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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, MAY WART, the Speed Cop OF TIME fhe MARCH rt. low. u. t. Prep areJ by KXM opt. fc the Editors of TIME The Weekly NeusmoZazine ...... a rmm Page One) fetus has lop ears, but if the baby is born with them it shows that someadoDt "outright theivery as thing happened to the ears' developa decree Ei?ned Inoffly PUc'. ment during the prenatal period. Tfor confiscation cf practi-f- f .pr Germany- ; h real estate and money o WORK WEEK hold-J- i are estimated at WASHINGTON-- In a heavy week's in German Austria at work preparatory to his Caribbean 'nnn The sweeping Goring cruise, the President sent to Congress his message on remanded registration of all more WOIU1 uiau legislation, signed the bigholdin r.i. and forbade sales gest ($500,000,000) regular Navy apSOOO marks) 1 transfers of Jewish property with propriation in U. S. peacetime history. 0 lovernment permiccion. Goring While the Senate debated his Navy Expansion Bill, the ;1 provided stiff prison terms for grants using "Aryan" dummies President also put in a request for T JLflOO. long-await- ed f 5 $25,000,000 to provide p work on two more Linen admitted that the decree for starting to bring ten total currently measure to dispos-'lo- n prelimtoary or under construction to nine. of what planned confiscation and The President also was visited by still remained in Germany. the man who, more than any other in the U. S., personifies to millions Believing the Easter the triumph of the rugged virtues of TENA demonstrations the American Way Henry Ford. ce on 'L prankish Storm Troopers round- - With Motormaker Ford was his son hundreds of Jews in Vienna's Edsel and Publicist William J. Camermarshaled them into parade on. It was Henry Ford's first meeting Usation, roared with laughter when with the President since World Wat Cv forced them to perform a bur-Zi- e days when he manufactured submarof the goose step through the ine chasers for Assistant Secretary of centre. The troopers the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. Iv's amusement cafe o Jewish patrons scrub floors escorted and thru wash windows, ,j repot streets customers from Jewish "HOW DO YOU DO" ;res who were forced to carry signs Mrs. Franklin WASHINGTON iing: "I am an Aryan pig. I bought Roosevelt discussed last wek its of; frankly sb a Jewish shop." the technique whereby, when shaking hands with lines of people, she whisks irts of f VIENNA Meanwhile, the official them along before they have time to "Volkischer start a conversation. Excerpt: Grasp Pnc?; jenna Nazi newsorgan after nty. abachter," declaring that by firmly the ends of the fingers of the guest, never allowing him to take 42 no Jew would have the oppor--jnit- y to earn a living in Vienna, yours, and, as you say 'how do you Abandon all hope, do, I'm so glad to see you,' draw him rjned: "Jews! creastt met is so fine that you will not gently forward and past you." il t4 o a hole in it through which you erthai 2 slip to return to the f leshpots of SILKEDOVN CRUISE :ultura vpt. There is only one possibility ecentlj if someone will you Emigrate CHARLESTON, South Carolina s attril Nazi But the organ As he boarded the Navy's sleek, light you." apt ieasonai there will be "no pogroms," cruiser "Philadelphia" last week for and rinded everyone that "Germany is a y "shakedown cruise" (first i rest .tod of justice." a new ship), President run of trial iditior.i Roosevelt spied the ancient battle present which Rear Admiral "Hartford" sloop in imif YORK In Manhattan arriv- in the Civil War commanded Farragut e to bl Fuhrer Fritz Kuhn of the German declared: "It Mobile of battle Bay, jerican Bund after a trip to Ger- horrible in It's looks awful. shape. jjy and Austria. Met by two grayWPA project Sed, Bund officers, Why don't you get a .t is down here and fix it up?" :irer Kuhn brought back a message for Replied Charleston Navy Yard's m German Jews to American Jews. embarrassed commandant, Rear Addc po'4 talked with lots and lots of Jews we fret ly : Germany," Kuhn said, "and they miral William Henry Allen: "Well, of sort for that not have money any told me this: 'Tell the Jews in Hod! arica to let us alone. We're all thing down here." Answered the President gailey: M! Thousands of Jews are return-- s "You at ti surjust send in a request for the Germany and I was really in ha see haw many Jewish stores appropriation and I'll put it