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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1939 tCmarch of time "Liued J'tora of TIME f prejaieJ W rage Oue) From "?!y: not say BU wrote a gracious the perforce accent can I is nothing There Rlti IS" -- !, Mentation, ARM" . the Atlanuu qh PS U. S. the A t- are dcscribed as full maneuvers in 11 1934 XX. Feet Problem more than a game. XX is rKns and planes, Commanderis Roosevelt playing Sid ?JZ r .1 "newer politics" that been playing, have recently j never Deiuie o i j I '-. 4 it" $270.-000,0- 0 .'0 O war this week are 134 Caribbean and 94i'l"S ofSlomacy,the "7, -i - - - ,rwffVGTON-- At 1 fleet of 13 modern bttle.i::ps, a se ond line of perhaps U n olJt but sv. viceable ones. The Navy dots in. i y. upose to scau taxpayers by saying what that rami-- ! mum program wouM cost (at around' and ctr-- j $70,000,000 per battleship amounts for the necessary responding complements of smaller vessels). Onj a le:-program based upon eight new battleships the Navy Department figures it must spend for construction, armament and amur.ition in 1940; 370,489,000 in 1941; $271,075,000 in 1942; and 5360,542,000 more by 1946. But Assistant Secretary of the Navy Charles Edison believes that it is money well spent. Says he: "If this Navy this strong right arm of ours is obviously strong the folly of testing it is equally obvious." M POCKETBOOK FRIENDS - - - Dance, Elwood, Every Friday Night. The East Tremonton Ladies Farm Purtau met Wednesday, February 15 at the home of Mrs. Oluf Johnson. Inhei Itance, or ability to produce and butterfat if feed is provided, milk The regular business meeting matter cf major impoitar.ee in a is ted of planning for year's activities efficiency of the dairy herd, Lyman at Utah en "Health of the M; ! He Ac;os." At II. Rich, extension dairyman declares. college, -State Agricultural dt the close of the regular met ting a that five pro Mr. Rich observe licious luncheon was served to 13 on test in dairy herd imherds ducing members and two guests. Hostesses associations average a butwere Mrs. Oluf Johnson and Mrs. Os- provement of 390 pounds of terfat production car Koford. butterfat per cow. animals in fiva J. O. Garfield. Mrs. Ada Garfield, medium herds average 304 pounds, Irvine Garfield, June Cardon and Faye and five herds producGarfield left Saturday to attend the ed only 267 pounds per cow and brot funeral of Charles Kay of Eureka, $37 per cow less profit than the high Utah. Mrs. Charles Kay is Mr. J. O. producers. They received more succuGarfield's sister. They returned home lent feed than the other groups but late Monday evening. not quite as much grain as the high Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Fridal Jr. en group. They ate less hay, but th tertained at a wedding dinner Wed- reason probably lies with the sire an. nesday. February 15, in honor of Mr. dams of the respective groups. Cows and Mrs. K. H. Fridal m . eat because they are good producers Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Seager were and do not produce because they eat. Salt Lake visitors Monday. In another herd the average butter LaVern Garfield was visiting rela- fat production was 398 pounds, while tives and friends in Ogden during the two cows of the herd produce only weekend. 252 and 226 pounds, respectively. On Henry Morrison and Earl Woodruff investigation it became appan nt that and son were in Salt Lake Monday the sire of six of the cows wa- a care Mrs. Rose Teterson returned home fully selected bull owned by the dairy from Logan, Monday evening after associations. The sire of the two low visiting her son, Carl for several .days. producers was a "pick up" bull. Miss Alice Brough returned from Mr. Rich predicts that in a few her teaching post at Yost to spend years breeders will be called on to the weekend with her parents, Mr. guarantee what qualities their bulls and Mrs. O. L. Brough. will transmit. The federal bureau or Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Peterson and dairy industry will probably establish Mrs. Rose Garfield were in Ogden a system of record keeping to furnish information showing blood lines on business last Friday. Leon Garfield motored to Eureka, capable of transmitting definite quanUtah Sunday to attend the funeral of tities of fat and good production. e records of proved sires his uncle. Charles Kay. Miss Unice Kay and Clifford Sum should eventually allow for almost a mers left Monday for Salt Lake city. prediction that the offspring will prosixTheywill be married in the temple duce under good condition. Some been have sires herd carefully ty there. Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Fridal enter chosen and placed with groups of tained at a party in honor of Mr. and farmers during the past 18 months Mrs. K. H. Fridal III, Saturday even in cooperation with Farm Security adof dairy ing. