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Show Page Two -- BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Tremonton, Utah- v rra, on Thursday of Each Week for Friday Distribution Phone 23 First West Street - - CLEAN-U-- . P jMf) PAINT-UP Entered at the Post Office at Tremonton, Utah, as Second Class Matter October 15, 1925 Editor-Publish- er SUBSCRIPTION KATES (la Advance) SOLDIER RATES ONE YEAR - $2.50 WillarJ A. Day of Duchea-has been named by Governor Herbert B. Maw to a commissioner-sh- ip on the State Road Commission, and Dr. W. M. Sta key Salt Lake City, was named to fi'j Mr. Day's recent position as member of the State Engineering Cum- -i mission's Advisory Board. H. M Chamberlain, Salt Lake City, appointed a member of the Stat Depository, Board for a and Dr. John A. Anderson ; Salt Lake City, was appointed to. r a term on the board of trustees, state hospital for treatment of poliomyelitis and diseases of children. ! THE CAMPAIGN IS ON at Tremonton, Utah, A. N. RYTTTNG, m 1 j $1.75 A Blazing Nation five-yea- Fires in the United States are now taking a toll of 10,000 lives yearly in the most horrible kind of death burning. The nation will suffer the largest fire loss in history in 1946, says Frank A. Christensen, President of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, unless united effort is made nationally to check present excessive burning which is due largely to carelessness. "The appalling rate of increase in our national fire losses calls for the attention of everyone interested in the general social and economic welfare of our country. If the present rate goes on through 1916, the toll of our real wealth, much of it productive wealth which our people can ill afford to lose today, will surely pass $600,000,000. That will make 1916 the worst year of reckless burning our nation has ever known. other-cripplin- Human Eyes Sensitive Human eyes are more sensitive to light than are cells ' commonly called "electric eyes." photo-electri- Mr. Christensen, in asking public cooperation in fire is merely asking for the people to help save their own property. Fire insurance can replace some property but not lives. It can never cover many of the effects of fire such as Compulsion Evil Illustrated A new light has been thrown in the bill for a national health program, which has been neglected up to this time. General Omar N. Bradley, Veterans' Administrator, told the Senate Labor Committee that any compulsory health insurance legislation should protect veterans' current rights to free medical care and hospitali-zatiWagner-Murray-Din-g- ell o. General Bradley pointed out that the bill under consideration does not specify means of finance. He said, however, that the term "prepaid personal health service benefits" indicates that contributions are anticipated from employed persons. "This," he said, "would require the veteran to contribute toward a benefit to which he is already entitled, without charge, under existing law, in that he is entitled without cost to himself to hospital or treatment of service connected disability and to hospital treatment of connected disability when bed is available." General Bradley did not express any opinion as to advisability of the legislation. He said he had studied it purely from the veterans' standpoint. The advocates of socialized medicine disregard the idea that an American should be entitled to choose his own method of cure. In the case of the veteran, the compulsory evil is shown more pointedly. out-patie- nt non-servi- ce AY S . ' PROTECTS PROPERTY ADDS TO YOUR THOUGHT WITHIN WELL-BEIN- Your dome N v INVESTMENT FAMILY'S YThbrb $3 NO G' ?LACE LIKB. fcLEAV UP -- 11 DO YOUSl PARTI f S : 'Keep this one ' PROMOTES PUBLIC HEALTH IMPROVES YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD Home dmtT Home pref-ventio- lost jobs, irreplaceable articles, the tragedy of being without a home, not to mention articles of sentimental value. c " "Equally shocking and appalling is loss of life. A few months ago newspapers and radio news periods had extensive reports of a 'Blazing Sunday,' on which 26 lives were lost in a few spectacular fires. That seemed unusual but it was not. An average of 27 lives are lost in fires every day." Too many people still fell that fire prevention is something that the other fellow should practice. The fire loss will never be controlled until every individual becomes conscious that fire is dangerous and helps eliminate fire hazards. Spotlighting UTAH den. Strange to say, seats in these cars are highly popular with the tobacco-usin- g public, traveling who seem to enjoy clean air for a change. i will be laid July 24th at the mouth of Emigration Canyon. Actual quarrying of granite for the monument is now going on at the quarry, three miles east of the old Wasatch Resort in Little Cottonwood Canyon. IRON COUNTY GETS EXHIBITION BUILDINGS After long and strenuous efNEPHES GAIN, forts on the part of Iron County BRIGHAM'S LOSS officials and Parawan City, they Nearly loosing the $500,000 have secured Parawan CCC buildrubber goods manufacturing plant ings from the Grazing Service