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Show ( 'IT'S A FACT Back In Circulation ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP) The genuine rubber band, first a war casuaMy and later a vlctom of the program, is once again fighting for top position in the department in competition with string, pins and tape. The B. F. Goodrich Co. said that following the governments recent lifting of the . ban. on bands, it has returned to the manufacture of (the 4,000,000 binder. Some pounds of natural rubber will be needed to satisfy this years demand. A of band is a tern perature-resdstan- t number for use in deep freezes which retains elasticity at 30 degrees below AKRON, O. (UP) AMMN6 h Cftififft AMP A HALF Me foph ftA-ton- mmioH ofemlanp e fW2 PROM Trie CONTINENT NMMIUS 6EhttP To - new-typ- NEISETb SUPPLY pADPlENrtBElS MoM fbWEI? , f y 1 hand-proces- . a i I - v,V ?:; v ms )L ,i one-hal- e e one-hal- zero. get overloaded," Husband On Rampage Sets Fire To Jail OIL CITY, Pa. (UP) Despite Mrs. Mason's charge that her husband was on the rampage, police believed the husband, James would be quiet, so they left. About an hour later Mrs. Mason appeared at the station house with a warrant for her husbands arrest. He couldnt be found until a local club reported someone Was creating a disturbance. Police deposited Mason In the city jail and resumed their routine duties, believing once again all would be quiet. Next they discovered the jail was on fire. IMason had stuffed paper and his shirt into a trash can and ignited it. I'm going to vote for trx fSv ZZZ-r-- T Coyote Gone To His Reward Snake-Eatin- SUGAR BEETS IN '53! IDAHO FALLS, Ida. (UP) Slick, the coyote that made black friends with a (four-foo- t snake and then ate it, has gone to the happy hunting grounds. His bereaved master Is an' Ida ho Falls taxidermist, Frank Kee fer, who pulled the coyote from a den beneath a big boulder, some 19 years ago. Slick was brought up on an eyedropper and 'later advanced to raw meat He learned to herd cows and also acquired the habit of leaping playfully on Keefers back. (He tackSlick never over-ate- . led the Iblacksnake tout one of the. staples of .fils diet was ground squirrels. When more squirrels were given him than he cared for, he would bury them carefully, leaving the tails protruding from their graves. When the coyotes appetite called, he would sniff the wind, select a tail, dig out the squirrel and eat Sugar beets have a substantial platform that every irrigation farmer should be interested in: 1. Sugar beats ora dependable. Over the long pull, sugar beets have been a good source of cash to the farmer to help pay mortgages and other debts. , an Improvement in price while crops are off a little from a year ago. 2. Sugar beets offer - most feed ' Sugar beets are important in an over-a-ll farming program. They are excellent for growing in rotation with other crops such as grains, legumes, and row crops. Sugar beets are often charged for the fertilizer that other crops use. Thats because sugar beets require a high level of toil fertility, but leave a reserve that is never fully used in one season. This unused fertilizer is carried over to other crops grown in rotation with sugar beets. You can always depend on sugar beets . . . so, of how you vote politically, be sure you "vote" for spgar beets on your farm for 1953. 3. i 13 ' g , A (UP) Lincoln youth couldnt hang on to his hat and it cost him $5 and costs. His hat was blown off while he was driving his car and in trying to retrieve it, he rammed into a parked ,s! VOTE AS YOU PHASE BUT VOTE QD We recommend that consideration be given to the candidacy of STATE He is He is Creek, a daughter of iMr. and Mrs. Jesse Tracy on August 22, 1926. She tells that the beautiful canyon holds many happy childhood memories for her. Some of my favorite teachers hailed from Brigham City, she relates. Mrs. Barnes was married June 17, 1948 to Richard Barnes and they have two lovely daughters, f Dixie Lee, two and and Paulette