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Show Joha A. Israelien The J 1.1.42 The Best Town By A DAM Cozy Corner BYW.L.C. VOLUME XXXIV - M-- folks here we go again! like we are going Day celebration Labor a J uSi this year and if we do it has the first time Hyrum Jbecelebrated Labor Day. The Llor and City Council are going a committee at their to appoint of the meeting to take charge can then we And activities. and friends our invite Spared to other towns to come relatives from and help us celebrate. tf,U it looks Dairymen Work By COLLIER ITS ABOUT TIME! More Gasoline TZZ -- Vlk' TT5 is For Quality To , For Servicemen tfOOK SLsW'? j V-- ftff v L Is New Policy are the boys who Success in the dairy industry is the hard work ,re really getting dependent upon sales and sales are are putting up their a result of tow as they having fine quality cOf You can here trucks and pea crop. dairy products coupled with scientafter peas nearly all ific gons going advertising and merchandising is if you want to lay night, that to bring them into ultimate conlisten for them, and they sumption, states Professor A. J. awake the are good and say the crops Morris, dairy specialist of the Utah lhe farmer should if farmers s0 up. good money this year. is inake Wednesday night the Third Ward Scouts again took a game seemed to be from Wellsville and it On good but not as good as the played last week at Wellsville. pretty one part of the game was the home run that was hit by Thair Allen when the bases were loaded. I wish you parents who have boys that could play ball would send them out as we are very short of There players most of the time. will be another game tonight this time it will be the invaders of Lotake gan and we hope that we can them into cmp also. Lex and Thair will do the chucking. The big This is the time of year when all residents of Hyrujn who can have vacations come scurrying back home for a two week's visit with It seems to relatives land friends. be the thrill of life two come back to little old Hyrum and your former friends. had a letter from a soldier the other day and he said if I can only get back home to former J Hyrum again I will "never want' to leave again. We have a lot of peo- town who say that they to leave here and never returnmaybe they would we dont know? But if they would likei to go why dont they that is the question and the answer is they dont want to go or they would. They know there is no place like home. ple in our would like We see where Cliff Stauffer has increased his Storage Plant so that he has more lockers for the public. That is a good, thing because they people to lay food a rainey day and we know keep telling laway for that maybe that day isnt far off be half so easy when things wont to get as they are now.' Talk about pretty crops I had ta take a little trip down to Salt Lake yesterday and on the way down was sure nice to see the grain U fields already to harvest and some had already been cut. And then the beet fields, I have never in my prettier beet fields than 1 seen yesterday while on toy trip. And people working hard to get their hay into the barn and the beautiful cattle feeding in the peen meadows boy oh boy does this iook like a good year for everybody I think it does. life seen the ones I have 'been told by several of Ur towns big dairymen that Hy-j- y fast becoming one of the s largest milk producers. We hope that i$ true because whatever ur town leads in gives us a lot publicity and makes people want to come here to live, Another business that is good is tne bee business. Jensen Roy says that this has been a good year for the bees and that the honey crop hould be plenty good. Don Gill ys that he has a good crop also. I Sd It wont be very long until we 'V he on our last days of summer and then on too fall. think Extension Service. In explaining ways in which the Utah dairy industry is looking to fhe future, Specialist Morris reported that the industry is planning now to produce quality products and protect the healthfulness of nilk and dairy products as a foundation upon which good salesmanship will reap a harvest. The quality orogram in Utah includ improved equipment and more modern plants which will facilitate sanitary and quality control. AH milk used in manufacturing, deluding that made into cheese, will be pasteurized, announced Pro lessor Morris. Technique of manufacture will be improved new uses )f dairy products will become more learly universal. He states that cooperation is albetween dairy ready underway farmers, processors, state depart-nent- s, educational institutions and .ederal agencies to safeguard the quality of milk and the many products made from it, and that this cooperation in a more practical and effective form is being urged by leaders,"! the industry, Scientists have recently developed new uses for dairy products, leclares Professor Morris, ho cites he amazing results achieved by Russian doctors in recent months in using butter .to treat wounded oldiers. The butter is used direct-- V in the wounds, and miracles of ecovery have occurred with this treatment. There is another miracle being performed through the use of milk the ,ugar in making pencillin, dairyman says, adding that milk is i miracle food and will be eventually recognized as such by the public. No farmer alone can carry on a nation-wid- e advertising campaign, emphasizes Professor Morris. No individual alone, tan conduct the myriad phases of research that are so seriously needed by the dairy industry today, research as to mysterious nutrients in butterfat that ether fats and oils dont seem to possess, but farmers, banded together, will be able to achieve these goals, he said. SCHOOL G ESTABLISHED IN NSC Establishment of an Army Engschool ineer Corps the only such military training unit at Fort Lewis, in the country Washington, was announced at the headquarters of the Ninth Service