OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1942 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Catered at HUG U3SVIEB3 the Postoffice at Tremonton, Utah, as Second Class Matter KRKDVJLE Published at Tremonton, Utah, on Thursday f Each Week fir Phone West Strtet 13-- jkjk TpPPS J JAMES WALTON, Publisher UflT L p. WALTON, Editor and Bustceas Manager THE GIRL IN THE GREEN DRESS SUBSCRIPTION BATES $2.90 NK YEAR (In Advance) EES MONTHS' tfn Advance) !TERE3'M0r!TH3 BOtf (la Advanoe) 0k Line eoofi-coorm- "HO y HA HAD MltfS 300,000 wear fbcm a err or W TlRfi THAT HAVE nit utrcacep " Your Town Tp as Free to FjibK'c intereuied. m; acm will beprompfaj ff well as to your Country U U fc't"M B ..m orpr.n.y Hp of aot 4 be obU.tire r prodo fatf rml ,Lfcriry. w Amirmaiv, the Obhtto Wrife foreutineMfAafmwiot Mirttor f CRAVES. fScL CWF OUT IT or eveey 000 PATENTS ssotrpey JfpVX i li Vl rrltl tV' I ,K KSW WlODUCTlOM RECORD "Behind the Scenes in American Busine NEW YORK, July 6 TOO GOOD TO KEEP The hats that were off to the flag, on the Fourth, figuratto ively may well have beenfordoffed asits American industry, too, tounding achievements in the campaign of the last six at the same time wraps For months. off some come to began news that heretofore had been cloaked, for tractical reasons. Of course, information that would be of real aid to the enemy is as tightly inguarded as ever, but some of the hibitions against talking about the production - for - war program have been relayed. The record being made is just too good to Keep entirely secret. war-producti- on war-producti- FOR INSTANCE The arms shipments of 157 companies in the automotive industry about of it amounted to $349,000,000 worth in April. It may give that figure some significance to mention that it is 46 per cent greater than (almost half again as much as the February total. . . And the nation's shipyards in June set a new world record for completion of steel cargo ships, putting 66 freighters and tankers into service. Vice chairman Vickery of the Maritime Commission said the U. S. merchant marine is now larger than before Pearl Harbor. three-quarte- rs -- IN THERE PITCHIN' By one means or another, the nation's auto dealers are staying in business, tho far from "as usual." The trade paper "Automotive & Aviation Industries" reports that mortality during the first five months of auto and truck rationing was only 7.2 per cent, surprisingly low. At the same time came a report from almost the heart of Broadway, in New York City, of a dealer whose business has run so coun ter to general trend that he's had to enlarge his salesrooms. It turns out that he sells Willys Americas used ones only, of course, nowadays and a large proportion of his reco ent clientele consists of suburbanites from Long Island and Connecticut who store their huge limousines in favor of "a car that'll take me to the station or shopping on the least amount of fuel." Maybe well-to-d- fa 91 .... JJ the kinship of the car (same basic power plant) to the Army "Jeep" mixes a little glamor with the economy. fame-winni- ng BITS O' BUSINESS War work in the New York metropolitan area has suffered markedly from tardiness and absence of workers due to their difficulties in getting gasoline. Thus foremen and executives get a fore taste of what will be a more geneial more serious condition as tires wear n to the stage. . , United Air Linus in May did more than double the air freight business of May, 1941, and upped its revenue passenger miles, too. . . Output of cotton fabrics this vear will hit an peak of 12 billion yards, with more than half of it going to the armed forces . . . Cocoa and chocolate are bound to get scarce. The WPB currently is limiting processors to 60 per cent of the cocoa beans used in 1941. . . . Packard definitely plans to be in the airplane engine field after the war, motor, not the witn a cargo-plan- e e it's building for the war. I mm J V I M Jim. A SWGLE CREW OF WOk:eR5 in ONE WAR PLANT PRODUCED 2,277 ARTlLLERy SMELL FORSN5 IN A IN6LE SHIFT DEVVEYVILLE By Mrs. Tboma Auit Ruth Snow and Veda Gardner re turned home on Saturday from Cali fornia. They will spend two weeks visiting friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Peterson and children spent Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Perry. ' Mrs. O. J. Barrett and daughters, Irene and Geneve, Mrs. Owen Soren-so- n and Isabell Stumps, of Mendon, and Veda Barrett of Ogden were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Barnard last Wednesday. Mrs. J. A. Fryer and Cady attended the Cherry Day celebration at North Ogden. They were guests of Mrs. Lucinda Hall, Satur day and Sunday. Mr. 8nd Mrs. Andrew Nielsen of