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Show THF. T.VTTT STTH T.TT.TTT Twatt id the J I of l i for wamej I :xpectt( lately; itproy onstrad nnson S ?provedsJ it Op! d to be otitic he qued mains w strec: i equips Qths ago! rial cat and the maiy bar VALUE B. LIT! erest Sb""" Jvilian Work Utah Farming Shows More Healthy Condition . -i jictrtat both t been evidence active interest "I",? of civilian de- true of first rJL upwards of V e0 work to I Some w lSd at the various the close of Airing the evening. Vm.rZ.Z Staking th7wnT revive IfHSSra ' ... t. In flTKf. I senior tah.1(,tion Is of His trpe o1 T i KUortanoe now to every-K every-K teachers It is always j J .. 11.. nrrtL-Aaa ever .. .-- i a VftTV KOOd a0e,",Vnd iff!- U far as u" Kid help is concerned, fist am " , tQ1trht. bv classes are oe - sutler,, who Is a , American Red Cross In-und In-und win continue over a approximaiay Leticaa Fork and Leminere Ltoately 1 mothers tak- lone M"" Mabel Jones, xvcu v, .nmiPted during the ' of reoruary - jtelc of mass typhoid immu-n immu-n program, which Is also In rtherance of civilian defense. tvioTi firm twrsons I if ere hjwg - ok advantage of this free toVrestine and most com- ble to note the splendid co- ion of the Red Cross nurse the American Legion, Imerican Legion Auxiliary. service of these people, wno under the direction of Dr. tea and Mrs. Jones, Is very anweciated. W clinics will be repeated at leek intervals each Monday Way until the requirements h lnnoculations has been Ms would make the date : second clinic on Monday and fe February 2 and 3, and the la Monday and Tuesday, Feb- 10 at the same hour and The healthy condition of fanning In Utah, Arizona, Nevada and California Cali-fornia is shown in the annual report re-port of the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley Just released by Charles Parker, president. - Farmers and stockmen not only paid their principal and Interest under the amortization plan of the land bank but many paid off their loans In full or sent In surplus money to the Future Paymant Fund. Principal payments last year exceeded ex-ceeded those of the previous year by $3,610,000; the 1941 figures were $14,820,000 while the 1940 totals were $11,210,000. In addition, $6,671,000 was paid the land bank and the ! CoCmmlssioner for interest, taxes,! and other outlays and $227,000 for the Future Payment Fund. This fund provides a -reserve for the time when crops and prices may be unfavorable and It then may be applied to loans. The fund draws the same rate of Interest that Is charged on land bank loans. Under Un-der this plan farmers and stockmen stock-men are In better position to face post-war conditions. In Utah last year 95 land bank and Commissioner loans were closed for a total of $251,300. . On December Decem-ber 31, 1941 there were 8,531 land bank and Commissioner loans out- i standing in Utah for a total of $17,625,000. I- Paper In Verse "The Eomios" of Athens Is a daily paper published in verse. place. A series of health clinics for children who will enter school next September will be held In the Grammar grade building on February Feb-ruary 9 and 10 from 9 a. m. until 12 noon. At this time the children will be given a thorough medical examination. examin-ation. Parents are most earnestly requested re-quested to bring children to these clinics so that between now and their entrance , into school the necessary remedial measures may be taken to safeguard the health of these children. This last series of -clinics is being sponsored by the local P.-T. A. group and Play School mothers. Sharks Once Shunned, Now Vital Source of Vitamin Science has turned the tables on the sharks. After roaming the seas for cen-turies cen-turies shunned as a scavenger and feared as a killer, the shark is find-ing find-ing a place of importance in the American home. Tiny capsules, designed to bring health to thousands, are being pre-pared pre-pared from this killer of the deep. Recent research by the medical world has disclosed vital vitamin content in shark liver oil. Leather goods manufacturers have found a place in their industry for shark skin. Other uses will no doubt be made of the finny monsters in the near future and the shark is now the hunted instead of the hunter. Just so you will know what kinds of sharks might have contributed to the little capsules sitting in your medicine chest-here's a bit of business busi-ness about them and where they may be found. Perhaps the best known of these babies is the white shark or man-eater. man-eater. He is white on the belly and brown on the back and when you see him coming toward you the only thing to do is pray. Another man-eater is the blue shark. He is also of the white belly clan and has a slatey blue back. These can be found most anywhere in the warmer waters of the world and when they go