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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, RIGHT OUT OF THE AIR Entered at the Postofflce at Tremonton, Utah, as Second Class Matter - Published at 4 Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday of Each Week Thone West Street By EARtE FERRIS rr Lson me eoinjjituuu w .. . ' ... cc: the road with her twice and declared. "Well, I'm all production, "Twelfth set, boys. Niyht," during the next three Budd Hulick, formerly of the months, Helen Hayes, pictured "Stoopnagle and Budd" team, takes While JAMES WALTON, Publisher I. P. WALTON, Editor and Business Manager first Canning Crops Con- tlCtS NOW Complete 1 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER -;--' 1041 23-- J on mcms '. 1 irr Kut.ui uj aiid cannc-r- w- nV rnry 1 11 .rnno i'-ri!,willfis - he- - m the what crops do I need onT;, TT. SS'S J have a safe rotation crops show surpluses and h ' o- (Are thev ".i;iji. are -HIV Sflil hlliliiin,. ana ''"b ing tates undn the aaa What are , . . "" ' so-;- i . ' j. giowcrs tt- the n.aik..: ?tit of Utah was finished for the in other' than contacted, I4 Vvai- 1241. All who participated the irrigation watiT both T? h ccutiacts, this : years :k:ng supply a very sober role for a change in based on outlook? Do !. "Home of the Brave." 'lov, .r represcntaUvc3 and canner rep on my rarm? Can be to uviwn ate ivsciitativts. congrauuaieu Gin-cox some canniCecil B. DeMille had signed vii their tlforts m uyu:g 10 unu wu fOf, con-- , yet do contracted, for? about Rogers to repeat her memorpo'iitions that brought able portrayal of "Kitty Foyle' In talking with that could be and wers signed : v b'.h nartics. The farmers are es j Rocky Mountain Cannipo! committee- - and canning crop committf pecidUy grateful to their note acreage for perfection Mm who dealt with canning crops for well as pole beans can ytt ba had. if beets and sugar prryeins ance of the 1941 acreage is efforts. their untiring ' . up immediately I unuVi.st;),i . nt. ,t.oi a, farmer iLiiij win. u msiaiiea in fi,.- -ire. isfactorily solved, then the mcnton plant determm-i of next step the must take Sugar beets and peas esp,. will he each of crop what acreage ing ' fac-- I should be planted early, j plant on his farm. A number of 't0 farmer Every mak u tors can aid the farmer in determining own decision on ought his own farm his farm practices: to cope with the present, Fiist, ho will want to worn out. a try world conditions. tain maintain wise crop rotation that will ROBERT H. STEWART his fertility, pievent erosion, and, if even before she won the Motion County Agricultural Agest possible, make a profit Picture Academy "Oscar" on the most was She the in wish of to, that performance. basis Second, he will remain in compli"Kitty" in DeMille's Monday night way, advantageous Radio Theatre over the Columbia ance with the AAA farm program. network. HEALTH Third, he will wish to support and His sponsor has just handed maintain any county institution and Bing Crosby's conductor, John encourage any other new industry j g 1 Scott Trotter, a new contract that will assist him in making a prountil June, 1945. Since July. and that Local health officers from all business farm out his of fit jr. 1936, Trotter has established a will play a sincere roll in building up tions of the state reported a total unique record among conductors. cases 395 of communicable disea a county to the benefit of all. He has conducted 242 consecutive broadcasts without a layoff of a Improved grower contracts symbo- the Division of Communicable Diseaat lize more money for the grower. How- Control for the week ending Mani single week. , , ever, the grower and the manufactur- 21. This is 57 cases fewer than wen Because of his excellent work er each have certain fixed charges reported last week and 734 cases few. as a romantic leading man with and other expenses that are incurred. er than were reported one year Yvette, song star, on the Xavier One case of diptheria was reported Many factors such as climate, insects, also Provo. from etc., soil, moisture, diseases, plant A case of epidemic meningitis play definite roles. If a f aimer can work out a proper reported from Provo. The patient a land balance and can produce quality a housewife 49 years of age. The