BETTER SHARE Fruit and vege- this place, and Mr. and Mrs. S. A. table growers were cheered by the Marble returned from a fishing trip report of John A. Hartford, president Wednesday. of the A. & P. showing that in 1941 the company returned to its farm passed in October, 1940, called the suppliers 7,8 cents more of each con- Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act, sumer dollar than it did in 1937, and amendments to which are now being 1.1 cents more than in 1940. Thej fig- considered in Washington. ures show that growers and shippers THINGS TO WATCH FOR New doing business with the chain last year received an average of 54.6 black curtains of celanese for cents of each consumer dollar about especially for absorbing "spill eight cents above the national aver- ed" light from stores, restaurants, which are, you age. A number of factors have enter- etc. . . . ed into the increased profits for the guessed it, one form of cosmetic sub reduction in the com- stitute for stockings. . . phospores-cen- t farmers pany's buying and retailing expenses, dyes for fabrics, so that suits decline in warehouse and cartage or uniforms made of them would glow costs, reduction of losses from dam- plainly in blackouts but be invisible age and spoilage, uniform grading from planes no higher than 2,000 and packing methods and a continued feet. . . simpler shirts for men, with effort to shorten the route between out pockets, with shorter tails, shortthe grower's garden and the consum- er points on collars, no French cuffs er's table. . . . branded auto tires, a portable brander having been introduced by GOING? Draftees and volunteers Master Manufacturing company for are entitled to some protection garages and truck fleet operators. against mortgages, leases, taxes, insurance lapses and installment collectors. It's taken care of in an act too-thi- all-tu- 1 IM.IKE MOST FRUITS. WLL NOT RIPEN ATt Btt3 PiCKEP PATRONIZE YOUR MERCHANTS LOCAL i forwided. - - ne Rolls-Royc- "dim-outs- ," "leg-stick- s" CANPV FROM i MCN swFtr POTATOES (With violates). I'CtJ.lNtoS AND all INaeTUB PROCESS Maude Burbank, of Mapleton, Idaho was the guest last week of Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Burbank, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wheatley received many beautiful and useful gifts at their dance and shower held at the Crystal Springs last Wednesday night. John Fryer visited his daughters, Dariene and Mrs. Gene Schieb, of Salt Lake City Wednesday. Dariene Fryer, of Salt Lake City, visited her parents, Thursday and Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Norr and son, Reed, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sudbury and daughter, Dorothy, left on Friday for a fishing trip. Friday afternoon Mrs. A. R. Burbank gave a shower for her daughter-in-law and son, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Burbank at the ward hall. They received many useful and beautiful gifts. A tray lunch was served to sixty friends and relatives of the newly weds. Mrs. M. Burhank, Mrs. George Burbank and other relatives from Maple-toIdaho attended the shower of Mrs. Kenneth Burbank on Friday afternoon. Mr. Hall attended our Sunday School and gave a splendid talk. On Sunday evening at Sacrament meeting a special program was given by Providence Ward. Geneive and Standly Gardner and Mary Hess visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kermet Hansen in Salt Lake City on Monday, also visited Mr. Hansen who is in the hospital The Statute of Liberty has had a variety of visitors in the 60 years of her conspicuous life. People from aS parts of the world have climbed up those steep, narrow stairs to peer out of the little windows in her brow onto the busy harbor below. But never was a visitor more appropriate that the girl in the green dress who' toiled up those stairs ahead of me a few days ago and had her picture taken later with the famous statue in the background. She looked like a million other girls do this summer, with a green bow in her hair and pink enamel on her shape ly nails. But when I talked with her I knew that the role she is playing in America's war effort makes her more significant than her gay would indicate. For she is an inspector of parts in a machine gun factory in Detroit In New York for a week's vacation. "To get away from the strain and the noise," she told me. "You've got to be on your toes all the time or you'll let something pass that isn't perfect. That means trouble after the gun is completer and costs a lot more time and money than it does when you find it before the job is done." Then she talked about the plant where she works in the simple everyday language one woman uses to