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Show Page 4 Buildings At Ogden Ordnance 100 Depot Completed The first army's now !1, it ,! 11 100 of the buildings $6,000,000 shell loading plant at Ogden ordnance depot were officially completed last week, and contractors started work on 70 additional buildings which will increase greatly the capacity of the mammoth munitions plant, reported Captain R. C. Kyser, acting constructing quartermaster for Ogden and vicinity. The 100 completed buildings tract are dotted over an about seven miles south of Ogden, near a large bomb loading plant which has been operating more than a year. Some of the new structures are odd shaped, some are large, some are small, and each embodies the latest army developments in construction and ma t production of and antinew type tank ammunition. Every building where explosives are to be handled is absolutely fireproof, built of steel, concrete and tile, with roofs of corrugated cement as842-acr- anti-aircra- e ft bestos. Shell making machinery is now being installed in the completed units. When the big plant is placed full operation, scheduled for sometime this summer, it will become one of the army's largest sources of needed small calibre artillery ammunition. The plant is expected to employ from 3000 to 4000 persons, most of them women. in iii V Extension Director Pledges Support In Defense Move - "V,. Pledging his support to the campaign to collect aluminum during the week scrap beginning July 21, Director Wm. Peterson of the Utah State Agricultural college extension service, addressed a letter, to acting governor E. E. Monson, stating that the forces of the extension service will cooperate with the governor's office in selecting committees and advising them of their duties in the recently inaugurated drive. As the plan now stands from the standpoint of the extension service, activities through the entire week will consist of soliciting contributions of secondary aluminum and scrap aluminum, from rural families in the state. Metal obtained this way will be sold to smelters at a uniform price set by the government and the proceeds will be given to the Office of Civilian Defense. The aluminum will be used for construction of fighter planes. Through a priorities order effective June 10. no aluminum so collected may be used for purposes. Mayor LaGuardia of New York director of Civilian Defense, pointed out in a letter to Director Peterson, that in this camextension paign "the federal-stat- e service, with its county agents' system and thousands of rural clubs is youth organized in particularly adapted for organizing rural areas." County agents and home demonstration agents will be the official representative of the extension service to cooperate with committees named by the governor to take charge of the collection of the aluminum. Details of the campaign will be announced shortly from the state extension office. Director Peterson announced. ai r OLD CRO " 100 iNali.in.il OUtilliT Pi. libit dorm 9iet Voik. N. V. r t J r roof t 4-- Local health officers from all sections of the state reported a total of 247 cases of communicable diseases to the Division of Epidemiology, State Department of Health, for the week ending July 11. This is 73 cases more than were reported for the and 12 cases fewer than were reported one year ago for th corresponding week. Whooping cough led the list with a total of 79 cases; chicken-po- x is second with 68 cases, and gonorrhea, third with 19 cases. Three causes of Rocky Mountain spotted fever were reported from the following counties: Cache 1, Iron and Uintah 1. So far this year, a total of 10 cases lias been reported from various sections of the state. A total of 18 cases of tuberculosis was reported nine of those being reported from Salt Luke City. Other communicable diseases arc as follows: measles, 8: German measles, 17; mumps, 16; pneumonia, 3: scarlet fever, 4; septic sore throat, 1; syphilis, 9, and other tuberculosis, 2. No report of communicable disease was received from Logan nor Cedar City. The following counties reported no diseases: Daggett, Emery, Grand. Iron, Kane. San Juan, Sevier, Tootle, Washington, and Wayne. pre-we- fothing Is too Difficult for Cleaning & Dyeing Co. to CLEAN! 3 ne 11 IlkVv t XT -J M Your fracile forma U. fine are all safe in our hands. silk. oft swratcn Kadi narmrnt re-rri- rarrful. individual rare, according to f.iril. rrouirrmrnK Try u next time. The results Mill please you! it CLEANING & DYEING COMPANY A-O- 4311 SOI NE Til STATE (Bell Syndicate WNU Service. " I rilOXE .Mt'RRAY ck State-Wid- Remember he used to cull you "my li tile Duchess" and moon around places uhere you wrre dining with Bill? By KATHLEEN NORMS MARRIED men with if unexciting, wives, could get it through their heads that the fascinating sweethearts they want so much to marry, after a divorce, are just the same as other women, and will make wives no better and no worse, how simplified and stabilized marriage would be! And if attractive young women, mildly bored with seven or eight years of wifehood, could possibly foresee the complications into which tempting illicit