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Show PAGE LEADER BEAR RIVER VALLEY SIX Mr. and Mrs. Lh,M Harry K. Woodward of Tooele is visiting in Tremonton. sen and children q.) Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Farmer Sr. Idaho, are spencUr e , .: Mrs. Grace Anderson visited and Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Farmer to visit relatives Jr. of Ridge, Maryland, were Mrs. in Malad Saturday. Christensen has of the Edgar Mr. and Mrs. Alma Larkin and overnight guests while of her mother fcr Winchesters Wednesday, daughters, LaNez and Phyllis enroute to San Francisco to visit guest Priesthood several weeks. attended the Aaronic the A. R. Farmers. in Salt Lake and with the R. C. Richards Friday and World Wheat Stocks Saturday. Rebecca Caok and Reach Lowest Level Williams Mrs. Richards are sisters. and T. J. Mrs. daughters, Udy and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. and Situation May Have No Effect C. E. Bench of Salt Lake spent lone, Mrs. Marvin Burnett On Consumer Prices. with Bishop and Mrs. John Allen and children the week-en- d Mrs. Leland Capener. The ladies were Ogden visitors Friday. The amount of WASHINGTON. Mrs. Effie Welling was visitare cousins of Mrs. Capener. wheat M: the principal exporting naMr. and Mrs. Delose Jensen ing in Logan Saturday with tions were able to save from last Mrs. Jack Welling. had a family dinner Sunday. Mr. and crop was the smallest in and Mrs. Dale Ogden and dau The M. I. A. Officers held a year's eight years, according to the agriculture department. ghter of Salt Lake and Mr. and business meeting Thursday evenMrs. Max Adams of Tremonton ing at the home of Bishop and The report, compiled by the deguests. Mrs. Leland Capener. Refreshwere the partment's foreign crops and jnar-ket- s ments were served by Mrs. Capdivision, raised the possibility Mrs. Ogden and Carol are spendthat deficit nations may have to home. Jensen at week the the meeting. ener, following ing the scrape along this year with even De Verl Hess of Logan, Lola less wheat Mrs. Winnie Latham Barton than they had expected and two daughters, Margaret Hess and children, Jane Udy and from this and other exporting counand Kathleen, and four grand- Mrs. Wililam Hess of Plymouth tries. The situation probably also will children, were calling on friends were visiting Wednesday with have an effect on American conhere Sunday. Wm. Silvester. sumer prices. Mrs. Lee Capener went to Salt Winona Capener, Sheron Hales If world competition for wheat the and Luana Tingey spent Lake Tuesday to be with her drives prices higher it will be week-en- d at their homes here. mother, Helen Lee, who was op- reflectedgrain in higher domestic retail They are attending school in erated on Wednesday at a Salt prices for meat, poultry and dairy Salt Lake. Lake hospital. products. The department said wheat stocks Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hales, Mrs. Rebecca Cook and dauin the four main producing counwere Og ghters Emmie and Marie, and Carolyn and Thayne, on July 1 start of the new tries visitors Mrs. Byron Cook and son, Jay, den Sunday. crop year were only 379 million of Idaho Falls were visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Forsberg and bushels. This is eight million bushMr. and Mrs. George Forsberg els below 1946 and the smallest July went to Hyrum Saturday to as- 1 stocks since 1938. sist the Herman Forsbergs in In addition to the United States, their move into their new home the world's major Mrs. Lenore Silvester Mrs. T. J. Udy. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Rytting of the Stake High Council was in attendance at the Sacrament meeting Sunday. Miss Ruth Petty of Ogden was a guest of Doris Hadfield Saturday and Sunday. Hansen, county Miss Bessie home demonstration agent, was here Wednesday, Thursday and Friday to assist the ladies of the Farm Bureau with some upholA. N. stering work. Mr. and Mrs. Parley Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Smith of Wellsville were Sunday guests of the Wilsons." Joel Richard went to Provo Thursday to enter school at the B. Y. U. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Moses and son, DeVon, and daughter, of Salt Lake, were calling on friends and relatives here Sunday. They are former residents of Riverside. Mrs. Carl Jensen of Brigham visited Thursday with her sister, Wa-nee- n, ROCK WOOL wheat-exportin- at Smlthfield. For ceilings and walls of your home in-owa- v. ? call GARLAND GENE LYNCH INSULATION CO. day. The Primary officers and teachers met at Mrs. Lyman Zollinger's home on Friday. The teachers' trainer lesson was given by Mrs. Earl Anderson and Mrs. Earl Christensen. Refreshments 1S 111, mm yl were served by Mrs. Lorin Lar-kiMrs. Earl Christensen, Mrs. Melvin Christensen and Mrs. Lyman Zollinger. Mrs. Melvin Christensen gave a birthday party in honor of her n, F. Goodrich Tires Outwear Prewar Tires . . . and cost less B. than prewar prices! TODAY you can get our ALLOWANCE ALL-OU- T FOR YOUR OLD TIRES Put B.F.Goodrich Silvertowns "First" on your list for (1) better than prewar mileage, (2) better than prewar safety, (3) better than prewar value. With all these "extras" and today's SO LOW' price, we're still adding a real B.F.GOODRICH EVERY CARRIES jieUm TIRE allowance for your present tires. PREWAR PRICE 14.79 kaui VM.f irnu tiefff THIS Quatatttee "Every Hrt end tuhe of our manufacture bearing our name 1.50 u mmti teruti number guaranteed $e be tree from defectt in it 6.00-1- Sin 6 PER WEEK DCWN-1.- 23 Putt a New 6.00-1- 6 Silveiiown oa Your Cor end material uitht,ut t tune or tniieagt," iteeut Wayne's Associated Service Phone 158-- J Tremonton mo MM '6VAWTEED S--l tree' aoc JA) ' Ht rhuUiCl vr Mcmy ro AI0WMG- - in week. &.r' m monoclc h OF PRfCIOUi -- .1 "X . m . .) fm0 m BLVD., OGDEN, UTAH. g Australia grain reserves on July 1 were estimated by the department at 49,365,000 short tons, an Increase of some 20 per cent over the previous year. This was due almost entirely to a sharp rise in world corn reserves, principally in the United States. The world corn carryover was estimated at 977 million bushels, an day and Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Arbon of increase of nearly 50 per cent over 1946. Ogden visited Mr. and Mrs. John increase The in the American Arbon Sunday. Mrs. Bill Stokes and family spent Saturday in Ogden shopping. J. W. Larkin left Thursday for Provo to attend the B. Y. U.. Among those going to the temple in Logan Friday were Mrs. Menah Rose, Mrs. Mary Rose, Mrs. Lawrence Anderson and Mrs. D. Lamar Cutler. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Meade and family were in Ogden Saturday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Arbon motored to American Falls Monday to attend the funeral of the 18 month old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ruland Neal. Mr. Neal is Mrs. Arbon 's nephew. The child was killed instantly when hit by a truck. Mr. and Mrs. Lars Anderson returned Tuesday after spending a few days in Ogden at the home of Mrs. Anderson's brother, Mr. Elmer Stromberg. Mrs. M. Christopherson of Bur-leIdaho, visited for a few days at the home of her niece, Cora Daley. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wallace of Elko, Nevada, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Roe. During their stay, Mrs. Wallace and Mrs. Roe spent two days with Mrs. Lucy Roe in Tremonton. Mrs. Jessie Garriett and Mrs. carryover since has been counterbalanced by hot, dry weather in the corn belt, which has cut this year's corn crop several hundred million bushels. Although record-breakin- this g had country wheat harvest a of bushels, officials have all but given up hope of meeting their original export goals because of the disastrous corn failure. 