and quantity crops and has a icuuuig iuysiu.iaii icpuriea me eontract for these toms as "moderately severe," Tto i J i'H aUV crops, he can expect a profit. The far, the source of the infection is m. canner is also dependent on quality determined. Seven cases of septic sore threat and quantity of these same contracted ciops. A full run cuts overhead were reported from Enterprise, County, Utah. costs; can provide for additional, efOther communicable diseases m ficient field and plant machinery; hire more' labor; and add more necessary as follows: chickenpox 89, influesa 22, measles 13, German measles U service. Cugat programs over the NBC-ReEach farmer should acquaint him- mumps 47, pneumonia 13, scarlet fnetwork Thursday nights, Bert self with the surplus status and prof- ever 22, whooping cough 86, gonParks, pictured here has aroused itable marketing possibilities of each orrhea 6, and syphilis 15. Hollywood interest and may fly to The following counties reported "a crop that he can successfully grow the cinema city between broadcn his farm. He should answer these diseases:" Carbon, Daggett, Duchesne casts for a screen test next month. and other questions, especially if he Iron, Kane, Piute, Sevier, Uintah Wayne. Socialism. Most is everyparedness When the late J. P. Morgan wn body figures socialism is something asked what he considered the off have else, away someplace they bank collateral, lie replied, like in Germany, and all we have here If you are stanoing on the side--, arg Ramsey MacDonaK and Republicans, walk and watching the circus parade, But behind the scenerVi you lookt you can lose your gold watch or may- wm see 0M Uncle Samuel Shop Thru The Ads For Real Value be your old wallet, and never miss u he(J intQ a uule wt of e them until the parade is over, or kind of business especially the electric, you get home. This commotion on war out when MONEY TO LOAN red. he WQn.t preparedness is not much different s&mhQ,s business is mn- from a circus. ning the army and the navy. When REAL ESTATE I been thinking about what else is h h,ate businefi he is OR HOMES FARMS are we helping Eng. ed ; going on, while lntQ Socialism. land Most everybody wants to help gd afc BR0UGH V(u England, the same as most everybody parade ' AGENCY likea a circus hut you gotta keep." lQW dow y tir.il .tM ...n.T m.' (.a FIRE AND AUTOMOBILE walk home and without your time- INSURANCE s our' ; - r? ; : 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ; er - Advance) ONE YEAR IX MONTHS (In Advance) THREE MONTHS (In Advance) In. $1-0- ti-ar- t 50 - r-- ' j rT ! ' " Jvertiir.e ' r "' , 4-- iathn nA place in the U. S. wWe ot bir.e rart-- r covcrmt n line d Without or produi c.n be obmed Free Library. Ob!ition n the Amrncji) Industrial Matter Buine 7u r Advertiting tor WJLerealed in;ame will be promptly forwarded. TV or!, - r tUtlRICAH IKOBSTBIAL I To Your Town. SSwell a$ to your Country j here, will fly into Chicago Sundays for her CBS air show. Directors and production staff will commute by air from New York. LIBRARY PATRONIZE YOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS TIONAL EMIOPIAL JXSSl Gabriel Heatter, host of "We, the People," has challenged Ted Collins, the Kate Smith Hour pron ducer and emcee, to a contest the opening day of the fishing season. Each lays claim to precedence in this field among radio people. , two-ma- iMtwHWHiiit m ifHitiirmi "Behind the Scenes In American Business" iiiuiiHiiiiiiiinniiHHHiHnHiHiinuuKuimuiiiiiiiinHiiiimiwiiK iWMttlHHmiHtatlUHWHttUtUMI K-E- ! i Orson Welles, shown here, will make one of his infrequent microphone appearances on Sunday, BUSINESS only about 2 per cent higher than in with their fondness for August, 1939, the month before out fn-jn-m- ell "im-possib- all-'-Jti- ; O per-iorii- tf R' RAINBOW Wliat looked for a sh.orUih.ort time like gloomy skies for the cooking utensil manufac-totturer- a affected by priorities cleared ,3 Mm little. A report got out that after tiieirtheir present supplies were exhausted .they they would get no more of the metaL conferring with officials In Washington said Ihf.y they nad. received no notice of the :repo reported ban, while defense chiefs described leports that the f ookCooking utensil people would be "out tif btjf business' as "unauthorized and n warranted." It was said that whiie aiuaiyiundnum supplies for this puiyiose 'wctuiwould be temporarily curtailed until U'ey they may "at times come to zero" noti.:J10thing like a total ban was contoni-plpitted. It was made clear that cial3 are reluctant to take any action that would tLieatui any number of jobs. It was furtl "further felt that expanded produc-ftiotion facilities would ease the situa-tio- n tion within a few months. privj-privatel- un-'a- m offi-iaa!