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Show FEBRUARY 23, 1840 ESAU RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, FACE TWO BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Catered at the Poet office at Tremonton. Utah, as 4-- Matter Second Class Ye Sons of Helaman: Esplin Joins JurW0 Dairv Short Course Secretary Shifts For Fourth AnnUa Tour last game of basketball with Set for March 8 Personnel In New Junior Stock Sho. Box Elder was fought hard, too hard. At State College! Your advisor viewed this game- and Organization Plan - Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thuisday of Each Week JAMES WALTON, Publisher L P. WALTON, Editor and Business Manager Phone first West Street 23-- J Shifts in the United States DepartUtah State Agricultural College's ment of Agriculture which moved Dr. is completing plans C. W. War burton, former national ( Dairy department I'rcoucis anu aiui.-turer'- s the Dairy for Extension Service Director, to depuShort Course held annuaJy on ty governor of the Farm Credit AdV the campus of the college, and schedincluministration, and M. L. Wilson, for- uled this year for March mer under Secretary of Agriculture, Professor A. J. Morris, sive, repoits to national Extension Director, bring specialist- - me to the forefront two of the country's dairy manufacturing meet the needs of to designed course, outstanding farmers, Claude R. Wick-ar- d the various branches of the dairy inand Grover B. Hill which handle or process milk Mr. Wickard, newly appointed un- dustry milk products, will manufacture and der Secretary of Agriculture, has and place special emphasis on cheese farmed a general grain and livestock ice manufacture this year. cream farm near Camden, Indiana, for 25 Besides faculty members and colyears. Grover B. Hill, who was named assistant secretary of agriculture lege officials participating in the proinin December, has been a Texas farm- gram there will be featured guest asC. Cole, W. structors including: men er and rancher since 1911. Both ice have been associated with adminis- sociate professor in charge of the of division the of cream department trative work of the AAA farm prodairy industry, University of Califoryears. gram In of The new under secretary first be- nia; Steve Suidzinski, proprietor Denmark, Cheese Steve's corporation, the with came connected Agricultural B. J. Ommodt, federal butAdjustment Administration in 1933, Wisconsin; and market ter specialist, Los grader and in 1936 he was made director of E. G. Cole, Dr. the North Central division of the Angeles, California; Lake Salt chief City board sanitarian, AAA. As director of the division, which Includes the corn belt states, of health; Dr. L. R. Curtis, also of the Salt Lake City board of health; Guy Mr. Wickard stressed inof the AAA. Mr. Wickard, P. Stevens, chief dairy and food of state agriculdepartment now 47, has operated the same Indi- spector, ana farm which was farmed by his ture, Salt Lake City, Utah. Others who will lecture are: Clyde father and grandfather. He graduated from Purdue University in 1915 McCulloch, dairy and food inspector and in 1927 was named a Master of the state department of agriculFarmer of Indiana in recognition of ture, Salt Lake City; A. T. Barrett, his work as a farmer leader and the Ogden City board of health; Rulon S. Tueller, Logan City board of health; improved farming practices he K. F. Colson, Creamery Package Hr. Hill, 51, was named a field Manufacturing company, Denver, Colrepresentative of the AAA in 1934. orado; George F. Jackson, plant supAfter serving on a committee which erintendent, Weber Central Dairy, drafted the AAA range program Ogden, Utah; William T. Cannon Jr. Since 1936 he has been in charge of and Gwen Sampson of the Arden the range program for the southern Dairy in Salt Lake City; Frank S. region of the AAA. During the Barbaro, Lamont-Corlis- s company, drought of 1934, he directed the reg New York City; S. J. Pearce, assisg ional program in New tant superintendent, Western CreamMexico, Texas, and Oklahoma. He ery, Salt Lake City; and A. C. Merstudied at the University of Texas rill, manager, Coalville Ice Cream Co., from 1909 until 1911, after which he Salt Lake City. went into ranching and farming near A surprise scoring and analysis of Amarillo. sample dairy products was held February 19, as an advance feature of the forth coming school. Results of the contest will be announced at the Dairy Short Course banquet which Wednesday evening of this week will climax the four-da- y school, Prothe Methodist ladies sponsored a fessor Morris announces. church benefit social in the form of a White Elephant party. Dinner was W. Leonard of Pa.; Bishop served at 6:20 followed by an auction C. C. SelecmanPittsburg, of Oklahoma City, of the white elephants. This created and Bishop Frank A. Smith of a great deal of merriment and the Okla.; Texas. Dr. Corliss P. Houston, entire evening proved to be an enof Chicago, 111., was also joyable one. present and gave a most stirring misSunday evening at 7:30, March 3rd, sionary message, "The World Is My the Methodist Church will enjoy a Parish." In the evening at 7:30 musical program, presented by the Dr. Hargreaves' address the Women's Glee Club of the Bear River colored choir of the African Methodist High School under the direction of G. Church in Salt Lake gave a musical O. Nye. Everyone is cordially invited program for half an hour. The varto hear this fine musical treat. ious sessions throughout the day were Beginning March 10th and