after a school of fish they'll run them right into the fisherman's net They aren't babies they grow up to and better than 20-feet in length. Very similar to these is the dusky shark only smaller. The thresher shark is easily identified iden-tified by the very long upper tail lobe which this type uses as a powerful pow-erful flail when it attacks a school of fish. The thresher runs from 12 to 15 feet long. A common small species along the Atlantic coast is the sand shark which has sharp teeth but according to mariners will not bother a human in the water. OjJRPEMOCRACV t byMt M r IF v We had good natural a r uu-w 1 niaf: SNV SOLDIERS THEN, FOR OUR QjGIT A) ;V MEN HAD HANDLED ft f '7k . f RIFLES AND HORSES t fl'J fT & ' , SINCE THEV WERE BOVS. V , , 1 U J, Seminole Indian Chief Didn't Pull Punches Osceola, wily half-breed leader of the Seminoles, regarded murderous deceit as a fair weapon in his relentless re-lentless warfare against the United States government in defending the right of his people to live in the thick, steaming everglades of Florida. Flor-ida. His cunning method was to obtain ob-tain supplies for his men by promising prom-ising at intervals to keep the peace, and then later ambushing scouting parties of American soldiers in the fastnesses of the swampy .grasslands. .grass-lands. Though it was done under extreme provocation, it is generally admitted that the government itself was not fair with Osceola when, under un-der a flag of truce, it seized the savage and put him into the- irons in which he died. The Seminole war lasted seven years, ending in 1842, and cost thousands of lives and more than $20,000,000. The vanquished van-quished redskins were sent to reservations reser-vations west of the Mississippi. One band of Seminoles was never caught Its descendants are the few hundred harmless Indians now residing in the Florida Everglades. And now, with a motor car to every 4 persons we HAVE MEN ADAPTED TO THE FUNDAMENTALS OF MECHANIZED DEFENSE. 51 Men Games Continue Here THE ADVENT of war, we are facing new problems in Me we serve. These become more complex as the '? of the nation gains impetus. Directly or indirectly, one of us will play a more important part in this undented un-dented endeavor as momentous days roll along in 1942. aurally, in tV.; til tone for quick communication. Not only are more calls made from each telephone, but the average length of calls leased. We are aHAi-nn x fa;i;t;,a tct c nhtninnhle e the peed exists. Vmt rlv I.. . - "1 OUUl bflgC Ul UlULVl IHiO J a .ucbc piannea aaaiuons. r irsi imngs iuus. '?t first! V " ' ( ' . suggestions with an appreciation of your past Don'l trutt to memory or old lists for telephone ""tt&eri. A. Krone number is a wasted call. Anmering your telephone promptly saves time facilities. P&iont you eaU emoueh time to answer. iff f, - ... - . .. Jwere ore delays on your calls, we hope that ret? we are exerting every effort to them i - Machine, Machineless "The machine method is older. In this type of wave, the hair is prepared pre-pared and wet with an alkaline preparation, and the heat is sup plied by heaters (one for each curl) These units are attached by cords to the central heating unit, an elec trie machine. "In the machineless type, the heat is suDDlied to each curl by a small chemical pad, which is heat-producing heat-producing when moistened with wa ter, or in some cases a specific chemical solution. The pad is usually usual-ly still cold when applied to the hair and does not come in direct contact with it. The chemical reaction re-action generates heat, the maximum temperature is quickly reached, and the pad begins to cool." The first of a series of basketball games for M. Men hi Lehl stake were held Monday evening in the high school gymnasium. Wednesday evening the First ward played the Third and the Second, ward played the Fifth. The following schedule is given for the rest of the games to be played in this series: Monday, February 2 First vs. Fifth, Second vs. Fourth. Wednesday, February ;4 First vs. Fourth, Third vs. Fifth. Monday, February 9 Second vs. Third, Fourth vs. Fifth. Wednesday, February 16 The two teams with highest rating will play. , On February 18 the regional meet will be held in American Fork. Twenty-one stakes will be represented. repre-sented. ! The officers in charge announce that each ward is responsible for making their own arrangements for practice games and the use of the gym. Games are held at 7 and 8 p. m. Salty Waters Many Argentine rivers are bracto Ish or saline in character. Legal Notices PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICE Consult county clerk or respective signers for further information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF WILLIAM CRABB, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 544 E. 6 North, Provo, Utah, on or before be-fore the 30th day of March, 1942. LaPRELE CRABB COFFMAN, Administratrix. JENSEN & JENSEN Attorneys. First publication Jan. 29, 1942. Last publication Feb. 19, 1942. - COAL-IIigh Quality-COAL DRIVE OUT AND SAVE $ AT Coal Terminus Company Inc. Opposite State Road Sheds Thistle,Utah Phone Toll 6 Wholesale Retail 1 " Slack .. $2.80 $2.90 1 to 3 " Nut 4.00 4.25 3 " Lump ..... 