- u e n IT--' RU j fly-casti- YORK, Mar. 24 ftta.Iliterative phrases, now find that the Hdefenae situation and all it embraces 3a affecting business and industry, can can be encompassed by three main tecategories Production, Priorities and iPrtJPrices. No important change in the pace of general activity. A :r;po report on one of the prime keys in the production picture is encouraging. R.it shows Uncle Sam's machine tool tr4industry well on the way toBilltheKnud-K- r 'levels OPM Chief fefcen asked for. The Industry set an high in 1939 at $200,000,000 worth' of machine tools. In 1940 they '"' nioio than doubled their output, to 51450,000,000. Now in the first two and a half months of 1941, they have fat CMt a pace 80 per cent faster than a ya!'-yea- r ago, making the estimate for v. ho; whoIe year of 1911 around $750,000-tfUooo worth. These are the "machines that that make machines," consequently thoirtheir success bids fuir to make pos- KUWeuaible, In turn, the ormance by pi oducers of planes, Tanks, sneus ana counucss ouier ense items. PRICES Cost of living has been, break of war. Yet officials in Wash ington fear that as production begins to roll, shortages in materials will cause sharper rises in prices of consumer Roods, setting off cycle of higher living costs, more wage increase demands to meet them, consequent increase in labor trouble, leading back again to more shortages, in manufactured goods. Miss Harriet Elliott, consumer commissioner of NDAC, has made public some sugges tions on general pricing policies to forestall rises as much as possible. Main points are that (1) retail price advances should not be made on basis of anticipated co.st increases, only actual ones; (2) that when prices of new goods advance, inventories should be averaged-ou- t instead of flatly mark ed up to new level; (3) that traditional mark-ushould not be applied proportionately to new goods that cost the retailer moro, except so far as to cover increases in general costs of operating the store. p GARDENS IN THE MONEY With gardening season officially opened by the New Yoik Flower show, suppliers report that the "garden business 'is in its biggest boom. Demands for equipment are breaking all trade records, they say, and a ve ritable arsenal of new implements has been evolved. A tour of the show re vealed such items as: the Garden-A- ll "kneelevator," a soft .device to protect knees from damp of and rheumatism; the tho traditional gaiden L ose by B. F. Goodrich's "junior gaiden club" hose, which cuts weight in half but ietain9 70 per cent of capacity; an ingenious dump car; a kneeling apion with pockets for tools; a com bination trowel, spade, rake and hoc, and permanent plastic seed markers. Ace novelty is th "pluntoiium" with which rambler loos es can be made to ramble up the liv ing room wall. Most popular item of all is the "thrift garden," a $10 combination of seeds which department store meichandisers say will provide a family of four with green vegetables for an entire season. hand-operate- d vest-pock- et 'all things considered, pretty stable i J? e PUBLIC COLUMN - run-nin- to ago. was I satis-rUptir- if ! SJTSf. March 30, when he appears in an original drama on "Silver Theatre" over CBS. Fortunate for Kate Smith that she has Jack Miller as her orchestra leader with ten years experience conducting for her. Jack knows Kate's every musical so welj, that he made all arrangements for her programs while she was fishing in Florida te and without consulting returned two hours before broadcast time, went over each song idio-syncra- her.-Ka- n d and THE LOW HAVE YOU READ IT? DOWN ' best "Chaw-ter.