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Show PAGE THREE SOUTH CACHE COURIER MARCH 22, 1946 I Mrs. Lola Bastow of Magna Mr. and Mrs. Don Maughanj Mrs. Eva Adamson of Wilmar, Miss Joane Kellett is recoverend week the sPent have and wife and a bad visiting with daughter California is visiting her relaing at her home following Mr. and Mrs. Alma Parent8 case of pneumonia. She is the gone to Jackson Hole, Wyoming' and fr(enda ,n Hyrum and : of Hyruiu. Mrs. Mary M. Fuchs and her young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. to visit with his parents. is guest of her sIstert the.house Mr. is Mrs. the Mr. and H. E. visited ward. of Kellett the manager First Maughan daughter of the South Cache Theatre. In Mrs. C. J. Jensen who has been Dalton M. Reid on Wednesday Mrs. Matilda Larsen of the Mr. is his absence the theatre is being ill the past several weeks. Mrs. Mrs. Fuchs and Thursday. No Housing Problem There Mrs. Lillian Fuhrlman of Prov Third ward is feeling imIlyrum Reids sister from Midvale Idaho. idence and Levi Curtis, Mrs. Hel- run by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mur- Adamson was formerly of Hyin health after being 111 .With Bunks for 6,000; proved rum. en Jensen and daughter Bernellj ray. most of the winter months. We Speeds Discharges. Dr. and Mrs. J. Paul Burgess all of Logan, attended the funerhope for her speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Larsen of have enjoyed a weeks vacation al services of Mrs. Marie Christ JUST ARRIVED Good assortment of children's coats ranging Salt Lake City visited for a few NEW YORK. Nowhere In the to St. Louis, Missouri. iansen on Monday. in size from 3 to 14. If you days with Mrs. Larsens mother, world, on sea or shore, in the opinE. J. Wilson of Hyrum, manion of navy men, is there anything are In the market tor one a Mrs. Annie Larsen of Hyrum. ager of the Logan Caches Knittcomparable to Pier 92 at 52nd street small deposit will hold it until Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Larsen are ing Mills, is on a business trip and the North river, which was needed. Fine assortment of ladies former Ilyrum residents. to the Northwest. turned into a receiving station suits and coats, going fast. during the war. It is the only known project in which a large pier In effect was transformed into a big Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Murray are back in Ilyrum after an extended ship billeting as many as 6,000 navy personnel, says the Herald-Tribuntrip to Old Mexico, Texas and In many ways Pier 92 more closeCalifornia. ly resembles a large citythan ship. Mrs. George Ownby of Ilyrum It possesses the varied shops and two weeks in Salt Lake . spent services of a town. Down the main ir City as guest of her son and of move the pier community I''treet Mr. and Mrs. j daughter, Paul automobiles passengers carrying Ownby. hack and forth. The street is lined 1th diversified stores and shops Sind entertainment centers. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Miller Has Everything. and family of Ilyrum have reLike any American town, it has turned to their home following several restaurants (mess halls), a a delightful two weeks. While motion picture theater seating 600 away they visited various points and showing the latest productions, of interest in California, Arizona, Need a bath tub or a bicycle? Got an old table or some a sports arena for boxing, a pool and Nevada. hall, soda fountain with the inevitachairs? Drop a card to KVNU, it listing what you have to ble juke box, library with hundreds trade in value under $200.00 and what you want; then S. A. Dunn of Hyrum was a of books and magazines, barber tune in on the business visitor in Salt Lake on shop, cobbler shop, tailor shop, bank (safety deposit cage), chapel, post ,the week end. office, printing shop, ships store, small stores, newspaper, beer hall, Mrs. Ruth Moss and two sons carpenter and machine shop, hosJames and Jerry spent Sunday pital (sick bay), hotel (bunkroom) In Salt Lake City where they and enough busy offices dealing with visited with Harry Walker, formhigh finance and varied operations to fill an office building. erly of Hyrum who 5s receiving I treatment at a hospital for polio. Probably one million navy men muj HMSWire have been handled through Pier 92. PROHiBGEfP As many as 30,000 are processed the 5n.e Mrs. Bonnie Allen entertained through the tremendous OF MflWE-OBelle Mure Club at her home the ark in a single morith. At 25 yews A .TR?r JODVE CV THE on Monday night. A50 Ifc'W,,, present about half of these are sent AMlVk-Df- i VIMliy H $2,700 to separation centers for discharge Q OM&K 1W4 IN Daffodils were artistically arThis Service is Absolutely FREE and the others go to ships for new X 4!. about the living rooms. A ranged and Brought to You by assignments. Officers in command luncheon was served at four received no orders concerning small tables with the appointoperations, but it is expected ments carrying out the Easter the pier will be rcommissioned as 164 NORTH 6 WEST, LOGAN, AND motif. Bridge