight or ten boys tional system for all children tip to and girls play together much as a certain age. This is similar to western children do. After that the public school system in the age, however, the girls prepare foi Their private their careers as wives, and they ;United States. schools, like the English ones on lead a more secluded existenct which they are modelled, are called than any occidental miss would submit to. Once married, 'public schools." fe "To show you the the Hindu woman shares her standing of our people as far as intelligence husband's interests to a very full education are concerned." extent. This includes not only his ,nd Mr. Kaicker continued, "97 of business problems and his social the successful competitors In Brit- activities, but his civic interests as ish Civil Service Examinations for well. Mr. Kaicker, for instance, India are native Hindus. Yet in addition to his business duties. these posts are open to Britishers Is chairman of the Delhi Civic anrt tVia AvarTilnnMnn. a Music Committee and of several England!" sporting clubs, in all of which the k Mr. Kaicker wears conventional Princess Raj Rani takes an active western dress, his only distinguish- - interest. Utah's crop conditions are very fa vorabl, according to J. II. Jensen, who is field representative for the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley. Mr. Jensen pointed out that fall wheat was in god condition in all areas of the state, and moisture conditions are exceptionally god. Storage lakes are d in almost all pails of the area, he said. well-fille- 1939 Is the telephone Fairgrounds number assigned to the private exchange on Treasure Island for the 1939 Golden Gate International Leader Ads Get Results wide-spread- ." r -- w ; t Slower Flying Bird Woodpeckers, and thrushes re anion:; the slower flying birds. They ennnot kefp up with o car at 20 miles nn hour. Jnys and orioles are about ns slow, but barn swallows, going unevenly In one direction for at least 50 yards, will quickly get well ahead of a speed. flm-he- s Wc Also Buy M ! Old Newspapers leader CO HIDES - PELTS - WOOL We Now Have a Sub Station In Trcmonton GEORGE TRICE, Agent Alka-Seltz- cr Office ve, does not depress the heart. FOR SALE: 5G.a-I-- 5 TS Gas is fine in your stove or furnace, but it's both painful and embarassing in your stomach. Why don't you use for the relief of ACID INDIGESTION, Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Muscular, Rheumatic, Sciatic pains? is pleasant to take and unusually effective in action. 1 whenever you wanf if! itrfnfflf al dk j! ELECTRON SERVEL O RUNS ON KEROSENE 0 Frtfip.i AisprLtirp Prntttrtit fntul jnnrferllv j j Saves j and work rnhex 9 steps Operates for fete cents a da J Ao daily attention No water. No machinery to wear you can live miles from tie J mains and power lines, yet f still enjoy the pleasures and savings modem city refrigeration! SerfH Hectrolux, the Kerosene RefrieeraW, duplicates in all important ways tl famous Gas Refrigerator which has been the choice for hundreds of thousands t of fine city homes. NOW wttbool ol teformatlco aboatsena tbe Kooaene KrfritrraM. Stmt or RJM- X- i. You stop gullies and produce fu- ture income when you plant trees on poor hilly land. You provide a valuable windbreak when you set them around your farmstead. You provide a valuable farm crop when you arrange for a woodlot. Tcnra. 1 SCHOSS ELECTRIC Tremonton, Utah fhone fT tf FIRST UTAH-IDAH- O LEAGUE T BASEBALL GAME i Tremonton - Garland X T t t -- vs.- MALAD, IDAHO AT-- oda n 30 Sunday, May 8th Admission - 25 3f ..li yomr f f Na 40. '., A.store at drug tnXt'pj fountain,the and ckages for use. c D OEM! ICE Kmtx. - W0I6HTION Pf Non-laxati- I BY-PRODUC- vice Commission, Washington, T Respectfully, Stake Com. L. P. Sup. DEAD or WORTHLESS HORSES & COWS COLORADO ANIMAL office of the first or second class or from the United States Civil St"' field. We Will Call for and PAY CASH for Trcmonton V Picaur scud me, WHEN FOOD FERMENTS AND 6ASES RISE Alka-Seltz- er Just Ring Lit 14 j Lmti . o 1)1 IV c i.v fire Of F!v5: xia, 01 uic ijubl oxnce or custom house in any city which has a rmt DEALER'S NAME AND ADDRESS us. e NOTICE TO FARMERS r rsfi Ctr. Uncle Jim Sags athletically inclined please be in the Single admission price to the 1939 group. Married men who hold Aaronic World's Fair of the West on Treasure priesthood and those also unmarried Island will be 50 cents for adults and who hold this priesthood please re- 25 cents for children under 12 years port to key men to be counted among TAKE JUST ENOUGH TO ALKALIZE their thiHrh me aate of ihu 7 close of receipt of am)li ,tons. These age limits will not be waived ia any case. Full information may he obtai 1 Lets show to that vast group our manly selves, let not a single wrong word or action be heard or seen. This bids fair to be a jubilee for the lesser priesthood of the Bear River stake. Stake committee and parents who have not seen thi s pageant are invited. Tickets for each group will be handed out to leaders on the athletic - ,3 7u hi st how-eve- Aaronic Priesthood Activity Column Lesser priesthood outing and pro gram for May 14th and 15th has been approved about as follows: Chairman Ririe of the Ogden group cordially invites our group of 300 to join their group of about 800 on the agricultural college athletic field in Logan. To meet their progham we should all leave here not later than 1 p. m. on the 14th of May. Reach Logan at 2 p. ni. and rub shoulders, compare athletic