- g. o Yes, a girl may have too much freedom too little valuable guidance from her mother. But often the girl who has been too closely supervised and dominated by her mother may hurt that mother by br eaking away to live a semblance of her own life. Aie you a patent whose child 1 cha:gcs you with ti eating him "like a. baby?" Perhaps you are piece. trying to defeat natur e to pievent Tt.e latest- - halfway covered by pre youi child from making a healthful break and growing up. What is the pr oblem and what i3 its solution? Read "Untying Apron Strings," an extremely valuable book treating this and similar prob 4 lems. It is by Halen Gibson Hogue and you will find it at your local library. (Comments by Sargent Streeper, Garland, for the Family Life fc JAMES r- -- THINGS TO WATCH FOR Toy despite "war economy." The Depart-"'jme- libraries; they're operating in a numof Labor's index for same is now ber of New York state towns playThe Lost Is Found By Our Want perthings arc let out for When you lose 'n advertise iods, and rcpaiied and disinfected be- Ads tween Ioanings. . . specially-name- d they don't stay lost long. and designed pen and pencils for men "in the service," with clips at the SHOP THRU THE LEADER AD3 very top so as not to interfere with buttoning-dow- n pocket flaps. . . scoreboards for bowling Q Quickly! alleys scorekeeper writes on celloEt phane and figures are transmitted to screen at the pin end of the large EX EXPERT BODY St PAINT WORK alley so all spectators can know how all contestants stand. . . plastic What about that fender or to bo worn undor the cap, . . does body bump your door for baseball J players Brooklyn's DodJam . . how about a new paint are usin them. . . plastic covers gers J In We Job? ttpevJallze body for sheet music very light, but they t and (taint work. It takes a help the music stand up on the rack KIMXkilist to do this work. Let a new cigaret humidor in form us Rive you an estimate . . . of a big shell, entitled "Big Shot" You'll appreciate how little a (a generation ago novelties of this i new paint Job costs when yon kind came along after the war.) wo the figures. TREMONTON, Subscribe for the Leader UTAH kIll ji' nt two-wee- ks DRESS UP YOUR AUTOMOBILE I V 1 rem- ote-control vh m Economically head-guard- s, H. HAVE YOURS DONE NOW! SEE DICK DAVIS UTAH TKEMOXTON, Cheese cloth covers to protect tomato plants over the period of spring dispersal of leafhoppers have been found to reduce substantially the amount of curlytop injury. They also protect the plants from late frosts, tho Utah Agricultural Experiment Station reports. The Initial co.;t of the covers is rather high but they may bo used for a number of years. . MAYTAG REPAIRING Oil-Plat- ed NERVOUS TENSION Sliowi In both fnce and mariner You lit not fit company f0r or anyone cl. wnen you yourlf r Tense, Nervous, "Kcye.l-vpDon't miss out on your rhore nf food times. Thp next time ov- nm'19 try lb D ELECTRIC GO. STGHES OGDEN, UTAH In on 1 571 V "3 y"? ?, ' I . J3 nprr-vlsio- i oil-platin- I! modern At oof tons try FOGSGSSGD OIL HT tin Store oil-flati- no oil-plat- ed oil-tlate- s. CGHOeO-GEft&- lbor. do't o tut nHi oil-plati-ng down. As long as you use Germ Processed oil, the stays plated mile at the curb hour up every every or standing overnight. That's why your engine is protected in advance against tho worst old starting wear . . . much as if Germ Processed oil hadn't even quit circulating! Likewise, when sun and speedometer both swing high, tho oil - plating slays plated up against needless wear. And that's more than half of the battle for oil economy. Change to Conoco Germ Processed oil that Todayl Continental Oil Company 1 n of akillwl chemist of America'! most w station. His Germ Processed oil patented o contains a extra "energizer'.' This bonds g to working parts as closely as the plating on body parts. Then can't all drain man-mad- you Vi!;' f jl, ' H'stlops, soethir.sj effect 'if DK. MILES KEIIVIXK Dr. Miln Nervin ii a clcntlfic formul eom Send all work by truck line or otherwise. CC::OSS-REA- Conoco ". pounded under th to TOUT on your car any halfway job is i-- a botch. The engine's full of poison, remember, as long as it's full of scratchy Winter oil. Today then, drain and refill for Spring But be more than half fair to yourself and your engine . . . Get it drained, refilled and besides all at the one same cost all in mere minutes, at Your Mileage Merchant's ... tnxrl nrv'ti 1 J fist ... Inspection Time Is Here! 1 oii-m- ! m YOUR IN0INI fie ' "! |