Command, by Major General David McCoach, Jr., Commanding Gen-eia- l, at Fort Douglas, Utah. Purpose of the school is to train soldiers in the latest methods of fire prevention as well as of aircraft and structural blazes. fire-fighti- OF TODAY TRADES" ALL JACK OF CAVALRYMAN Just nly one more month and we will Todays cavalryman is not only bve fall, and then we will have an adept horseman hut also a 'nnter and then we will hear the skilled 'field soldier. Headquarters cry about the cold weather. funny but there is very seldom hat people are satisfied with the kind of weather they are having nd nomatter what kind of weather here is someone always wants it Ninth Service Command announced todayy at Fort Douglas, Utah. Dont forget folks to start talk-to- n about a Labor Day celebration Jjtotouse the more you talk about more things that we will have and then on Labor "Day it will be Here. Lets all talk about a big celebration for Labor Day, Monday, September 4. j. People Is Afferent. , Low Down From Hickory Grove Some time back I was' expoundin on a sales tax, and why we should have one, and an old Tall corn editor rose up and says, what is left to tax? A boy just out of high school and making here The NUMBER 6 FRIDAY. JULY 28, 1944 Hyrum Utah, 5c per single copy IN CANNING KITCHEN FARMERS METHODS IMPROPER WITH BRING TO ACCIDENTS Pressure (cookers contributed 15 bout percent of the accidents reported last year in connection with canning, reports Miss Elna Miller, nutritionist of the Utah Extension Service, in telling Utah homemakers proper canning met-odsr-- WFA SUPPLY COOPERATE AND ARMY TURKEYS j 'Farmers of Utah have been called upon by the War Food Administration and the U. S. Army Quartermaster Corps to supply several .thousand turkeys of the 1944 crop for the holiday dingers of our armed forces overseas and in this cturitry,'Carl Frisehknecht, of the Utah Extension Service, reports. The turkeys are being obtained under War Food Order 106, issued recently, which requires the for purchase by the Quartermaster Corps of 1 00 percent of the turkeys marketed and processed in this state. This means that until the full requirement of the armed forces is met, Utah turkey producers can sell only to authorized processors, or to buyers purchasing The turkeys for the processors. by turkeys must be slaughtered authorized processors and held for sale ad delivery to the Quartermaster Corps either directly or through wholesalers or from cold Professor Frisehknecht storage. states. 'Generally speaking, said the poultryman, This means marketing turkeys in the customary manner through many of the outlets the producer has normally patronized. The thing is to market them as early as possible. In some instances, however, where there are no authorized processors or turkey buyers purchasing under the order in a given the producer who wishes to market his turkeys may obtain the names of processors from the nearMarket est Arny Quartermaster Center or through the local dairy and poultry branch field representative. Owners of fewer than 25 turkeys which are being produced in areas where there are no authorized processors within 100 miles of the farm may apply to the regional representative for a release, which, if granted, alows turkeys for local consumption. The importance of turkeys for the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years Day dinners of our fighting forces overseas and in the United States, Mr. Frisehknecht be cannot overemphasized. says, Turkey .dinners are traditional chow in the army as well a$ in American homes. The turkeys being obtained this year will be sent to battle fronts and armed force encampments throughout the world, and its urgently necessary that the birds be obtained in plenty of time to make these shipments to distant points," he concludes. poul-trym- cookers are as safe as any piece of equipment in the provided they are used corstates Miss Miller, adding that accidents rave happened because people have failed to follow the instructions which are given to make the use of the cooker absolutely safe. She sayys that if authentic instructions are used there need be no accidents fro mthe use of the cooker, nor from spoilage of food products and' poisoning resulting from products which are processed in the pressure cooker. An important cause of last years accidents was the imporper use of the petcock in releasing steam after the processing was finished, and this often resulted in explosion of jars. Frequently the petcock was not opened to allow steam to escape before removing the lid. Miss Miller cites the case of a woman who had her face badly cut and burned when the lids of the jars were blown into her face, and another woman opened the petcock immediately after the processing time was finished without letting the pressure drop to zero. the AH the jars exploded inside cooker and all the food was wasted. Another woman used a cooker which had never had the safety valve removed for cleaning, and that it it was so gummed up could . not release, and the pressure inside became so great it blew a hole in the side of the cooker. Sh warns that people have been scalded from lifting the lid off so that the steam came up into their faces instead of away from them. Accidents have happened when cookers hve been left over high heat while their operators visited with neighbors or worked in the yard and left the cookers unwatched. Water bath accidents were usually caused from jars being packed too tightly leaving no head space in the top of the jar, she declares, and explosion or breakages of jars usually occured while the jars were being removed from the water hath. The other house, rectly, W. D. WORKERS TOTAL on that day to amuse us. If there 1,200,000 is something you would especially MORE THAN like to have here, talk about it and The War Department now emthen someone will hear you and civthen they will tell