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Show EEAP. RIVER. VALLEY LEADER, THUP.DSAY. FEBRUARY at the Postofflee at Treraonton, Utah, as Second Class IICJ The New All Indian Washakie Ward Biohopric BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Entered P. 1 Matter utuid I sf By W. S. Director. BchooU of Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of Each Week International JAMES WALTON, Publisher I. P. WALTON, Editor and Business Manager First West Street 7 ' 1 ? SUBSCRIPTION KATES - $2.00 $1.00 50 ONE YEAR (In Advance) SIX MONTHS (In Advance) THREE MONTHS (In Advance) A 1 0 I feaf, house today There s much uoise In the frontapl of t M age home and when this u if " case and your house is i.. ?1 a quiet street, a booth is Jm a 1 cided convenience i A vault is another desirav. . ture to install in your hotn- - t a feature can be lur?e enoush , commodate silver, oj jewelry and other valuab'ts U Mil T Correspond CONVENIENCES 23-- J i Loj. Arch.J V. Phone ! 1 Free to Publi'c only place In tha U. S. where catalog and dvcti.m matter covering any line of hu.inraa or praJw-- l can be obtained Free And Without Obligation t. the American Indi'ttrtal Library. Write or Bu.ineaa AdvrrUin Matter you are interested in;.atne will be promptly forwarded. Tl. m To Your Town ; .... An Indian L. D. S. Ward Bishopric and Two Former M. AMERICAN IM SUSTRIAL LIBRARY SU.inaariniUmildinA. Cbioao. XUlaoi F r NAT I ON Al EtlTCRIAl ASSOCIATION - - Bishops oi 1 I i "Behind the Scenes American Business" In set-up- wise-acre- ff non-partis- If you conduct a retail store, there are four things you wish to do (1) You wish to HOLD all of your present customers. (3) You wish to REPLACE with new customers the old ones who move away. (4) You wish to INCREASE THE NUMBER of your customers. m fT1 i nus - . am. jou nave lour oojecuves. iot one of these objectives 1 a a tan be reached by doing othing. Non of these objectives can be wholly realized without advertising in THE BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER i TT4vtli m ' con-towa- rd plugs-depart- ment light-shile- j sim-jewel- ry man-far- m ' j I $29,O0-Q,000- cross-arm- s, cut-ou- coun-insulato- ts eroundins-eauinment- Clean-u- . 1 celeall or- w"me"1 rs car-loadin- gs , r . HcFp fh-- Clpnne the Blood of Harmful Body Wate Your kldn.yi art ronatantiy (IH.Hd from th blood alream. But kldnrya aum.tlmn laf In th.tr work do not act aa Nature intended fail to r mava tmpurltic that, if retained, may Ui. arat.n and upaat th whol rotaonmachinery. Symptom, may ba naKging bacVatha, prriiatrnt hradarh. attack! of dicxinna, totting up nlchta, awrlltng, pufflnaaa nndvr th. tytm a fnltng ol norroua anxlrty and I oat of pap and atrnfth. Othar af na of kldn.y or biaddar dia edor may b. bursrai, acuity or to wat matter J li-- frrnruant one-ha- lf hour and for rules were that the Bothwell boys had to dance with the Thatcher girls and the Thatcher boys had to dance with the Bothwell girls. We all had a good time. Blaine Jensen - e for a program. state meeting will be held A long-tim- sect, soon. Subscribe for the Leade: For Guaranteed SPRING CANYON OR ROYAL COAL From Truck - See NORM J. ANDRE ASOX Phone 84-- 2 , - POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE 25 esur xou save si.M e ORDER NOW USE THIS CONVENIENT COUPON Maiav" Eo.clo.cd la $J.2J. Send your ntwtpapcr and Popular Mechanic! STEAM ROLLING STOHL ELEVATOR CO. rhone 41 - Tremonton, Utah Saroat ami Number, or R. F. D.. Clay. ior Bg Aisitin "rear t Aircre ::3ed I n.. I Aft jialfa 0 ?;ow ?ta 3,1 roo r rten a clii - CilBb john 'riUe too Coe-- -- artaatio. Tbaro abould ba a. drrabt that prvnint frmuaont ta wW than naflaaC Ua l fua. Vam t kavo haaa anmaag W" awar frWAt lar laoro Um tarty yaoiav aan a aVro raooa, dad by ivaWnJ M.pta tb oaartry aw. 4 at awar aiaafarf lrr lasted about r'ry potigl: - Do you want to cut your home or farm repair bills ? Can you make inexpensive home improvements? Are you saving money by finding new uses for discarded equipment? Can you service your own radio? What do you know about the latest developments in electricity, mechanics, inventions, etc.? Popular Mechanics will answer these question for you and help you solve hundreds of other problems. Each issue is chuck-ful- l of helpful suggestions, practical and useable plans, money-savin- g and money-makin- g ideas. Here are only a few articles, soon to appear, you will not want to miss: "Save That Old Chair, Re cane it Yourself " "Build a Serviceable Low Cost Motor Boat" "Cementing Glass, Metal and Celluloid" "How to Build Your Own Tractor" "Make a 1939 Little Giant Portable Four-tubCombination Phonograph-Radio,- " and many more. the other half we had a dance. The Vjnop . Hundreds of Home and Farm Hefps In Each Issue of POPULAR MECHANICS Program-L- ast