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Show Friday, March Uintah uasin record, duchesne, utah IK, 1944 Friday Evenin 24th Dance Amid the Tragic of Harbor Lights at Fn isii DEAR DOUG: Former Myton Woman Dies At Ogden Pearl MYTON Margaret Nielson Anderson, 30, died Wedhosnesday, March 8 at the Dee She diebetes. of in Ogden pital was a daughter of Emery and Sarah Bird Nielson of Myton and was born Nov. 13, 1913 In Arcadia. With her parents, she moved to Myton when a small child and attended the Myton elementary school, graduating from the Roosevelt high school. She served as recretary of the MIA of the Myton L D S ward. She married Fay E. Anderson in Vernal Oct. 14, 1933. Several years ago they moved to Salt Lake City and later to Clearfield where they resided at the time of her death. Surviving are her husband and a daughter, Patsy Ann of Clearfield; her parents of Myton, 3 sisters, Thressa Nielson and Mrs n Erma Adams of Myton, Mrs two of Duchesne; Hardinger brothers, Arvel J. Nielson with the Navy in the Southwest Pacific and Acel L. Nielson of Salt Lake City, a grandfather, George Bird of Salt Lake City. Funeral services were conducted Friday with burial in Salt Lake City. : Ar-lea- RATION REMINDER MEATS, FATS: Y and Z in Brown stamps book 3 are good thru March 20. Red stamps A8, C8, D8 E8 and F8 in book 4 good thru May 20. Waste kitchen fats are redeemed at two ration points plus four cents a pound. PROCESSED FOODS Green stamps K, L and M are Blue good thru March 20. stamps A8, B8, C8 D8 and E3 in book 4 are good thru May nt 20. SUGAR Stamp 30 in book 4 is good indefinitely for 5 pounds. Stamp 40 in book 4 is good for 5 pounds of canning sugar thru Feb. 28, 1945. GASOLINE In states outside the east coast area coupons are good thru A-1- 0 March 21. TIRE INSPECTION For A book holders, March 31; for holders, May 31; holders June 30. for SHOES Stamp No. 18 in book 1 good thru April 30. Airplane stamp No. 1 in book 3 is good indefinAnother ration stamp itely. good for one pair of shoes beginning May 1 will be announced soon. GOU) AND GREEN DANCE MOUNTAIN HOME THURSDAY, MARCH 23 PATS ORCHESTRA rrww eeepw" Minimize Winter Losses from HEMORRHAGIC SEPTICEMIA nrul PULMONARY EDEMA PASTEDREIlAtetnJACTERIN Each dose of Franklin Bacterm gives the double benefit of resistance against both hemorrhagic septicemia and the complicating infection that so frequently occurs vith hemorrhagic septicemia. known as pulmonary edema. 10 cents a dose, less in quantities m DUCHESNE DRUG u STORE Continued From Page 1 iel, and the new Fundamentalist polygamy scandal in Salt Lake and half the time youd have have thought Dixie (the pooch) wa the child of one of Axels other wives, only Afton apparently mothers it as much as she did her own daughter. After Lions club last week, Stan and Ged were here a while so of course we got to talking about some of you boys. George is in New Guinea, I Lindsay think Ged said, and Ray is in New Caledonia. Ray Walker is in Sicily now. along. They moved him right He was at Moon Lake fishing with us last July just before his induction; Hap Birch too, but Hap was released about a month ago. I saw him the night of the Lions meeting too, but it was on the street and pretty cold, so I didnt get to talk to him much. Ralph Rowley was at the meeting and said Dick had been moved from Arkansas to some place on the Atlantic seaboard. There was sure a good turnout at the Lions meeting; there are 43 members now and 32 were present. Because we were both scheduled to talk, I sat beside Judge Turner and we had a nice visit. A new bunch of inductees went out last week, including Ralph Halstead, but his trick knee kept him out. We cant say who went in until the draft board releases the names. Jim Kent was here again last week on the traffic count, and helped get the paper out Thursday evening. lies switching over to some other department soon so wont be travling around so much any more. Bob is raising chickens in Salt Lake as a side line, Jim says. Arthur Goodrich has been here this week selling his home to Lotus Fisher. Art is driving one of Franklin Davies trucks at Shoshone, Idaho, he says. Enid is working at the Clearfield Naval depot and Myrle and the rest of the family are in Salt Lake. Doris Fitzwater Bailey is here for a visit. She works at the Paris in Salt Lake now and says Troy is overseas. Well, maybe we ought to finish that tour we started up and down Main street. I believe we got stranded in a mud puddle at the Mission corner a couple weeks ago The mud hasnt dried up yet, but if we hold up our jjants high, we can splash across to the Shell corner. Otto Johnsen is still the king-fis- h there, and about everything else, right now. Grin Olsen used to help him, but Orin has gone to California now and the only help Otto gets is from Tennis Poulson who holds down the fort at times while Otto goes home to do chores, etc. Next comes the Bakery, with Anna Nielsen