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Show -- Page Two BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, Week Published at Tremonton. Utah, on Thursday of Each for Friday Distribution PhQne 23 First West Street Second Entered at the Post Office at Tremonton, Utah, aa 1925 Class Matter October 15, A. N. RYTTTNG, Editor-Publish- SUBSCRIPTION RATES (In Advance) SOLDIER RATES ONE YEAR - $2.50 $1.75 Thrusday, September Utah j en a signal when and as required ..7 wii an, nwy make such left turn and the drivers of all other vehicles approaching the from said ornosit? x tion shall yield the t iiidiujig me lelt turn Suggests 1 er -- pounds, yet 40 out of 50 animals permit holders got their ) HIGHWAY PATROL season-that S during the recent open is straight shooting. Nor docs all the straight shooting glory go ( KNOW YOUR TRAFFIC ..) to the men; Joyce LeeMaster,-16- , S f ruma LAWS of Srrineviile, investigated pus in the family hen house and found - a wild looKing animai, like a cat, only larger, with a bob tail." Miss LeeMaster's well aimed TURNING LEFT shot from her trusty 22 rifle AT INTERSECTION Bobbrought a chicken-stealinThe driver of a vehicle within end. an cat's career to an intersection intending to turn to the left shall yield the ST. GEORGE to any vehicle approaching "LONGHORN' CAUGHT from .the opposite direction which The last" surviving Utah "Texas is within the intersection or so Longhorn," weight 1400 pounds close thereto as to constitute an and with a horn spread of 39 inchimmediate hazard, but said driver, es is now gracing St. George dinAnhaving so yielded and having giv- ner tables. Caught by Rudger thony and John P. Atkin in a roundup, the big steer "battled" his captors continually as he was dition to what was already owned at the beginning of the war, will available to the discharged soldier for job training. In addition, Mr. Gunderson, the local direc-tors, and the instructors who have worked in war production training are fully conversant with the most expert methods in the supervision and training of men for after yet their plan is flexible enough to be quickly adapted to any new needs that may arise in and employment the training fields. BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Tremonton, Utah-- j 13, 1943 inter-Sectio- ! right-of-wa- y Mr. and Mrs. Henry Garfield of Brigham were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jess Garfield for the rodeo, Saturday. g right-of-wa- y TRAINING ON Property Board. THE JOB Presidential 15. Adequate protection and It is particularly pertinent at Wartime Message encouragement for small business. 16. Clarification and liberali- this time that employers throughfor hospital out the state know that they are zation for The importance of President and medicalprovisions train- entitled to act as agencies for vocational care, Truman's first peacetime message inlife and if they are approvloan guarantees ing, to Congress merit a review of the surance for veterans. ed by the State Board for Voca- First b recommendations embodied. The 21 point Postwar Plan follows: 1. An immediate, Federaly weeks maxisupported Federal extension employto mum othand marine merchant the ees, ers not now covered by unemployment compensation, 2. A substantial increase in the minimum wage. of second war 3. Extension 1946 to attain "an act into powers orderly, stabilized reconversion." 4. Deferment of proclaiming cessation of hostilities Legislation making permanent the President's powers to reorganize the executive branch of the government. 5. Early action on full employment legislation. 6. The establishment of a permanent Fair Employment Practice Committee. 7. Termination of War Labor Board after forthcoming conference. 8. Ultimate return to the states of the employment service, but retention as a Federal agency at least until June 30, 1947, with a suitable appropriation. 9. Transfer of five hundred million dollars in funds to Commodity Credit Corporation for continuing price support; a crop insurance program; adjustment of existing larm programs to peacetime needs. 10. Suitable inducements for army and navy volunteers; continued inductions from age group with maximum term of service fixed at two years. 11. Broad and comprehensive housing legislation to help private enterprise build 10,000,000 to 15 000,000 new homes in the next decade; with federal aid for slum clearance. 12. Creation of a single Fed eral scientific research agency to and control all Federal research and promote, support and finance private research. 13. Limited tax reductions for calendar year 1946; later modernization of entire Federal tax structure with further reductions. 14. A single administrator to Surplus replace present three-ma-- $25-for-2- 6 40-ce- labor-industr- multi-millio- n lend-leas- e y lend-leas- e well-rounde- dollar proA of for development regional gram natural resources and construction of roads, airports, Federal buildStates and ings, and grants to for public facilities. municipalities 18. Repeal of the Johnson Act, seteconomically sound remainof tlements, appropriation ing $500,000,000 UNRRA commitment. 19. Repeal of Congressional inexpense allowance, immediate crease in salary of $20,000 a year for all members of Congress. 