wa; j , I Bothwell Brought 1 Munici AND Friday the Bothwell school brought over a very good program. Some of the numbers were tap dances, readings and some very good songs. It "seful it. ia nOW tTQT&J gicco ui -ouncrsa. f . a . t .1 l mat. tttcii ui i.me interested agent, cooperate in one extension progr J which will .reach every comma! . I x reterHun explains. In order to get the plans for eral clean up in the State under' the State Landscape Improves! committee members met at the house Hotel, Salt Lake City, Janl 31, 1939. Those present were: l Mary K. Mower, Statae Farm cau; Superintendent Charles H. SU more, State Dept. of Puphc insW tion; Mark Nichols, state Dept."Public Instruction. Dr. Arvil Sa. Extension service; Mrrs. Jennie J Knight, L. D. S. Relief Society; Ella V. Reeder, State and planning committees; Mr. Harold a Lee, Church Welfare Board. All organizations represented n nified their willingness to coopers; in putting over this beautificafc Dr. Stark presented his own ft! stating that the condition in the 3b confronts us with an invironmeat A negligence. This plan vas acceptas a definite procedure and a tat THIS N1WSPAPEII Lip-cas- $0 dCJ!' if",;--;- suo-rreez- 'fusion mil lorai uujt;(jis in ,)e jt(. interiors of closets when the are opened. anti-chai- - 'irtneP W ias IUCJ 'i will bring you Both for ONE YEAR ;.:3.1F s This iv.Gi.ey Saving Offer Ml V iccc. tf cons Do not overlook th- - Imports-- , of installing plenty of tl.x-ui- c 0,: lets. These should be provided ft electric irons, tv toasters. heaters, refrigerate' stoves, vacuum cleaners and . ous lights. There should be a BinK and it ol mc large homes another over the si. Lights should be so arranged tk; anti-chai- on is . bration and exposition in 1947, ganizations of the state supporting beautification programs are being united in a coordination program, an-nounces William Peterson, director of the Utan btate Agricultural txuiege extension service. Willing to ccopeiate with all agencies in the move, the extension service took the initiative to "start the ball rolling" for an intensive eight-yea- r program, and during the past week county, state, church, educational and civic agencies were represented in a meeting in Salt Lake City where a plan for cleaning up the state was proposed by Dr. A. L. Stark, extension horticulturist. Under Dr. Stark's program, which was accepted by those present, the goal is to remove all unsightly views from state highways such as delapi-date- d buildings, automobile - junk fences, heaps, dead trees, fallen-dcw- n and discarded farm machinery; eliminate unsightly surroundings in each community; and to paint buildings and generally improve the landscape. Director Peterson reports that committees will be formed in each county and community to assist in organThe state izing for the : campaign. : - 4.i in Uir T, I num utc uum outte raim uciegiica Bureau Federation, associations, the state department of public instruction, the L. D. S. Relief Society, other church groups, garden clubs, the State Nurserymen's association, the state highway commission, the governor's world fair committee, newspapers, the state board of health, the state planning board, the agricultural planning board, the Extension Service, and various civic clubs. "For several years various organizations throughout the state have sponsored beautification campaigns from time to time with varying de- Parent-Teache- i0l li' p the proposed state centennial TILTOIER SOIOOL NEWS (2) You wish to SELL more goods to your present customers. m" In an effort to make the entire NEW YORK, Feb. 6 BUSINESS year. The rosy hues which economists predicted for the 1939 business pic-- 1 THINGS TO WATCH FOR For- ture are . ... slow in appearing, due to i n ous rubber whisk-brooj which picks is still anticipated, however, that the up lint, fluff particles and dust specks air will clear sufficiently by early and is easily cleaned by squeezing it' . spring to encourage a further climb in soapy water. . A sleep kit, d a and ear taining for levels. Buyers prosperity stores, who have uncanny for insomnia sufferers . . . "Piano ways of knowing months ahead of Christmas Clubs" for families who time what Mr. and Mrs. Consumer are want to save during the year for a . . New method going to buy, predict that women will piano at Yuletide. so facsimile of more cent telegrams sending 20 hats, gloves, per buy send-di- d can a child that operate it; and pocketbooks than they pie last year and 10 per cent more kit-- 1 er writes message on blank in black chenware, curtains and bathroom ink or pencil and drops it in slot and i equipment. American motorists, who the message is automatically received now boast of a radio in every third in the main telegraph office. passenger automobile, will buy 1,000, 000 more