4.60 4.80 Twenty-four Hour Service Fast Loading Not an Air Raid Shelter First Photograph Maj. Albert W. Stevens, commander com-mander of the National Geographic society-U: S. army air corps stratosphere strat-osphere balloon Explorer IL took the first photograph ever made showing the division between the troposphere and stratosphere and also the curvature cur-vature of the earth. This unique picture was obtained above 96 per cent of the mass of the earth's at-rr,nnhpre. at-rr,nnhpre. and is the first photo graph ever made with the line of sight from the camera to a far-distant objective (the arc of the dust horizon) wholly in the stratosphere. Major Stevens also made the first natural-color photograph in the stratosphere, at an altitude of approximately ap-proximately eight miles above sea leveL ,: 'tm f iLiw-t ' ten'? . A 0Untai.n States Telephone and Telegraph Ca 1 H Bonis and Stt amps Japanese Stones Crying . Japanese stones are free to complain. com-plain. "If you happen to hear," says the Japan Times Weekly, "a strange wailing sound when traveling travel-ing through the districts around Fujiyama . . . you'll be surprised that it is the poor stones crying because be-cause they have no place to go." The explanation is that these pieces of ancient lava are prized as garden gar-den stones and many people have lived by gathering and selling tnem. But under the Anti-Luxury Regulations Regula-tions luxurious things are forbidden to be transported, and garden stones are deemed a luxury. 9$ .-. -:-;-:-:iw: 4 Beneath Utah's grass roots flourishes an underground empire. It is not an air raid shelter or a series of shelters, but tunnels and underground chambers that form the nucleus for the mining Indus-try. Indus-try. Hundred of miles of underground workings running crazily through the rock can be followed in Bingham, Park City. Tintic and other Utah mining districts. It is the most fascinating and interest ine "ofess;on in the world this tuuneitog throngh rock to find the precious minerals that create so much industry for the state of Utah. High School News . u hpcomes necessary to bore farther and deeper into the earth and each year the vto-1. vto-1. rft extracting the minerals be- comes more ditficult and more expensive. In tne early days many mines were found on or near the giass roots, but today all of these surface deposits are gone and the miner must grope around in the dark corners of the earth to find desired result. Therefore, mining needs more encouragement, more capital and more InitiatiTe and fortitude. Undoubtedly Un-doubtedly the underground is still leaded with opportunity, bat those " who take these long chances must be encouraged and welcomed here u Utah to do taa Job. The metals that are taken from the underground under-ground are first treated Id Utah milling and suiplting plants and then sold on outside mark-ts and the money brought back to the state for wages, supplies and more Utah industry. On January 29 an assembly will be presented by the United States Park Service. The assembly Friday,' Fri-day,' January 30 will be presented by the Lincoln high school. Lehi will play Lincoln Friday at Lincoln. The game will start at 8 o'clock. . Mr. Kirkham reports that report cards will be issued this week. The date for the Music Festival has been definitely set for May 12. It will be held In Lincoln. Prep arations for the orchestra, band, chorus and fifteen or thirty soloists solo-ists are being made. The band has been playing at our basketball games. The Lehislon staff has completed Ita drive for the yearbook and is now securing orders for individual pictures. They are also contacting business men for advertising. Boys' Day proved to be very successful suc-cessful at the Lehi high school. Friday, Fri-day, January 23. Everyone attending attend-ing the dance reported an enjoyable time. Lehl High School, Jan. 26, 1942 Dear Patron: "Repair your broken-down machinery ma-chinery now," Is an order sent out by the United State Agricultural Defense Board and manufacturers of farm machinery. It is a known fact that farm implements will not be on the market mar-ket after the present supply has been exhausted. It is also known that the building of repair parts has been curtailed and after the present channels have been drained, "extras' will be made only upon order, this of course will result in months of unnecessary delay. To help you do repair work, In order to assure a huge agricultural production program this summer, we are opening up our farm mechanic me-chanic shop and will have a specialist spe-cialist on hand to teach you the fundamentals of farm machinery repair and maintenance. This Is an opportunity for 'you to make your repairs now and to learn how to make repairs ' and adjustments In the future. 