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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1940 tt-er- e -- l of fertile acres fh. olow, We are camping rc, -- Sno'foes borders. -r jtt!.Sdder b the .trr e ?o "P- - are W' cannot to the heights of seweild a one by nannnt thru fly n' ' ourselves God knows ;JSse things over. conclusions rSio , !me 1,1113 it out. - hus pver been evised to without sw eat the great prizes Jr . ' a some thinking you will dent and hap- Ld The tragedy of America isre"""6" f there isn t tnn much scheming and .1? that received no support the hands. Sl vou do j up; aKe a thinking American. Be a tnainpfi to reason, " jcome ... icr m oi-m- v a"v to search for facts, impractical dreamer cannot " ... .K..rohs fnr silk lace This ' VOU cuuw-"'.4f faces serious matters and we sit- i learned minua u vicu jn ana cany . and security. . think, and if we don't jj: we uuu v come when we will will h inv "L urnpninu.is. n -in a fallen niirMtrivco . " J.: voiceless its nag torever "with i " v,0 j't - irled." want you to take this message and keep it in your heart. I lilac &11 uiwuivi- yOU to rcttUZ-no safeguards. Do people provide I , t .i.rfhinlr fnr crantpfi Think i.i.. tttAC ttilviaiAi think and think, just as the clock and ticks and ticks. America is ? on your mind for a vigilent '' Ice. Answer like a true patriot. JOHN R. BRINKLEY i jitiac Sales Set Record for Jariuary i of new Pontiac high for any Jan-j- r In Pontiac history with a total 13,671 units according to D. U. irick, general sales manager of tac Motor Division. This was a iof 32 per cent over January, 1939. Mveries during the last ten days 1 5,437 compared with 3,651 for rai& period last year, and 5,205 if aicond ten days this year, i'iMhrick points out is quite irarthy considering the unusually w weather which prevailed in a fur-- I parts of the country indication that the automobile iess is becoming more and more I year round business. entories of new cars in dealers' Un- are only normal, it is 4 orders for new cars at the end the month were 4.4 times greater 5 at the same time last year. e 7$ed car sales also set an 3rd for of a with total January 37 or a gain of 20.3 per cent over mry of 1939, which is very satis-:torBathrick said. letail deliveries i set an EVERY INDIVIDUAL. OF NATION all-ti- .... he-Id- . all-tim- y, AL AND INTERNATION- materials from American factories on a vast scale, and the sky was the limit so far as price was concerned. The allies even bid against each oth er, thus sending prices zooming. A long time passed before buying became even comparatively orderly and efficient. If anyone thought that mad was due to be repeated when the current war came into being, they were just 100 per cent wrong. Before the war was actually declared both France and Britain had purchasing commissions in this country. These commissiones worked cooperatively, not at cross purposes. Purchases were made by direct contact with manufac turers, thus eliminating the need for brokers. And when, late in January, the two commissions were merged unh der the name of tie Purchasing Board, it became evident that the allies were out to get the most for their money, and are work ing as closely together in business matters as they are in military af fairs. One purpose of the new Board is to eliminate competition and overlapping of functions. Anoth er very important purpose is to keep in friendly contact with the U. S. gov ernment and to eliminate possible friction that might occur if Allied purchases seemed to hamper our own preparedness program. The heads of the Board are well known business men long experienced with American finance and industrial methods. Biggest Allied demand is still for airplanes so far Britain alone has placed orders for some $90,000,000 worth. According to a Wall Street Journal article, Allied total aircraft buying may run to the astounding figure of $1,700,000,000. Inasmuch as our total aircraft output last year was only $225,000,000, this, if it materializes, will call for tremendous expansion of our aircraft industry. It is believed that, the Allied purchasing agents will attempt to get part of the work done by subcontractors such as in order to automobile concerns speed matters up. This government is obviously con cerned lest Allied war. buying reach the point where there would be an inadequate supply of war materials left for us. To prevent this, the President has appointed a committee, headed by Secretary Morgenthau, representing the Treasury, War and Navy Depart ments, whose duty is to coordinate foreign war buying with our own defense program. Mr. Morgenthau has said that our own needs must be filled first has expressed the opinion that our capacity for producing air plane engines for fighters, is insuf ficient to meet the demand. The Allies may thus be forced to pare