20. Legislation to expedite disposal of large surplus tonnage of merchant ships. Government 2 1 . Permanent needed for materials of stockpiles national defense but in which the U. S. is naturaly deficient. 17. d 18-2- 5 n JIRMAMD HAND CREAM ( on-the-j- WOULD LURE TOURISTS Spotlighting JIRMAND large $1.00 Size HAND CREAM 3! 79c ADAM'S DRUG STORE arc invited to attend a special showing of WOMEN'S Fall Coats and Suits ON DISPLAY ONE DAY ONLY Mon. Sept. 17th This line consists of fine quality virgin wool COATS and SUITS many of them match, harmonize, or consets. trast for Quality FUR COATS Tuxedo fur trim and extra fur collars. You wiil never see such values again during the Fall Season Come in and look them over they're gorgeous! . . . but come on the date indicated above! LaGra Shop TREMONTON, UTAH Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gorton of Soda Springs, Idaho, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Homer. Mrs. Richard K. Gorton of Philadelphia, Pa., and Mrs. Olena J Homer accompanied them back to Soda Springs where they will visit for the com ing week. iTt AHEAD by 1 GEORGE S. BENSON PtesldttHatdiiig College Scare f. Jriansat Gifts of God Draw on your imagination lor a moment and consider with me an circumaltogether improbable stance. Suppose a gentleman with an easy flow of language should mount an improvised platform in the public square of an town next agricultural county-sea- t Saturday afternoon, play a phonograph record through a loud speaker to get an audience, and then should say: "Ladies and Gentlemen there is just so much water in the entire universe; so much and no more. Any time you drink more of it than you need to quench your thirst, you are greedy because some unfortunate person somewhere on earth wants water. He is thirsty. His throat is dry and his lips are parching. And it is all for want of the water which tell-tal- e STRAIGHT SHOOTING UTAHNS ' Fire Insurance Automobile Coverage Public Liability Property Damage Comprehensive Collision All types of Surety Bonds Crop Insurance Hail and Fire Auto Medical Real Estate Loans Automobile Loans 0 Quick and Reliable Service JAMES BROUGH REALTOR H. C. ROHDE Blacksmith and Machine Works "Mends Everything But Peeple's WayB" TREMONTON UTAH TOURISTS have then reasons for traveling in your area. AN INTERESTING POLL readers, made by "Promenade" shows that its when they travel by automobile, do so for the following well-to-d- o reasons: See country Comfort 20 15 well-groome- d you so wantonly swallow." It Is Not True Such a speaker would soon lose his audience. People would walk away and leave him. Some of them might think about having his head examined because they know his ideas are out of joint. There is no connection whatever between one man's abundance of water and some y stranger's thirst. The need of the sufferer, even if he were a victim of cruelty, is apart from the owner of a good well. But the speaker might hold his audience if he said something like this: "Ladies and Gentlemen there is just so much wealth in the world; so much and no more. Anybody BECKWITH EXPLAINS with more than he needs for food, CRATER clothes and shelter is greedy beFrank Beckwith, Editor of the cause there are many people in China and India who never had a Delta Chronicle, and by heart, ; square meal in their lives. They are geologist, is the first man to actual poor because a few people get very ly discover that the famous Pah vant Butte, in Millard County, a huge and extinct volcano crater, is only a youngster compared with a much older crater which Mr. Beck with recently found circled the Pahvant Butte. Discovered by Father Escalante in 1776, nearly 170 years ago when he came thru Utah and designated on his map as an isolated mountain in "The Valley of Salt," the Pahvant Butte is a half mile in diameter and 850 feet high. The Butte is also mentioned by Gilbert in his U. S. Geologic Survey in 1890. It remained, however, for Editor Beckwith to get curious enough about the Butte to fly over it in a plane, and in doing so discovered an older and more ancient crater ring a mile in diameter circling Pahvant Butte. When Utah was considerably under Lake Bonneville, Pahvant Butte was then a live volcano, building its cone nearly a thousand feet above the lake bottom and possibly to the surface of the water. Millions of years previously, however, this giant had been to a much larger degree and left the crater ring first rccognizod by Editor Beckwith from 3,000 feet in the air. "If," questions Editor Beckwith, "this sleeping giant awoke twice in the last billion years who knows when it will awaken again?" THESE ITEMS Have Your FARM IMPLEMENTS REPAIRED NOW Why wait until you are ready to use them? fll'TO.IICBlLE The problem of getting the ist into Utah and Nevada, of keep- up-to-t- " red-poi- : ing him happy and showing him a good time will be discussed at Ely, Nevada. Sept. 24, by the Utah- Nevada Hotel Association. The JOB TRAINING AVAILABLE membership of the association is made up of Utah and Nevada ho' The sudden end of hostilities has tel, tourist camp and auto motel brought both veterans and employ- owners, and a large representa ers face to face with the realities from both states will be of putting into practice the pro- tion visions of P. L. 346, better known The Utah Department of Publicity as the G. I. Bill of Rights. This and Industrial Development