in charge and her two girls, Lillian and Edna as chief helpers. At tlie school board office, Supt. Bond and Miss Stark, supervisor, hold forth on one side with Cliff Mickelson on the other. Elaine Poulson, Monts daughter sometimes does a little stenographic work after school. The next building is now combined City and rationing board office. Hildur Johnstun is both OPA clerk and city clerk, Mary Fisher is her assistant on the rationing board work and Andy Clemons sister, Laura, helps mostly with the city work. Barber Bill holds forth alone and in the last office in that string, the Red Cross has now set up a work room where any number of women sometimes gather. The Palace Cafe is now managed by Mr and Mrs Will Hadden. Eddie Kielbasa is one of the cooks and his wife helps in the dining room. Frieda Mitchell Hadden also waits tables. The old Pierson garage has Five Criminal Cases On Court Docket Continued From Page LOCALS 1 Set for trial April 18 at 10 a. m. State of Utah vs George H. Legion Auxiliary Meets set for trial Mrs Ernest Wilson was hostVVilcken, et ux, m. 18 a. ess 10 at Monday evening to members April Prentis M. Brown, Administra- of the American Legion AuxilCase iary. Plans were made to hold tor OPA vs Louis Laris a card party. dismissed. Home Acceptance Corporation Bridge Club Mrs Vern Rife was hostess on vs Muse K. Harris default of the defendant entered. The court Thursday evening of last week found the material allegations of to' members of her bridge club. the complaint true; that the Participating in the play were Mrs plaintiff is entitled to the re- Ralph Halstead, Mrs Edwin Carlief prayed for in the complaint man, Mrs Reed Cowan, Mrs Geo. and the decree shall be in ac-c- Kohl, Mrs Grant Murdock, Mrs A. M. Murdock, Mrs Edward Wildance with the complaint. Divorce Granted kins, Mrs Clem Labrum, Mrs Laura Maxine Griffith vs Leo Rose Marie Cook, Mrs Jess Johnthe plaintiff stun, Mrs B. A. Jacoby and Mrs Lawrence Griffith was awarded an interlocutory de- A. J. Feller. Mrs Johnstun was cree of divorce on the grounds winner of both prizes. of mental cruelty; custody and Dancing Party control of the minor child and Miss LaJean Cowan was hostess Monday evening at a dancing $30 per month maintenance. party at the Legion hall in celeDate On Dairy' bration of her birthday anniverClosing sary. Guests included Russell Nears Feed Payments Schonian, Robert Rife, Elwin Verl Dairy feed payments for Feb- Thomas, Howard Moffitt, ruary sales are now being made Davies, Seth Fullmer, Darrell LiBerthell by the county AAA office at the ddell, Mayhew, Boyd same rate as the January pay- Firth, GJade Merrell Eugene Dament, 50 cents per hundredweight vies, Joe Hadden, Jay and Tom on fluid milk sales and 6 cents Mickelson, Lloyd Grant, Lloyd Iva Lou per pound for butterfat sales. Brady, Marvis Bond, Closing date on February sales Allred, Jeannine Lyman, Eva will be April 30, 1944. Reynolds, Eloise Partridge, Enid Milk producers will get higher Munsee, Pauline Mott, Mardene returns in March and April from Bond, Pauline Marsing, Norita these payments, the county AAA Robbins Lorraine Wilkins, Baroffice reports, when , rates for bara Burdick, Donna Rae Jensen, th county (and the entire state) Maxine Peterson and Norma will be 60 cents per cwt. on flu- Grant. Lee Merkley made a business id milk and 8 cents per pound for butterfat sales. Since these trip to Salt Lake Sunday. Arthur Goodrich spent the week payments are made to offset higher feed costs, tentative plans end in Duchesne transacting busof the War Food Administration iness. Mr and Mrs Axel Birch and contemplate that a seasonal reduction will be made in the pay- Mr and Mrs Lloyd Benson of ment rates for the months of Roosevelt were Sunday supper guests at the Schonian home. May through August. Mr and Mrs M. H. Christensen War needs for dairy products have increased and producers are of Talmage were in Duchesne on business. being urged to increase produc- Monday Burdick of Bluebell was Lyman tion per cow. Better pastures can contribute greatly toward in- in Duchesne Monday on business. Lynn Orser of Roosevelt was creasing the milk supply just as Duchesne business visitor on a unfavorable pasture conditions contribute to the decline of the Thursday. Roosevelt visitors to Duchesne nations milk production in the Tuesday included Joseph Moysh, last half of 1943. Jack Zimmerman, Harry Sprouse, been taken over by the county Carol Robbins, Axel Birch and and school board, with Bill Gall-ye- r Clark Benson. j and W'illard Deardon of ArMr and Mrs Jack WinteiTose cadia as mechanics. They have of Heber were guests Sunday at their hands full, I guess, keeping the home of- - Mr and Mrs Jess county graders and trucks and Johnstun. school busses on the road. Mrs Carol Robbins of RooseAnd thats about the lineup of velt was transacting business at not so the OPA office on Monday. the business section Mrs Niel Anderton spent part many new faces