their exceedingly ambitious present Acid Indigestion, Gas on fomach or Heartburn make you 'eel uncomfortable or embarrass try Alka-Seltzwhich con-- ns alkalizing buffers and so er, counteract the associated Stomach Acidity. ..tut e relief of these minor mach upsets is only a small J ,hat yu can expect J ui Find you. You it effective for Pain Re-- S PS cess Jhad?cheXeuralgia,Cold, Aches and Pains. contai ns an analgesic, (sodium made more 2LSaliJcylate) Ste ng action by alkaline buffer hard work or strenuous make yu fecl tired and SrfSt0 O if en!oy T'h(h- - S i - v v-- h , T v ,?' i f jt rv - va---? ?: : X Li :'is. '" ' V" A .f I ; , t , .1 j - - - '. '' J r- i ca tour Icne Wither, youthful screen end stags star, met J. L ! Jl , Whil ll J - ' - ; i nouncement was made iv x . - ; .... I ( I lb. iNewebt CUNe"w"York City The Fruit Salad hat a tiny plat- form mounted with tiny iruits and vegetables and trimmed with black bow and streamers. I to' O'ed 73,328 units, a figure which sri ashes all January records, with the exception of a single year. The an- I " f I. ..... ani trucks in the month of Januaiy : ; I A evrolet dealers' sales of new oars TS S EI "'. V','V I P A Kf i ' v !t : SZt:d-was fitted for B. F Goodrich Company president, and a made ci Koroseal-treatewardrobe fabric, a miracle material jes t w created of limestone, coke and salt, a recent Goodrich Collyer, d labora-velve- tory discovery I" , .1 r v' J , tT' .jwm.,,i,,,.mi,. - r- "V . i. 0 J' W x,Sh JT-- v lib. The Relief Society ladies held their work and business meeting Tueeilay at the H. S. Tinegy home. Mrs. y and Mae Tingey were the hostesses. Mrs. Ruth Holman, of the Stake Board, was present and spoil e briefly. A delicious luncheon was served after the meeting to twenty-tw- o ladies and four children. The M Men and Gleaner Girls held a Valentine dance Saturday evening. The ladies orchestra from Deweyyille furnished the music. Rayola Walker, of Pocatello, Idaho, spent the weekend here with her daughter, Betty. A large number from here attended the wedding dance at Thatcher, Friday given for Mr. and Mrs. Dale Udy. Bishop and Mrs. J. H. Ward were Logan visitors over the weekend. The Garland school girls' chorus, led by Nellie Elgen, favored the Riverside church goers Sunday evening at Sacrament meeting with four numbers. Mr. Gunderson, principal, and Wm. J. Culllmore were also present The speakers were Mr. Cullimore and E. W. Ward. Miss Phyllis Richards, home demonstration agent of Afton, Wyoming, is visiting with hex parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Richards. "v v?tH ' ? - rf. 'J . ,, ; ret and i K"P X Toacher's To-o3rand Rapids, , Mich. Lun't be surpnsed ii someone dumps a giant Moving Giant T Redwood from C iiomia in your village square one o! these days) There seems to 1 almost no limit to the size of trees which can be transported now Shown here, on board a Fruehauf Car all trailer. Is an elm that was a seec ng when the USA. was an infant. J cies. Jugoslavia seems to be looking to Italy for protection, as does Bulgaria, Turkey and Greece are the Allies' friends, though Turkey has specifically said she will not aid Britain and France should they go to war against the U . S. S. R. Rumanie, country of oil, Is the state which is really on the spot now. While the Allies have pledged their aid in case of need, they are f ar away. Germany is right next Q habits of two ' "' - ly opos--ecent- where roam at will jook about the of sum. p 4 - , hit-- " v N V. ''''.- J- W . -. n J H . Dennis Day. popular young lack Benny tenor, is almost as well known lor his domineering mother as for his voice. Here Dennis real mother (left) meets his stage mother, Verna Felton, before a T" s h I (he Ssnay SovthV ; Hitch your wagon to a star fish like these two beauties on the beach at 5t. Augustine. Florida s oldest resort jacJcle bwain is the lair guiding star lor this team of stars Her passenger is Willetta Helmly. i recent Sunday broadcast D Cheap, effective control of internal parasites in livestock may now be had in the form of chemicail, phenotha-zin-e. This drench, as report- non-tox- ic ed by Dr. John R. Mohler, chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, is being patented by the Bureau so the public may secure it at a minimum cost. oi Benny's program over NBC. door and is phrasing her demands in unequivocal language. Chances are that Rumania will be forced to go a long way in doing the Reich's bidding. If this war is to become a real world war, most authorities think the starting point will be the Balkans, birthplace of many a devastating war of the past Bothwell School News Miss Emeiine Christensen returned to teaching school after being sick in bed for the past 2 months. Last Wednesday the girls' basketball team played Thatcher's girl team Our girls won by a score of 46 to 23. Last Wednesday