OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, MAY page Timm 25, 1S39 SATURDAY IS "POPPY DAY fteMARJGH. OF TIME rage One) From ntisued : the export instead of n to subsidize $00,000-- which two months the' temptation to make to the Farm Bill, the reward ion seemed a pood con-- : to bill goes When the like-;now hardly is L Jon cutting it down to its ?SUrp!House mt 3 r&Ls ' C ' dimensions. j came the House's next the inspend-- on Z the War Department sup-- ; " ' non-milita- generations, Rivers and have been appropriations :'!litical pork. The House last fSed $50,000,000 for flood con- -' to 1 navigation improvements by 000 000 measure reported excus-- ! ';;Droprialions Committee, ' on the ground that this the would be deducted from For n 1 ;';y : to an end four months of in which Congress had fa' total of about $70,000,000 the rious bills. In one week e and Senate undid this parsi-threand over, times or four dead. Economy seems quite t -- maps as friends of the and $200,uuu,uuo to revive prepared j doned -- with was decorated senate . nwi it last week. 'm lUf this project defense" purposes by Roosevelt himself. "national , it Ways and Means week recommended speed-- Com-la- House e st s Security payments out Social -- age reserve account, beie 1942. of in instead next year account is $994,000,000; so far old -r has been paid out. da's Senator Pepper last week to n planning a Senate measure n i putting that money into circu-this summer if even sooner 514,000,000 -- Gas Masks ior Babies French babies under two years oi age will be protected by means ol a respiratory device which is connected with the gas mask ol the mother, in event ol war. BEEF Cutting out Adolf iSHINGTDN the affection of Argentina Roose- , project high on President conferV'must" list. At a press last week he discussed a letter h he had written to Secretary of e Huil on the subject of Argen-canne- d corned beef. The Fresi-- t said that he felt the Buy Ameri-c- t (requiring the Government for er vi supplies and , .se only U. pment) would i f t not be violated if Department were to accept Argentine Meat Pro-r- s Cooperative (a Government corn- dy) to supply 48,000 lbs of beef at less than 16 cents per lb nearest U. j 8 cents under the bidder, and 14 cents under after Navy bid of the Dr. Miles NERVINE "Did tU work" says ) MissGlivtf V- , L WHY DON'T YOU TRY IT? . " V than three month ' raffering from a nervous Glivar used Dr. Miles nervine which gave her such splendid results that she wrote an enthusiastic letter, jf you sufler from "Nerves. 4 you lie awake nights, After more ail-aent,- ,JJ fart fit sudden noises, '?i!y, ore crznky, blue jlJ:7cti;, your verves order. them with the mcdlcino that "did the r'irl." fcr this Colorado girL yair "Nerves" have J'!1 hu you for hours or for "r". you'll find this time- remedy elective. jWjtores 25c and $1.00. r;f'-hc- r i . ( pa-n- k. j I l. " Good-Wil- to Missouri Judith Barrett gets her first big r Texas fine-lookin- g, break in the clean-shave- movies,- and now there's an argu- open-backe- Vi anti-aircra- ttud r k i T was sold that month. But the mills, as is their habit, kept operating at close to top sped, meanwhile losing up to 1 cent on each yard they toomea. cotton cioui ?"JTJrJ nrVo! vw, w e j duction of all U. S. industry was up only 24 per cent. With the warehouses now crammed with 180,190,000,-00- 0 yards of unsold goods, the mills were by last week finally starting to LUC Oaillv ij.tvyiii.xi . j.- - curtail operations. It so happened that the cotton mills had an excellent excuse for slackencotton. ing their pace a shortage of Rhrrtns"e. rlo uj slop-sloppi- ... two-thir- one-thir- d. long-rane- -- e-- NEW YORK AS 3,400 members of the Dental Society of the State of New York (largest dental group in the country) met with 4,500 other dentists in New York City last weeK revealed were these dental facts : Some 75 per cent of U. S. citizens through poverty, fear or ignorance, have never felt the pang of a den tist's drill. In large cities, crowded WPA clinics work overtime but con tribute only a drop in the bucket. In spite of numerous free school clinics,over 65 ner cent of U. S. school children are seriously in need of dental care. FAREWELL - MADRID, Spain- - All the time that Benito Mussolini's tens of thousands of soldiers were swaggering around Spain during the recent evil war Adolf Hitler's men modestly stayed in