ability and mingle in games and sports till about 5 p.m. for an then perhaps a round-tabl- e hour, lunch at six to seven and the pageant at 8 p.m. Every group plans their own transportation, luncheon or picnic. There will bo a small expense for restaging, perhaps a dollar per ward which they key men could carry with them, that we may pay on the spot. Provide a bag of nuts, candy or some item that the group would all have access to during and after lunch. Will all swift footed boys, high jumpers, broad junipers and otherwise t ft Prices af lower grade beef cattle are expected to remain near the pres ent level during most of the spring, but some weakness in the prices of better grade animals may be antici pated, the bureau's pamphlet said. Numbers of cattle on feed in the corn belt on April 1 were approximately 20 per cent greater than on the same date in 1937, and marketings have apparently been appreciably delayed by large supplies of fairly cheap feeds. Favorable conditions for development of new crop lambs should result In larger slaughters of sheep in May and June than a year ago, it was pointed out. The early spring lamb crop, too, is at least 15 per cent larger this year than in 1937, and decreases in marketings of Texas animals will hardly compensate for the surplus. Prices for a new crop lambs will pro bably continue considerably lower than a year ago. There will be no great change in the world-wid- e seedings of wheat this year, the bureau said. Marked acre age increases in some wheat areas, notably Rumania, were largely offset by drips in the seedings of France, Tunisia, Italy and some other coun tries. Conditions as of April 1 indi cated that the nations winter wheat crop would yield at least 726 million bushels, and figures of March 1 indicate that the spring wheat crop will be about 200 million bushels. World wheat production excluding that of Russia and China is estimated at 3,819,000,000 bushels. Under the new 1938 Farm act, all farms in the nation are divided Into two classes, Utah State Agricultural . - 9,1 1936. iiiaMwwatfiaeaaijii 3! X JO milk today Is clean and wholesome he, considers it only natural for milk to be kept in that condition. J. LliJ fallacy.' The dairy Industry has a long and noticable pedigree, Dr. Carroll says. Safe milk as it is known today- traces its ancestry back to Louis rasieur, and has appropriated his name in such a manner that no informed person will mistake its origin, he points out. It's roots also run deep in more modern studios of human and animal Anyone who looks on this achievement as simple should trace the history of human suffering and loss of life through epidemics of bo diseases, Dr. Carroll asserts. Four barriers are listed to the maintenance of a permanent supply of safe milk; ignorance, carelessness, prejudice and greed. Even in the sha dows of research institutions, city governments will go to considerable expense and take great pride in supplying its residents with meat inspection service, at the same time shutting its eyes to the sale of infected milk, Dean Carroll states. Efficiency in the operation of pasteurization plants deserves more attention than it now receives. Inefficient pasteurization gives a feeling of security which is far from justified by actual bacterial counts. "Cleanliness in the manufacturing field is not only a matter of vital importance to the people served, but is also one of the cornerstones of proi-uquality, and upon which successful merchandising in the future will largely depend,' Dr. Carrol believes. Dairying as a profession abound's with men who might be called patron saints, he claims, listing Louis Pasteur who provided sanitary methods for the maintenance of high quality and flavor in dairy products; Gail Borden who built the enormous condensed milk industry; DeLaval who provided the cream separator and Stephen Moulton Babcock who devised the Babcock test for butterfat content. There are a number of problems yet unsolved; oxidized flavor in bottles, troubles encountered in the condensed milk plant, breakage in bottles, and other difficulties, according to Dr. Carroll. He believes, however, that they will all yield to the carefully planned, clearly executed research which the youths of today are carrying on. "I have too much faith in the vitality and fundamental soundness of the dairy industry to believe that it can meet a problem which will se riously and permanently handicap it," Dr. Carrol layers. AO fli X. snrcfisiOH ivCain T mm ; r at Mmm9mm i 'i i" To Your Town iT th p0" sition cf Student Nurse at the Train. is too complacent in accept-- ! fw ing useful developments irom ine, ths Hospital. Washington n ta2a. uarrou, plicant3 must h AP- past," according to Dr. w. uean vi uie uim oww; a6iivuiu". from a standard 4 year high . c(XiZ : college school of agriculture, "because course which must" v,Q f Z units. "1VC "raided he dealizes that we have electric heat tarn specified Applications and light and power and communica- be accepted from senior students Tv. could we s assume that he tion today, to later proof of ject aT graduation .Likenot possibly be without them. plicants must have reached th;. u, market wise, since he knows that but must have t PMsed . "Man Subscription Rates One Year (In advance) - - - - -Bit Months (in advance) - - Months (in advance) - - 7 miL ser"xamd Scientist Reveals The United States Civil "Pedigree" of Clean ,Commission Serv announced an Dnirv Manufactures competitive examination for Children - W |