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Show OCTOBER 22, 1942 THE LEHI SUN, LEIII, UTAH THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1942 II II r- . " : I T? L bf-1151 wTTERE IS YOUR IMPORTANT 10 POB WAR SAVINGS COMING FROM? . to Dut ten percent of our earnings into War vfSen atomos it means adjusting the budget all along the niis a,"t do without many things, ana we must save on be- w ..cannot do without. Ue flu5 save is to buy all your family's winter needs at a liie-saver MJ uwuuiia wuu&e larnuy uuugeis Gtb.gffXr than ever before sure 5 V H ft A Flannelette is SMART for winter! GOWNS & PAJAMAS Gay Prints 1 10 Solid Pastm w IK! -.1- - nrlnfov TOITinS V-4s1 i-.'iue kt Hi care , but you if you p vmi tvipsfl smart - I? J IVV v-a Clever ?NEW GLOVES but-sensible outfits! Clever new designs in well cut, Ifitted gowns . . . with slim waists, graceful skirts and attractive neck treatments. Pajamas in man-tailored or butcher boy styles! "At Home" for Leisure Hours! HOUSECOATS 4.98 Just right when you want to relax in com-lort! com-lort! Lovely, soft chenille that is warm without being heavy! Fitted waists, swirling swir-ling skirts. 4 jrfi p $ Mines Large and Small r Respond To War Call :.. ' f. ff 98c I 4 Sturdy cotton or rayon, for I general wear! Misses' Knit Mittens 89c :Cay Knit Gloves .... 96c PAJAMAS Tailored, or butcher boy styles. ; 1.29 Knit Sleepers 65c Men's Warm PAJAMAS 1.47 New stripes, plaids and all-over all-over designs! D r awstring styles! For Boys' 1.03 CASUAL TOGS! Women's " SPORTCLAD I SWEAT E RS lew long-length slip si QO ers. Casual cardigans1' O Wters For Girls 1.98 Jaa SkL-ts Of Wool Crepe 2.98 jfirls Sport Skirts : 1.98 S WEATEBS Two-tone coats and practical slipovers! Warm! Boys' Sturdy Sweaters 2.98 Men's Sport Slacks 4 98 Boys' Serviceable Slacks 1.98 2.98 lit Safe From Llgbtning If Gilbert 0. McCaan, a .We&t pt Kimtljt, sat in a modern kith i iteel top whfle 3,000,000 ofmiB-tnads liehtnin hit ihm kd rtreaked to the ground a second later witbon to Mm. Costliest Fires The costliest fires of all times as listed in reference books were the burning of Tokyo after the 1923 earthquake, $1,000,000,000; Chicago fire of 1871, $195,000,000; and the burning of Moscow by the Russians Rus-sians in 1812 during the Napo'Ieoijio invasion, $150,000,000. EDDY KILOWATT IS HELPING PRODUCE MORE FOOD on : farms in this territory 1 1? Ae Sovernment asking for greater food Foductioa in spite of the shortage of farm ioh u dy Kilowatt is working at more farm uxa.il ever hptnro Tn tprrttnrv his - w. Uaikf J "chores" farm UUU P into tne dozens on many ?rms as more and more farm owners find 3 Elearic Hired Hand.. pzbly iuna many duties with speed and ability and at mio-u. i - mighty low cost. UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. PUL10 OF YOUR INCOAIE IN 4, WAR Rnxmc Awn c-r vfPQ 1 - .. .. wr Ji 4 V w Another Bomb for Hitler or Hiroheto from one of Utah's mines. Navy Reserve Recruiting Unit Here Today Lieutenant R. W. Schlecht, officer in charge of the United States Navy Reserve for this area, announces that the Navy recruiting service is sending a mobile recruiting unit a 39 foot scale model of a Navy ship to Lehi Thursday (today). Accompanying the ship will be one of the most colorful men in the U. a Navy Chief Petty Officer, George Sanderson who is eighty years old and the oldest enlisted man in the Navy now on active duty. He has sailed the seas for sixty-seven sixty-seven years and this is the third major war in which he has participated partici-pated wearing the uniform of tne TJ. S. Navy. The primary purpose of the visit to Lehi is to interest men between the ages of seventeen and fifty in enlistment in the Navy. Lehis quota for October is six men and so far no one has enlisted. Through stimulation of Navy interest, it should be possible to put LelU over the top. Other Navy personnel on board the ship will be Chief Petty Otf'.cer Edward Kimball, Pharmacist 3 Mate Harry Hansen, and Yeoman Richard Jacobsen. Volunteers can have their preliminary papers processed right on the ship and can oe ..worn LUo the navy as soon as they arrive in Salt Lake City. Arrangements are beinjr made to give this recruiting unit a rousing welcome on their arrivV. here. When the war broke upon tha are the Utah Copper company, the United States with the attack by American Smelting & Refining com-the com-the Japs on Pearl Harbor on De-pany, the United States Smelting, cember 7, 1941, all industry, small Refining and Mining company, the and big, had to tranRfnrm to a war International Smelting & Refining basis and transform quickly. This company. The Silver King Coalition American industry, small and large. Mines company, the Tintic Stand-did Stand-did and in record time, as produc- ard