Camille, seven months. Besides writing, Mrs. Barnes hobbies includes collecting worth-whilbits of wisdom for her scrapbook and taking still and moving pictures. Her husband is ward clerk at the L.DS. church there and second counselor in the Yost ward bishopric. Mrs. Barnes, too, is Two. active In church activities and She was born in a canyon enjoys her roll as Relief Society home near beautiful Johnson teacher. one-hal- e . M WITH UTAH VETERANS NINE YEARS A A FORMER BISHOP - THSEE YEARS MISSIONARY MEMBER OF U.S.A.C i Friend of farmer, teacher, laborer and buslneBnaik ; Granger combats Communism by exposing Isolationism. & VOTE.ttAHGEG U. S. SEHAT0B VOTE STRAIGHT DEMOCRATIC (Paid Political Advertisement by Leo Rotvot, Pleasant Grove) aro 3,150 n n r7TTTCPHnTrTTnr"rTTT n n h !f te rwi-wss- .., H m " ' " j62f! It took the work of 1,500 employees to provide telephone subscribers. Since then the number has more than doubled. These telephone men and women take pride in doing a job for you. They are good citizens of your community, off the job as well as on. They work with and for you io church, school and community groups. Many of them are stockholders in the Bell System devoting their savings as well service independent to our Utah as their growing state. efforts to the task of providing ever better telephone service for this 11500 PIOPLK IN Elect HENRIOD Justice Term, Utah Supreme Court, on the Ballot! . NON-PARTISA- 4-y- ear N ... The Legal Profession FAVORS Him, 5 fo 1 Justice HENRI HENRIOD is NOTED for his FAIR, FORTHRIGHT decisions, without regard to RACE, COLOR or RELIGION . . . Your VOTE it tho IMPORTANT onel VOTE it for HENRIOD November 4th! I. , lok - WAITER P. WHITEHEAD, Provo W. I. EEATHERSTONE, Sal loko ALBERT t. BOWEN, Salt lake ' v (Potd Politico! Advortiiement by 3. Uoiiard lovf 1735 Yolecrtit Avt., S l.C.) UTAH TELEPHONE FAMILIES One person out of every 60 you meet is member of a telephone family. The money earned by telephone men and women is spent largely in the communities in which these families live. Its important to you that telephone men and women be paid wages that compare fa' vorably with those paid in other businesses for only then can we find and keep the capable employees we need to serve you well. Wage costs, which account for over half of our total expenses, have risen rapidly in the past few years. We must receive enough for our service to pay these expenses, with enough left over for a fair return to the investors who have made the expansion of the service possible. d "SET Ci TT BOARD OF TRUSTEES Not Long Ago T-p A Overseas service with the Marine Corps in World War I . , , Charter member of the American Legion . . . Member of Veterans of Foralgn Wars. - t FARMINGTON, Mich. (UP) rr-T- , ... There were only 1,500 telephone men and women In Utah SS . BUDGE, logon WESLEY HORSLEY, logon H. KEDDINOTON, Salt mt - Representatives. Elvert Balloo, a deputy county dog warden, makes sure that ail his neighbors keep their dogs tied up. The neighbors, as a result are angry at Balloo. When they saw Balloos dog tied up during a hot day, al legedly without a shelter, they called Albett Sumlell, a humane officer for the county animal welfare society. Sundell swore out a cruelty to animals complaint against the dog warden. TCf! (Paid political advertisment by H. L. Pearse, Wm. E. Davis) The uninterrupted and unprecedented growth of the savings and loan business represents a unique chapter In postwar American finance, Hazen said. ' SENATE few The increase In 1951 representfor a single year. ed a new record Three timet Mayor of Cedar City . Three terms In tho Utah House of Representatives . . . Six terms representing Utah in Washington In tho House of Anyway You Look At It, It's A Dog's Life progressive. He is under no obligation to any person or section He has been a true representative of all the county Oi 1951. world. Most Distant Writer BECAUSE - g WITH UTAH VOTERS . af ii. UTAH record-breakin- non-partis- 1 of Bear River City .TO THE States Savings