affairs on the side would draw them, one of America's most serious social problems would be lessened. IFgood But a husband will continue to that the lovely, eager, sympathetic girl in the office has no faults. And his wife will go on dreaming of the perfect lover like that man she met at Jane's so polite so handsome so attentive. And so the mischief goes on, breeding incalculable difficulties, heartbreaks, disillusionmcnts for all concerned. Same Situation Over Again. When Mildred divorces Bill and marries George, things usually go wonderfully for a few years perhaps three. But then, if any woman friend is mean enough to remind her of some cf her sentiments at the time of the divorce she meets a cold stare from Mildred's eyes. Mildred d.esn't remember things exactly that way. "I ll never forget how you and George adored each other!" babbles the friend. "Do you remember you two used to meet at "Chez Louis' and simply stare at each other for hours? Remember he used to c.ill you 'my little Duchess' and moon around places where you were dining with Bill?" No, Mildred doesn't remembrr that. She admits that Bill was such a brute she had to divorce him or go mad and that George had been crazy about her f ir years, and so she married him. Further than this she doesn't go; the subject seems to hold no interest for her. Sensible Viewpoint. No marriage retains, after the first few months or year, the trembling glamour of the honeymoon; sensible women know It, and resist the illusions of the new affair. And sensible men remind themselves that the girl friend, all sympathy, youth, fragrance, lure Way, will turn, after a few years of marriage, Into Just another faulty, unreasonable, selfish and extravagant companion as was the discarded wife. Which bring us to "Bobby's" letter, which came to me a few weeks M. This is part of it. "After a few years of marriage, when our two girls were seven and five," writes Bobby, "My wife and I drifted apart, Wc seemed to have no Intercut in common and life became a dull and dragging affair f r us both. I was Uien traveling for my firm, and met a woman 1 will call Hazel. Site was a most sympathetic and understand. ng friend, and e became lovers. Hazel giving up her job and maintaining a little establishment In a town some W miles from my home. Bobby' Complicated Problem. ' When my wife discovered tins she left me, but did not Immediately apply for a divorce. A year pascd and I was promoted, moved to ntt. other city, and had an opportunity to meet some unusually Interesting people. One of these, a young radio 1 la ever actress, everything dreamed of finding in a woman, of fine family, beautifully educated, think lovely In In love; 31 volume of traffic over Utahs main highways continues to increase according to the ree Highway port of the of department Survey, Planning the State Road Commission. The greatest increase for the first six months of the year has been on U.S. Highway 91. The automatic recording device at the Draper Cross Roads shows a daily average for the year to July 1 of 4410, an increase of 13.93 the first six months over cent per of 1940. The average daily number of vehicles using Highway 91 at the Draper Cross Roads during June was 5002, which is 10.54 per cent higher than for June, 1940. While tourist travel accounts for a part of the increase, the survey shows that local traffic has also increased in greater proportion than has tourist travel. In Parley's canyon the 1941 traffic is 8.92 per cent greater man for 1940 while the increase in Daniel's canyon on U.S. 40 is 4.99 per cent. A number of sections of Highway 91 are being widened and straightened at the present time. At the Point of the Mountain approximately four miles of the highway has been widened and straightened and the surfacing of the four lane section is about lf half completed. One and miles of highways at the north entrance to Provo is being realigned, widened and surfaced. The stretch of highway will also be four lanes wide with a four foot neutral zone in between opposite lines of traffic. Highway 91 seems to present a major traffic problem and it is likely that the entire highway south may receive special attention. Traffic on U.S. 91 south has increased 42.66 per cent this year over 1937. If the Fame percentage of increase prevails during the next five years, congestion is bound to interfere greatly with the regular flow of traffic. A four lane highway from Salt Lake to Payson seems to be the answer with the balance of Highway 91 to the Nevada line being widened to a minimum of 24 feet. The National Defense Highway program may bring this about sooner than is expected at the present. The non-defen- A-O- V Married Love Affairs Come High nati- on-wide 1 5ft 04 itt (fie A now. Utah Highway Traffic Increases Kathleen Norrisjays: Board Of Health Issues Weekly Report Matfeivffe ' Thursday, July THE MURRAY EAGLE every way. Margaret We are deeply (Uie radio for the first lima. 17. j94 Reported Recuperating S. F. Burningham, been very ill, fa now uho be recovering in a local wg PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES (Consult the clerk of the ., or the respective