the background, playing a less con- -- Hlbusy. rrowiliil. lionpltals Tiio nftT o!.n(! te V pffwts oro dinturbliif to tni kHlrirya una . , ""IT"!' wllhriiit. know ki'J",!y nCU0U "'ay l''r'Il,' if..... fr,r nml filmllnr Ills .f t..i,y InipiirUlcs 5 vn',n- tUk'i il n morfn! ft.;! It . - ';," m,1Ht bltfr frum Umbloml. .. "raiDlnm. jh.j... NEW YORK One thing the cotton textile industry has never been of is monopolistic tendencies. One of the biggest sources of U. S. payrolls, the cotton textile industry is composed of 1,000 desperately competitive and generally unprofitable mills. About the only check on procaduction the industry knows is the as and long of warehouses, its pacity warehouses ago as last October the held over 150,000,000 yards of print as cloth, about three times as much of Wayne Sandall Motor Co. WILL OFFICIALLY OPEN SATUEIBAY, MAY 27 NEW n rp. rr r nnnnnn Mr U-- i and 6 : , urnntV " ' !' or too ernieful With the 2 Speed Dual Performance that Means More Miles Per Dollar in mini "ly on and SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CABS WITH EXPERT WORKMANSHIP P ' , mo.l- - 4,k your !(' ri '' . nhhorl 5 Priced down with fhe 3 lowest! f f t,r i 't ill ulotor Go. " "jimt paym,r, V,. ,t Doan $. Solu M G. M. C. TRUCKS . J , 1939 PDNTIAC THING THE MOST BEAUTIFUL ON WHEELS rU!'.-- . Trr r ASON WHVS 14111 signs bt Daezlnv t,., kiirh. n.raiat. rlrnir stores. IIP) &1 We Arc Now Equipped to Show the -ninrVK Urn nvcrtnuwl an1 ta I mnr ei(''HR nf ,i" ,.1 w1t. V,af. I.r,l .nil Ik. l,r lrm. ..... New Show E.oosn Service Bepafftfiaaciatt Tihe THE LIFEBOATS:" "MAN" ttoroub'1 k I? ESN EM O lif, y , Honeyvillc-Deweyvill- d ' !th Its liurry and t.t hUrh". di n f''"l' Urh.klriR. xpoHure, 0,,,'tapion, ryes ,"f., ' rn ft 1 NAGGING BACKACHE M u,-- well-behav- n, "nak ment between Texas , and Missouri over which one can claim her. however for the U. S. Government nnrier loan 11.400.000 bales, enough to keep the U. S. in shirts and skirts, sheets ana loweis, iui two years. Paradoxical though the shortage is, O it is precisely what the Government's cotton policy was supposed to accomSADDENED EDITOR - - 1937-3- 8 tremendous plish. On the alNEW YORK While the U. S. crop of 19,000,000 bales the Governmost suffered a coal shortage and ment offered to lend farmers 9 cents went Europe remained, as usual, on the per pound. The market prices that result the with 8 cents, as low as Woolman Edna verge of war, Mrs. cotton holding Government's the of editor magazine, "Vogue" Chase, Secretary last week addressed the Shoe Guild on jumped to 11,400,000 bales. would like to Wallace of she: Said Agriculture another weighty problem. some of his cotton now, but the "Gentlemen, I want to remonstrate sell rirtintro a risinjr t.....v. ooatr, DUULUCIH with you with vou. I want to plead win their constituents, to stop this promotion of the open- - market for Governno to that see it shoe for street presumably toed, as the wear. . . Today you see millions of ment lint is released so long 9 cent to the so close is market price women, all over America, along the streets with not only loan figure. may benefit their toes out, but their heels out The Senators' shortage the mill and constituents provide their too. . . I won't be a bit surprised if, off. to work excuse an some day, they just walk right out ope ators with contri- no is but it great inventor on you and shellac their soles and put the permanent solution of bells on their toes and say, 'To hell bution cotton S U problem. That prob- -' All this makes me the with shoes'" very sad." tirt and are rn.la!)!y out of hict ar,:l relax r.e 69-ye- ar thrc-ughou- f ill Dr. George Gal-- I WASHINGTON lup, famed for his public opinion polls last week received at his home in Princeton, N. J., a post card asking him to choose among the ten leading Presidential candidates. It was from Emil Hurja, the who use to dope elections expertly for the Democratic National Committee and now operates his own "political analyst" office in Washington, V. C for DUSnesg clients. M Hllr1a nuizzed 149.999 persons besides Dr Gallup some in every county throughout the U. S. by postcard and personal interview. Lead ers in his poll were Mr. Hurja's Democratic friend. John N. Garner (45.3 per cent) land Republican Tom Dew-- j Cor- ey (44.8 per cent). Runners-up- : and Arthur dell Hull (23.5 per cent) Vandenberg (21.5 per cent). In Dr. Gallup's poll