another; about the foreman who "had it in" for her and the manager who liked her; about the girls she worked with, about the cafeteria they didn't like and so the management closed it; about the clothes the girls wore and how much they cost; about weddings and romances and her hope of taking an ocean trip some day. In fact, she was saving money for it now. "You like your work then?" I asked her. "Love it," she said, her dark eyes shining. "It's interesting. It pays good money. Besides it makes me feel I'm a part of things today. I've got a brother in the Army and so the more good guns I help build the better I like it." SPES n, Then she turned philosophical that frivolous looking litle girl with the serious job. "I've always wanted to visit the Statue of Liberty," said. "Now that I've done it, she seems more important to me than even. They'd take her down, I sup. pose," she said bitterly. There was a firm set to her jaw as she concluded, "but I don't think they'd have a chance." It's workers like this that management finds invaluable in the war of production which American indu. try is winning so magnificantly! Social Notices The East Tremonton Ladies Farm Bureau will hold their summer picnic on the lawn of Mrs. O. L Brough Wednesday, July 22. All members are invited to attend. A few weeks ago the Department of Agriculture called on fanners for greatter hog production during 1942. Now the Department is saking farmers to get their hogs ready for markets early to alleviate the strain on the packing' facilities of the nation if the record number of hogs are marketed about the same time. The Department isn't asking farmers to market hogs light but rather to watch their feedings with an eye toward early finishing at good weights. Hog feeding specialists say that the average along with hog grower should feed more protein to make the fattening feeds more effective. With most of the milk and milk products needed for other things they suggested feeding tankage in combination with other plant proteins These are the averages computed by the Utah Extension Service average that show Sevier county at the toD of wheat yield per acre: Davis for pota-- j toes; and Morgan for sugar beets. full-feedin- g, MIL Mft tobring"!.P GLORY" , fo Every Reader of . THE LEADER very ill. Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Duett Love-lan- d received a letter from their son, Darrell, who is with the U. Su M. C. This is the first letter in nearly three months. Darrell is recovering from an appendicitis operation in some hos pital. All are hoping for his speedy recovery and to hear from him soon. 1 1 Vould You Like This If x5 As a reader of this paper, we are offering you an amazing opportunity to own a glorious, large "Stars and Stripes". Made of fine, durable cotton bunting,' .with individually sewed stripes. Stars stamped in fast colors on a rich, blue background. This beautiful flag, when opened to its full majestic spread,' measures FIVE feet long byTHREE fee wide. STRING BEAN SALAD Has become one of your problems heen to find new ways of serving string beans? They are a porblem food and for that reason are often served "as is." For variety you might try them in a salad. Mix the following ingredient with a payoniuuze, French, or sour cream dressing: jt ... OUR SPECIAL OFFER TO YOU Show your neighbors that you're true blue "and proud of it"-- by flying "Old Glory" on every American holiday. This great flag can be yours now as a reader of this at the very special price of only paper $1.19, mailed POSTPAID to your home. . INGREDIENTS One pint string beans (if they are home canned, heat to boiling d point ten minutes and cool). Four eggs, chopped; one small minced onion or three tablespoons chives; two tablespoons of pimento; pickle or relish. (The last two if desired.) FT. AMERICAN FLAG? hard-took-e- Tb scrvic your trucks jive you depend upon the service you five your truck. "Victory Maintenance" . . . CMC program to keep trucks pulling for Victory . . . ha already proved itself to hundreds of operator. If you are interested in prolonging the life of your truck and tire, preventing unneceary breakdown, restoring operating efficiency, or saving time and money on service . . . consult with a CMC "Victory Maintenance" expert at once. Specia' "Strmc taymtnt Plan" oroloble through our own VMAC WAYNE SAND ALL MOTOR CO. EAST MAIN ST. ft: TREMONTON, fHhYEYfr1 UTAH ifQy - I- r -- - .'.- READER'S COUPON CSS NAMI ; ACDRISS Tltae send me one of your $ ft. x 3 rt. American flags at your special Reader's offer price of $1.19 postpaid. 1 1 ' r ( 4 J t " Ot Arl Mm ADDRESS -.- 1 CITY r.i)j. ( STATE STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER Jj'; |