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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, Page Eight Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, -- Thursday, September THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBEK ZU, 21, ZZ "Blood On The Sun" SIDNEY Starring JAMES CAGNEV, and SYLVIA Tremcnton, Utah SeptenbeM8 j Qrph eum MIKE" "THE GREAT Envin and Robert Henry with Stuart Outlaw Roundup" 13, THEATTcP Serial fnr mvself. T reflVF uDon the an automobile salesman that fact used to be able to sell me a new car each year. But when the war came I learned that automobiles will go 50,000 or 100,000 miles and still be pretty dependable as a means of transportation. a names need not be published The publishers are in receipt of upuuuii on a controversial must bear the signature of' a letter for the Open Forum coh ject will and before they can be his writer discharge has received umn, which was written by a mem' ed, of son soon be home. He is trie ber of Uncle Sam's armed forces, Mrs. Parley W. Chnrstensen of and which is certainly worthy of Mr. and Mrs. Parley Elwood. Chrk' sen attended the funeral of tu P F Auk scent Wednes publication. They regret being unable to S Adams of Logan, Thut with Mrs. day in Ogden visiting on the letter, however, since the Mr. Adams was a cousin of is use Pearson (Sou While Drew J. M. Russeil. vacation, Secretary of Attriculturt Clinwriter failed to give his name. Such Christensen. contributes a Vance RMC S l'C Edward L. Davis who Mrs. has been in naval radio since 1940 Visitors at the Clifford home Sunday were Mr. and Alan Dickey and daughter Mr. Dickey's father of Provo and Mrs. Ralph Dickey and child' ren of Honeyville. Mar-jori- e; mm J 1 Liberty Theatre ton P. Anderson column.) Tremon ton FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 and Two BIG FEATURES Two By CLINTON P. ANDERSON Secretary of Agriculture The first SunWASHINGTON. V-- J friend came a after Day, day by with an automobile to take my family and hU for a drive into the country to have dinner with another friend. Nothing like that had happened In years. We were all delighted at the dhance to ride through country lanes, to talk about the height of the corn, the possibilities of crops, and the probability that we would enjoy meat for dinner. But as we started back into Washington, we could not help but notice that the roads were filling up. There was a long line of traffic and many folks drove by at speeds which seemed reckless to us. They were 15 THOMAS MITCHELL and MART AHDERSOH "WITHIN THESE WALLS" plus ROD CAMEROH and FUZZY KNIGHT in "BEYOND THE PECOS" Matinee Saturday 3:30 Cartoon and Serial 16 and 17 SUNDAY and MONDAY, SEPTEMBER guest WILLIAM BEHDIX and JOAH BLOTiDELL in "DON JUAN QUILLIGAN" SHIRLEY MASON RECEIVES DISCHARGE V arrived Corp. Shirley Mason dis-after being home Wednesday iinrlpr the new point sys- of tern, having had a total number S9 points He will now make his home in Tremonton where his wife and baby have been for the last three months. 1 perhaps driving 40 or 45 miles an hour and we had become accus- HOME ON 15 DAY an hour leisure- LEAVE tomed to the ly gait. Oleen Udy arrived home on car one When speeding 15 day furlough this week, bgt a swirled past us, I heard my wife Udv has been stationed in Wil murmur, "My, what I wouldn't Delaware. He is the son mine'ton. to have give gasoline rationing of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Udy of back." Riverside. I began to wonder how many of the things that war had brought to us as sacrifices or privations we would soon come to appreciate as RICHARD SMITH blessings in disguise. I began to WRITES PARENTS wonder how long it would be before President and Mrs. C. E. Smith people would sometimes sigh for some of the real advantages of the received word Tuesday that their days during the war when we all son Pvt. Rivhard Smith had left lived a little closer together, a little and was on his way to more simply, and perhaps a little Leyte more in the traditional American pattern that had started this country on its way to becoming a JASPER RHODES WITH great nation. with Phil Silvers and Anne Revere le ' Cartoon ' News Shorts Matinee Sunday, 3:30 -- TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 19, 20 VEROXICA LAKE and ALANJ LADD in "THIS GUN FOR HIRE" and BILLY GILBERT and SHEMP HOWARD in "CRAZY KNIGHTS" Cartoon FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPT. 21 and 22 Two BIG FEATURES Two Coming BILL ELLIOTT and BOBBY BLAKE in "MARSHALL OF RENO" plus RICHARD ARLEK and CHERYL WALKER in. facial tissues (LIMIT) MENS COTTON PLAID I OCff JLkJT Hose 45 Gauge Size 14 to 17 LJ77 & 108 KM) chilly days. MENS - BOYS' Cowboy Boots 1f CAJ MENS', All Sizes JL Black or Brown I QQQ BOYS'(A.lSiZes '.!"".' &Trt'.i -- Mens Leather Childrens' WORK Two-Hec- e Gloves Sleepers t0 Sof Sizes 0, 1,2,3 and4 Extra Lowers fa mt llWill MIHH III Ml llllllll