has column in collaboration with Mr. been invited to participate Howard B. Gunderson, State di rector of the Trades, industries and FINDS GIANT FROG distributive education, in order to A giant fossilized frog, two feet reach all interested, will carry a in length, has been found northcontinuing series of articles designof Monticello by a group of west ed to clarify problems relative to led by Ansel Hall of explorers job training for the returning G.I. Colorado. Dr. Charles Camp of the University of California is re EQUIPMENT IN READINESS noving the ancient amphibian to the Calitornia University Museum The Utah vocational training The creature was found in Beef setup, because of previous experi- Basin, a little known or explored ence in war production employWalter Herz, of Reno ment preparation is prepared to area, reports a photographer, who spent a month offer a highly satisfactory service Mr. Herz inform with the to the returned veteran. One mill- ed Utah group. and Industrial Publicity ion dollars worth of modern, officials minute equipment, in ad- - Development department that the large and practically unexplored areas, lying west of Monticello and Blanding, have a marvelous future for groups in" terested in exploration and archeology. iniii'M food and dressed 702 and after capture, meat. of pounds good His head, mounted, will be seen in the Biology Department of Dixie Junior College later this fall WHEN IN NEED OF A Suggestion: pen, tour- UTAH Vonishing typt of hand cream. Softens handi suffering from water and expo sure. Wonderful for elbows and legs. You tional Education. Superintendent E. Allen Bateman has been given the responsibility of supervising the training, and of approval of all training agencies in the state. This will insure qualified instruction, adequate equipment and a continuing interest in the satisfactory progress of every veteran. Any employer interested in hiring one or more veterans and in doing trainshould immediately ing contact Supt. Bateman for application blanks. Upon the receipt of applications, officers of the vocational department will inspect and determine if the facilities are of such a nature that the veteran is assured of continued and satisfactory progress in his chosen work. Continued clarification of various phases of this training, so vital to so many persons, will be continued in succeeding articles. Independence 1 5 Leisurely travel ( 10 Stop wherever they want, interesting, etc. 40 flexible, convenient, THIS SURVEY should drive home the fact that the magnificence of nature is not enough to bring you a rich crop of tourist dollars. ANY WAYSIDE TOWN that serves the best meals of clean wholesome food; offers a place to sleep in clean comfortable surroundings; breathes an atmosphere of hospitality, will within a year become a mecca toward which thousands of tourists will turn. UTAH STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLICITY AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT Atlas Building Sail Lake City, Utah (This advertisement is number six of a series to promote a future tourist trade for the entire state) far-awa- GREAT PJEWS! CATERPILLAR TRACTORS rich." Another Fallacy This speech is no nearer true than the one about the water. Both have some facts in them but they are not related facts. I am not trying to say that wealth is free and cheap like water, but I am saying this: My neighbor's fine home and big car have cost me nothing. He has more than I have because he (or his father maybe) has more wealth-creatin- g ability than I have. There w such a thing as oppression of the poor. There is such a thing as exploiting labor. It is a crime which Jesus decried openly. It is d also a vice because it leads toward poverty and not toward wealth. "Good money in circulation" is a manifestauon of prosperity and it occurs only in lands where workers are well paid and thus permitted to maintain good homes and live in comfort. America's Blessing Workers are paid well in America, twice as well as in England and six times as well as in Russia, and America is a rich country. Families live on $1 a month per person in China China is a poor country. Is China poor because America is No! rich? Without the United States as a customer, and supplier, the Orient would be poorer still. The difference is that we have liberty, and they have oppression. We Americans receive countless benefits from God's hand that people in other countries never heard about Is God partial to America? Certainly not! Our benefits come through a channel that the rulers of other countries have blindly and selfishly closed by exploiting labor. Our ancestors opened it lor us long ago. The channel is personal freedom, protected by representative, constituUonal short-sighte- are now RATION FREE! PLAY SAFE Come in nnd let us advise you on the size CATERPILLAR . TRACTOR you will need in your post-wa- r farm oper- ations. Tractors Will Be Delivered according to order priority. Ask About Our MYERS WATER SYSTEMS REPAIR Headquarters for O Tractors ' j:, A I'll O Power Units O Combine Motors O Magnetos O Carburetors if;.!! ACETYLENE and ELECTRIC WELD IN A size for Every Need. Peterson Tractor Service God-fearin- g The most deceptive big game targets arc antelopes; they run 50 miles an hour and weigh only 100 Phone 90 n ALBERT EARL, Mgr. i |