last week Mr. Dewey received 54 per cent of Re publican votes. WASHINGTON President Roose velt offhandedly announced last week that the Navy's highest officer, Chief of Operations William D. Leahy, who is to retire soon, will replace Governor Blanton Winship of Puerto Rico. old For more than a year, of talked has quit Governor Winship ting to live on his Major Generals nension. Recently he has tiffed with his superior, Secretary Harold Ickes. Said Blanton Winship last week to the 1,700,000 Puerto Ricans whom he has ruled for five years: "You are all damned lucky to get Admiral Leahy." A hoominsr new aspect of national defense prompted Franklin Roosevelt in this appointment. Puerto Kico is to become to the Caribbean defense area what the Navy's strongly for tified Pearl Harbor in Hawaii is to the Pacific: the Navy is installing a $9,300,000 submarine and air base there; the Army is planning to spend some $20,000,000 on air bases, antiaircraft, and garrisons. j :: : NEW GOVERNOR BVED 1 IIURJA POLL ' Mr. I O .'pelief Bill. By Thomas Anlt Saturday is Poppy Day in and sson. Mr. and Mrs. M. G. ai)tl the I" rated States. Myrl, visited relatives Peiry in Slatervi'la Millions of little rd poppies will b? morning and were the dinner in honor cf the World War Sunday tf Mr. and Mrs. OShr Peter-S'i- n, d.Tid. Hundreds of thousands of dol-- j jruestsat Petersboro, Sunday laio will be contributed for the wel- Mr. pr.i Mrs. Chris I'an.-- n spent fj.;e if the war's living victims, the Sunday as friiests of Mr. and Mrs. disablwl veterans, thtir families and Newsome, of Salt Lake City. Their the widows end oiphans of the dead. daughter, Norma, accompanied them Members of DeVere Watkius Unit home to spend her vacation here and of the American Legion Auxiiliary at Ameiiean Falls. will be on the streets here early Sat Mrs. Anna Gcrmer and Mrs. Ken- XT urday morning with baskets of pop-- ; neth Germer arul 3ittle daughter were i visltincr in Oerden on Tuesday. pies maue uy uisauieu veieians. will ask evtrj'one to put on a poppy Tuesday evening, tne retiring bishPulitzer Pnis Winner Carl as an individual act of tribute to opric of Deweyville was honored by Van Doren will receiva the those who gave their lives in Amer- the people of our community, under $1,003 Puhtier PrU Award ica's defense, and to contribute some- the direction of the new bishopric. lor the most distinguished thing toward the Legion and Auxil-liar- y The program was announced by Duett American Biography ol 1938 work for the disabled veterans Lovckmd, which consisited of music and dependent families. readings and songs, and a comic Uefi-- shmpnta of cookies The poppies will be crepe paper rep and lieas of the wild poppies which grew, puncn were s. rvtd. Bishop Clarence in such profusion along the battle Fryer presented the tokens of es front in France. More than ten mil- teem to the retiring bishopric, Marion lion of them have been made by dis- G. Perry, bishop; Horace R. Barnard, abled men working under the direc first counsellor, and Albert Thorsen. tion of the Auxilliary in government second counsellor. Dancing was enhospitals and special poppy work- joyed by all. rooms. Hundreds of veterans unable Camp D. Daughters of the Pioneers to do other work, have been given held their closing meecting at the employment through the winter and home of Captain Viiginia Rl:ckham spring shaping the little red flowers. on Friday afternoon, with Mrs. Black-haMore than 100.000 women will be and Mrs. Jane Heusser as hosin Saturday's Toppy Day army, dis- tesses, Mrs. Addie Gardner pave tho tributing flowers in memory of Amer-- , lesson "Mining Industry of the West." ica's more than 100,000 World War; DI1 1 Ut'SlliiV, iVll and Mrs. Henry dead. They will ask no price for the Yates .of Salt Lake were the dinner poppies but will give them for any guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Wheatcontribution the wearer feels able to ley. