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Show BEAR RUTO VALLEY LEADER, TKURDSAY, FEBRUARY OUR SCHOOL NEWS Naughts THAT AFFECT wPrTGS PAILS. DIVIDEND TAX BILLS OF flffTSi vTinTDCAL. NATION- - ?Pb INTBRNATION. LOCAL fSOM Wtri avail-tim- lie e trustworthy figures this is written show the winter decline m vj. in earn-tui activity has begun practicalof the year, so it this, forecast expert last at m i PVC1J It is be- - UZ3 B, PACTS Last Word in Conve nience Commercial Students Yearly Farm Moves Costly To B. E. County To Operate Store Boy! Oh, Boy! did we have a treat today for assembly. We had the Bear River Valley Ramblers, who perform on the radio every Saturday and Thursday &t 11:00 o'clock over station KVNU, Logan. They were here to givt us selections and boy, were we honored. Besides this there was a prayer by Coradell Anderson, reading by Louise Homer, song by Coradell Anderson, riddles by Gay and Gloria Schaffer, tap dance by Barbara song by Bebe Strand, reading Dy Mae bpencer, piano solo by Erma btenquist, jokes by Eldea Vee Smith tap dance by Fayolla Bobbins, piano solo by Colleeen Harris. Wal-dro- (Courtesy B. R. IL S. Searchlight) Mr. L. J. Cummings, manager of J. C. Penneys' store in Tremonton, and his entire store crew will retire for one day next month, when the commercial department of Bear River High School will take over the man agement of the store for the day, with Alfred Landvatter acting as general manager. Previous to this day, the students will organize like a store crew and will go to J. C. Penneys' where they will receive training. They will also order $3,000 worth of merchandise, and when this merchandise arrives, they will unpack the goods and check on the invoice and the back order. The different jobs to be filled are clerks, cashiers and window trimmers, who will make displays for the windows. At the close of the day, the cashiers will check on sales, wrap coins, and will deposit the day's monsalesey in the bank. The man will receive an award, while all workers will receive individual wages. Ed Harris, instructor of commercial subjects, will direct the students in this activity. He thinks they will profit greatly from the experience in actual store practice. n, it will continue into March, There aie many good books in the jtrtdttata new uMWie will set in i that I go every Thursday to . ..u , fall. will take us to City Library. a different I write the get :! substantially better than the names cf the booksbook. I in my little read ffL average. Security booklet. library reflected the have faithfully . vaiu Jimmy Frazier 3rd grade trpnd with values current aowr- ri5queS SlOWiy oasS'"b Our room wrote letters to different lover relatively small. Here again to find out some information fiplaces l" occurred many ...a has concerns advised about Utah. All of us have receiveed back except about two. We Clients to sell the bulk of their letters were surely surprised and happy to as field, &gs in e speculative get that many letters back. as the first of the year. Darvel and Ora Fay I Wrf that therefore, be argued or more a in are going along Our Seventh Grade For the Past S normal fashion, and that the pic- - Week having self government Z as a whole, asincluding prospective in our We're school. We give banners to actual present well the most quietest room in the school is a comparatively happy each week and our room received it are there same time, the T at and after you've had it for four weeks can of important "ifs" that we get to keep it and we're doing I Jj heip but cloud the outlook. The Lnerts write that business will get our very best to do so. Were planning I teller this spring if government to have a Valentine party in a re- - couple of weeks. We think it will be I spending produces the hoped-fo- r - better than the one we had last time. indusgoods -if the consumers Bud Holland market and, tries find an expanding if the heavy goods industries We made a harbor. It is New York i m abie to continue their slow march harbor. We have all kinds of boats I up from the bottom. in it. It has the Statute of Liberty I it seems certain that government in it. We think it's very interesting is this and be lavish, will spending to study about boats. I of course a highly favorable short- Rosco Zar Heppler 3rd grade of view in the term factor even as, long-terunfavorable an is many, it in-In Miss Maughn's Art class we i factor, because of its unpleasant made valentines. There were valenThe debt. and taxes on fhience public forecasters predict there seems to be tines of every kind and color, there I no reason why purchasing of consum-- I were red ones, white ones, and all colors. Everyone used their own orera' good3 should not be at good lev-- ! and this iginal ideas for their valentines. There els for most of the year. But are were no two alike in the entire class. indeed a there J very big "but," They were all made cleverly and were reasons the many goods why heavy I i industries may find the going tough. very pretty. Coleen Woolley 6th grade I The railroads, for example, are one of the biggest customers of these bas-- J We have a little battleship in our manufacturing industries. And a room. It was found by a boy and his great dec! must be done, and quickly, father. They were looking for an airJ before railroads will be in any posi-- 1 tionto spsnJ money for expansion and plane that may have crashed and gone down in the water. The boy said he j betterment on a big scale. It is certain that Congiess will tac-- I would like to keep the boat in this kle the railroad problem this session, school until he came after it. We I and some good groundwork has been think it is a good model of a battlelaid the President's Cheryle Sandall 3rd grade. special commit-- 5 ship. tee of six has made an exhaustive J report which has We found out that snow is water. met with wide ap- proval, and contains many basic sug-- I We filled a pan full of snow last gestions for legislative and regulatory night. This morning the pan was half I changes. But, even if some such pro-- I full of water. The sncw had melted. gram is quickly enacted, it will take Marianne Manning 1st grade a considerable time before it can bear I J much economic fruit. Our Student Council We have a It is, therefore, ' argued in some quarters that the gov-- I eminent, through the RFC or some attack. There will be some utility exstai&r agency, must make loans to I pansion this year to care for the northe lines for