sets for their cars this year MODERNIZATION MARKET Alra 25 per cent increase over 1938 voleady-built homes in America form ume, according to trade surveys. a market for 3,500,000 new bathtubs or showers, 2,500 flush toilets, 5,000,-00- 0 WASHINGTON Between now and furnaces, 2,250,000 modern stoves June 30 REA will add, or allot funds and 1,000 sinks. These figures, larger for, electric service to 500,000 more by far than plumbing equipment families a welcome "hypo" for ufacturers had ever dated estimate industry. REA orders or allocations the modernization market, are deduc- for materials will then have reached ed from a thorough study by the W. ; line! P. A. of 8,000.000 family dwellings,! $150,000,000 poles, hardware and $6,500,000; or about half the homes in the $l,5fl,000. transformers, try. As far as absolutely necessary and brackets, repairs to these houses are concerned, $27,000,000; Sl.-- i it is fstimntprt thaf $18.000 000; wirla7kp nnrt and 500,000, conductors, $49,000,000. aggressive dealers, plumbers, roofers Such orders have effects, and builders have a potential market Take the last (and largest) item, con- - requiring $7,750,000,000 in labor and ductors: Of the 730,000 miles of alum-- material or about six times the na- mum power cable the U. S. has con-- , tion's 1938 bill for new residential sumed, '15,000 miles were required by construction. REA. New 1939 orders will help stabilize employment for the bauvite VOTE OF CONFIDENCE Busimines of Arkansas, for the common sellaborers and housewives nessmen, carriers, for alumina plant workers, for aluminum reduction and fabiicat dom find common denominators of but according to a survey last ing plants, and even for the steel in- opinion,in week the authoritative Fortune which conductor provides dustry, cores. To top it off, orders for ap- magazine they have united in voting confidence in the "streamlined" mass pliances will have reached a total of $90,000,000 by the end of the fiscal distribution system of chain stores. The survey snowed a nation-wid- e opn to store legislaposition numerous. tion, such as the "death sentence" tax Approximately 25 bills affects ap- proposed by Representative Wright propriations and claims. If those car- Patman, of Texas. Only 6.3 per cent rying appropriations become laws, ap- of the public favor the proposed desproximately half a million dollars truction of the chains. Of even greatbe spent by the state to carry out er significance was the 16 per cent their provisions. Largest of the ap- gain, since the magazine conducted propriations sought is one for $135,-00- 0 a similar poll two years ago, in the for a general program of noxious number of citizens voting for leaving weed control. House and senate bills the chain stores. Condemnation of ask for $75,000 to establish smoken agitation was "fairly uni-- 1 less fuel plants. A state department versa!" among persons of all income' of commerce bill seeks $25,000 for brackets and political beliefs in every administration. An appropriation of section of the country, the magazine s'uw.uvu 10 Auugni, iui uaiig a uiatrtiat: lOUnu. control. Of approximately 30 bills relating HEADLINES IN NEW YORK to revenue and taxation eight provide for exemptions, reductions, refunds or International Paper and Power an- 11 W sell its utility proper- repeals of existing levies. Five seek n.ounces come ues' of funds and transfers soieiy a paper manufac-nefour propose taxes. Important among the ex- - iurinS corporation. . . American Telegraph System reports measures is the homestead Phone tnat 65'000 additional telephones were which act is deemed exemption likely to pass despite objections on the part Put 111 use rlng January, more than increase announced for Janof Governor Blood. Proposed new tax- - twice es include levies against chain stores, uarv 1928Freight creased during week, whereas decline tras. and Datent medicines. The senate has already passed a bill had heen expected, featured by heavy unanimously requiring that all sales demand for coal as a result of con- tax revenues be used for welfare and unue temperatures. . . relief. A pending measure reduces a Movln& "P in the business world: county's share of public welfare costs Thomas J. Carney named president of frfom 15 to 10 per cent. Another de- - Sears Roebuck; Robert R. Smallwood fines income in old age assistance to elected president of Thomas J. h ton, Inc. income. Tele-empti- Advertising Does Four Things I.Ia nwi4rue,uui. For Utah By 1947 I w r x state of Utah "spick and span" for I six-da- a General F.4tlUinMHlIlflmMfHMfHllf.MI(HU to increase revenues from personal income taxes by lowering exemptions and raising rate, and another to boost the mine occupation tax. Still another tax bill proposes, however, to afford tax relief for new industries not in