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Show V . S; bandhyhyr , , , VJJK) Y J J For Freedom's Salt BulldS i ; Published by C. N. Lund V" . Satma u Second Ciaas Matter lit the Port Ottice t Salt Like City. Utii, under the Act or March 3. 1875 5 ""Devoted to Brotherhood Through Spiritual Uplift, Cooperation And Municipal Ownership ot Basic Utilities " VVII. 26. 217 David Keith BIdg. ,Salt Lake City, Utah, Friday, July 23, 1943. Subscription $1.50 to $5.00 a Year i1 Women May Invade Mills and Smelters at ' 'u , v JhS ts. Plants survey jobs that can be filled by M- -n ik s, such a, one pictured above may be given more important work J The powder puff will soon replace 0 the plug of tobacco on some jobs I, in the mills and smelters of Utah if plans now under way are com- - pleted for the employment of wom-en to relieve the shortage of work-ers in this industry. The last session of the Utah - legislature revised laws to permit the employment of women in mills and smelters for the duration of the war. The mining Industry Is one of jj. the last to be invaded by the ' teminine sex, and they are anxious r1 to take a hand in this industry "5 which is so vital to the war effort. Ji: Surveys are now being under- - taken at some of the plants to sts determine the number of jobs that can be filled by women, and negotia- tions are now under way with the unions on the seniority status of men workers who will be shifted to other positions. Women will not be employed underground, but it is believed that there are many jobs that they can fill in the milling plants and in the smelters. The mining industry has been hard hit by enlistments and loss of workers to other war work. Recently the situation became so serious that 5000 men were from the army to return to the mines. This together with the return of some metal workers has relieved a critical situation some-what, but 1000 additional are still needed. PeronaL If life gives only one true friend, One who is faithful to the end, Then life is sweet, complete and fair With this one friend oar lot to share A very encouraging word comes from Neighbors Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Iverson of Mt. Trumbuul, Ariz. "We like your very fine paper. If we could step into your office e would give you a hearty hand clasp and pat you on the back for your defense of what, you believe to be truth and righteousness. Your senti-ments voice ours to I he T. We are proud that Mr. Iverson is a son of H. P. Iverson who bap tized your father. We are re-spectively 62 and 60 years of age and are enjoying life. '"Mrs. Iverson is one of nine children all living and all doing well born to Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Bundy, who are working in St. George Temple. Frieuds and Neighbors Mr, and Mrs. G. B. Wilson of Hur-ricane, Utah, have been on the list almost since time immem-orial. We know their hearts and something of their humble lives and can honestly and truthfully say that they are very good people, respected of men and loved of God. They say: "Here's an appreciation for your paper and its princip-les of Christianity, We wish you God speed. Youf poems and many editorials have' been a cheering message on life's journey, so we're wishing you longevity and continuous con-tact with the many friends you have made." Send in that subscription ev-en if yon have te send it on a wing and a prayer. Mrs. Bertha Jensen en a number of friends on Sunday evening showing mo. tion pictures and playing1 re-cords of family life made whilo the late Andrew Jenson was alive. Alvin and Eva Olsen are spending their vaction in California. Friend and Neighbor John V. Crone of 1244 Indiana Ave. is a good kindly fellow who haa remembered us generously. He came to Salt Lake in 1919. His good wife died a few years ago and he has been somewhat lone ly. His health is not the best at present. He is well educat-ed and followed the teaching profession for a number of years. Also insurance business. His sister from Montana has been visiting with him. She too has been a teaeher and lat-er a librarian. AnArborgraduate Mrs. Evan Olsen, (Julia) our first Jewel, is in Salt Lake for the present. Tuesday she un-derwent an operation for her hearing at the hands of a spec-lais- t. Quite serious but she came through pretty well. Alfred Sorenson, Jeweler, has a miniature U. S. O. in his store. Scores of serviee men come in daily and i'ney, get..a0a,.K.. good word about-.- ' Utah. One soldier wrote bacK---- - ; to Alabama and said: "Salt Lake has better water running down its gutters than yu uns have in your pipes. All of us just bloat on this water." Keep Vitamins ' In Home-Canne- d Tomatoes The tomato rates respect because it is chuckful of vitamins (A and C), those invisible spark plugs that keep one leehng fit. Because tomatoes are an impor- tant food, it is imperative that every one not needed for immediate use be saved by canning, but they must be canned right, else there will be 5 x k Mil S Photo Courtesy Ball Bros. Co. little or no vitamin C left in them. Undue exposure to air after the skins are removed and g in an uncovered container destroy vitamin C. This is one reason that tomatoes should be prepared and canned as quickly as possible. Usually whole tomatoes have more food value than tomato juice, partly because a con-siderable amount of vitamin A is lost in the pulp that fails to go through the strainer when the juice is made, but mainly because greater exposure to air destroys vitamin C. H you want first-clas- s canned to-matoes, use freshly gathered, flrm-rip- e, sound fruit one small