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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER PAGE SIX Since the organization of the Berk- - il,Aol tlAlvLAill one-na- j j Feed-grai- - j millr-pnnivalp- nt to-fBl- gtt RiriHT OUT OF THF AIR . . I; t 111 I ,S- ET71 If 4 HOI 1V4 VhT TV Sl i i ill i .4 Sum 3tfen ,pr plan ilo !y to CO apac jent- - wa; i at tie e ne. Slightly Soiled To Clear SHOES wear- 2 101 " won l r for aioth( all ring ole s I i I : is t t J.k c Coiign i ' me , ou ;e . Hoi :". t i 3r 4 Only - MISSES Jlp by SWEATERS AU Wool All Wool To Clear ty i ade; xi' Now 3 Wi .1 qi J to I per cumt LADIES' SILK HOSE ANKLETS t m som y? X a Pn j Service Chiffon New Fall Shades Sizes 7 to 102 Now Regular Value 15c Long Wearing Made By Peters Now Regular $2.59 legii y thii dis f CHILDREN'S t tl Weigh, Just! luce o3. 1 " UI "ha .en B LADIES' CHILDREN'S COVERALLS si t s RUBBERS Too bad but we haven't all To Medium Heel sizes To Clear 00( i a Clear ; t y The 7 V lite; .n A: -- BOYS' MATCHED SET SHIRT & PANTS te " . W k- - .. t it 1 )::: ;jNmniW-- f' J I i". Blind Student Wins Contest Pri Sizes 8 to 12 For Dress Up Time Only Pau bauerland. twenty-on- e year old blind tu- aeni at tne university ol Newark, is shown being presented with a special blind man's! wrist watch, in the annual Gruen ColleaW ate Advertising Contest. More than fouri tnousand college students submitted ad vertisements lor watches. Mr. Sauerlnnrf m travels to school daily with his Seeing Eye vI Can Swim. Too Frances Gilford, starlet, poses on the high diving board before taking off lor the swim that keeps her in shape. dog, Rena. He is shown here with Professor Paul K. Ed wards and Dean Esterly of the University of Newark, and ol the Gruen nenry Sh lit i . I watcht-ompany- . One Group - LADIES' (Fast Color Wool Peters Velvet Step Widths A and AA To Clear Regular $5.00 Only 1Q BLANKETS 5 DRESS SHOES Dark Patterns CRETONNE jj.95 9.90' $2.90 Full Quilt Size So easy to quilt because it is so nice and soft! feo. of Cradu-ato- i pharmacy scliools and colleges, throughout the nation, is the Pharmaceutical Recipe Book which is being read, by William H. Luckey, first In the Class ol '41. Colleae of Phar macy, Columbia University. The book is rre- senled annually to pharmacy school gradu ates tY the Uwens-Iilinoi- s Glass Company lackey's professors deny that his symbolic nam naa anything to do with his winning medals and q fellowship in pharmacy.! $j.98 100 Wool Large Much better than a tsr i are some folks you know very well in t Oil and song. Kate Smith (center) is givina'v Friday night spot on CBS to "Claudia" lor the s The stnaer is shown hr wiiH P o ' f 1 ,ne ,01es 01 Waudia" and Vi. adi ,!?,M ,uoeea 7 the popular fiction rkv'u'11' ...w., aaiyi t'J.lJLVT, mtmmmmmtmammmlmm tCT Of course we have many, many other bargains to choose from at n. a- $4.98 $ to 6-9- 8 Size fr $9.8S light or dark, heavy weight and so many patterns tot choose from - 36 in. wide! as BROADCLOTH Solid Colors 36 inches above, jHere ' BLANKETS Wool Extra Large Double Size &U.19 ill" 1 1 OUTING FLANNEL BATTS A Gift to v 25 TART WOOL 1 la , nei BLANKETS Full Double Size : it's ' 12s - QJ H 3 Lam; - 11.45 WORK SHOES whir i t - ' WOl ,h t i SWEATERS Suede Cloth - Gray Only : Only - INFANTS BLANKETS WORK SHIRTS - d fens ObMo J MEN'S er Bill t One Group Slip-ov- bill 1 ( Scout Type can take the rough They at Clear-a-wa- y Light Weight D,00 ,V 8 c . Nice Tufted Design I i We Clear at Full Cut. hue ry m&m&&&&i0ei&$'&i$t? One Group Odd Sizes c . Ck 75s DRESS SHIRTS Color no I i Smartly Tailored To Regular $1.98 Boy's Sizes too To Clear Regular 98c MEN'S and BOYS' Fast sigt for i i wool skirts! DRESS SHIRTS ' " y mg SWEATERS BOY'S c on . DRESSSOX 7Ss loni ) - Sleeveless MEN'S a; j stor 6 Only - MISSES 14s I IS iaam - MEN'S 2 .29 t $ MEN'S MEN'S ine wen groomed woman never appears without a hat. nere is an example ol a tailored hat with feminine detaila cartwheel of traw, with purple and green accent in ribbon and r, grape trimming.rp-- Ilil 1 CLE ARAN C ii Long or Short Now Values to 25c 1 ;ing OF ki at es L nw : 'fe n 1 , SNAPSHOTS hi-- ' 0. Frisch-knech- - KMJ m Js3 11 S Poultry Production MEN'S 177? r - C Specialist Suggests Increase Ways I ed rrJ' hi obt' 37 tt, OOO iO-- ,r-.