continu- held in the First Methodist Church ing through Easter Sunday, special of Salt Lake City. services will be conducted twice on Sunday (morning and evening- - and each week night except Saturday. The first week Rev. Lester Young will be the speaker. At present Rev. Young is pastor of the Methodist Church in McGill, Nevada, and comes originally from Nebraska. He is a graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary in Wil- more, Kentucky and is a very inter esting speaker. Everyone is invited to hear him. During the next week Rev. Goff will continue these services as he has done previously during Holy Week, climaxing the observance of Easter with a Sunrise Service, a morning worship service, and an Eas ter Cantata presented by the choir in the evening of Easter Sunday. Thursday, February 29th, four car loads of members and friends of the church attended the Methodist Ad vance in Salt Lake City. Four Metho dist bishops were present and gave most inspiring messages: Bishop Ham ; maker of Denver, Colorado; Bishop A. 4-- 8, SUBSCRIPTION RATES ... ONE YEAR (In Advance) SIX MONTHS (In Advance) THREE MONTHS (In Advance) $2.00 $1.00 ... BO Free to P.ublit Tl. on!y ple in the U. S. wrier catalog and dvertiin matter covenn anyline or txumcM or torodnrt ran be obtained FrM And Wilboul 'To Your Town Obligation w the American Industrial Library. Write (or Buaineaa Advcniin Matter you are inlcteated in; aama rdl b promptly forwarded. as well as to your Country AMttlCMIUISTBUL Ea.UrU LIBRARY Ii BildiaA, CjUmAo, lllUal PATRONIZE YOUR .LOCAL MERCHANTS IIONAl fCITCPIAl u zAshi. ASSOCIATION I93 5 mmTm,.T.m7TiT "Behind the Scenes In American Business" finnlHHHHMtltnilHIMft NEW YORK, Feb. 26 BUSINESS Has the European war done much to American prices T It's pretty hard for John Q. Public to tell. Just by examining' the price tags on shirts or loaf of ocks, or hefting a bread, or seeing how big a cauliflower he can get for 15 cents. But we do find that wholesale commodity prices zoomed 27.2 per cent between late August and September 22 when the war was 19 .days old. By now, about 40 per cent of that increase has settled down as has the war though the general level of such prices is atlll 16.5 per cent higher than August. The natural expectation is that, sooner or later, this will be reflected In retail prices, too. But actually it's Almost impossible for the layman to spot these results, because the retail price levels of almost all staple merchandise remain the same except in very drastic situations and the differential is made up by putting a litor tle less material In the shirt-tai- l, fewer buttons, or shorter thread-coun- t. As one merchandising expert puts it: "There'll always be a dollar shirt and a twojfif ty shirt always a dollar sock and a partly from the hitherto lax enforce, ment The SURPLUSES wheat price on the Chicago futures market spurted five cents the limit one day last week. The allowed cause was something of a mystery, though some attributed it to reports of a short wheat crop in Argentina. Short crops do that to prices; surpluses do the opposite, of course. A new technique in smoothing farm sur pluses in the U. S. in the last couple of years is that of the producer-co- n sumer drives, sponsored by chain stores and Joined in by other retailers cooperating with growers. Growers' organizations report that such drives in 1939 saved price levels of many commodities and, for fresh fruits and vegetables, stepped up consumption as much as 60 per cent. A pioneer in this activity, the A & P, now reports its participation in such drives helped it to move 11 per cent more fresh fruita and vegetables into consumption in 1939 than in 1938. The growers return also was bettered, the company's payments for fresh produce aggregating $90,000,000, an increase of 20 per cent With other Bock." mass distributors showing similar reWASHINGTON It looks as sults, growers agree the new tech though another flying squadron of nique contributed materially to 1939's etreamlined modern "revenooera" will rise in agricultural income, about 2.5 be combing the business and indus- per cent. trial woods soon looking for BITS O' BUSINESS U. S. cigaret act violators. An early e Janupeed-u- p of enforcement of the Fair production hit a new Labor Standards act is indicated in uary peak last month 14j billions of the current expansion of the legal the little cylinders but more notable and inspecting personnel in regional was increase in output of higher-price- d cigars, two classes of these show, offices of the W. and H. division. The 16 regional offices are setting up ing larger gains than the nickel or branch offices to speed investigation "tvvofer" varieties. . . Packard and of complaints. In the New York of. Nash are rushing engineering and fice, for instance, the staff has grown production plans for new lines in auto field, encouraged by from two to 30 In the last year, with 20 or 25 more to be added by sum- success of Studebaker's "invasion" mer. Officials say larger concerns may be ready by late summer, almost generally are complying, but that surely before the general showing of 1941 models in the fall. . . American there is fairly widespread smaller in youth, said by some to be going to among employers some industries, for the most part the dogs, bought 20 per cent more arising from misunderstanding, but Bibles during the last Christmas season than ever before that the Good Word Consumption of domestic wines is expected to top 90,000,000 LEE gallons this year, gettering