through." Then, while Navy cannon boomed a sstopper wRjpen." n salute, the "Philadephia" slid be injuij o ;t of the harbor into the open sea. out. fc BALLOON - - hcadea for the Caribbean wnere the hovmerl I resident planned several days of livestock MONTREAL. Canada On March 1 fishing. be take! chemistry class of Verdun High o I ort. School near Montreal, released a hy5 cent balloon with BACK DUES PAID - - tich ben had f: experimenting. they pidly GENEVA, Switzerland Indomitaast week they received this note mountaif Haile Selassie, deposed Emperor cm Singapore, Straits Settlements, ble e held of ;bcat 14,000 Ethiopia who last November was miles away: n Stec last week dug up suf'My wife found your balloon this reported broke, ordinal to funds ficient give the League of uming. We saw your address on the jiager a personal check Secretariat )te; it was torn and I could not write Nations' i of as part payment of Ethioit If you send me money I will for $2,300 ie rti the green ballom to you. It was pia's back dues. Embarrassed League )pen M near Kilhney Road. I am a officials, planning to recognize Italy's id Futc Jinese old man." King Victoria Emanuele as Ethiopian o Emperor at the next Council meeting, did not know what to do with the id. Pkt. W EARS check. his o SEW lid. YORK In the affliction smonly called "lop ears," the ears BUSINESS: FIRST QUARTER rir'd conspecuously out from the NOTES nton 4 a like wings. In the American Med al NEW YORK "The present outlook Association Journal last week :rcd M irvard's Dr. Donald W. MacCollum is very poor," said President Walter tverii as he ;Prted that this abnormality can be P. Paepcke of ContainerhisCorp. the Sir week company's last ieiied by cutting a piece of carti-j- announced from each ear. In Dr. ommission of the usual quarterly divinet renders j lop ears are not due dend. Contained's first quarter of 1937 a from profit off proper care in childhood but are dropped ; ersoft1 congenital defect. A h $626,970 to a 1938 loss of $53,198, and bat-tleshi- ta Jew-Tvreal- th anti-Semit- ic ade :. -- if' : de-jr- ed six-da- N'EVV black-trouser- r. l1. : : to 21-gu- c- - Gulf-Strea- m the iogen-fille- d a : -- d y' - S MacCol-opinio- n, three-mont- re as Sffii Sam si, unusual snip ririces on PAINTS AND VARNISHES are still effective. .. . Prices Are Lower Than You Would Dream Possible .... in-In-i- ng her tor the N in E WHAT Quality Merchandise BUILDING MATERIAL - HARDWARE COAL - GLASS A THERE REALLV MAGNIFICENT) TO HONOR THESE OLD ( VETERANS AND THAT tS TO I PARADE THEM c im skic USED CARS V c ujnuncne.u rantOVft "V ALL TOWN- W Kv ) iMtm fvou BUYING SAFE WOULDN'T EVEN THE VMtDOVM THE OLD FELLOWS THINK THEV GAS SAVER MAKES. LOOK IN THOSE ,(( NEftE OLD REYES AT THEM I SWELL USED CARSy) ENOUGH TO te-( HwE FOU6HTL Vsav nTVC iLirur rD ' T if:TH 1 IwAO J rnf - fCM T n " WHO MAKES USED CAB Co. VOUNG A MV-HO- WAV ICT, ctVrV rsW F VETERANS'' -- lS BuT ONE I AND CHINA WARE Farmers' Cash Union "YOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET" TTIPJ-- 3 1SS1 CHEV. $395.00, Otr oTHT PAGE Standard Sedan Ileater - Kadis T 19SSPONTIAC 34&gMIMfe $295.00 1931 FORD SEDAN A Snap No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains Btudy to ascertain the extent to which lack of emergency lighting facilities is responsible for accidents in homes and industry has just been launched by the Light for Life Foundation, Inc., of New York. The survey will cover an accident field about which very little is known, officials of the Foundation said. It is expected to provide A nation-wid- Fallacies About Feathered Friends Some of the birds that save millions in crops each year are still misjudged by the farmer. The Baltimore oriole has been ac cused of damaging grapes and garden peas. But Department of Agriculture studies show that the oriole's food habits are largely beneficial. Caterpil lars are its favorite fare, but it also eats quantities of plant and bark lice, ants, wasps, grasshoppers, spiders and e '(9 fresh ammunition for the attack being waged by the Foundation and other safety organizations on America's huge toll of death and injury from preventable accidents. Under a survey scheme worked out by the Research Committee of the Foundation, thousands of accl dents occurring in the next months will be Investigated thoroughly. The cooperation of a large and di in versified group of industries eluding a steel plant, a rubber plant, a packing plant and a shoe as well as Red manufacturer Cross