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Show -- Page Two BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, Tremcnton, Utah- - ' Thursday, .r Pre-Salte- d Celery Out BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday for Friday Distribution First West Street Entered Spotlighting of Eacb Week UTAH Phone 23 at the Post Office at Tremonton, Utah, as Second Utah Goes to Harvard Class Matter October 15, 1925 A. N. RYTTING, Editor-Publish- er SUBSCRIPTION RATES (In Advance) SOLDIER RATES - $2.50 YEAR ONE Dr. Chas. H. Tozier, head of the visual education department, J1.75 THE BRIDGE OF PEACE The Valley of Unrest has been spanned by a Bridge of Peace. The cost has been high. Too many years, too many lives and too many tears. But such a bridge was a necessity. And since it stretches over the rivers of hatred and aggressall time to ion, and since it must be cherished by man for come, let us examine its construction. At either end are the foundations, conceived in a sense of profound justice and right. One foundation was laid by America the other by our brave Allies. Foundations laid for To establish forever that this bridge shall a noble cause echo with the footsteps of free men, unto eternity. After the foundations had been set and the towers of courage were erected, there came the job of installing the suspension cables. These cables were spun from heartaches and tears . . . from the cries of a boy on a foreign battlefield, from the sobs of a loved one holding a telegram from the War Department, from the anxious prayers of a mother. This sacred Bridge of Peace has cable swings which stream down to its roadbed. These swings are woven of sacrifices. Sacrifices at home and at war. Look closely and you will see their texture: The sullivans; Colin Kelly; The Borg-stromJohnny from up the street; Richard Bong; The boy who delivered your paper; the Lexington and the Franklin; John Basilone ; Rodger Young. Lives and materials built into the bridge in order that the free may once more walk in complete peace. s; Now we come to the great trusses that span the stream. They are made of the sweat of the brow ; of the labors of men, women and children the whole and tine crippled and the who worked endless hours in order that our fightblind ing men might have weapons and munitions. And the trusses are strengthened by the efforts of American science and industry, and the produce of American Farms, and the teamwork of the cities. .... ... Har- vard University and party of Boston, Massachusetts, are heading into Utah's Monument Valley this week. Dr. Tozier's visit to Utah is significant in that Utah's scenic attractions, her geological wonders, her rivers, mountains and deserts strike a greater response in the famed doctor's heart than other scenic attractions in the U. S. So impressed is this Harvard professor with what he found in Utah that he is returning to set up a permanent visual education exhibit of Utah scenes at the famous eastern hall of learning. The party was met at Zions by David H. Mann of the Utah State Department bf Publicity and Industrial Development, who gave Dr. Tozier valuable information and direction that will enable him to enlarge the scope of his efforts. Takes His Own Pictures At-vvoo- Hear About Utah The group's $12,-000.0- pre-salt-e- 0 d While entirely possible, experimentation by Utah growers indicate Utah's crisp, crunchy, delicious stalks taste better if salted by the consumer at the dinner land., table. Tourists Flood State A two hundred percent increase to the L. D. S. Temple in visitors Grounds since V-- J day is noted by officials in charge. Zion and Joryce reoort a 74 Der cent increase with cars arriving daily from all over are the country. The horoad. Utah lodges, again on the tels and filling stations are doing a spirited business. Utah's before the war tourist income was a meager $37,000,000.00, only one, of the total seventy-firs- t national sum spent by tourists. If Utah should manage to get her honest share of the tourist money, it would reach the staggering total of $200,000,000, ' enthusiasm for the Bridges and the Arches was of the type that preBryce, Zion, dicts more eastern visitors for Utah. Thy questioned Mr. Mann for two hours about Monument Valley; its roads, inhabitants, how to reach it and what to see. Next winter, students in the Harvard We walk across this great span upon a roadway Every visual education classes will see and grain of sand, every tiny pebble, every bit of this roadway's hear about Utah's scenic and geosubstance shall forever remain sacredt For it is paved with logical wonders, thanks to Dr. ToAs can easily be imagined, the lives of the men who died that we might live