OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY, LEADER. THURSDAY. MARCH 30. 1939 Cast of The MARCH OF TIME TIiIE KKO. leJ by the rI. u. S. FAT. OFT Tlie Weekly Kcwsmoazina ;tora a!f PaeOue) Zjr.wi From f, I " ence com- - with my they came Department soon made t it would in no way assist. J5 to seize the uzecn wvan-..in the U. S. If Nazis will have to convince the their right to it. Estate r . 'ft 'txi. '; R?to to ? Cftsu 1 T laugh togemtx. I 1 flASHGTOT To succeed William D. own. SEPJU Ad- - Roose- - P , orations, President able Harold llford ("Betty") Stark, 58, who Admiral only two been a Rear likelv to have to send to war than any Chief! nations since 1914, Harold! Zn a Distinguished Service' for his exploits in hunting marines during the last as Chief of Ordnance,! served ta Secretaries Adams and as commander of cruisers week chose Out Tea I 'Tl treaty-breakin- g, 5 1 r- 44 Czecho-Slovak- ia the-ffe- ei 3" 34 fu. j - j ' er zi -, le ! . Scotch-drinkin- 1 1 1 1 La-o- . - o , , v i i POINTERS FOR PARENTS - - j y j NEW YORK What are U. S. par- ents' chief wot; ies in raising cliil- dren? To find out, Professor Ernest of Columbia University's Osborne Teachers college and a staff of WPA researchers polled 75,000 parents, learned that parents were pu-zled by such problems as children's tardiness, indifferent eating, reactions to bad movies, need of sex education, boredom during summer vacations, tendencies to jealously and lying, Last week Dr. Osborne began to dis- tribute a series of mimeographed pamphlets (price: lc each) advising By HELEN household tasks, even decisions as to the way the family should spend its money are ways to develop democracy in the home." To cure children of lying, help them spare the rod, be gain patient, tell no lies (even "white" ones). "Thoroughgoing truthfulness comes hard and it generally comes late. with a 8 self-estee- iroiu lue nai pan cake to the high conical postilion crown shown here VXyJk$'''v with its wide ro wan striped baud and veil. This model is sometimes trimmed with huge, bright flowers in front and the inevitable veil. Other sailors are seen with white pique bands and bows which contrast smartly with soft, pastel felts. stiff ribbon bows or big birds also adorn the fronts of Bmaller, more conventional sailors. Over-size- d p-- waists and pleated skirts T 1VUV J' M iff vv ; TEA SPOONS SALAD FORKS BUTTER KNIVES TABLE SPOONS Bouillion SPOONS SOUP SPOONS SUGAR SHELLS Butter SPREADERS ONE COUPON and I Tremonton, Utah I ICED TEA SPOONS DINNER FORKS DESSERT SPOONS OYSTER FORKS ... Bear River State Bank i . With each Dollar purchase at Gepharts you will receive one of our silver certificates which entitles you to the purchase of one piece of this high quality "New Aristocrat'' pattern SILVERWARE at a small fraction of the regular price. and short dressfelt hats or bonnets es, off carry out the youthful mode. They're the newest silhouettes and also come with quite wide brims which provide a flattering frame for your face and hair. You who love the casual felts with swagger briuis so flattering to us all will be glad to know that they have been designed newly and are as important as ever. Brims are wider and crowns are high and manipu lated with trimming of straw braid, wool embroidery, or contrasting brightly colored ribbon. These classic felts are a little dressier this Spring and very important In pastel to be worn with gay shades prints as well as with salts and for spectator sports wear. parents how to solve all these problems. Some Osborne pointers: To avoi scows rt tab!e, serve attractive, tasty dishes in small helpings, be cheerful, never nag. If a child still fails to rat, remove his plate after 20 minutes without comment. First of the Ten Commandments of Dicipline: "Thou shalt use no emotions which you do not wish to see icflfcted in the child. An angry moth er makes an angry child." Third commandment: "Thou shalt condemn the deed, not the child." To keep democracy alive in the U. S., each home should be a democracy. "Our authority. . . must not lie so severe that children learn to dislike all authority. . . Our children must be allowed and encouraged to help make decisions that affect the whole fami ly. Vacation plana, the divisions in .V They Are' Worth Real Money Mow Available at Gepharts (with girlish " ' 11 SKirts. In keeping "f 1 )? i i new frilly shirt- - jC& i "V V I the-fac- e III! 7 Ml . "3f MUNSINGWEAR Shirts and Shorts caw bons or (lowers nestled snu&isiy in the teiescopi crown. This type also is topped off with a frothy feminine veil which may be draped around the ctown or drawn tightly over the face. Veils are more fashionable than ever this Spring and are combined with every conceivable trimming . . with flowers, bird-- , fruit, fancy ribbon band. and bows. Lace edging or trimming will also be seen on many hats and looks especially well with the A visited relatives here over the week end. Ray returned to Salt Lake Monday. Mrs. Orpha Ault, Mrs. H. A. Lish and son Horace, Mrs. Lettie Burbank end Mrs. Duett Loveland attended the funeral services of their