the 1939 record by 15 per cent and that year AI18T U A C T O R was 13 per cent over the previous one Established 40 Years . . . Private engineering construction BRIGII AM CITY, UTAH award3 for the first week of 1939, totaling $114,530,000, are up 21 per SOCKING 10-ce- nt three-for-a-doll- ar wages-&nd-hou- rs all-tim- S. NORMAN t farmer-administrati- cattle-buyin- admired your physical energy, your vicability to wage a fast war for to obedience umpire tory. Your quick rule was also admirable, but your not game was so fast that you could baskets free Too many avoid "fouls." thrown on both sides. Too much spet d toward the basket at a sacrifice of science. Henry C. Link, one of our greatest psychologists says that "playing the acgame," that is, the benefits from curacy, clean from errors is far greater than winning the game. The team that had had no errors called on them, though the score fell below that of their opponents should be declared winner, though the opposite score was higher. Mr. Link applies this lesson to all our social, political, religious activities. Those who rush to win and do not weigh carefully each step, make many false moves and are many times required to retrace their steps, thus giving competitors advantages over them. If you perform your obedience to "divine law with the same energy as you exhibited in that game, and follow those higher laws with the accuracy herein defined, vou will cer tainly soon fulfill our slogan, "The Sons of Helaman Shall March Again.-- ' (Signed) HELAMAN, Stake Advisor ! tf' ces. v Professor Esplin who s also laborator with the United States. experiment station at Dubois has judged at many leading' including the sheep show at o, Texas; the Ogden Livestock show Colorado State Fair at Puebv'" ' the Utah State Fair. who have been cho3ea Judges viously for this year's Junior are H. H. Smith, extension asb husbandman and associate prof of animal husbandry at the U C. and for several years a judge t leading western shows, will judge swine classes, while E. F. Rw animal husbandry specialist at & University of Idaho will cattle division. Professor Rinehart, a veteran fe. stock judge has been in the rin the International Livestock showi. Chicago, the Pacific Internals Livestock at Portland, Oregon, major events at San Francisco Los Angeles. l t MERCHANTS WISE - ADVERTISE SHOP THRU THE LEADER Aft Our Beet Bonus Special I FREE - One Pint Fresh Fruit Sherbet - FREE with purchase of each quart of FREEZER PACK ICE CREAM - qt 35 DIPPED ICE CREAM - qt 50? Methodist Church Notes Har-greave- Alma C. Esplin. extension husbandman and associate r, ar of sheep husbandry at the L'Uh Agricultural college has been v to judge fat lamb clasps at th Annual Intermountain Jurior stock show to be held at North r Lake, June 4, 5, and 6, J. h. field, chairman of the show Special for Saturday and Sunday We Also Have Many flavors in Ice Cream Brick or Loose FRESH STRAWBERRIES - FROSTED MALTED s, Fountain Service - Candy - Lunches v pre-ceedi- In Old Utah Power & Light Co. Location West Main Street Tremonton, Utah jsgpi CELEBRATE cent over the figure for the same period last year. NATIONAL E W audi SAVE WEEEC BECKONING BUSINESS A good. ly shar of the upturn in construction is attributed to modernization of business places, which has proved a business-getteNow E. L. Ostendorf of Cleveland, former president of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, recommends a nation.wide drive to modernize whole business sections and restore "blighted" city areas FEBRUARY 24th to MARCH 2nd r. With These Specials - at Gepharts 80 SQUARE PERCALES 15c Yard to FAMOUS QUADRIGA QUALITY (Necdleizcd) ORGANDIE FRILLING Dainty - Yard 5c BIAS TAPE J. P. Coats With thread to match - Bolt 8c -- status. In Toledo trade-attracti- ng he told realtors that many property owners have discovered that modern, iztng with structural glass, lightweight metals and other modern materials turns obsolete and unprofitable structures into live, properties. With the return of trade when such a project Is undertaken on a neighborhood basis, he said, general property values rise and the whole community benefits. He cautioned that rehabilitation should be undertaken with the guidance of trained city planners after careful study of causes of deterioration. income-produci- MANY OTHER SPECIALS DURING SEW AND SAVE WEEK COME IN AND SEE THEM - ng MONEY TO LOAN on REAL ESTATE FARMS OR HOMES JAMES BROUGII PHOTJt 33 X iaa n, I I I 1 I I TREMONTON AGENCY FIRE AND AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE TREMONTON, UTAH Steering It . ; . low priced car with h wheelbase . . . with fresh, new beauty of styling never before seen in an automobile . . . with a rid that would be amazing in any car at any price! Discover for yourself the beauty and convenience advantages of the new Plymouth's wide, straight doors. The greater vision through the bigger windshield and glass area all around. The 50 to Heitz U UmiS Most sensational car ever offered in the low price field! That's what they're saying about the new 1940 Plymouth . . . what you'll say when you see it and drive it. Think of M 'I 117-inc- & 65 better road lighting that new Sealed-Beaheadlamps give you. The smoothness of this big 84 horsepower engine with its Floating Power mountings. All the basic better value engineering features that hav made Plymouth famous for economy, long life mi tafetyl m And by all means, try the 1940 Plymouth's treat Luxury Ride. Ask tu about it today. Winzcler Auto Co. TREMONTON, UTAH PHONE 16 ! |