4 If you would like this help, please come to the Lehl high school shop, Monday evening, February 2nd, at 7:00 p. m. for the purpose of organizing or-ganizing a class. Sincerely yours, Delbert Fugal . E. B. Garrett Lloyd B. Adamson. Utah County Reports Successful Year According to a report issued Saturday Sat-urday by Milton IL Harrison of Sprlngville, deputy county auditor, Utah county completed a successful success-ful year financially during 1941, closing Its books with a budget bal- -ance of $54,453.70, and cutting its total expenditures $17,253.05 over the previous year. Expenditures for the year totaled to-taled $482,910.13 against the budget bud-get figure of $537,363.83, Mr. Harrison Har-rison reported; Expenditures for 1940 were $500,163.18 with the budget bud-get totaling' $504,961. Receipts for 1941 were $479,750.48, compared to $426,430.12 for 1940. All departments showed a budget bud-get balance with the exception of exhibition and advertising. Expenditures Expen-ditures In this department were $8135.69 which amounted to $35.69 in excess of the budget figure. Expenditures in other departments depart-ments and the budget balance follow: fol-low: General fund $141,696.37, $16,-493.13; $16,-493.13; highways fund, $93,657.80, $4342.20; poor and indigent fund $20,297.34, $7902.66; infirmary $24,-517.41, $24,-517.41, $6856.92; memorial fund. $62.40. $5937.60; public welfare $141,251.12, $11,748.88; interest on bonds $1292, $1208; bond sinking fund $52,000, none. Beer Taxes The United States Industrial foundation foun-dation has produced statistics showing show-ing that since beer was legalized in 1933 more than $3,000,000,000 In federal fed-eral state and local taxes have been collected from the sale of beer. Tbe Quickest. Surest Way YOU Can Help Win This Buy V Defense BONDS STAMPS Now! CLASSIFIED A BARGAIN Right Good Oranges $2.15 crate or $1.10 for half at Russon's Market, Lehl. v l-23-4tp. FOR SALE Fine large farm. See Clyde Dorton, Lehi. l?29-tf. FARM FOB SALE 32 acres of late Elisha H. Davis farm; also a dry farm. See LeRoy Davis, Lehl. : l-29-3t FOR RENT 5 room modern home. Furnished. For Sale or Rent, 1 chicken coop. Inquire Mrs. L, E. Lott, Lehi. l-293tp Anyone desiring to remove trees for wood, see Mrs. Julia Brown. ' l?29-lt WANTED TO BUY Good used chicken coop, preferable 100 feet long. Call at Sun Office or phone 90-W, Lehl. l-29-tf COAL For Sale Deer Creek Huntington canyon. Reuben Dean. Phone 154-J. 13-25-tf CALL LEON FEET For Plaster-ing Plaster-ing stuccoing, eement work. Phone 57-W, Lehi. 12-18-tf FOR SALE Set of heavy Work Harness, $30. See Azer Wanlass, Lehi. 12-18-4t SILK HOSE MENDING, Mrs. Wayne Holman. Leave at Ruth Farr's Beauty Shop, PI. Grove. l-15-2tp. Civil Service Jobs Open The United States Civil Service Commission announces an open competitive examination for Trainee-Repairman, Signal Corps Equipment. Equip-ment. This examination is open to both men and women and they will be paid while in training. The chances for advancement are said to be good and this will be based upon individual efficiency and ability, abil-ity, and the occur ance of vacancies vacan-cies in such positions. Full further information and the necessary forms for filing may be obtained from the Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, located at your nearest' first or second-class post office, or from the .Manager, Thirteenth U. C. Civil Service District, 136 New Custom house, Denver, Colorado., Applications must be on file with the District Manager at the above address not later than January 30, 1942. LIVESTOCK WANTED Highest prices paid. Archie Boren, Pleasant Grove. Phone 3391. .... 7-10-tf FOR SALE or will trade for livestock live-stock Hallet and Davis upright piano in A-l condition. Inquire of Ralph M. Smith or phone 152, Lehi. FOR SALE Ten acre truck gard ening ground, large flowing well. L. J. Ovard, American Fork. 12-5-3t. THE CALL TO THE COLORS IS A CALL FOR DOLLARS f ' Dig deep. Strike hard. Oar boys need the planes, ships, and guns which your money will fcdp to buy. Go to your bank, post office, or savings and loan association. Tell them you want to buy Defense De-fense Bonds regularly, starting now. WANTED!!! HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Bones, Wool, Hides, Pelts, Furs and Dead or Useless Animals. Pelt Prices Paid for Dead or Useless Sheep Prompt Service. Utah Hide & Tallow Co. PHONE 88 Three Miles West of Spanish Fork DEER HUNTERS We Pay Highest Prices for DEER SKINS t Hi Jj i ' it it I |