League reports that savings and loan associations increased their assets during 1951 by $2,288, 000,-00- 0 w(B). Ben H. Hazen, president, said the rate of increase was continuing in 1952. By May l, he said, assets had passed the $20,000,000,000 (IB) mark, Compared With a total of $19,173,000,000 (B) at the end of of personal Integrity, loyalty, honesty and reliability AND Republicans placed him among tho top three In tho same poll , , Honored by election to the key House Ways and Means Committee . , . Speaker of the Utah House of Representatives. Today thero FOR . United Democratic Congressmen voted him No. 1 among 43S members of tho House of Representatives on tho basis g practices as well as preaches the rule of helping others. After publication ol his book A Return to Morality," which explains the senators iphlloso phy, the New Hampshire Repub licans office was flooded with mail. Many wanted to know more about the Senate crime invest! gating committee. Some did not mention organized corruption Among the letters was one from a man whose wife had left him. It read: My friends in your district tell me that you can do any-thing. So 1 wish youd see if you can get my wife to come back to me. She has left me. But I love her very much, and 1 want her back. Tibey wrote back: 'll will do my best. Sent me your wifes address. Shortly thereafter the woman received a letter from the senator. It said: marriage is a holy bond and your husband loves Mrs. R. G. Barnes, N & J Correspondent you very much. He didnt get an answer from She was born . . . is a native of the borderline country. her. One of Creek. Johnson home in a canyorf near beautiful Some time later, however, the her favorite hobbies is writing news from the Yost-Nsenator received a message from area. her husband. You are wonderful! he wrote. BORN IN CANYON HOME "My wife is back with me again. I am the happiest man in the My lifes history is not particularly colorful, but a very ha'ppy one, comments the News and Journals most distant community correspondent, Mrs. R. G. Barnes of Naf, Idaho. 'Mrs. Barnes rates writing as one of her favorite hobbies and tells she enjoys contributing news items to the Box Eider News and Journal . They are well read by a long list of borderline subscribers that includes Idaho people as well as Utah. Mrs. Barnes, herself, lives at Standrod, Idaho, and has a 50 yard seat to observe community life in the widely-spreaand very busy community. Mrs. Barnes also reported news in 1942 during World War The and Loan (UP) WITH HIS COUBACUCS . . . Bible-quotin- Is Active LDS; Writing Is Hobby LINCOLN, Neb. t Marital Tangle It, Undone By Wind said. CHICAGO Always RANKS FIRST . WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Charles W. Tobey ls Geiger Savings And Loan Assets In Record Ritt Sen. Tobey Adjusts Not Colorful, But Happy History 'Jews-Journa- f 31. 19S2 , WALT CHANGED Third Ward Junior Gleaner Girls left to right : Gladys Johnson, instructor ; Sharon, Janice and Diane Christensen, Evalou Mills, Gwen Chidester, LaVonne Hunsaker, Sheronne Steed, Lola White and Carmen Reeder. . . . Friday. October The police department, conscious of the citys (financial problems, has been producing police academy, turns out aibout s 1,000 bullets a day. This costs around $55 a day its own bullets for 17 years to use for pistol range practice. John F. Geiger, ,who works in a small second-floo- r shop at the and puts them Into casings with der and a new primer, f two and grains of pow "All it takes is a lot of care less than the factory-madam munition. He figures the per bullPt cost would run about six cents each for the manufactured ones and only cent a piece for his type. The bullet-make- r collects old lead from the pistol range, melts it and pours it Into molds. Then he trims the molded lead slubs Jc' holding-things-to-geth- SCHEME TtoJEtfED Police Save Money With 13 Box Elder JOURNAL Hand-Mad- e Brigham City. Utah , Bullets Honored Mothers fn Tuesday tdmradery Natural Rubber Bands tylERRY 'CAHILL |