purposes of expansion mal growth in demand. But until the I and improvement, both in the interest differences between the utilities and of economic recovery and national de- - the Administration are settled, there tee. What happens here remains to can be no expansion of the bs seen, kind that would really invigorate the Equally important customers of the heavy goods bakers. We have heard heavy industries are the light and for years that these differences are power utilities. As everyone knows, about to be settled, but nothing defiI without arguing the merits of the nite has happened. So there is still lease, the utilities are bedeviled by another place where a big "if' must j government competition end political be eliminated before anyone can honestly say that the sailing is clear. Automobile sales have not come up to expectations. Some say this is due problem-oth- ers primarily to the used-ca- r attribute it to the cautious attitude of a public which doesn't know what Is going to happen tomorrow and is hanging onto its money. Whatever the reason, the failure of sales to reach forecasts greatly reduces the output of those vital, industries. , heavy-good- s To end this piece on a more optimistic note, it can be said that the outlook for construction, especially in the residential field, is bright. And s this is a real help to the builkl to manufacturers. The urge homes is widespread and the long-terloans available now of thousands of hundreds are enabling families to turn their hopes into action. s X 1Q93-2- 5 I Yi - - l faff! 'fr.onrv high-poi- : i , - Soi. irs Ibei m ! is The desire to make a car reflect its owner's individuality is a potent factor m the average motorist's choice of accessory equipment. And it would be hard to find a more thoroughly "personalized" car than this new Chevrolet in which Mary Pickford is &hown applying a touch of makeup. As if the handy illuminated vanity mirror were not enough, the car has a special kit of Miss Pickford s own famous beauty aids, now on the market under her i he container, holding lipstick, rouge, powder and cream, folds neatly upname, into the glove compartment when not in use. Inset shows close-u- p of vanity case. . student council to make our school better. We will help keep the rules. Each week a new member from every room goes to the council. The best room will get the banner. Last time Miss Warburton's room got the banner. Mr. Henry's room got the banner upstairs. Doveen Barlow 2nd grade sand-papere- grade. Her father came from Japan.) When she came she brought her Scrap book. It was very interesting. She showed us some chop sticks and showare very glad to have her back. ed us how to use them. She did Berenice Campbell some Japanese writing for us. She learned to write Japanese in the JapOut fourth grade is studying about anese school at Honeyville. She goes the Pueblo Indians. The khivas were to the Japanese school on Saturdays Gay and Dennis the room where the Indians wor- - and Sundays. 1 - W ic st A little Japanese girl came to our room a few days ago. Her name is Leona Tanaka and she is in the fifth Miss Johnson has been sick for two days. Miss Van Sweet has taken her pllace. She came back Wednesday. We &8 T" & S VX :H ? S 4 i "S. S X if V Improved tenant farming practices and the saving of thousands rf dollars now spent by tenants who move from place to place each year when their leases expire are aimed at by the Farm Security AdminUti alien's new "flexible farm lease," according to Wm. J. Thayne, FSA County Supervisor. The supervisor says that an average of 300 farm renters in Box Elder county move on to new land every year at a cost of around $50 per family, and that "this is only the beginning of the cost to them and to the general public, measured financially and in waste of valuable time and energy." Both the land owners and his tenant suffer from lack of stabilization under the ordinary one year lease, Wm. J. Thayne says. "If a tenant can work his farm only a year he baa neither the incentive nor the opportunity to improve the land, or even use it properly. He is inclined to get au he can from it and let the future and the.next renter take care of themselves. Many landlords take the same attitude, especially when they are non resident in the state or county. They fail to realize what is happening to their soil." Another bad result of continual movement of tenant fanners is that their children must be taken out of school for wTeeks or months at a time, according to Wm. J. Thayne. .Most moves take place during the whiter and early spring months, after harvests are in, and the children of farm renters therefore may lose an entire school term. Usually they are set back in their classes when they return, and consequently lose interest In their work. The same discouragement and occurs with, the tenant farmer and his wife in regard to their activities in the community. Thayne says that the Farm Security Administration's flexible type of farm lease encourages the renter to remain on the same land from, year to year, under arrangements beneficial both to himself and his landlord. Lease forms are now being distributed from the FSA offices in Brigham City and Tremonton. , We are making a reading table. We are going to varnish the top of it and paint the bottom blue. We will d call it our library. We it and sawed it. And that is all Melva Jane Carlton 2nd grade S 1 nt shiped. Only certain people can enter the room. The Pueblo Indians used to live in New Mexico and Arizona. They are noted for their fine pottery. Lind House ts, j- EEVEJ X,W44 Leader Ads Get Results k S & - X 89 t.. .... K ed t,"Wu.JpKi uwimii ill mi .in iiiiijmu wnw ii mi mj'vmum iij uji .inin im.mhmpmmiiwwibwmw.jmi .Plll MWIUMI 1 big-sca- le J I to Wk V long-dorma- heavy-good- low-intere- st 'arm oOo No discussion of business prospects and actualities, even so brief a one as the foregoing, would be complete with out mentioning the current European situation. The talk goes around, some of it h from high quarters, that the differences are an open powder keg. What seems to be a virtual Fascist victory In Spain is also fraught with explosive dangers to our troubled peace. And this, obviousefly, has an extremely dampening fect on investment and, as a result, on industry and spending. One good sign: Most of the experts feel that there is more smoke than fire abroad and that 1939 will not witness a general war. 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