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Timmerman and make. Every penny of the money contributed will go into the relief and children of Ogden were dinner guests welfare funds of the Legion and Aux- of Mr. and Mrs. T. L, Wheatley on iliary, where it will work for i.eedy Sunday. Hundreds ol New Jersey liquor veterans and veterans' families durGladys, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. retailers pledge their adherence l L. Wheatley, who is employed In T. the to nine principles of coming year. ing prewas their guest on Sunday. engraved on mis piaque Ogden, sented to Governor A Harry lone, daughter of Mrs. Edna MarUnnrm ol New lersev by the spicuous but no less effective role. is spending a few days here. ble, The Fuhrer had ordered his aviaHouse ol Seagram on behall ol Aaronic Priesthood presented a The A. latest Kann. of out a their few to tors the retailers. Kalph try with Bishop Dis ol Seagram representative tricks over Loyalist cities, but spar- program Sunday night, of Mr. Burg-esand Clarence tillers Corporation, mates me Fryer of life the ed Germans the tedious ol one The Aaronic stake plaque, Priesthood, giving presentation. trenches. His neatly the many presented to State and uhkn u u.e spienniu dressed lirst the city ollicials, represents bv thousands warriors were mostly staff officers, men of the pridhood. Sunday night Mr, Mr. ol retail liquor dealers throughexpert airplane technicians, artillery" nrrtion to Dromote a out who men and gunners between Kottor imHprstandina ctavr-r-l bnek nf the nes ami Kept jclub civic ville them and tlie communities tliey May Wheat-le- y presented There to themselves. pretty much for the serve. of dollars five award honor were probably never more than 10,of the points highest one grade eighth 000 of them in Spain at time, schools or tuie a two but for years they performed lem is basically the loss of foreign service which neither Spaniards nor tion to enter high school. to S .used Mrs. Hilda Tingey and children export Italians were educated to do. markets, for the U. of its annual crop, now exmoved In the Harwood home and have At Baraias Field, some eight miles Alabama's Sen from Madrid, Generalissimo Francis will make Deweyville their home. ports only Mr. and Mrs. II. D. Thomas and son ator Bankhead has an answer m the co Franco last week held a final re but tfae gcn. view for the German, Italian and Odeen, were dinner guests Sunday at ate last week turned it down, largely ftnanish airmen who fought on his the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gcrbecause the subsidies would directly side in the war. He took the salute mer. They also visited at the home of benefit no one in the U. S. In defense from 1.500 Italians of the l.ittono Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Blackham. Mrs. Mlral Cmwthcr and children of the defeated measure, Texas' Tom Legion, 5,000 Germans of the Condor moved away after spending the have 13 To Connally orated: Legion, and 3,500 Spaniards. "Cotton is like a sinking ship'. r.erman and eicht Italian aviators he school season here, Mrs. Crowther When a ship at sea is sinking, you awarded the Spanish Mjlltnry Medal. will attend summer school. Mrs. Edward Nielson entertained a do not wait to work out navigation In his speech the Generalissimo pre- of little folk at her home on e number a devise that. Sua n's present air HirtHi problems and try to vmrwtfAH Ratimlnv afternoon, hononntr- her son, i, wm u uiuiuimicu n liw" proeram. You just shout, 'Man strencrui j the lifeboats!' Now we are trying to times In tEeiuture," and added mat vvauies wiumwj. ana reiresnmems man the lifeboats for cotton. "it must be prepared on a moment's notice to lift its wings to rebuild the' Mrs. Ella Gardner is slowly improving from heart trouble empire and make Spain great." DENTAL FACTS - 17 deduction of 6 cents duty. To newspaper correspondents Mr. Roo3tvelt declared that he did not know why South American corned1 beef was "infinitely better" than that from the U. S. praries, unless fortign cows are just naturally Letter tasting than U. S. cows. If correspondents did not believe him. he said, let them try a can of Argentine beef on their next camping trip. U. S. cattlemen and their spokesmen in Congress exploded with indignation at this Presidential statement. In Argentina, whose frozen (but not corned) beef has been kept out of the U. S. on the grounds that the country harbors hoof and mouth disease, his words were acclaimed. Said Argentine Foreign Minister Jose Cantilo in Buenos Aires: "A fine gesture! . . . An important precedent in friendly relations!" I DEWEYA1LLE p ! n - through our o !,hl ir YMAC Plot, ol Jl 1 1 p vfiv lowfif oroWabl. ro.! nr,m-ve- - WAYNE SANDALL, proprietor, cordially invites the public to visit and inspect their new building, and see the NEW PONTIAC and G. M. C. TRUCKS pf |