bad spot can ruin a whole batch. Wash the tomatoes before scalding; scald a few at a time. Remove all core, slip off the skins, and cut away green spots. Pack the tomatoes tight into clean hot jars this is best done by pressing each tomato down with a wooden spoon. Add salt to season to suit your taste the usual amount is one teaspoon to the quart. Seal jars according to manufacturer's in-structions and process 35 minutes in hot water bath. If tomatoes are not fresh from the garden, process 45 minutes. No juice can be better than the fruit from which it is made,--so be sure to use strictly fresh, firm-rip-red tomatoes, which are free from all decay. Wash well and cut away any green spots or weather cracks. Weather cracks are those splits that "form around the stem ends when hot sunshine follows a haTd rain. Such tomatoes are unfit for canning or juice unless used immediately after picking. Leave the tomatoes whole and steam or bake them until they are soft; then press through a fine sieve, preferably a d one; reheat the juice to simmering; pour into sterilized jars and process 30 minutes at simmering. The pulp will separate from the juice unless a very fine sieve is used or if too much heat is applied at any time. Oh, so you boil the juice in an open kettle until it is thick? Well, that's a fine way to get rid of most of those precious vitamins. The best tasting juice is that made by pressing whole home canned to-matoes through a sieve just before serving. Any seasonings liked may be added before canning but the juice will be better if seasonings, except salt, are added when the juice is opened for serving, and even the salt may be left out. ( Read it all and profit. Its worth far more than the little you pay for it. ) Inspirations An American Heartthrob Here is a Covered Wagon Day Pioneer Story that should be written in letters of gold and counted as one of the great hearthrobs of American history. Orson Spencer, a stately, educated, cultured young man of the East, allied himself with a most unpopular church. In a New York home of wealth and refinement he had met and courted a queenly girl who consented to marry him. This was against the wishes of her parents and when she took the step they closed forever to her the doors of their palatial home. The couple went Westward to the head-quarters of the church where they shared the persecutions and mobbing and privations heaped upon a despised people who finally were cast out from home and native land. ' As they began the famous exodus that' bridged the continent she was taken ill and grew weaker from day to day. Word of her condition was sent to her parents with the request that she be permitted to return and stay until she regained her health. The answer was, "No! Not until she renounces her husband and her faith." This she refused to do, and she died there on the cold and somber prairie. No man knows where her dust reposes, but it has become part of her country and at the last day it shall be gathered and she shall rise to shame those who cast her out and to be counted as one of the Jewels arrayed in White who have come up from great tribulation. C.N.L. ! "Thar Is Zinc in Them Thar Hills!" yw :ji Turiyi. 0....U.W.". '.j .ju.nyj.i.innmj.iww"L"ii i''huwiiw.i ... t l I?. 1 I -i- "-',. - "l K ' j t I V.' I " IT - - - I " 1 ." t hi I a' I ' I J 1 i I !j' f J .. Base metal replaces precious metal in desirability for duration. the lowly metal and long iZlna, child" of the family, has risen to new in mechanized World War 5 No. 2. Instead of gold the slogan u is now "Thar is zinc in them thar ' hills," so desirous has become the gray metal. 9 Every gun from revolver to can- - lt non and its amunition requires zinc. H Shell brass contains 30 per cent zinc. Each jeep, tank and truck requires J. zinc for their most vital parts. A jeep requires 5 pounds of zinc and $ as much as 200 pounds is required is;, for an armored car or large size J tank. Airplane engines are shaped and built with zinc dies. Each fighter plane, fying fortress and transport plane requires from 100 to 450 pounds of zinc for its vari--f ous parts. The bombs and flares 6 which light the bomber's targets contain zinc. Radio sets require from 2 to 200 pounds of zinc each. 5 Even the buttons and identification tags of our soldiers are 13 zinc and the fast color- - of their uniforms requires the gray metal in making their dye. Zinc oxide has an es-sential role in warfare also. It is in rubber, paint products and is used for camouflage and for smoke screens, smoke bombs and signal Utah is one of the leading pro-ducers of this metal, and the smelt-ing capacity existing in the four smelting plants in and adjacent to Salt Lake valley is already suffi-cient to take care of almost any demand. More zinc could be used in the war effort and more stress must be placed upon mine production and upon exploration work to find new production. It is gratifying to note that recognition of this in Washington has resulted in some liberalization and expansion of premium prices for over quota pro-duction, which should stimulate mining activity generally. America Was Given to be Free So Very Important Were the American Beginnings So important were the laying of American foundations that a very strange thing is said to have occurred on the last day of debate on the Declaration of Independence. 