sT ers Jor further information.) tnct court NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of INA EUGEXl ptvp ROSE, sometimes also known 35 Ina T. Ringrose, Deceased Creditors will present claim with vouchers to the underlie, j at office of W. Douglas ajk. City Hall, Murray Citv, Utah or before the 20th duv of tcmber, A.D. 1941. I " WILLIAM R. ringrose Administrator for the wre ot Eu es- ia Ringrose, sometimes imuwii as ina T. -' . also W W. DOULAS ALLEN, Attorney for Admini iraior. First publication, July n, Last publication, Aug. 941 fy Get the EXim CRISPER MEAT CHEST BIN VEGETABLE POLAR UCHT MAGIC SHELF. st'i 1 a i1 one-ha- CHARM FAILS "The third time is the charm," runs an old saying, but it failed to work in the cuse of this husband and father, who seemed unable to make up his mind regarding a suitable mate. Read the observations of Mis Morris, as obtained from his first letter, pleading for a solution, then an urgent telegram. He had solved his own problem. "My problem is Kuzel, who insists upon my marrying her as soon as my divorce is granted, which will be late in June. She has changed completely, so that my original feeling for her is wholly destroyed. She is critical, bitter, threatens a lawsuit; indeed, her lawyer has been in touch with me. Naturally, in my notes to her in the beginning of our affair I mention marriage, and she proposes to take advantage of them. She can hurt me very much with my firm and of course with Margaret, should she pursue this course. Please advise me as to any obligation I may have In the matter, and as to the best way of handling it." My advice to Bobby might have been that Tie did have an obligation to Hazel In the matter, or I might have suggested that he marry no one for awhile, having complicated the lives of three women so thor- BsTZK?JSr3U Dttntrra in I 6 rout kiUbnirts Vr I'nttiltr, fUt iun ana jr Lotal t jxa txin. (stiff GRANITE FURNITURE CO. South State Street Phone Murray i 4810 nRnnnnnnrinnnsirin n n n n n n n ttli oughly. Answers Own Question. But before I had time to answer this letter it was answered by a telegram from Bobby which arrived this morning. The telegram reads: "Please disHazel regard and destroy letter. and I married last night Bobby." So this now loveless and stale relationship has ended with a wedding after all. But weddings begin some thing as well as end something, and it is a grim sort of contract into which Hazel and Bobby have entered. He is paying his first wife alimony and he will soon be paying a doubled alimony to his second wife,' a seriously crippling situation financially. If Margaret decides to join this fascinating gentleman as his third wife she will have to retain lur well-paiposition and contribute substantially to the family budget. Not Real Marriage. Not real marriage, this sort cf thing. And women in their hearts want real marriage. They want the richness of that tried and UsUd relationship that shares ups and downs, good times and bad; that weathers the long years, builds up a thousand memories of breakfast table talks, nursery cares, kitchen crises, acarci and relief from scares, emergencies, changes, and long serene periods of happiness and companionship. It Is a foolish man or woman who Jeopardizes all this for a fleeting pas. sion a deceptive time of flattery and delusion Uiat all experience, bII history, all good common Sense pronounces to be Just one more will, Over and over again the victim of the married love affair emerges a sadder and w iser man or The homo woman. that once seemed so dull appears to the divorced wife a very haven of safety and content Her heart achei for her children, whether she has them with her In the chaos of wrerkngp, or whether they are staying "for awhile with Jim's mother." The discovery that her new mate has faults, abruptness and selfishness and lack cf understanding, is a bitter blow. She has caused all this trouble on the ground that darling Leonard was the perfect man; it Is rather flat to begin to say of Leonard the same bored, critical things she said so recently of Jim. Take a look at the couples who threw discretion to the winds and startled their respective circles with the revelation of a "grand passion," a few years ago, before you take the leap. 2 3 J js d n 2 2 2 1 3 3 3 3 3 3i USF.n PAR D 3 3 AINS ARG nnnn 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 '39 Studebaker DeLuxe Sedan Driven only 19,000 miles; overdrive, rlim.i'i tically a new car at a used car price. SKK IT: '38 Ford r DeLuxe Sedan V-- 8 Radio, heater. Exceptional buy! 37 Studebaker 6 Sedan Overdrive. l'r-l- f Heater. New paint. A ne--v- . nr. :i i; 36 Studebaker President Sedan Overdrive, heater, radio, new blue priced car comfort ot low ct. Overdrive, radio, heater. New mint. Eni.v ern features and comfort at 'i of uriginal I 111! 'I '. ,M'K j'33 t ur. Kin.r.T OACH n.VMOt'TH SEDAN' 35 ri.YMorni sedan Heater si mi -i okd 3.1 !OKI MMMU; , i , C '3 3 nioM S25.00 to $ro.oo TI DOK SI DAN, Radio, heater. .V. - CHEVROLET COACH New rviint 32 CHEVROLET . OKI) MMHIK 23 OKD TI DOK ESSEX t m i i 30 STl DEHAKI K 2! 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