- - sob-sist- er i ex- - Beet Tons CBS-aire- "I Smith tion. 9.8 rwr ' LLi. ' chickens, and a 10 tj, in piles' in turkey numbers bVt" are en tte toP3 placed Tn Fppdinir aa will rrot be hard to be well packed tey should to keep knecht predicts, becaSV Uhe more added settles, pile As beet tops are a valuable f eed poultry can be for livestock, they should be con- time, and minimum served and fed properly, Harry " " fattening been set by the i animal -husbandman - i JJiK cni, ,vt.noinn culture. lambs in South Dakota, and steers colat the Utah State Agricultural Other conditions Beet tops should not be fed as the favors lege, advises. sole source of ' roughage however, Pro- production is the PRi?V Much waste is caused by pasturing fessor Smith concludes. K production is the tops on the ground because liveof the O O popuiloK" 0 poultry stock destroy the feed value of the fuuucuon hen not be brought tops by trampling them into the soil. Much of this waste can be avoided creasing the number of n,? ' To Tjy placing the tops in small piles in its Mr. Frischknecht the field. Hauling the tops into a greater production ,V vU corral and feeding- them as part of from present poultry nUffiwC l..-- the ration has proved to be the most dry, clean, roomy, and Poultry production goals set for houses satisfactory way of handling them( to inereas help Utah in the "Food For Freedom" pro- do well Professor Smith explains. balanced rations"? can be reached without poultry-me- n r Tops may be conserved by placing gram investunusually large making them in large piles or by ensiling ments in new t, a equipment, Carl them if the ground is dry and the extension poultryman at the Farmers use mor? tw t weather clear. Utah State Agricultural college states farm tractors and cars to Many available poultry houses are various farm tasks. A Trench silos have proved satisfacnot filled to capacity and a large on about 3,000 ' farms tory for storing tops in many parts number of can be repaired buildings of the west, but silos should not be to house increased numbers of chick- counUes in 40 states shows than half of the auton used in wet and stormy weather as ens, Mr. Frischknecht explains. more than five years old m Utah production goals call for a muddy tops put into a silo will carry dirt which will materially lower their 16 per cent increase in egg produc- - cent were of 1928 vintage or feeding value, Professor Specialist Urges Care j expected to be unusually large due'eley Back for Cooperatives, seven andj n 4 more ma ceEt loaned three to it years ago, the per expected lartly increase in the number of milk cows than $100,000,000 to farmers' cooper-- n Relief Society ward conference was rami ih Rureau of Agricultural ative marketing- and purchases as- - hpirt Riindav evening: in connection Economics of the United States De sociations in Utah, Aevaaa. Arizona Sacrament meeting . Bish and California. E. A-- Stokdyk, presi- jwrtment of Agriculture reports. rotter 0D j? presided and President n ducted tbe Relief So-supplies in the first half dent of the bank, reports. lnuusines receiving me largest ciety program. Mrs. Fielding Barlow, f 1912 will be ample for heavy feedIng and aupplies of high protein feed amounts of money were fruits and 0f the Relief Society stake board and M. I. A. IwiU be five to 10 per cent larger durvegetables, dairy poultry, cotton, hay Wallace Bourne, of the Y. M. attenoance. airs were in ing the coming year. stake com-board, ! and seed, and mutual irrigation otvnnrta rn a Anna W. Larson, class teacher, ana hasis are exDected to be twice as 'Panie8, 'Mrs. Lavona Grover, chorister, were released. Mrs. Naomi Oyler and Mrs large In 1942 as in 1941 and almost" Loans outstanding for the bank tal approximately $12,500,000. times as large as in 1940. Dora Isaacson were sustained as class teacher and project leader, respective was carried ly. A splendid program out as outlined by the stake Doara Talks were given by President Leah Ovler. Bishop R. J. Potter, Wallace 6 Fred Grover and Mrs. Bar