to Brigham City, Nephi is happy which will be used for county fair from the purposes and exhibition buildings. in the announcement Thermoid Company of New Jersey that "we have definitely se- UTAH PLANTS lected the site at Nephi." STIR SNEEZES Salt bushes, common in Utah, Two days previous, the Thermoid Company officials pondered along with native grasses, sagea site at Brigham, where every brush, russian thistle, sunflowers, concession possible was made to and rabbit brush are entering into induce them to locate their new a pollination period. While few hayfever sufferers realize it, the plant in the Peach City. above plants are all guilty of maker life miserable for the ing UINTA OIL sufferer. PROSPECTS TESTED While oil men are keeping findPLANS STATE-WID- E ings entirely secret, they are careSAFETY MEET fully probing every section of the Governor Herbert B. Maw is Uinta Basin for oil. With the now laying plans for a state-wiRangely, Colorado oil field just mee"t to be held in Septemover the line and producing heav- safety ber. Governor Maw attended a ily, intense interest is focused on national in meet May and plans the Utah side of the field. Utiliz-n- g localize the to of safetechniques scientific apparatus in the out in the ty recently brought form of portable Seismograph SG(S)M MEMBER FEDERAL WAREHOUSE SYSTEM Wholesale and Retail GRAINS .. SEEDS .. FEEDS 0 00 hay-fev- STEAM ROLLING GRINDING CLEANING de WE BUY ALL KINDS OF GRAIN cents was the farmer's share of the food dollar units on trucks, major oil concerns national conference. received during April, a one-cedrop from the level of the are carefully mapping the under- WORK STARTING 5 previous months, due to an increase in retail prices, while ground structures of the Uinta ON MONUMENT Basin. Headed by rapid working prices received by farmers declined. Fifty-fo- W4G STATE VACANCIES V FILLED BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Published THURSDAY, JULY 11, ur nt TREMONTON PHONE 41 The first stone in the scheduled well drilling units, putting down "This Is The Place" monument , holes six inches in diaLongtime soils studies reveal that the fertility of the plains folthe area where wheat is the principal cash crop is steadily crews meter, Seismograph delow closely. Two trucks with clining, especially with respect to its nitrogen content. 100-fo- ot Adam's Drug Announces the amazing new a a a EVERSfAPP a REPEATER PEN a B o B a B 11 Mf .iX.T'tfffr - n iv B B 1 51 ni " "i f -" 1 1.- V v-- vva 'N ; ; r v dry when tub wotr. w4 i jji if? B Ut 15 in 15 tcond. Con'l lok You can't , does it! CA A B B t. ' B B ot any altitude. tvon shako the ink out. W.ile on ony paper or mate ri .l, linen, textiles, etc. Mates 6 to S carbon copies ot a siccus h !1 trgtd vndtr Writt for 3 montht to 3 ytart on on rtfill cartridge. Rcloadt with a cartridge If B Evtn writtt H:j I i'; t f i II I I I means Capillary Action ... an exclusive Eversharp patent n BI!,TEI Cmpltt I So "P,a,r 21.50 I Ton) n dbdubbd DCCL Reacf the Leader 1 every week " because . . inf omied on the values offered by our local merchants many and business firms. Watch for advertisements of these firms, they contain news of the arrival of so many "hard-to-geitems that have been so scarce the past few years. Then, too, there is the news of the doings of your friends We are doing our utmost to keep you WOULD STOP SMOKING IN CAFES Robert Crookston, an occasional writer in the Cache American Newspaper, recently came out in a torrid attack against smoking in Utah restaurants. Calling attention to the fact the Utah's laws forbid smoking in public places, Mr. Crookston maintains the present variety of fixd served in res taurants when well stauratcd with tol icco smoke makes mighty poor eating. He would have the police jail all who insist on smoking in Utah cafes and restaurants. By way of side comment on the suhect, many New York cafes forbid smoking by patrons, calling attention to the fact that tobacco smoke spoils the taste of food. One other point worthy of mention is that the fiftccn-chighspeed trains which operate every hour between New York and Philadelphia, carry ten passenger cars in which smoking is strictly forbid ar Tremonton, Utah ""l upa ink on dry! It' a B B B tmeolhctt writing ptn. Wor!d' Roll th special built in electrical equipment make up a Seismograph unit. One truck locates at the drilled hole, and the other one sets half mile distant. A charge of dynamite is fired in the hole and the miniature earthquake shocks set up by the explosion are recorded by the distant truck's electrical equipment. The resulting record indicates to the operatorsthe underground earth structures in the locality which in turn, hints to the geologist a possible oil field. As can be readily understood, their findings are a deep secret, and 'only the future will reveal whether or not Uintah County has an oil field similar to Rangely, money-savin- s' t" and neighbors in the valley. Also, the news of social, civic, and religious organizations are here for your Make it a habit. Read The LEADER even week Your news items are always welcome. Just phone 23. I |