showing, but lots of the old ones missing. of the week in Salt Lake City There hasn't been a letter or and Park City visiting relatives card come in this week from you and friends. fighters, so I guess you're all either gone some placet or darned Cut Coffee Consumption busy getting ready. Home consumption of coffee under the rationing program is 30 per cent Hopin youre the same. RAS less than it was in 1941, et al, oi OPTOMETRIST MILL BE TESTING EYES AND FITTING GLASSES: SIH RTLKI F HOTEL, ROOSE ELT, Monday, March 1911, from 10:00 a. m. until 6:00 p. ni. LEWIS CAMP CABINS, ERNAL, Tuesday, March 1911, from 10:00 a. ni. until 5:00 p. m. Phone 11 J. PLAZA HOTEL, DUCHESNE, Wednesday, March 20, 21, 21, 1911, from 2:00 p. m. until 4:00 p. in. To aoid uniting and disappointment, please rail the Hotel for an appointment. Make appointment as enrly as possible, Lewis Optical Company PRICE I TA1I From Page 1 gone throught more than their share of it but you cant find a bigger couple of smiles in the whole world than they carry. Injury In Africa Continued old Clifford Mace, 24 years this week, is blind from an injury caused' in line of duty with the American army in Egypt the after great battle at shortly Since then hes El Alamein. spent most of his time in hospitals, first overseas and finally Letterman General . hospital in California, where he was discharged. He got out of the army on Nov. 23, 1943, and since then hes been rehabilitating himself, preparing for a new job and a The couple plan to new life. move to x Provo soon, hoping to Mr. Meanwhile, buy a home. Mace is studying typing, Braille, and readying himself to go to vocational school to learn a trade with the federal government, the American Red Cross, the Legion of Provo and the Lions club of Orem lending him their every support. The Maces had only been married two days when on Jan. 22, 1942, Clifford was called to duty. He received his basic training at Camp Barkley, Texas and was sent overseas with a medical unit as a sergeant. When the British chased Rommel out of Egypt, Mr Mace was assigned to a unit following up the troops in a motor convoy headed for Libya, The convey made a stop just about at the Egpytian border and one of the men picked up an Italian hand grenade, which he had mistaken for an electric heating unit which troops carried. Clifford enemy spotting the incident, ordered the man several times to put it down, and finally went over to the scene. Grenade Explodes Just as he reached the spot the grenade went off, killing the man holding it, wounding one other badly, and blinding Mace. When he got to Letterman his wife came to visit him, and they began to lay new plans. He received typing and Braille training at the hospital to start him off on his new road. It was pretty nice there, he said. The doctors and nurses were all swell. If it hadnt been for the wonderful treatment I re- - sent in by Milton J. - Hollenbeck, P. M. lc of the U. S. Navy, son of Mrs Helen Hollenbeck: Two score and seven days ago our battalion brought forth upon this island a new project, conceived in a foxhole and dedicatthat t all ed to the proposition evil. created are Japs We are now ensnared in the heat, rain and mud of the island, testing whether this project of the Navy will long endure. We are all together slipping and sliding as we do this, but in a larger sense, we cannot cultivate, we cannot navigate, we cannot harrow this ground, for these great rains which make this mud have made it impossible far the poor power of everything but our tractors. It is for us, the Navy, rather to be enslaved here by this menial labor; , labor which they who are in charge here have thus so freely advanced. It is rather for us to be here, sickened by the hash set before us, that from these cans we took our nourishment; and no devotion to those cooks, for our stomachs gave an everlasting measure of commit-ion. t County Agent Marden has issued the following bulletin to producers in Duchesne county: The shortage of gasoline, rubber and trucks has made it difficult for many of you to market Broad-ben- small numbers of livestock and produce when they are ready to go. We are offering to help our farm people With this problem. The county agents office will act as a center for listing small numbers of livestock and farm produce for sale. Farmers are urged to notify this office what they have for market and the the stock approximate date (sheep, hogs or cattle) and produce will be ready for shipment. Truckers could then readily find where a load is available to haul to market. Through the cooperation with the office of defense transportation gasoline will be allowed for this business when certified to performing this service. O D T advises that gasoline and tires will no longer be available to hunt over the countryside for sufficient stock to make up a load. This office will set up records showing the farmer, the number and kind of stock for