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ministration. Improvement as soon as the Stohl, Mr. and Mrs. Leland Harris, cows should commence Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Hansen, Mr. and offsnrinsr of these bulls come into pro Mrs. Wavne Holmgren, Mr. and Mrs. duction, Mr. Rich believes. Mont Vance, Glen Garfield and Rhea SUBSCRIBE FOR THE LEADER Heppler. I - Anti-Commun- iff Anti-Com- ATE ?f Vi is rad-son&st'ess, as cm of a l.st ci trie Women of iioS" "Tc-- i Outstanding complcJ by Durward Howes, editor T Amrncan Women, fc.raritne no-rx- - d X-- Life-tim- ' s' 'Who's Vho." Neither naval nor half times the volume provided by Hiwec' list includes (?.) Florence in the U. 8. be- - tv,air int rnmmerriial accord, which A'lc-E. ot the Uniled States Cir- two years ago. ' je Europe's totalitarian states was inten-upteinvasion , noted author; (6) Helen Hayes, dramatic actress; (j, .vate bmiUi, -- mild risk import such valuable po to remind chosen not only because of her talent displayed on her Thursday was who I but it is the Navy's job tential wartirne supplies as naphtha airshow but also for her philanthropies; (1) Alice Marble. CDS nicht . it is a risk. rl omrarpw vital neacetime nrot mCUl tliivt inui.ui.wv, NaVoral Women's Singles and Doubles Tennia Champion; (3) Grace Noll I last wek ducts such as coal, lumber, wheat ard the winner of the por practice, the Navy Crowell, the poet, and (7) Jacquelin Cochran, aviatnx, I M. Patterson, newsnew pocket-Admiral of are Eleanor here Vice their to Met Race. dix 1938 pictured Ben Symbolic edge a barley. we siight . Julia C. Stimson president o the American Idolphus Andrews' defending 'Blacks' book friendship was the launching paper edi:or and public Columbia for-1 end I Nuists Association j;aa Broadhurst, bacteriologist at to sea in cmise last week of a small destroyer built athey steamed Uitlvershv. v. nation to protect tne vnai nuuun.i itaiy ior ine nusoiaii anal from salty Cive Aunm ai r,. Kalbfus' attacking 'Whites. Only, wane-- , the rural weeklies wax. Since both STEAM UP ttree men know all about what 1929 they have gained in numbers, C. Most economists circulation and advertising lineage, site are doing: Admiral Claude NE W YORK has fallen off. Bloch. chief umpire in the Navy game; agree that sustained U. S. recovery while the daily group A 1 rove will who Franklin Roosevelt, on a real rise in demand for Ten years ago the circulation of all crui-- ; on the area batUe of the the there week fi through weeklies was less than a third producer goods, and last ser "Houston," kesping tabs by radio were signs of such a rise. Meanwhile, dailies' 45,000,000. Today dailies are and Admiral William D. Leahy, Chief General Motors' report on 1938 earnto 40.500.000 and weeklies have At, comwho will stay of Naval Operations, 40 per cent as much. Radio's ings brought home last year's i in Washington. rUcrvoritv hptwpen recovery in and advertising, news petition for Because the President has made it consumer and producer goods. has toppled many a which 60, an important area in the Navy's in the has scarcely rippled tne gnu unit Motors, General biggest world just now is South America. A news is U. S. automobile industry (consumer nress, whose most valuable ery present possibility for the Navy of $102,320,-00- 0 the kind that radio wouiu hul up to- -' goods), had a 1938 profit ; is revolution inspired by European 1937 to a profit of cast even if it could get it. compared tahtarians and therefore,, by the terms last and the quarter ot Country editors have little chance, i of Franklin Roosevelt's hemisphere $196,436,598 The average (about $63,932,000 contributed 1933 however, of getting rich. defense, to be prevented or suppress-- : week of a small-tow- n of the year's net. U. S. publisher-owne- r 62 cent) per ed by U. S. arms. In Navy thinking, includa in the year, higunit about $2,400 earns ly most likely spot for such a police job Steel is the biggest If indus- of U. S. producer-good- s ing income from his job printing.like is Brazil, whose Foreign Minister Os- - hest on the of range, 1937 out to a Comnared profit he lives far waldo Aranha last week assured the en nil ma tt s steel had a 1938 Editor Charles Laflin of the Govert U. S. that it need not should (and must often deficit of S7.755.914 despite a final (S Dak.) Advance, he not) worrv about his country. for subfence posts and which in take turkeys operations Admiral Leahy says all the U. S. Quarter pickup chosen be to earned a profit of $4,394,454. scriptions. He is likely ; has to do to keep on good naval foot-- 5 blood r o referee basketball First among last week's omens of mayor, at ing is to maintain its Navy at