our boys' basket ball team played Treomnton's eighth grade team and won by a score of 33 to 21. mm an mm I The eighth grade are going to put on a play called "The Ring and the Lock." Glen Allen is Tommy, the main part, and Norma Scholer, Marian, his older sister . We hope we have a large attendance when we put it on - i ...... mim!MUB':fim i v'- J DncXjm &iim If you want to stop your land from blowing or washing away, you can't beat old mother nature's way of tying it down with roots. Phone oOo lt "Pi-- sum. shothe two He is lot 'A sions. The key to Europe's future may lie As Captain J. H. "All through history it Craige says, has been easy to start wars in the Balkans, hard to stop them." If the Balkan states could get to gether and form a cohesive neutral bloc, their chance of being invaded would be small. They would have an army of close to 2,000,000 first line troops, adequately equipped and back ed by a sizable air force. But the Balof mixed, unkans are a crazy-quifriendly nationalities. Never in his tory have they been able to work cooperatively, or to adjust their opposed and divergent ambitions and poli- 1 Tin-ge- price-boosti- in the Balkans. et RIVERSIDE N. jf v ' v - r?-?T-- com- pany's headquarters today. Sales for the month showed a gain of 21,325 units, or 41 percent, over those for January 1939. Sales for the final 10 days totalled 25,915 units, as compared with 18,843 in the game per iod last year. The records show that in only on other January January 1936 has the record of the past month been equaled, and the sales in January of that year were million-Chevrol- , -- at the i only 2,280 units ahead of the month just closed. Sales of trucks totalled 14,113. a gain of 1,170 units over January 1939. Used car sales in January were 118,272 units, a gain of approximate 3,800 over those in January 1939. Used car sales in the final 10 days were especially heavy, exceeding those for the second 10 days by 7,923 units. Anglo-Frenc- Even as the makers of war mater ials have benefited from the war, the research has reof other commodities have producers of the development fhdale breed of sheep. This ani-- f suffered. British demand for tobacis a cross between the South-"''co, for instance, has practically disa high quality meat produc- - appeared Europe has no gold to for Severe restric luxuries. ut with a hght fleece, and the spend Teiiale, an excellent wool produc- - tions have likewise been placed on fruit purchasing, at the expense of American agriculture. Despite this, I however, and despite the almost complete loss of German and Polish trade, our exports have been remarkably high. The European neutrals, no less than the belligerents, have significantly upped their purchases from us. VI Summing up, it looks as if the war will not dislocate our economy at this time, or materially affect prices. But when war ends, it doesn't seem pos sible that we can avoid a slump many a great factory geared to war production will find that its reason for existence has vanished overnight. War booms make post-wa- r depres When f v.:"- 1 AL PROBLEMS INSEPARABLE FROM LOCAL WELFARE. 'Airaal Husbandry ed in the f S rm. dinner pails, dhtdend CHECKS AND TAX BULLS When the first World War broke the out, a spectacular holiday followed in thous this country. advancing By the end of 1914, the p.,s todav requires allied governments were seeking war fortitude and energy and begin rirhere were nches in the virgin tts0f America but toil was neces ,m There was gold in f to but persevenng miners had V AFFECT use their heads wisely of th nracticabi cas been A (highlights f 0 HAITE.VEVGS TILT Chevrolet January Sales Best Since 193 H TO T757 Tc3 ECONorac page cryrr? 23-- J ' Want a cook, Want a clerk, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want to sell a farm, rilONE ZSJ B. R. Valley Leader Phone 23-- J , buy Chevrol7Trithlr conr SAVE ' et- All used cars priced tOMllf-- at In order LxL to inan s. O method behind erenr SAVE Only Buy now b- price rUe and save the difference. Save deprecla-for- e tlon on your old "OK SAVE SAVE few ax- 9,262.068 lopU mm4 wt4 trck IxwgM from Chtvrlt 4mWi dvrtng the tart tlx jri Mnm Hrat Cor too. (tevroM SAVE Save winter coo- cart (0)fo) I m. room for mora trade-in- Want to borrow money, Want to sell livestock, Want to recover lost articles, Want to rent a house or farm, Want to sell 2nd hand furniture, Try The Boar River Valley Leader Advertising gets new customers, Advertising keeps old ones, Advertising builds you up, Advertising gets business, Advertising has energy, Advertise and succeed, Advertise regularly, Advertise wisely, Advertise often, Advertise now! ' sXX - ear. Trad on pairs car. no nuKX yo- -r Willi fiBlin tor v-- .n Hk up Save costly old pense. 9m nm4 mn lnft 1 k fcwv iii utt 1 tOniM r-- FRONK CHEVROLET COMPANY EAST MAIN STREET TREMONTON, UTAll |