sale, and the approximate date the' owner desires them transported to market If truckers do not call at this office in sufficient numbers to pick up this stock then ODT will appoint others to receive The world will note or long remember what we did here, but we shall never forget the hash and beans we ate here. Let us resolve that we shall not have sweat in vain; and that by Easter we shall have 30 days of freedom in the United States and this not shall perish from our gasoline to do thi3 work. thought We shall be glad to assist you hopes. if possible, with this program. ceived I probably wouldn't be Write this office or phone 26. Considerable gasoline, trucks and here now. Commenting on conditions ov- tires can be saved with this proIt would be erseas, he said that the time he gram functioning. was in Egypt the Americans and a convenience to you also, in British didnt get along too well many cases. always scrapping over who was winning the war. But the SUBSCRIBE, DONT BORROW. British are doing a wonderful he said. One high point job, in his service was the time he visited the Holy Land, souvenirs of which he carries with him. COZY THEATRE Fighting Family Clifford is from a strictly Utah family, and you might well say a fighting family. Still in the war is a brother, Delbert, who was wounded on Tarawa, but is back in action now. And' you cant rule Clifford out of the war for after his vocational training he hopes to enter the production fight with a job at Geneva steel. March 18, 19 A Lady Takes a Chance Sat.-Sun- ., with JEAN ARTHUR and JOHN WAYNE Research Aids Advance Of Mining in Utah :;dm H v ' f X V' ' ' '' 1, ? w v Y ' iM H & . s' Si I . . , ''Y & - auiswwtei,-- 4 , ? .' , J I ' O' jL 1 f jVYY-ii- ""v" " " Fs Scene at new Bureau of Mines labortory which strengthened state position In metallurgical field. The position that Salt Lake valThe researchers at the bureau are continually working toward not ley has attained as the leading mining and smelting center only Improved methods of producIn the world can bo attributed to a tion of lead, zinc, copper, steel, large exti nt by the research carried silver and molybdenum now proon by the smelting companies and duced, but toward production of to the mineral producing companies manganese, aluminum and magnesium and other metals in the Salt operating in this area. The posit Ion of Salt Lake City as Bake area. Since the war the a center of metallurgical resorch bureau has actually entered, into was strengthened with the estab- development of strategic minerals lishment of the metallurgical di- in this region. A number of provision of the United States Bureau spects throughout Utah, Nevada, of Mines with the completion in Idaho and Wyoming have been 1910 of a now building adjacent to tested and several projects are now the Unlverslly of Utah campus. pi educing much needed strategic Is This building one of the most met? Is. Also on the alert continuously complete metallurgical laboratories in the world. It was built at a cost are the research staffs are tbs of $350,000 and houses $230,000 American Smelting & Refining comworth of scientific engineering pany, International Smelting & Reequipment. fining company, United States The continued growth of the min- Smelting Refining and Mining coming industry of Utah depends on pany, Utah Copper ( nipany and continually lindlng new ore and im- Combined Metals Reduction comproved methods of treating it. Tills pany. These companies during applies not only to the ores of past years have made coni rlbut Ion? metals which now constitute our to the mining industry, which, if greatest source of production but not in practice now, the mining In to deposits of metals not now dustry of the state would undouht n nrked. tally ho comparatively smaller. non-ferro- Dr. W. W. Lewis Thcughts From A Navy County Agents Office To Aid In Man In South Pacific Produce The following bit of prose was Marketing Wife of Blind War Veteran Is Former Myton Girl to wipe Food Chiselling out and keep Food Prices down You can t beat this daily double the Patriotic Lady chopper and the Honest Storekeeper. They are the team that is making ration points and ceiling prices help win the war! Keep food fighting for freedom! When you go marketing, do these two simple things: 1. Pay your points! Ration points are the American way of dividing up our scarcer foods fairly so everyone gets his share. 2. Pay only legal prices! Price ceilings are neces-sar- y to keep the cost of food from being pushed too high for the millions of Americans on allotments or other small fixed income. army Official celling prices and points for rudonn i t posted in ail food stores and at your local Ration Rr n keeping yourself your grocer, your pockcbook-- ad ,our colintry.J Psd i i ' Thl ilfrtlemfnt prtpirtd Mr Ailvrri iitnil ( oiiihII bf in Kith th Oftw of Irh Arinilnlatratlon, th Vf roml Aitmlnlai ration, and tb Otlu of IntoMimUoa. th rmt Trr.1 |