Mining company and the Park tion now proves. Utah Consolidated Mines company. Utah's mines from the large down to the smallest producer, turned their output to war production. produc-tion. The responsibility rested largely with the larger companies as today mining is largely a big company game. The days of the rii;h surface dis- Durlng recent years all of these companies have expended vast sums In the development ot Utah's resources. Millions of dollars have been spent in tunneling through the rock of this mountainous territory ter-ritory in an effort to find more ore to replace that being mined. It eoveries are gone. The bonanza takes big money and companies mining days are gone. Modern mm ing requires a strung well-financed concern ihat can afford to gamble a million dollars or so on bringing a project 10 a successful conclusion, conclu-sion, lyons expensive prospecting and development campaigns are cess of a million dollars each necessary today in the process of fore the ore was opened up. making a mine. with theso companies In the field. Utah is fortunate in having a Utah mines were ready to answer number of large companies active any challenge when the war broke in the mining field. Among these out that are tn a position to take great risk to keep the mining Industry going. The Ontario tunnel at Park City and the Kit on tunnel at Bingham are only two examples of deep exploration which cost In ex- be- Long, Wide Canyoa ' On the floor of the Atlantic, short distance southeast of New York, a great "canyon" ranging ta depth from 500 to about S.400 feet, has been accurately charted. It if 50 miles wide, ISO miles long. Government Profits In sending a letter, the average cost to the government is 1.73 cents. Extension Leader Outlines Musts Of Home Storage In storing vegetables Utahns should aim to get the storage cold as soon as possible in autumn and keep it cold, without freezing, during dur-ing the entire storage period, according ac-cording to Dr. Arvll l,. stark, horticulturist horti-culturist for the Utah State Agricultural Agri-cultural college Extension Service. "Storage in the row is sutlable for parsnips, horseradish and sallsfy and consists of placing straw over the vegetables in the row where grown and covering the straw with sou to hold it in place," the horticulturist horti-culturist states. "Mound storage is suitable for storage of all root crops and potatoes pota-toes and cabbage and can be constructed con-structed in any garden. It consists of a shallow trench eight to twelve Inches deep and not over five Yeet wide. Vegetables are piled In a cone-shaped pile and covered with straw. Soil is placed over the straw which is allowed to emerge through the top of the mound for ventilation until cold weather begins." - Leave one-fourth to one-half inch of the tops on the crown of root crops such as beets, carrots, rute-bagas rute-bagas and turnips avoids breaking the skin and prolongs the storage life the extensionist says. "Stems should be left on pumpkins pump-kins and squash. Cabbage, celery an cUettuce are best stored with roota attached. Onions for storage are harvested when thoroughly mature ma-ture and when most of the tops have died," Dr, Stark explains. Dr. Stark outlines the types of storage, how to store vegetables and harvesting for storage in the new bulletin "Storage", distributed by the Extension Service on, request. Decaying Teeth The average man has 10 decaying decay-ing teeth and the average woman has 11 decaying teeth, dentists claim. jVU.S.WAR Mmds UNITfO STATES Of AMERICA SPEED LIMIT 3.5 MILES At Reduced Speed Kio Grande Motorway is saving rubber ... giving the same dependable dependa-ble service , . over primary Federal highways thru Colorado and Utah. O Schedules carefully coordinated with transcontinental lines at Denver, Pueblo and Salt Lake City. O You can help ... make only essential trips . , . travel during midweek , , , carry only one ptece of luggage, NEW SCHEDULES Now in effect EASTBOUND: Lv. 2:00 P. M. 7:00 P. M. SOUTHBOUND: Lv. 2:30 P. M. TRAILWAYS BUS DEPOT PHONE S58 Farmers Urged To Conserve Wire In view of an inevitable war-time decrease in the supply of bale ties in 1943, farmers are urged to begin individual wire conservation programs pro-grams in order to meet as many of next year's needs as possible, according ac-cording to W. R. Holman, chairman of the Utah County War Board. Although 125,000 tons of baling wire an unusually high tonnage-was tonnage-was the manufacturing goal set for this year, U. S. Department of Agriculture officials pointed to an almost certain drop-off next year. Baling wire manufacturers, running at full capacity up to August 1, this year were directed to decrease then- production 25 percent beginning on that date. Iii view of