its any moment, ne news that steel donor present relative standing in battle- - better times was the a week, and rarely has 80 hours of to 1939 a high reached ships and aircraft carriers, continue operations u book. read to of capacity ana mat u. time its cruiser and destroyer construction 53.4 per cent wppk surveyed 100 ty were January shipments program, sharply accelerate its air- - S. Steel's in 30 15 months, with heavy pical weeklies and ; craft procurement to 500 planes per the largest in 1. mac found to light. states and year. Object: to stay just behind steels rising in proportion and the Settlement of the ,nauj gwua K,,0inPH3 in, 1938 Great Britain in , Other h portents: and heacy categories Doneicleared the early part of 1939; come well up with the authoritarians TV A fight apparently their e ads are disappearing; in lighter decks for utility modernization, and . r. .cv.lv written but eaitoriaoa ships. of another On its purchaser major Navy the U. S. has spent last week overly seem-- h are either purely boosterish 52,742,000,000 since 1933, is asked to producer goods the railroads anu uu.jr entirely; or Un missing timid on spree. a v,Pii hpnt spending appropriate $785,987,000 more for the waiter Winchell is doing a i announced a $15,000,000 coming fiiscal for only a year. Presently a ion Pacific : mimiTii npw rails, box hangup job of columning building or appropriated for are six ccach few hundredneignoors. battleships, two aircraft carriers, cars, locomotives and remodeled $1,500,- ordered Pacific seven 16 cruisers, 39 destroyers, All told, railway submarinees. Two 45,000-to- n battle- - nnn worth of rails. said that manufacturers Ps, the biggest in U. S. naval his- - equipment received had this they year t0Iy. are included in the 1939-4- 0 Pirpndv fisof only tons rails, cal b Program. Under existing Congres- - orders for 375,000 1938 s total. than less tons 000 5 J'onal authorizations and treaties, the O S. by 1946 may lay down keels r1 rePace all its battleships. Thus ROOTS TRESS - - "J 1951 it could have r first, line GRASS vr.W YORK Humbly but firmly in U. S. journalism are the rooted For CliVAmnievA weeklv newspapers that deliver homey and SPRING CANYON OR 17 000.000 small-townewsS. U. the ROYAL COAL rural Americans. In weeklies aie From Truck - See paper business, country Dr. Miles dailNORM J. ANDREASON a bright spot. While the urban NERVINE are a ies wane, the rural weeklies Fhone 84-- 2 dailies urban the While 'Did the work bright spot. says Miss Glivar mafic situation. ip-- .i trans-atlant- ic Bi-ck- ! ; j ', i ROME, Italy Ideological political differences between nations are often overlooked when the pocketbook is Germany concerned. was at one time the chief seller of goods to Soviet Russia and, although trade between the two countries is gradually drying up, as late as 1937 fifteen per cent of Russia's imports came from Germany. Last week the Soviet Union made a new pocketbook deal with Italy, where the imcm yai. ungumnu. ' trade between the f nwv marshalled its sea power to ter arrangement, 1a cacvicu v"IWO nations lwa With specmc (Ul 1 Inheritance Is Vital To Efficiency of Dairy Herd, Expert Declares I consis- - , ' , the New Deal crys-and political V imS,rTln of social aed Court, but; cmrme :bt on ,ustice... Tie; no . .. o 1. .!;,. Er.rial phiiosupny nf all arrangements, public too heavily taxed jtm Priva.le.:vtv. In a dissent he Tott Justice Brandeis left "Jis UkeUest judicial epitaphs: be power in the States TtTe nation to remould, through our economic needs. nr.irr . j i i IferAy .NVu'wia'ne r- -j Revolt :n 77:e EAST TREM0NT0N I Radio Singer Among Country's Ten Leading Women THREa PAGES L 3 . 1 C : rlpnr-nd- s '1 omi-r,,,- V V: V ': u f . V,-1-- ' c. i I t kM UJ fa o; : m 1 ; : I - i a 1 tV. j ; m K3 Sit. .T, corn-cur- i I ; t H I i- i Subscribe for the Leader ; i I ; i i TO , n f new mill m?m$ Operating. SEE US FOR ROLLING AND GRINDING OF GRAIN and PE?D MIXING n ny ment, Miss Glivar which gave her sucn she wrote splendid rcsuhs that letter. .... enthusiastic If you snBcr from "AVrrf. ne &art at sudden v.;m. blue and easily, are cranlry, fidnety, your of nery, pri.be Wy out1. .. V,m U7llh the Juica anu rci.i. that did lhe Ml ne medicine p.iL Colorado this work for ';..: MnrvP" have or for troubled you for hours this find years, you'll eMeclivc remedy and Sim At Drug Stores 25c 1 16 Garland-Tremonto- v - j i WHY DON'T YOV IT? n'nV :yr l ill than three rnontKs aJ. from a Afterc of suffering N-ri- "-- 5 Milling Co. 3 iI u if n in Li fa . time-test- cd $1-3- ; O' r,- -. i Re-bui- lt PUOTIEN COW MASH - Mixed With Purina Concentrate - cwt. 3 -- 'vi k Our Tremonton Mill, Which Was Destroyed by Fire Has IVen and New, Modern Machinery Installed Is Now -- 1 - TO BE ANNOUNCED TE3E FIRST WEEK IN MARCH |