1,427,000,000 New Antiseptic Reported Effective for Infections BOSTON. Perfection of a new kills more than 40 that antiseptic bacteria and is "as important as sulfa drugs and penitypes of cillin" was announced by the Asthma Research Foundation, orInc., of Boston, a non-prof- it ganization. germ killing solution named glycerite of hydrogen peroxidewas discovered by Dr. The Ethan Allen Brown of Boston, regent of the American College of Allergists. Dr. Brown said more than 5,000 patients afflicted with various infections have been cured by the new antiseptic. He said 20 physicians, physicists, chemists y, and bacteriologists have used the daughter, Jeniel. Refreshments with uniform success antiseptic were served to eight guests. for six years injrivate research. Mr. and Mrs. Sanfred Smith of The antiseptic was said to be Promontory visited over the particularly effective in curing week-en- d with Mr. and Mrs. Alinfections of the nose, mouth and ben Borgstrom. throat and skin rashes and in treatment of tuberculous glands. Miss Dorothy Petersen attendBarbara Garriett of Garland and ed an office girls' convention in daughter, Mrs. Rollie Sharp of the Gold Room of the Hotel Preston visited with Mrs. ChristUtah in Salt Lake City. The Veteran's Leg Is Saved ine Peterson Thursday enroute to convention was sponsored by the By Alert Subway Employe Burley. Utah Poultry and Farmers coNEW YORK. The local M. I. A. gave an exAn alert employee on a subway train in Brooklyn pulled cellent program operative. Sunday night Mr. and Mrs. Nels Stander of the emergency cord of his train just introducing the theme for the Brigham and Mr. and Mrs. Ro- in time to save a coming year. Beehive girls La bert Knerr of Salt Lake City from being crushed between a sta- Nez Larkin, Phyllis Arbon, Elva were dinner guests of Mr. and tion platform and one of the coaches. Cox and Roseane Cutler sang Police said Irving Epstein, former Mrs. Golden Burton, Sunday. soldier and a student at Brooklyn and Doyle Cutler, William Hurd Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Tol-mcollege, made a dash for the train and Belie Cutler sang. Talks spent last week visiting Mr. Just as the doors closed, slipped and were given by Clyde Black, Mrs. and Mrs. Huett Tolman of Sal- feU so that one leg was wedged be- Alma Larkin, Graham Cutler, tween the train and the platform. mon, Idaho. Gam Larkin, Samille Cutler, Frank Augustinski, 32, who saw Mrs. James Wise and children, Marjorie Arbon, Cutler and the pulled an emergency Ladene Cutler. Jay Virginia and John, of Layton are signalmishap, so that the train did not start. Mrs. D. G. Nelson Jr. left Tues visiting this week with Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. C. Petersen. day for Salt Lake where she will Man Is Freed From Prison Mrs. Mary Anderson visited attend conference. To Begin Another Tern Saturday with her daughter, G. E. OIL FURNACES GENERAL ELECTRIC Kitchen Appliances Dish Washers Disposal UrJ Home Water Systems F.WER PLUMBING f,0 "" Phone 126 LIN Tremc-- , that i aows, IT. esestat W$0e I' It AT' J " A SWELL TPM( NZRS'S TO STEP UP EGO PRODUCTION h A Use Standard Poultry House Spray to kill mites, lice, ticks fleas. Comes mixed, ready to use. A dime's worth covers ml than 100 square feet and stays active for days. And use Sta: ard White Oil No. 9 U.S. P. to step up egg production ft ai ' r ) listless hens. Mix with feed. mineral oil tbENS ety helps bowel movements. non-irritati- rillrr FARRELL J. EST. STANDARD D I S T R I B U T Of STANDARD Tm Phone 121 pouiiav 8HOUSI ,. ,,..,.,. .1 ' ex-G.- I. an El-no- ra of Ogden. - Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Christensen of Oregon called on Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams enroute to Salt Lake City to visit Mr. Christensens' father, J. C. Christensen, who is very ill. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie White and family visited over the week-en- d with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Olsen of Mt. Pleasant. Mrs. Leslie White entertained the Penthatwell club Friday night. The book, "My Country," i by Ernie Pyle was reviewed by ' Mrs. Perry Stanflll. Delicious refreshments were served to fourteen members by the hostess. Any Port in a Storm Is Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Borgstrom Motto of Montana Pilot of Brigham City visited Mr. and s MONT. WINNETT, Gary Mrs. James Petersen, Friday. believes the that seafaring Mrs. Merlin Larsen of Promadage of "any old port in a storm" ontory, visited Mr. and Mrs. Pet- should apply as well to airfaring. er C. C. Petersen Monday. Unable