the reduced supply of bale ties Mr. Holman urged farmers to buy only their immediate needs at the present time. Buying luture supplies now is a form of hoarding which means otner larmers wui have to go without, he said. ' He suggested that dealers also make a otic nf not ' selling more ties than were needed immediately. There's Work To Be Done By U. S. Navy The navy is launching a drive for one thousand Utah volunteers for the Navy during October. American Amer-ican Fork's share of this quota is eight men. The navy's Job in this war is of such magnitude that it almost defies de-fies the imagination in picturing. The U. S. fleet, in cooperation with the army and navy air forces, must bear the brunt of the coming offensive offen-sive on all fronts and yet, while doing this, must also keep open the supply lines from one side of the world to the other. Datelines of far away places of which few of us ever heard before tell daily the magnitude of the navy task. While navy vessels keep our fighting men in the Aleutians supplied, other ships are blasting at the Japanese in the south Pacific; at the Germans Ger-mans and Italians in the; Atlantic off the coast of Africa; In the Medi terranean and in the north Atlantic where it is essential that we get 28-WFCf STREAMLINED ELECTRIC FREIGHT TRAIN Mr Hnlman ureed farmers to plan i.nd-lease supplies through' to on re-using bale ties. If cut near Russia. And in the meantime an in-the in-the tie, straightened, and placed tensified patrol of our own coastal where they will not rust, such ties waters goes on ceaselessly. American 1 L .MM n a cltcrVlt.lV j . . ..frn ,1.- X.4W can oe usea next jem v a troops move saaeiy aioaa me ui&u- smaller bale. He said ouierwie much hay will go un-baled. Military needs require iron and steel usually I comers of globe. ways of the seas to England, to Ireland, to Australia and to the far available for bale-tie manufacturers. lit"- Undwwrittrt' approved 50-Watt trantform Train mtosvrts S'S'Un Ungth Includes streamlined locomotive, coal and water-typt tender, tank car, hopper car, box car, cattle car, caboose, "uncouple sign" and section, 9 sections of straight track, 8 curved sections, transformer and track connector. ISifkway Signal 2.49 Automatic road signal with, two red lights that flash at train approaches. K Latest Typa 4-Motor Transport Piano 21" long J-4f) 27" wingspraaJ Propellers spin. Dual landing wheels. Tricycle gear. A sturdy toy. Crow! ntf Gale 2.75 Automatic double alarm gate. As train approaches gat goes down and light shows. Men's Bo To ' HOCKEY SKATES 4 Chrome-plated, tabular skates. Ground alloy steel blades. Bheepswool tongue. Shall Not Pass Although the Suez canal's average aver-age width is about 250 feet, ships going through it ara not allowed to pass each other in motion between Mediterranean and the Bittar Lakes, or over about three-quarters of tha 100-mlle course, ine amp facing the tide, which flows ir en hours and ebbs for nve, u oDugea to tie up while the other passes, lor fear too much backwater will loosen the sandy banks. Hypnotism an Old Practice Hvnnotic phenomena were known thousands of years ago to the Persian Per-sian magi and the Indian yogis and fakirs. Scientific and medical interest in-terest in the subject was first universally uni-versally aroused during the latter part of the Eighteenth century by the work of Slesmer. a Viennese physician, who claimed to be able to cure many diseases by mean! 01 animal magnetism. All these actions are dependent upon the navy for success. Advanced scientific discoveries have necessitated radical cnanges in war planning but man power, the paramount factor in warfare, remains the same. Unless we win this war no American Amer-ican will live to see the return of the way of life we have known. Events of today demand action on the part of every man who is physically phys-ically fit. In the final analysis war will be won by man power. Our vaunted "bridge of ships" m w. napless unless this nation can provide the men to man the j battle stations. j The navy has asked American, Fork to furnish eigni men aunug October. We can't let the navyj down. ! Y'Ol -il "'In ' ' 1 tl'1',! " w isl A Vigaravt Toy for Growing Yeungtttrt STURDY TOY AUTO J Gilbert's Soft CIIKMISTStY. SET 325 experiments can be performed with this set. 49 materials. Test tnbe rack. Manual with complete Instructions. 13.8). Completely equipped 9 Sturdy construction Watch his eyes shine when he sees this auto. Pedals easily. Equipped with motometer, windshield, .bumper, seat pad, dummy headlights, and horn. Cainese WeddUK Costona Chinese oewlyweds always eat oeremooiou. dinner of a pig s heart because they will then b.v. "U SSi Tbeart" which is the word (or harmony " " ALPINE MOTOR COMPANY AMERICAN FORK |