FERRIS Bourne. IARLE By low. The Singing Mothers rendered "Three colleges have already put Jay Jostyn, as radio's "Mr. DisMiss Sherma Hansen Love." of "Gifts 1 in their bid for Dinah bhore, tne trict Attorney" on NBC, frequently solo. All joined in sing a gave piano in the encounters law of matters .Eddie Cantor chanteuse pictured ing "One Hundred Thousand Strong.' here', to be their prom queen in scripts. These chance encounters have caused him to take his Black-ston- e Mrs. Joy Benton was an Ogden vis seriously so don't be suritor Tuesday, prised if you see an announcement Mrs. Hilda Petersen recently at that he has won a law degree. tended open house, held for her sister, Latest Hollywood addition to Mrs. Annie Malmstrom of Salt Lake regular radio ranks is Una Merkel, City, on her 80th birthday. Mrs. Pet pictured here, who plays the title ersen is five years older than Mrs Malmstrom, being 85 in December. She is well and very active, doing her own housework. She is a faith ful attendant at Relief Society, Sac S rament meeting and Sunday School and enjoys most social functions in the ward. Mrs. L. M. Holman, as a member tta$ of next year. She's heard of the Relief Society stake board, viS' every Wednesday night over the NBC-ue- d ited conferences on Sunday at Stone network. in the fore noon and at Bothwell in The first Hollywood headquarthe evening, ters of Cecil B. DeMille, producer Mrs. Doris Petersen and 3 children d of the Monday night relatives in Provo, Cedar City visited Radio Theatre, was a barn, half of and Gunnison last week. They en which housed the combination of role in "Nancy Bacon Reporting," fice and studio while the other heard Tuesday nights on the countered snow while away. housed a cow, a horse and auto of "Johnny Presents" program over Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hansen vis early vintage. The first DeMille NBC. She portrays a daffydill ited with a sister, Miss Winnifred who gets her story under dressing room was a box stall with in Logan, Sunday afternoon. Cook, a door hung at a crazy angle across all circumstances. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Grover called the front. on Mrs. Mary Seager at the Dee hosFrank Fay, who is heard Thurs William L. Shirer, pictured here, day nights on NBC, never uses ma in Ogden, Sunday afternoon pital heard Sundays on CBS, through terial on the air which he has alThey report she is improving after his "Berlin Diary" is commonly ready performed before night club a very serious auto accident over a audiences. Fay believes if he did month ago. that it would take the freshness from his stuff. He prefers to build Mr. and Mrs'. J. W. Larson and a new air routine each week. Paul Larson spent the weekend with relatives in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Paul Roger Pryor, director and mas- Larson and children returned home for the CBS with them, Sunday evening after 'Screen Guild Theatre," has turned spending the past week in Salt Lake Mr. and Mrs. Heber Petersen, son Bud and daughter Jacqueline, of Ogden, were calling on relatives here Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Adams and family, of Yuba City California, are visiting relatives in Utah this week thought of as an authority on the and next. , contemporary scene in continental Dale Miller came home from school Europe. However, the correspondat the B. Y. U. to assist in the beet ent is quite as widely accepted as harvest this week. an authority on India. lie is a friend of Mahatma Ghandi. I 3 "Love in Bloom," played haltingFern Flourishes in New Zealand ly up and down the studio aisles by a sideline into ieJ. Profitable The most characteristic ack Benny before broadcast time, ness. Rog has a sty!- plant of f New Zealand is the fern, which 1 Hot only proves tfftit Jack can aviation for ih pan four flouryears ishes in great really play violin after a fashion, ad ihu mmiiw wreived his variety everywhere, 7 but also warms up the audience rhe tree fern often reaches d is givine; i!y- r?itnp a for laughs to come. height of 40 feet. La 30. 1S41 C0WLEYS' TREM0NJ0N UTAH Our Grocery partroent, too, 6ave you wontf C |