'It began to look like they never would do it. Morning went, noon came, then afternoon. In the midst of the debating an eloquent and penetrating voice range out. All eyes turned and looked upon a Stranger who had come, none knew from whence. As he began to speak he trans-fixed them with his oratory. His voice rang with a holy zeal. They had never seen him before. None knew when he entered. But his pale face and his tall, stately form ' filled them with awe. He stirred their very souls. He closed his masterly appeal with the words: "God has given ' America to be free!" ' ' When he finished the Stranger sank back into a chair exhausted. A wild enthusiasm broke forth and men rushed eagerly to affix their names to the immortal document. But where was the man the Stranger who had lifted the veil from the eyes of the assembly and revealed in part, at least, the grand purpose for which this nation was founded? He had disappeared! He went like he came Nor was he ever seen again, nor his identity established.' Yes, let us believe and know that "God has! given America to be free!" We the people are the keepers of that freedom and, as Lincoln said, "We shall meanly lose or nobly save the last best hope of earth." . -- - Bf - Progressives Must Become Militant "Radicals Are in the Dog House" Dr. James Bryant Conant, president of Harvard University, is out with a challenge to the country, saying that it must have more American Radicals, men and women whose ideal is Thomas Jefferson and whose political prophets are like unto Emerson and Thoreau. He goes on to show how big and corrupt money and business are organizing to keep this a country of backward-lookin- g reactionaries, to keep the un-scrupulous few at the top rich and powerful and the many poor and in subjection. By Radicals he means those who believe sincerely and honestly in a better world where peace may be maintained, where every man will be entitled to a chance for a decent living, where there will be universal education on every level, where there will be no centralization of money and power, where there will be a higher value on human rights than on property rights, where special and in-herited privilege will be done away with, where cooperation will be the ruling system. "Radicals," he says, "are in the dog house today." Let's call them out. - FIGURE IT OUT YOURSELF A BIG CHANGE MUST OME The U. S. is spending $265,000,000 a day for a war for-ced upon it. One who knows said at the Art Barn Sun-day that we have 4,000,000 people who never have enough to eat, and 150,000 mothers too poor to go to a hospital or have a doctor in child birth. That's part of the Am-erican Way the blind reactionaries want to preserve. Townsend Club No. 1 will give an Independence Day pro-gram Friday, July 23, at 7:30, at 109 West 4th So. Speaker, Seaator Romney. Dr. Syndergaard Back ArpA Sorenson I Dr. H. F. Syndergaard if back after five weeks in Calif- - r--) ' T.1 ornia where he finished a new rrogressive jeweier course in advanced Rosicrucian philosophy. At the office again 75 Second South in the Ness Bldg. t Ninety-i- x cents out of . Jwelry, Watch. Kodak every dollar goes for War Repairing expenditures. ffik. The other four -- 'fc-4 cents goes for Over 40 Years In ilgWSk ?xP.m": SALT LAKE CITY. For Freedom's Sake usual." 1 The World's News Seen Through The Christian Science Monitor An International Daily 'Newspaper Published by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts u Truthful Constructive Unbiased Free from Sensational-ism Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. r Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, 2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents. Obtainable ati i 3 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM j 702 Mdntyre Bldg, Salt Lake City, Utah M - STUART CHASES IDEA Unless there is very carsful planning, the Uniled States is more likely to experience a depression than prosperity immedi-ately after the war, according to Stuart Chase, economist, and author Writing in Survey Graphic, Chase points out that at least 30 million persons in war industries or in the armed ser-vices will have to have peacetime jobs. The jobs won't be here POOR SLOVENIANS WILL THIS ALWAYS BE? We have a thousand years of foreign misrule and oppression behind us. Right, now four hundred thousand Slovenians are under Fascist rule in Italy. Our min have had to fight in scores of wars through the centuriep, not for themselves but for others they had nothing in common with. And for a long time now there hasn't been enough to go around. There hasnjt been enough to eat, and many of our people have gone away! SOUND AND UNSOUND MONEY Greanbacks Yes, Greenbacks to the amount of $660,000, 000, which was printed back in 1933, according to press reports, was released for circulation December 21, 1942. The U. S. Treasury neither taxed nor borrowed this money, and it is not backad by interest-hearin- g bonds True, this money is not counterfeit one may use it to buy shoes, meat, clothes, wheat, corn or any other product of labor. But the UNSOUND MONEY advocates say it has no collateral of any kind back of it. And the money lender cannot get any rakeoff from this sound money. .... 3g WORK TO GET IT THIS WAY What public ownership of utilities has done for a com. munity is wonderfully well illustrated in the case of the town and people of Bartlett, Texas, a town of 2000 people. A live young man from a neighboring town came there to live Having been used to public.'ownershipiin his home town he began agitating for it in Bartlett. SoonHie was elected Mayor and started out to get what he Jwanted. The PowerCo. had an injunction issued against him He called the people to vote on the proposition and they sustained him 4 to 1. They soon got their plant which makes enough torelieve them of taxes. |