Size82toll 49c M III WlllM HI Pliable 1 Ull fTT ! l 2 49 Ml lima J Jj LARGE SIZE OUTING TURKISH Flannel Towels 27 inch 1 Green lV)'d. WHITE 36 inch Fancy STRIPE Yellow Q OQt &V?yd. Blue Or 7v Rose Limit 2 Towels to each customer Gephart Stores Co. "BUY FOR CASH AND PAY LESS" All wool . ; their farms. The war has done something to all of us. It made us appreciate some of the real values of life that many of us had lost sight of. We all complained a little about the war, didn't we? We were a little disappointed when we found that the stocks of new cars were frozen, but we discovered that the old car was a lot better and would run a lot longer than we had thought. Neighbors. I remember my first experience with a car pool. We had two automobiles at our house; our next door neighbor had two automobiles at his place. We were not well acquainted, mostly because it wasn't necessary, until the war came along. Then my next door neighbor and I and two others, who heretofore had gone to our offices by separate means, found ourselves fused together into a car pool. We were irrevocably tied to each other. We had to rise at the same time in the morning, leave at the same hour for work, and return home together in Car-Po- ol the evening. I am sure that at first we all resented a little the fact that we lost our freedom of action, but we gained a great lesson in neighborli-nes- s. We found out that the people who lived next to us might be just as interesting and attractive, just as pleasant and just as companionable as the people whom we had always known who lived down the street or across the city. Victory Garden Blessing. How many women Improved their figures as they walked to market! And think what Victory gardens did for the men! Like Drew Pearson, I will perhaps be away from Washington when this column is printed, away on a short vacation. While I am gone, someone will be mowing my lawn. During the war I had to mow my own lawn. I couldn't find anyone Interested In taking care of my particular little piece of property. And a strange thing happened: I found that I could mow it as well as any-on- e else, that I could mow it quickly, and that I could learn within a short time exactly how each particular section could be best mowed to develop the best cut of grass. And I found out also that when I mowed it myself, I not only improved the lawn, I improved my own digestion. I'll miss that now that the war is over, because I'll tell myself that I'm too busy to do it when I can hire someone else for the Job. I suppose that my wife will miss something, too, because she used to walk to market and carry her home In a basket. U w f 7 'til Real Values of Life. Do you remember back in the Private Jaseper L. Rhodes, son years of the depression that Henry Mr. and Mrs. Jasper W. of Ansley out in Amarillo, Texas, wrote a book entitled, "I Like the Rhodes of Garland, was among Depression"? Frankly, I liked his the first Americans to enter Vien-n- a little book, because he told of the as a member of General Mark blessings that had come to him with W. Clark's United States Forces a reversal in his financial situation. in Austria. He told of the discoveries that he Private Rhodes, a member of the had made as the period of wild pros202nd Military Police Company, perity passed and the long months of is attached to Headquarters, which set in. He told of the depression farmers who had gone back to liv- USFA, entered the service in May, ing on their farms instead of living 1944, and was transferred to over-sea- s off j Shkis f f Ladies' Rayon FLANNEL Sweaters For ,VS Baby! GENERAL CLARK'S ARMY "IDENTITY UNKNOWN" On SALE SATURDAY 10 a m - i Ja-pa- n. ' i sv waters. But-J.l. t n It's Playtime F 1 n e kmt lot In wo1 aU rompers,Colors. hand-e- broidered. Bootee Sets i ,Y9 For The Young! and Bootees, sweater cap. All wooL Knitted Sacques! j Softest all wool sacques to keep babywarml duty in October of the same Baby Bootees!.' year. ROBERT WINZELER AWARDED AIR MEDAL r VMtv 4i Second Lt. Robert G. Winzeler, special equipment officer on a B29 has been awarded the air medal by the direction of the President for for meritorious achievement while participating in aerial flights as a combat crew members in succes-fu- l combat missions against the Japanese empire. His wife, Mrs. Jennie E. Win-zele- r resides in Tremonton. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Winzeler. Ik BOOTS without a certificate. .STOICM KING BOOTS KNEE BOOTS 5.90 Mf d Smooth white kid. y X .X acoK is AQ t'S'O 0 y They're wrapped up warm and look ing pretiy as Lhnstmas packages, too! Bright coats and dark coats that fit into any girl's big snow scene! vjiesiemclda, f itted and Uoy styles TREMONTON 68$ I Wrap up for Winter in A 3.49): Shoes For Little Feetf ri Can now be purchased BOOTS puret itized.VOt.3. RUBBER HIP Made of, softest wooL, in all-woo- l, soft fleece and wool pile. Ctker. Coats.! 19.75. 2?.75 1 ; .75 |