aunt, Mrs. Orpha Danielson, which was held in the L. D. S. Church, Monday, March 27 at 2 o'clock at American Falls. Idaho. Mrs. Eva Annie Yeates Eliason, of Brigham City, mother of Mrs. Kenneth Germer of this place, died Monday, March 27 at the home of a daugh ter in Honeyville. niWQn brim rib- f ! Gepliari'S Silver Certificates silhouette, as illustrated, is generally seen ". Uh a cluster of f - . . cTAivi.rss sTRKr knives OWE COUPON and . . MiS i llrT1 PHOrE 33 " 1 1 1 1 I 1 11 1 1 1 H LI 11 TREMONTON I 11 1 I I ! -- 35c and 50c - CLIFF'S CLOTIIIERY. SHOP THRU THE LEADER APS small, The mushroom W GIANT left Friday to attend a convention of the National Physical Education association to be held at San Francisco during the first week in April. Miss McKay expects to be gone until after Easter. Spring felt to make sure that you're buying a. strictly American made hat. You'll find any foreign markings stamped on the body of the hat itself for It's required by lav. And speaking of Spring and Easter bonnets, here are several very flattering silhouettes youTl want to consider when replenishing your hat wardrobe. Stiff sailor brim felts are being r'7 By Mrs. Thomas Ault Mrs. Lila Sweeten, of Salt Lako (B. R. II. S. Journalism Dept.) Miss Florence McKay, a physical City, visited relatives here Saturday. Mrs. Arvilla Loveland and son Ray, education teacher at the high school, by a patriotic urg as most of us are these days, yaa can go so far as to Inspect your new ,'lVVr-- t DEWEYVILLE E. HOLME IF you're swept cjU' CffiEMT Florence McKay to Attend Convention In San Francisco BONNY SPRING BONNETS multi-colori'-- j Wil-jThe- g, story-tellin- 1 .1 Suddenly it was remembered tViat Bill Douglas was born in Minnesota, raised and schooled In Yakima and Walla Walla, Washington. Although he will not put his lanky legs on the high e court's august desk or cigarettes during hearings, he may often wish he could. That is the way he behaved in the chair of SEC. His careless clothes, sandy hair awry, speech plain s a pikestaff, are essentially characteristic of the young man who only 17 years ago herded sheep and bummed on box cars to get East for his legal education.. Bill Douglas wrote a textbook and taught three courses to earn his way through Columbia Law School, was graduated N. 2 in his class. For two New York years with a law firm, he threatened the jungles aim imiiw. lie wuu i iwiaie back to teach at Columbia, was called to Yale where he became Sterling Professor, declined an even finer chair in 1934 on at Chicago, went to SEC , i T T" enneuy a mvuduun. Senate sentiment last week indicat-!i- e ed prompt confirmation for Bill Doug-i- t las, and a lot of Washington's young- er, less social folk, and proprietors of various quick-ordrestaurants, were thrilled at the prospect of already knowing a real, live, g member of the Supreme Court. Bill .Douglas lives. on the edge .i .: ' i 'it. un ius iwo cimurai, oir vvasningion Mildred (9) and Bill, Jr. (7), and his pretty wife, Mildred (Riddle), who f was his boyhood sweetheart in Grande, Ore. Besides work he likes golf, bridge, wild life and sunsets. . j . 3 la high-power- -! anti-Na- Jot chain-smok- 4 225-mi- 1 ' x T, 5 -, -- - ria-ht- j d : . haard erery Thursday at :30, th prorram ruiinatinc fai tha KUL Radio Playhouse. Parpoaa of tho program M to acquaint" Hstenn-wilh tho ncnti of electric cookery. Top. r ronl " How, readme from left to v right: Al Priddy, annooneor, Fielding K. Smith, comic, Bob Keem. aolobt, Br Wood- bary, orcheotra leader. Janyca Don, aoloiat, Reginald Beala, cum ei t yiolinlst, and Captaim The orchestra to Dad ley. howm in roar. Scene to tho , plctaroa part of tha vast ndieneo that h poraiiv Oa to Taow tao Iand. they always took pains to make c'ut some sort of a case for Z T. The Electrical Ehip of i lie-selves But the te!linS German Dictator last week j rew away all pretense of being any- i a fcJ conqueror, msieaa or try-1- 0 lnl"S in to think UP further fancy excuse3 for aggression, in Berlin it was simply stated thal .the etern?i yesterdayers 3 46 u" ' who always limp behind events (are) 165 to tte President will also have thei.efore , constantly surprised by 156 e scon a successor to the Army s ttem J atutude wag toe g 158 of staff Mahn Craag who by for a bdated international HO stop Hit. i ler" drive. 176 5t! 31 0 The French, British, Soviet and U. S. press vied with each other in deiHLVT NEXT? . nouncing Hitler. British Prime Min- Seizure of the LONDON 145 jster Neville Chamberlain officially last ' and publicly buried his appease U7 ; Republic of '23 r, was Adolf Hitler's most sudden, dictators policy and announced that 12 'ast shocking surprise yet. Although henceforth what happened in south-l- e f 28 tod always justified his conquests eastern Europe was decidedly Brit- liiththe explanation that he wanted ain's business. One group of British 1 3' 'only to get all Germans back togethpoliticians was said to feel that Die- Czecho-Sloover 'er in tator Hitler could not be stopped this again, taking tip 29 Initiate was taking over millions of side of Turkey, that Poland, Ruman-- , f