chapters, Y.M.CA.. branches, hotels, hospitals and camps, has been promised. These organizations will furnish the Foundation with reports showing bow lack of emergency lighting entered into accidents as a causative factor, as well as sucn data as the type of injuries, the cost to individuals and employers and the number of working hours lost. Thomas Fansler, a member of the Foundation's Research Committee and director of the research department of the Division of General Education of New York University, said the decision to make the survey was reached after an examination of the accident records of police departments, insurance companies and other agencies showed that the precise cause of accidents is rarely noted on many existing report forms. "For example," said Mr. Fansler, "a report of an automobile accident may state that the cause was the car going off the road. In a sense, that may be correct, but to the safety investigator the statement is virtually worthless. What he wants to know is why the car left the road what human or mechan- with few exceptions the same sort of thing was being experienced last week by almost every other U. S. industry. Samples of comparative 1937 and 1938 first quarter figures: U. S. Steel down from a $28,561,533 profit to a $1,292,151 deficit; Schen-le- y Distillers down from a $1,570,928 profit to a $364,712 profit; General Hotors down from $44,814,166 to Standard Brands down from $2,885,492 to $2,353,002; Paramount Pictures down from $2,651,000 to $830,866. o FOUR LOVES RALEIGH, North Carolina Daniels, U. S. Ambassador to Mexico and publisher of the Raleigh "News and Observer," and Addie Bag-le- y Daniels celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. Said Addie Daniels: My husband has four loves: first, newspapers, next the Democratic Party, third, the church and fourth, me. After the regular Sunday School opening exercises, the following Moth ers' Day program was presented: lntiflorp-iiirioiravc noons honoring mothers; poem by Parley Burbank: Singing Mothers rendered a mothers tribue; Alma King of Garland, deliver ed the Mothers Days address; Church History class sang "Mother is Praying for Me." Sunday School presented all mothers with a potted plant. A silent monument for tribue was had for all departed mothers. The scouts presented their mothers with their rank of honor as scouts; Mrs. Addie Consult Tito weevils. tins will make good use of houses on top of a pole in an open space. Wroodpeckers are often suspected of damaging trees by their drillings. Each hole drilled means that the bird has located the larva of a destruc- tive woodboring insect. Woodpeckers are among the most valuable forest conservationists. WTith their heavy bills they get insects that other birds cannot get. Fruit raisers often look on robbtns as enemies because of the robbin's appetite for cherries. Yet robbins con sume insects harmful to fruit crops throughout the year, and only during the flocking periods in June and July do they eat cultivated fruit to any extent. As soon as the wild berries are ripe they will form the greater part of the food. One good way to keep robbins out of the orchard is to plant bulberry trees nearby. Mulberries ripen at the same time as cherries and the birds prefer them to oth- Farmera who tear swallows' nests from barn eaves are turning out their best friends. Swallows, catching their food on wing, consume vast num bers of harmful flying insects espec ially during the nesting and molting periods when they, like most other birds, eat little besides animal foods. er fruits. Young birds in the nest often eat more insects than their parents. To Argentine Pass The Argentine pass is a mountain encourage swallows, provide mud for nest mortar, a shelf to support pass in Colorado, not far from Dennests, and cut small entrance holes ver. It i ttains an altitude of moi in bam gabbles. Barn and tree swalli;a:i 13,000 feet and is one of th roads of the Rocky Moun-tts-ns lows will appreciate boxes placed atid in the world. mar while in the barn, purple high V! 'V'.$ at $150.00 Farmers Hold War on Accidents Shifts to New Front As a Nation-Wid- e Survey is Launched By Mrs. Thomas Ault Our Save Honey and Buy Wow rns, w' i GENTLEMEN-AHEM- DEWEYVILLE "the be sest I I U $1,500,-000,00- an additional up their properties. Nazi or- :',j OPINION ON THIS MATTER By Frank Chevrolet anti-monopo- ly t n A -- V, OiO jewish property throughout vAMVl THINK WE HAD) V,TV V. BIIEriiET WARTS - - 12. 