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Show January 11, 1945 v, Thi BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, TREMONTON, UTAH Bear River vs. Malad High at 6:45 and 8:00 o'clock Methodist Church Willis C. Phelps, MinMer OH fll r.Ardnn Smith and 10 a. m. Sunday School vis-rtMorning Worship ll a. m. EAirf ey Frank W. Dr. E. Blackstoek will in preach Kben Wilcox the sermon in the absence of the last week. Mrs. F. VV. regular minister. A quarterly conwith rel- - ference will be conducted immedweekend fs11 the iately after the close of worship. K1, ?"d friends in Ogden. are 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship Grover Mrs. Raipli Sermon: "Ambassadors For a business. on Lake , S Blanche Hansen spent this Better World." Lake. . We will have a Church Night ,vU in Salt visited m Standing yia supper at 7:30 p. ra., Friday eveUkeTuesdajr ning, January 12th. Each family is requested to brine- sandwich t JliSS Wame nfriends. a covered dish O'den with was in Ogden on dessert This is and something for 'Dale Coombs Hobby Night, so if you have a hobby come prepared TuSne Welling left Thursday to show us about it. We will have Ism Francisco, accompanied by a special speaker who has made Mrs. M.W. Welling as a of wood carving and whit-- ; rafsait Lake. Mrs. Welling ling-hobby men will have charge The with Sted over of the supper and program. daughter, Enid. nnn.vlu ohThe future rrugre formal dance at the ward A THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK leation hall Friday. Among the "Inner Doors of Life" were service-nfroof the outward doors of happy dancers states: lifeMany different several are closed to us because of the of Russellville, war which surrounds us. Pfc Jimmy Voss Britton Arkansas, and Fvt. Jimmy But there are inner doors which c.'New York City, both are sta- are open to us, and which no man rred at Bushnell; Frank Lawson can close only we ourselves can stationed close them. T M. 3c of Deweyville, California; CpL at San Francisco, Regardless of what may happen to us outwardly, the inner door of character growth is always open to us. We can always work towards the development of a strong ' YOUR OLD upright character. Another door to U3 is the growth of good open will and forgiveness in our lives. We will greatly need the use of this door in the year ahead of us. MADE An inner door which all of us need to keep open, and to use, is the door of fellowship with God. The strength and courage of such fellowship may prove to be our greatest help in the days ahead. Zr ; iSW ? i Z 4 ' - - 1 .' an-rth- er j j W ib Rick raw. rmm o) of Rid '; (2) efact! I not e .magel s caus inual- - x the le in MATTRESS , 1 I flies i mm .t real- i m NEW and - i j de 51 I placed case, cr a t daily pound lutte- Send monti clean cd 8, new COW! it to us and we will and rebuild it into a e comfortable Darrell Hansen stationed at n Field, Monro, Lousianna, and Sgt. Vern Oyler, Fort George Wright, Washington, both of East Garland; and Charles Borne, A. C, of Fielding, stationed at Merced, California. Roll-Edg- at Mattress JIM LOW COST shade sthai Pick Deliver Regularly cut Phone 23 2 or Tremonton and our driver will call. feed free SEE US IF YOU TO YOU Up and manj ck Even though life has treated you badly in some respects, vou can keep these doors open in your life if you will! Del-ma- Ml 1 80-R- NEED MONEY Interest rates and MATTRESS CO. iuse om E, 1st South- single - LOANS AUTOMOBILE FIRE INSURANCE EVERTON lo not repay- ment terms reasonable iv suit your convenience. aagiif 1 JAMES BROUGH Agency Brigham Tremonton, Utah USDA le al s from stated pital te k$L requectj all-o- 2:30 p.m. P'na of law. XvtrWS v. V 1, -- . - Is 7 V . it J i ; Third Grade We have made seme little brick houses. The bricks are empty, but we are trying to get 100 per cent all the time in health and .in other work. Each time we get 100 per cent we get to fill in a brick writh red crayon. We are seeing who is the best carpenter in the room by seeing who can fill in their bricks first. This is the first time we have run a race and we are enjoying it. We do not have to write manuscripts any more We can write cursive now. Mrs. Crowther's Fifth Grade In art we made parrots and toucans. We are going to put them on the windows. Last Friday we brought the Christmas presents we liked best. Some were very nice. Crowther Mrs. is reading "Trooper, the U. S. Army Dog." It is a very good story so far. We are learning how to divide with two numbers. It is easy for some of us. In our Social Studies class we are studying about the New York and Delaware Bay region Today. It is an interesting subject. In