somebody else ploys approximately 1,200,000 ilian workers, it was learned today by headquarters Ninth Service Command Civilian Personnel Division, Fort Douglas, Utah. an set-asi- de loc-calit- y, LONELY? WRITE VANCOUVER, WN. BOX A new policy in granting gasoline to members of the armed services on leave or furlough will have a good effect on morale, stated B. of the M. Thompson, chairman Hyrum war price and rationing borad. Begining now a serviceman or women on leave for a period of three days or more will be entitled to one gallon of gasoline for each the chairman day of his leave, said.. The new rule replaces one granting a flat five gallons regardless of length of the leave or furlough. It has become evident that the old policy, which resulted in giving too much gasoline to servicemen who got many short leaves, was unfair to the man serving out of the country and returning after a long absence. To eliminate this unfairremarked, the chairman ness, the new rule, tailoring the amount of the ration to the length of leave or furlough, was worked out by OPA in conjunction with representatives of the Army and Navy. Furlough rations will now range between a minimum of three galleave to a maxlons for a three-da- y imum of 30 gallons for 30 days. At the suggestion of the Army and Navy, no ration will be granted for passes (to Army personnel) or liberties (to Navy personnel) or for leave or furloughs of less than three days. .. To receive his ration, the serviceman or woman should apply to the vvar price and ration board having jurisdiction over the automobile he expects to drive, and present his papers. The ration will be issued in the form of coupons or gasoline purchase permits, or a combination of the two. bucks a week at 75 some war work, dont know what to do with that much dinero. Putting a 1 0 per cent tax on his spending would not crimp his style or slow him down. But folks who do not now get such inflated wages would find 1q per cent tax upsetting that is what the old Hawkeye editor told me. But if we sit around on a stump and wait until the 75 buck jobs are finished and Sambo dont get some of it in taxes now, then, sure as shootin, whoever is left is gonna get a double dose, and instead of being just upsetting and annoying, it is gonna be painful and tough. We better have our extra tax misery now, while we can have company. Lots of the debt is from the war, but lots of it is from tinkering with Socialism but calling it Uplift. But we gotta dig up for both i maybe it will sober us up. We been listening to the barkers and come home with a brass watch. Yours with the low down, JQSERRA ARMY CONSERVATION SAVES MILLIONS Savings of $2,000,000 by the Army Quartermaster Corps during the past fiscal year by repairing clothing, equipage and general supis directly traceplies for able to strict adherence to the War Departments extensive conservation program, the Headquarters Quartermaster Corps at Fort Douglas, Utah, home of the Ninth Service Command, was informed toue day. BUYER AND SELLER MUST Mr. and Mrs. Jacob had as their guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. who were married WHEN SELLING AUTOMOBILE Henry AHgaier last Monday and who had been on a short honeymoon to Bear Lake. Mr. and Mrs. AHgaier will make One of the most important parts their home in Salt Lake City. Henry of a used car sale transaction is is emloyed at Hill Field. the certificate of transfer, whether from individual to another or from a dealer to an inividual. It MUST A NIGHTMARE FOR be signed by both the buyer and the seller. It is especially important MRS. HOUSEWIFE that the information about year, model, and body type be given accurately on the form. If the car Twenty-tw- o Quartermaster Corp you are buying has any special laundries in the eight Wester built-i- n equipment, such as vacuum states monthly handle 25,000,00 transmission system of fluid drive, pieces of clothing for serviceme or is equipped with a heater or and women on duty in the Nint radio, be sure that information is Service Command, it was lannounc also given. On or before the day ed at the Fort Douglas, Utah, head you, as a buyer, apply for your quarters of Major General Davi. new gasoline rations, the certifiMcCoach, Jr., Commanding Gen cate of transfer, properly filled out and signed, must be filed with the eral. price clerk of your local war price and rationing board. You do not AMERICAN PWs IN GERMANY need a certificate of transfer if you are selling to a dealer. But when TO RECEIVE BARRACKS BAGS you buy, unless you are a dealer trading with another dealer, you MUST file an official transfer certAmerican Red Cross will dis ificate with you local board. bute 65,000 Army issue barrai bags, received from the Army S SERGEANT RAY A. DIPOMA vice Forces Quartermaster Coi HAS ARRIVED OVERSEAS to American soldiers in Gem BOTH SIGN PURCHASE SLIP prisoner-of-w- WITH U. S. ARMY TROOPS IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC Sgt. Ray A. Dipoma, whose wife, the former Ruth L. Allred, lives at Hyrum, Utah, and whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dipoma, 326-2- 1 Street, Ogden, Utah, has arrived overseas. Sgt. Dipoma, a wholesale trucker Rock operating between Ogden, Springs, Wyoming and Phoenix, Arizona, before he entered the army, was stationed at the airfield in Hobbs, New Mexico for 18 months prior to shipping overseas His occupation was that of a parachute rigger and inspector. He has one brother, Pvt. Dewey 26, L Dipoma, in the service, with an ad infantry outfit not yet overseas. I camps, is was ar i nounced today at the Ninth S vice Command Headquarters Gu 'frmaster Corps, Fort Dougl Utah. CARD OF THANKS To the many friends and neighboi who assisted in any way during tl long illness and death of our hi loved Mother, we extend our hear felt thanks and graditude. The Family of Mrs. Augusta S. Nielse ' t Subscribe for the Couriep |