1938 i5a'iir Thomas Fansler ical deficiencies were really responsible. Similarly, a report of a home accident may show that the victim fell down the cellar steps. We want to know why he fell, and if emergency illumination probably could have prevented the accident. "We know that lack or proper emergency illumination may be the cause of a large percentage of accidents. In a study of insurance reports, we found the case of a woman who, arising at night to take some medicine and not wishing to turn on the overhead lights and perhaps awaken her children, went to the medicine chest in the dark and took poison by mistake In this case a small hand light or cabinet light undoubtedly would have saved her life. There are Indications that a small amount oi preparedness would prevent many tragedies." Serving with Mr. Fansler on the Research Committee of the Foun dation are W. Graham Cole, director of safety of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.; Harold F,. Director of First Aid and Life Saving of the American National Red Cross, and Dr. Thomas W. Gor.ling. National Director of the American Junior Red CrooS. He makes mere "oil-changer- take a back seat s" ... because w. Gi!LY YOUR LERGE PtlERi CHANT YOUR ENGINE OIL-PLAT- ES fc j6?...a..T'-;- irV- . . . ami. , , Gardner, a mother's "Thanks;" prayer Miss Phyllis Fryer. May Day party was enjoyed by children and parents Monday at the chapel, sponsored by officers and the Primary children. After the special nroenram. sandwiches, cookies and punch was enjoyed by all. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Perry and chil dren, of Blackfoot, Idaho, returned home on Friday after spending a week at the home of Bishop and Mrs. Marion G. Perry, parents of Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. James Burbank had as guests, Mr. and Mrs. Thurin and sons, of Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Chidester, of Salt Lake City, visited with relatives here for the weekend. They were the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Chidester. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Newsome and Norma Hansen, of Salt Lake City, were Mothers Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. John Becker, of Ogden and Mr. and Mrs. Duett Loveland and children were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Ault. Mrs. Ira Tucker, of Slaterville, vis ited relatives here for a few days. Mim-mot- 1 f- - h f:i H Miss Blanche Arbon spent the week end with her parents here enroute from Tortland, Oregon to Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. Antone Rentmeistcr and children, of Murray, were week end guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Larkin. The Sunday School sponsored a very good program for Mothers Day. Mrs. Hulda Holmes, of Ogden, visited her mother, Mrs. Vanderhoof, the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. DrLamar Cutler were hosts at a party at their home Satwere Mr. and urday nipht. Mrs. C. P.. Gunnell. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gunnell. Darwin and H. B. Gunnell nil of Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Slander of Trcmonton, Iwell Cutler of Lgan. Mrs. .Tunita Allen of Ogden, Mrs. ChcMcr Elinson nti'i daughter 'Marie of Stone, Mr. and Mrs B. S. Cutler, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Cutler and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pie-sen- t ':? 12' K;. ' t;: W , 'ji - . i Merchant: it with you v.-- niile- - .v:cnXil nne touay as yc:i Ccnoco Germ Processed oil, and then yo-.- can keen tabs on how far you go before you ever rs?cd :.-.- " engine. is exclusive with Co:i?co Gcr:n Germ Process forces OIL-PLATL- oil. The patent-guarde- d "10-ccss- ed thii oil to "rnagnctizc" on to the working parts in the form The parts that used of implanted slippy to wear worst and make your oil "ruh out" fastest, now possess this all-ove- r, deep-seate- d It can neither drain down while your engine is stopped, nor let loose in all the whirl of 4,000 revolutions a minute. done only by Your Mileage Therefore Merchant, distinctly tells you why your Germ Processed oil and your car money won't do a "disappearing act." Continental Oil Company mm era1 MSB 4 l4 Do you need any reminder of what oil you bought? Not if it delivers smootli long mileage that you can't forget! Then here's the real big vdue of the little drain tag you get from Your Mileage in your By , ;.:.rZ t SNOWVILLE Miis Annie Hurd 't "my |