our room we have $106.45 in stamps and bonds. Jerry Cannon gave a news report that 556,000 American soldiers are missing, prisoners, wounded or have been killed in this war. Shanna Hill and Barbara Jean Smith Miss Christensen's First Grade We are studying Eskimos in our room. We have some charts and we made an Eskimo boy to take home. Elaine brought an Eskimo doll that came from Alaska. We are going to make other Eskimo things as we study about them Globulin, a new measles preventative serum, is particularly timely, as 1944 so far has been a "measles year" and there has been a marked increase In deaths from the disease, according to Dr. Louis I. Dublin, third vice president and statistician of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. There is no cause for alarm, how ever, as measles come in two oi three-yea- r cycles and the general use of globulin, which is being distributed by the Red Cross, should eradicate the cycles, Dublin says. Germans Use Potato Bugs in Ersatz Bombs The Germans used a forerunner of as bucs potato V-- l flying weapon secret the bombs, a scientist said. He said Cothat German planes dropped damlorado beetles in an effort to British potaage the 7.000,000-toto crop. Specimens of the beetle, were disprevalent In Germany, covered in southern England. LONDON Brought to You by UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. 1 n . s- : r- I' HOLLYWOOD ! : 5 4 -, S - 1. (TV i PO a small group in Hollywood A pictures came. The teacher received a guide book. It told us some interseting things to do each month. For January the book suggested we find a bird nest, put it l in a flower pot with soil in, then put it in a sunny place, water it and see what grows. Ake brought a bird nest We are going to try the suggestion and see what happens. By Joyce Nelson NEW YORK. it.' r:. K' at the year 1945 means the beginning of fame; for movieland, already jammed with stars, is planning to feature some new names in big lights during the coming year. There will be many surprises not in the cards at present, but from where I sit on the side lines these are the stars you'll hear from in a big way during the coming year: Bill Eythe, at 20th. landed smack In the lap of Lady Luck. This means that the lad from Mars, Pa., unknown to movies two years ago, will be right up Mrs. Cannon's 4th Grade We at the top in the joined the Audubon Bird Club. cast of characLast week the books and bird ters. Eythe's high Globulin, New Serum, to End Cycle of Measles righan Looking ut to ning! j Grade This year the McKinley school has gone for basketball. We have seven teams playing. They are improving as the weeks go by. We are trying to learn some of the fundamentals so that we can understand and enjoy the game. At first it seemed hard to go through the drills, but now we are having lots of fun. In March the elementary schools and Bear River high school are sponsoring a tournament for all the seventh and eighth grades of northern Box Eldder County. The Bear River high school is furnishing the trophies and referees. All junior high school teams are urged to participate in this tournament which will be held at the McKinley school gymnasium. Carl Nelson and Ross Mason Miss Stoller's Sixth Grade we are swaying aooui uie twiiwns in Social Studies. It is very inter-- i esting to learn about these ancient people and their ways. In mathematics we are learning decimals. We are now multiplying them. If you know how to do them they are really fun. Carolyn Jensen, Reporter s attend the Golden Wedding of Mr. and Mrs. David Morris. A group of the young married folks went to Fielding to the dance Friday and afterwards were the guests of Mr and Mrs. Joe Butler at a chicken supper. Mrs. Earl Marble and daughters of Tremonton, were guests of friends here Monday and attended the party for Don Davis. Shirley Hales, of Logan, came over to attend the Davis paity. Miss Wilma Morris, of Pocatello, visited with Thola Ogiden and other relatives last week. Mr. and Mrs. Delose Udy and daughter were visiting in Brigham and Corinne the latter part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Davis and son, Don, were in Logan on business Monday. Mrs. Louisa Bigler, who has been quite ill, is reported to be much better. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Bowcutt spent a couple of days in Ogden and Willard last week visiting with the.ir children. Mrs. Lila Metzguer, of Salt Lake City, spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henrv Tubbs. Her brother, Norman, of San Francisco, is also a guest at the Tubbs home The families of Joe Bowcutt of Logan, and Bumell Roundy of Fielding were dinner guests Sun- -' day of their mother, Mrs. Rowane Macfarlane. Ted Macfarlane went to Logan with the Bowcutts and will remain for several days. McKinley U me, 50d School News Eighth gSncr reported to Fort Vi? ADMISSION TREMONTON rnonii' ' J Monday, Jan. 15, 1945 HIGH SCHOOL GYM Games ,11 Page Three PORTLAND MUSEUM Hugh McLellan built the Sweat Mansion at Portland. Maine, in 1800. General Joshua Wingate, of President Jefferson's Secretary oi War, General Henry Dearborn, lived there. When Mrs. L. D. M. Sweat died, it became the property of the Portland Society of Art. In its Municipal Art Gallery hang Gilbert Stuart's portrait of General Wingate, Douglas Volk's portrait of President Lincoln andp other notable works. Defenses set-uby U. S. service men and supplies purchased with War Bond funds have kept these treasson-in-la- w ures unsenrred through three years of war. More War Bond funds will insure their protection. V. H. ' t ' 'l rensury Department Bill Eythe pressure person- - ality won him the ' lead opposite Tal- lulah Bankhead ' in "Royal Scan- dal." When Pro ducerLubitsch Lauren BacalJ saw tne rusnes he said, "Eythe is the greatest star material I've run into in 20 years." So they rushed Eythe into the lead in "Colonel Effingham's Raid." Watch his dust in 1945. I 7 utoj uuiririrxrv Mr. and Mrs. George M. Ward . went to Portage last Sunday to That Uncertain Something Lauren Bacall, that glamorous menace whose pussy willow face and eyes are her trademark, is familiar to every magazine reader, although she's appeared in only half-ma- st one picture. "To Have and Have Not," with Humphrey Bogart. So what? Warners sent her right back into double harness again with Bogie in "The Big Sleep." She's decorative and provocative. Quite a different type is Universal' s Ella Raines. A girl with clean blue eyes and a well washed look. You saw her in "The Invisible Lady" with Franchot Tone, and again with Eddie Bracken in "The Conquering Hero." But "Tall in the Saddle," with John Wayne, really got 'em. 's Moody Gail Russell is ace find of the last year. Dark, mossy soft hair, eyes full of dreams, and a trick of project- J Whats the idea? Para-mount- tickets! c f ing the intangible put Gail Russell into a class by herself. She's valuable, and proved it in "The Uninvited." " Home Town Boy Type When Metro found Van Johnson they hit a rich vein of talent ore. Metro has a second Van Johnson in Tom Drake, a dark type with the same direct, homey appeal. He'll make the register ring at the box office. Faye Emerson has had all along what it takes to make a young star. Already she's been stepped into the lead role in "Happiness," and if she wants to keep on making pictures she's set. Faye has real talent as an actress, but it took a marriage to a Roosevelt to make Warners recognize it. You might keep your eye also on red - haired Lucille Bremer, most promising young dancer. She gets star billing in "Ziegfcld Follies." Then there's Metro's Gloria De Haven, hailed by the GI Joe as just what the doctor ordered for a soldier with the blues. Twentieth's June Haver has danced her way into star roles after 18 months' experience on the screen. Of June AHyson, another Metro baby, you might say "once seen, never forgotten." "Destination Tokyo" gave us three boys that hit the popularity target dead center James Craig, Bob and Dane Clark. Craig has some of the quality that put Clark Gable among our fabulous few. Hutton is a sort of composite Jimmy Stewart and Bob Walker, and Dane Clark is a natural. Hut-to- Peggy Ann Garner was the child Elizabeth But prodigy of 1944. Taylor will be in 1945. Remember "Lassie Come Home" and "White Cliffs of Dover," and a little girl with black hair and sooty Irish eyes? She played a scene with Roddy McDowall that made the big boys sit up and take notice. In "National Velvet" Elizabeth Taylor rides right into your heart. You'll simply love scream about the great discoveries of the year, but for my money Bob Walker tops 'em all. He has the homey, shy, sweet boyishness of your own son. The year 194S should be a lucky and a happy on for these Holly' wood stars. You can shout and hard on the man, yet there he is, nrflrtifiallv 3 - cars - in - l . . . First. Second, it became his wartime car . . . And third long may it live new car outpostwar! For not even put in 1945 can keep millions from being forced to wait until 1946 or so mosf likely including you. that's his pre-w- car ar . . . record-smashin- g Then go the limit shielding your priceless motor car That's your sure gain by having its engine in switching to Conoco N'A motor oil. 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