competition with existing ones. Measures coming in for more than ordinary consideration last week included one forbidding marriages between whites, bulattos, octoroons, Malays, and other races, and the bill prohibiting employment by cities, counties and the state of persons whose wife or husband is already engaged in gainful employment. The senate spent practically one session in debating the former and the house almost all of its Saturday afternoon session in arguing the pros and cons of the other. Both finally passed. Hundreds of public employees will be affected if the prohibiting measure passes the senate and is approved by the governor. As passed it prevents any married man or woman from being employed by the state or any of if wife or its political husband is employed in private industry or otherwise. The wages and hours bill received its first public airing in an open hearing held last week. Arguments presented apparently prefaced a bitter fight to be fought in both legislative branches. A bill sanctioning purchase of airlines stock by railroads held senatorial attention during one session last week. It was finally defeated. The first of several anticipated bills amending the new direct primary law reached the legislature last week. It would eliminate the run-oprimary and give the party nominations to the high candidates in the one primary to be held on the fourth Tuesday in November. It also provides that the oath taken by candidates would include a promise to affiliate with and support the party organization. A judiciary is also provided for in other measures. A summary of bills already introduced show that those affecting the business and professional world lead in number. Those affecting civil and jutlicial proceedings come second, with agriculture and livestock running third. Those having to do with revenue and taxation and state schools and education are likewise - Organizations Plan wmiiiimi'ttwaittmmiHiUHHiuiMmiUMittrim Grinding steadily, the twenty-thir- d "Utah state legislature opened its fifth Vek Monday after completing a y period that found lawmakers introducing, discussing and passing measures that in many respects vit ally affect the lives and dally doings of tho state's population. With both morning and afternoon session under way this week, senators and representatives are expected to clear legislative calendars of many of the more than 400 bills thus far introduced. Last week the lower house passed 15 measures and the senate nine, making a total for the entire session of 23 in the senate and 25 in the house. Eight bills have been killed and five withdrawn. Further evidence that the legislators are likely to heed Governor Henry H. Blood's plea for economy and not to make drastic changes in s that existing governmental might reduce Btate revenues materially was seen in the attitude of the lower house on proposed liberalization of welfare laws and pensions to prison guards. Representatives refused, for example, to approve a measure calling for payment of old age assistance to those over 55 instead of the 65 age limit now in force. Another straw showing winds favoring economy and leaving things as they are in state governmental departments revealed itself in the killing by the senate of a bill establishing a new state department of justice. The same measure passed both houses last session, but was vetoed by the governor. It received only seven approving votes last week despite inclusion of changes to overcome the chief executive's objections. A tendency to favor smaller communities as against the larger cities was again shown in the passage of a bill by the house giving a larger share of auto license fees to the more eparcely settled districts. Following close on the heels of senatorial action frowning on efforts to give aeronautics gas tax monies to the Salt Lake municipal airport and favoring its state wide distribution, legislative s visualized a close welding of smaller community interest. That there will be efforts made to increase taxes was shown in the Introduction early last week of a bill - tne vtara at Ward, former bishop; Moroni Timbimboo; Left to right, Nephi Perdash, first counselor; George John Neaman, second counselor. Jim bishop; present bishop; Joseph Parry, retiring PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS apt! Ejpi Clothes chutes are mnnv hAma t(-.r, cv ,a(i uvuaj tins device clothing may be drrr ' from the upper stories direeti. the laundry room in the baLU or cellar It does not cost a , deal more in your building and the steps saved ar con-- r able. Naturally, whon soiled can be handled in this manr makes for a more sanitary tr, hold operation. The busy h'" wife will appreciate the saving lime. 8 as well a? to your Country ''anted .Sou. park? l&ody, auto: 1 J roum lof ft |