ia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia: I in taking over the Czechs and Slo-- , and Greece must inevitably be his if he wanted them. vaks, however, Adolf Hitler was not lorfeJ In France, Premier Daladier went soaring away from the program out-- 1 tEET.. Parliament and obtained die- in his hnnk- - "Mein Kamnf." before Act sni ui r im lot the drama of German destiny, ac tatorial powers to permit him to act, cording to that Nazi Bible, ends with secretly and promptly to f orstall any which triumphed further Nazi or Fascist moves. He Munich last September 30 when was expected to put France on a vir- tie last big solid bloc of Germans in tual wartime footing, to call up extra to speed arms pro- Europe were hauled under the Nazi men to the colors, stu- duction. In Warsaw, banner Act II is the drive to the east ofvrhich last week's advance dents held demonstrations and the Pohas long been was Scene I. Act III calls for a lish Government-whi- ch dicta-- ; mighty German Empire of 250,000,000 on the fence. between warring , ; i f mc ana laeeu uemourucies torsnips ppfeObviOUSly not all Germans dominating- Europe and perhaps fur-- i necessity of choosing between them. nishinp the "hiehest master race' Napoleon, the last man to go con- 15 which . might need the resources quering through Europe, lasted the entire globe." years. Adolf Hitler has already lasted In one fundamental sense Adolf six- Iow that he has taken to out- how Hitler's action last week was a simple riSht conquest, historians wonder ne com. nas mre y gooa years act. Germany, which m to nimmust buy important raw materials 0 outside her borders, needs real money arid has only about 529,000,000 in gold YOUNGEST JUSTICE fc'L An exporting country, Czecho-- ; Slovakia has $80,000,000 in WASHINGTON To succeed Louis gold in its natianal bank enough to offest Ger- - Dembltz Branaeis who resigned in Eany's adverse trade balance for a February, President Roosevelt last few months, and about two and a half week appointed SEC Chairman toes that much in foreign assets and liam Orville Douglas, 40, to be the exchange which Germany may not U. S. Supreme Court's youngest Asso-- 1 get ciate Justice since Joseph Story, who Where Germany would next plant was only 32 when President Madison her military boots was the next ques- - appointed him in 1811 for a term that tion. The Nazi majority in the Lithu- - lasted 34 years. aaian Demands that a Westerner be nam- city of Memel, having long agi- tated for a "home in the Reich," were ed this time restricted the choice. team " 1 ' EASTTREMONTON Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Erough entertained at a family dinner in honor of their daughter, Alice, on her birthday. Alice returned from her teaching post at Yost to spend the weeknd with her parents. Mrs. Lacy Kay and Mrs. Lena WTiite had as dinner guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Westmoreland and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Peterson, of Ogden . C. M. Merrill and daughter, Mrs. Mary Valentine, were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Doris Fridal. Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Hill returned last week from San Francisco, where they have been visiting at the Worlds Fair. Mrs. Lacy Kay entertained at two birthday parties last week for her two daughters, Ardella and Elnora. Mrs. Fannfe C. Done and Mrs. May Butler, of Salt Lake, visited with their sister, Mrs. Ada C. Garfield Thursday. The East Tremonton Farm Bureau met Friday at the home of Mrs. Rose Kerr, with Mrs. Ada Calderwood acting as assistant hostess. Mrs. Nettie B. Lund, county home agent, gave a lesson on "The Value of Home Gardens." Luncheon was served to fifteen regular members and Bpecial invited guests were as follows, Mrs, Rose Hunsaker, Mrs. Parker and Mrs. Nettie B. Lund. j ea f;v,ut-countri- rCl W CHIEF-- - J j j Depart-franint- ivvo-ra- not v I ' ' ! ? -j Minister Hurban any sign of being o At the State los da Dr. Fernando ex- Ambassador of the nearly ' ih RemibUC. AS they snoo nanus, lit ' j lourtof all this J absorbed by Germany at last week's end but this1 wa3 small change. Hun- gary's Regent Nicholas Horthy is) scheduled to meet Fuhrcr Hitler soon to disclose "common problems," and. speculators wondered last week wheth er he might not find it expedient to' deliver his countiy into the trust of Adolf Hitler, just as Czecho-Slovakian's President Emil Hacha did. That Hitler's eastern march had already impressed the Balkans was! apparent from the quick answer he got from Rumania on his proposal to; trade manufactured goods for - Ru manian oil and wheat. Instead of tak-- ! ing "the consequences" that would re-- ! suit fiom flat refusal, Rumania1 agreed to give Germany temporarily a greater share of her trade but stead fastly refused to surrender any political rights. Meanwhile, just in case of trouble) King Carol ordered some 500i 000 soldiers to man Rumania's west- ern frontiers. When the Germans successively won back the Saar, remilitarized the Of Joy" Program i IJ smart. 'The Electrical Ship PAGS TKPJ fi I t |