to locate an emergency Mrs. Sophia Diderjcksen visitlanding field when he was running ed last week with Mr. and Mrs. low on gas, Simmons plunked his Ken Barker of Bear River City. plane down on a Win-netaxied five blocks to street, city Mrs. Earl Anderson, Mrs. gas station and order the amazed Sophia Diderlcksen and Mrs. aattendant to "fill 'er up." Milton Anderson visited in After gassing up, he wheeled the Brigham City Monday. plane around, taxied back to the Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dideredge of town and took off down the lcksen and Mr. and Mrs. Milton highway. Anderson attended a wedding and reception in honor of Golden Tinge Masic and the former Miss Grated cheese Is a delightful additDoris Carter Saturday at the ion to plain biscuits and gives them home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Lauran Interesting appear ence Carter of Tremonton. ance. - twin-engine- d Sim-mon- tt d (. Increased Sugar Use Per capita consumption of sugar in the United States has increased 900 per cent in less than four generations. In the 1820's it was about 10 pounds a year, in the 1920's it was about 100 pounds a year, and this high level has been maintained since that time except for temporary reductions by rationing. Estimates show an average per capita consumption of 96 pounds prior to the war. T'Vj PER MONTH I (CtVllUN lOUIVftlINT TO niVATII MT IN IIOUlAt AtMT) ARRANGE TODAY QUALIFICATION U. S. ARMY ' and AIR FORCE Brigham City, Utah tRVIN ic tea comb FOR YOUR INTERVIEW RECRUITING STATION Eddy Bldg. ne 1 f emm 1 l( 5 n MEMBER FEDERAL WAREHOUSE SYSTEM PAYS HIGHEST PR ICES FOR GRAIN WE DO CUSTOM Man Brit; thxa, CLEANING rn gold-flecke- TO START Ai j MO. SPRINGFIELD, Lyhue Samuel Hancock, Nashville, Tenn., truck driver, who was discharged here on a writ of habeas corpus, has decided he will return to Tennessee "of my own free will" to begin a prison term. Hancock was released from the U. S. medical center here July 20, after serving Ave and a half years of an eight-yea- r term, for a Dyer act violation. In February, 1942, he entered a guilty plea in federal court In Tennessee, then was taken to a state court where he pleaded guilty to arson charges, then was turned back to federal officers. La-Ve- 2113 WASHINGTON Canada, 20-ye- ar iT0Ni V-- l :. Thatcher by all. Mrs. William Burton and Mrs.' Alben Borgstrom visited Mrs. Leslie Hawkes in Brigham Tues- 121-- J are and Argentina. Total world The 305th Quorum of Seventy held their final meeting in Thatcher Sunday and will not meet again until next summer. Following the meeting the group were invited to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Zollinger. Delicious refreshments were served by Mrs. Zollinger to the seventy-fiv- e representatives from seven stakes who attended. The Thatcher Pinochle Club met at the home of Mrs. Golden Burton Wednesday evening. Mrs. Floyd Adams won the traveler's prize, and high score prize. The consolation prize was won by Mrs. O. B. Jensen. Refreshments were served to eight members. An enjoyable evening was spent for ESTIMATES or INFORMATION L Thursday night. The Primary officers and teachers held their monthly teachers' training meeting at the home of Mrs. Flo Cutler, president. Mrs. Norman Talbot gave an interesting lesson, and refreshments were served. Mr. Jay Larsen returned Saturday from Montana where he has been employed. He and Mrs. Larsen spent Saturday in Ogden visiting with Mrs. Martha Peterson and Mr. aud Mrs. F. G. West. Miss Mary Kay Nelson entertained a few of her young friends at a birthday party Monday afternoon. She received a number o gifts, and games and refreshments were enjoyed. The Birthday Club honored Mrs. Doyle Cutler Wednesday evening at her home. She was presented with thirty beautifully embroidered and hand painted friendship quilt blocks. A delicious lunch was served by the hostesses, Mrs. Carl Cobia and Mrs. Reed Larkin. Charles Cobia of Ogden, and Melba Hurd of Salt Lake visited at the Carl Cobia home, and at the Edmond Hurd home, Tues- pageant out-of-to- countries THURSDAY, OCTQr : Tremonton, Utah PHONE 41 CHOPPING A7 TREMONlfi.i |