formed the evena receiving station, with Mrs. Four ships complement the quar- ings entertainment y Margaret Larsen wrinning the pier in providing 180 SOUTH MAIN apace and facilities for thousands of high score, Edna Nielsen the all navy men to live, work and play. cut, Gladys Nielsen the low score AYatcli KVNU A'our Mutual Friend Leased by Navy. and Hilda Nielsen and Meda Hall ' All - W'iT ! . the travelling prize. The navy leased the pier, formery Beside the members who atly used by the Italian line, from ,r?4, the city of New York in September, tended the special guests were ( 1941. The navy tied up alongside the ' Phyllis Savage, Gladys Nielsen, J xa submarine tender Camden, which ' Arlynn Brown, Luella Nielsen . At 'A .. had seen service in the First World and Jennie Burris. v . xy war, and used its four big boilers she is among the last of the coal &, 4 burners in the navy to heat the vast space. The ship produces ' enough heat for the ships and the two decks of the pier, each measV uring 1,180 by 120 feet. A historic sfiip built as the battleship Washington in 1904 and later called the armored cruiser Seattle, was tied up on the south side of the pier, berthing ships company I personnel and bachelor officers. The hw Mercer, the newest type barracks ship designed for Pacific service, was tied up at the north side to 'j X, house an overflow of men. The Mer,v; cer can billet 1,000 men. In addition, the naval receiving View of one of Utahs mills where continued vigalcnce is kept for ways station, Pier 92, has taken over the to enable mines to ship lower grade ores. ship Prairie State, anchored off 135th street and Riverside drive, forAll mines contain various it is left in the mine, merly ' used as a midshipmens amounts of low grade ore, a term Therefore, the higher the cost of ( School. given to the waste which is too operating a mine, the smaller the low grade to ship to the smelter mineable ore body becomes and JL' New Yorkers, faced with a smaller the ore reserves and and sometimes sleep- - or to mill. Some values are there, but the operating cost is too much yj6 smaller the mining industry, eight to a room, might be en-i- s to permit mining. if they saw Pier 92s big The long life of the industry In Thus the extent of an ore body h mile in or the reserves of a mine are deter- - Utah is evidence that the mines bedroom, nearly length, sleeping comfortaly 6,000 mined by operating costs and how kave adhared to a policy of mining bunks at one much of the low grade can be sand- - as much low grade ore as possible men in three-tiere- d wiched In with the higher grade or rather than gutting the mine of time. commercial ore. Taxes, labor costs, Ike high grade for a temporary good shipping costs, treatment and vari- - showing. OU3 other and sundry Items go to It becomes a tragedy when low Japan Is Far From Flat, make up the extent of a mineable grade ores are left in the ground Financial Experts Say ore body. because it Is seldom passible to In some Instances it is possible return and mine this or8. Unless HAMILTON FIELD, CALIF. -Jmine the low grade product and the low grade Is mined with the apan can pay more than we ex- to in reparations and the store it on the dump in the hope higher grade, the majority will be pected of some further condition that will lost forever and thus much poten-permamount and extent of the indemnity its shipment, but more often tial wealth is never taken out are soon to be established, H. D. Maxwell, deputy chief of the American Reparations commission, said on arrival here recently. Maxwell and 10 other members of the commission returned from Japan aboard an army transport plane. SS Japan has a surplus in industrial air despite shattering capacity, raids, which can be appropriated for reparations purposes. Maxwell said. Some of Japans 3,300 principal industries are completely undamaged. The intent of reparations is to eliminate Japans war potential and t&.-iiiSr- j, to transfer physically industrial t foment from Japan to Pacific entitled to indemnity. Maxwell explained. in the work The Japs of the commission and as far as I know, didnt conceal anything, Maxwell said. He declined to comment on the share which any country will receive in reparations. New York Pier HYRUM LOCALS J" Town in Itself Q e. J J - ft NEIGHBOR! WANT TO TRADE? .... SWAP SHOP Another New KVNU Feature land-anchor- P 1:05 P. .M Monday Thru Friday Qve Leaving Low Grade Ore Becomes Tragedy WOODBURY CURING PLANT SEAMONS AND LOVELAND yX k cs r ,w s ? x. v -' t;' 4- hous-shorta- Q one-fourt- it f0 VRtSS fi J tftis V MAnila Is Long on Rats .. But Its Short MANILA, P. I. forvcats in Manila. on Cats Theyre calling Army health authorities say there five times as many rats in Mresidents, and blame it all arias ( Japanese. During the occupation ti'ey explain, the people got so hungry most of the citys cats turned up in the form of stew. They asked citizens throughout the islands not to drown unwanted kittens but to give them to the city. are !.V 19 th JJs blvd p ft The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. |