according to zier. this type of publicity is the kind the will of God. Here is spilt the blood of young men w ho an- that can't be purchased, yet is of swered the country's call with a willing heart. From the the most valuable to be secured and mountains they came. From the plains, the drug stores, the there is no doubt but what the fufarms, from industries, from the railroads, from all walks of ture flow of tourist traffic into life. Into the pounding flame of battle they went their heroic Utah will be considerably stimulated by Dr. Trozier's lectures, his ways. They suffered, they wept and they died so that free still picture exhibits and his motion men after them might travel this roadway of peace. picture demonstrations before his Harvard classes. This is the roadway at Bataan, in Ncrv:.andy, at El Utah On Alamein and Anzio, in the skies of Germany, ti e jungles of Rotarian Cover the Orient, the dangerous waters of the Pacific and the AtA Bryce Canyon scene,, a color lantic. foi-ge- photograph by Fred Bond, nationally known color photographer This is the sacred Bridge of Peace. This is the structure of Los Angeles, adorns the cover installed over a great volley of unhappiness. Through the of the August edition of the "Royears men and women of all races and faiths will travel this tarian." This magazine reaches Rotarian in the country and way. And as they do, let them remember the cost of this every the cover is good promotion for bridge. Let them pause here and review its construction in Utah. Mr. Bond has told the State the light of deep consideration. Department of Publicity that he is coming to Utah this fall, when May all remember that this bridge was necessary if men the reds and yellows are in the were to be free. But in their freedom, may the Bridge of Peace mountain forests to seek photoor quaking asps lor stand as a monument, nolle and sacred, to those brave men genic aspens magazine covers. After all, one and women who made it possible. Utah cover on a national magazine is more effective than 10,000 Courtesy Union Pacific Railroad. descriptive words. AHEAD T 1 arif 5 l7i surprised by a visit of her " "A I telleft Ptaidinl-Httii- M) i Siercf. Arkansas Mr. and Mrs. Fred Seaddea Ogden were guests of Mr VI Saying what a man earns, ex- Mrs. Lester Barnes and t pressing it in cents per hour or Sherman, 'Sunday. dollars per year, does not tell much about the measure of prosperity he enjoys. Good living depends on so many things that change from time to time and differ from place to place. Prosperity depends, in very large part, on what people must pay for the things they need and Used Carl Values want Putting the conveniences and luxuries of life in reach of a large number of people helps to build a nation's prosperity. Franklin's discovery of electricity became a great discovery when electric lights began costing less than oil lamps. The automobile became a great invention when cars were priced down where only rich people could afford to own carriage horses. Paying for Service Plain people pay richly for favors; plain people are so many. Names like Edison, McCormick and Ford stand for huge estates because these men did a real service for lot of plain people. It is because they hoisted a wholesome standard of living in a free country. Thousands of men have done the same thing on a smaller scale and profited handsomely. Actually, ALL PRICES AT OP BELOW CEILING O 1936 Buick Sedan i c 1935 Olds 8 Sedan o 1937 Plymouth Sedan 1938 Chevrolet Sedan' f 1937 Pontiac Coupe the thing that inspires mechanical inventors to invent, the thing that fires scientific explorers 1937 Tudor to explore, is the chance to earn o from a free people the rich reward Once upon for a valuable service. 1940 Sedan a time in the United States of Amerafford could ica men who had ideas to develop them. They can't r1938 soon now. How I hope those days return. Big Ideas on Sale and Ford 1935 Edison, McCormick didn't need to hawk their ideas, nei' Ton Pickup ther did Bissell, Denton, Parker and, had Gunnison O'Sullivan, but Foster to sell Ms. Gunnison's inventions came later. Do you ask, "Who is 1937 this Gunnison man?" Well, he is a Ton Pickup great inventor, not yet famous. But, unless I miss my guess, he is Amerr ica's Henry Ford. 1939 Coupe Gunnison invented a prefabricated G a out house and worked plan to build it in mass production. His units D Motorcycle were scientifically constructed, insu- 1942 lation built in, thoroughly modern 9 in every detail.- - Individually, his house models are so different that a BUYS tourist might drive past 100 of them 1941 6 foot COLD SPOT in a row and never guess that they Refrigerator were drawn by the same architect O Alike and Different I could talk for hours about Gun- Flat Bed Semi-Trailnison houses. ' They come in eight O sizes with great variety in looks. than house are better far any 1 They 24 foot Ladders materipossible to build of als in any community for the same money. They have everything from Plenty of material to build bathtub to garbage grinder, econo- TRAILER WAGONS, eith; my and convenience; a poor man's 2 or 4 wheel. palace, amortized to $1 a day. But the inventor sold to the U. S. Steel Corporation. Why? He lacked capital and, under today's tax laws, never could make much profit. The giant corporation can run the project in the red and deduct early losses from war profits, most of which the government will e take anyway. Unless our tax laws are changed, every fertile idea in this inventive nation will TREMONTON? have to hatch under the wing oi some huge corporation that exists al-- i ready. j Ford Mercury e Ford Sedan forty-eight- h ! Ford tithing of what California and New York gets from the travelers. Utahns don't know it yet, but the tourist business is the state's only a Terraplane greatest potential industry. 34 Ogden Writer Hits Esquire Pontiac post-wa- Keith Barrette, Ogden newspaperman and writer has an article in the September issue of Esquire titled "Gunsmith to America." His opening sntence is significant: "When you take down that favor' ite gun of yours, it isn't a Winchester, Remington, Stevens or Colt that vou fondly finger, but a variety of Browning." The balance of the finely written article tells of the accomplishments of the late John Browning, famous Ugden in ventor who actually was "Gun smith to America." H OTHER ! C L cr old-lin- Mrs. W. McDermaid and two children of Salt Lake spent the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Laub.j Mr. McDermaid and daughter Myrl came up from Salt Lake Saturday and returned with them Sunday. 1 1 e e 1 m ti! 1 1 L I UI ur Tronk ! j i Chcv. war-tim- jf ' Co 1 1 m; eei ..'.;: PE, Why my coffee CO! 10?, gives you an extra IH1 fOI flavor "lift" r ; Mr.DwightMw1 nwiflHT 0WW vr rue in. COMPAN- YONBNECOffES if l U Frozen Hopes one-hundr- Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Laub were Mrs. Annie McDermaid and Amy Ellis of Logan and Mr. and Mrs. C. O Hendricks of Fielding. ruaoel 1 SO, 1945 GEORGES. BENSON L stay-at-hom- Dr. Tozier, old enough to retire, yet full of enthusiam and good health, finds great pleasure in taking his own pictures. Two retired millionaires, Alton B. Chelsia, Massachustetts, and Frank M. Howard, Winchester, Massachusetts, their wives, and Dr. and Mrs. Tozier make up the party.They were so enthusiastic about the photogenic grandeur and majesty of Zion Canyon that they started work with the first daylight and were loath to stop shof.ting pictures when it ended. Their $V 000.00 worth of still and motion picture equipment is all personally owned; they paid their own expenses and the group was as happy as boy scouts on a country hike. Student's To The Utah celery harvest suited in earnest this week at American Fork where hundreds of cars of an early variety will be shippd to eastern markets in advance of celery yet to be harvested by other states. There is no argument relative the superiority of Utah celery, the fact is attested by eastern buyers without quibbling. One American Fork celery farmer, whose farm is operated by share croppers, will realize the tidy profit of from 12 acres of celery without turning his hand; nice business, this celery raising! The industry in Utah is only in its infancy. No! Utah celery raisers are not interested in growing celery on the state's saline waste T August OM CAN TOMATO GROWERS! PEA! W 10 STARTING SHIPMENT OF Green Wrapped Tomatoes' MONDAY, AUGUST 27th Growers and others interested in jobs should contact WE at Edwards roast and blend coffee WE BLEND many coffees to give you tbe exclusive Edwards flavorthe choicest coffee beans, selected for size and color the top of the crop from Latia America, Honeyville, Utah fJla n n n rr w EEa 1" h m u rs t II it n f n r j n n rr sj 1 at Brfcham City, Phone 499 J4 anytime after August 24th out the full, natural coffee flavor TlLm"? 7 the CoLn,ro,led. 'ow-he- a process. ..then grind immediio gU" ,0 til iraT,0?um"p'ck LI i 14 COFFEE TO BRING - by a personalformula, first used by my father and slowly perfected over 40 years. Each pound is as rich and flavorful as our it. knowledge of fine coffees can makeVTe 10 Edwards Coffee days. for Try just believe you'll agree that it is an exceptional coffee and that it does give you a delightful extra flavor "lift." ... Morris Vance Sterling H. Nelson Co. 8 Featured at Safeway Stores M1P CRWO. TOO , HI, CHE! SIRLi UM! UVEI FltAf, |