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Show THURSDAY, JANUARY 25 Tin? t vut ottm T.TTTTT. UTAH THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1945 THE LEHI SUN Published Every Thursday at Lehi, Utah, by the Lehi Sun Publishing Co. Entered as Second Class Matter Mat-ter at the Postoffice at Lehi, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Burgess spent Sunday afternoon visiting with relatives In Alpine. Mrs. Florence Jensen was hos tess at a Relief Society quilting at her home Monday. UTAH STATE Fri ASSOCIATO Subscription Rate $1.00 Per Tear Local Items Mrs. Harold W. Barnes and Mrs. Alma Earl of American Fork spent Monday afternoon visiting in Provo. Mrs. Alex Chrlstofferson spent Tuesday in Ogden on business. Mr. and Mrs. Don Allison of Salt Lake City are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter. The new arrival has two brothers. The mother Is the former Helen Taylor of this city. William Taylor Tay-lor is the grandfather. The baby has been named Claudia Jean. Executive officers of the Fourth ward M. I. A. and their partners will hold their monthly business meeting and social at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Peck Monday evening, January 29, at 7:30 p. m. " Mr. and Mrs. Randall Schow and Wesley Schow spent Wednesday Wed-nesday in Ogden visiting with Mrs. Dee Schow and baby son. Mrs. H. R. Spurrier and son, Stanton, of Salt Lake City visited in Lehi last week with Mrs. Spurrier's Spur-rier's mother, Mrs. Kate Anderson. Miss Virgie Mae Fjeld, student nurse at LDS hospital in Salt Lake City, spent Thursday in Lehi visiting with her grandparents, grandpar-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fjeld. Miss Fjeld is the daughter of Marie Lambert and the late Dr. Virgil Fjeld. Members of the Junior Athenian Athen-ian club met at the A. K. Chat-field Chat-field home Thursday evening, with Mrs. Josephine Chatfield as hostess. Mrs. Arlene Keate reviewed re-viewed the book, "Brave Men," by Ernie Pyle, and Kelsey Chat-field Chat-field sang several vocal numbers. Mrs. Arlene Keate will be hostess at the next meeting, January 25. Mr. and Mrs. Junius Banks attended at-tended a birthday dinner Sunday in Pleasant Grove, in honor of Mr. Banks' brother, Karl Banks. Other guests included James Cordner and Mr. and Mrs. Antone Rohbock of Orem, and Mrs. Violet Vio-let Cobbley of Pleasant Grove. The Lehi stake presidency, A. C. Schow, Rodney C. Allred, and Virgil H. Peterson, Stake Relief Society president Ethel Hunger, and Bishop E. N. Webb attended "a regional welfare meeting in Provo last week. Amy Brown Lyman, Roscoe W. Eardley and Elder Eccles of the general welfare wel-fare board were the speakers. Mrs. A. D. Chrlstofferson and Mrs. Wallace Hebertson attended a Vegional conference of the Red Cross in Ogden on Tuesday. Representatives Rep-resentatives of every branch attended at-tended the conference, which stressed the war fund drive and publicity. Dr. and Mrs. E. O. Thompson and children, Karen and Ronnie, of Salt Lake City visited with Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Larsen, the occasion being Mr. Larsen's birthday anniversary. Mrs. Matilda Phillips entertained enter-tained at dinner Monday evening, honoring Bill Thornton, who is on, leave from the U. S. Navy. Guests included Mrs. Thornton (Betty Phillips), Mr. and Mrs. Lester Peterson and family, and Mrs. Mary Bryant. ' Executive officers of the Lehi Fourth ward M. I. A. entertained the remaining officers and teachers and their partners Tuesday Tues-day evening following mutual in the ward hall. Table games were played, followed by refreshments. Hosts were Fon Rothe, Michael Kearney, Frank Huggard, Zina Anderson, Kathryn Clark, and Eudora Ross. f Mr. and Mrs. Warren Goates Counts on Rocket were Salt Lake City business! visitors on Monday. Mrs. Selena Hutchlngs of Bountiful attended the Cooper-Ames Cooper-Ames wedding in Lehi last week. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Powell and family are visiting in Poison, Montana, with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Powell. Robert Morton entertained a group of friends last week on his birthday anniversary. Help to Win War Members of the stake Relief Society board met Monday evening eve-ning at the home of Mrs. Rose Lott for their regular business meeting. Following a delicious hot luncheon, served by the hostesses, hos-tesses, Mrs. Lott and Mrs. Edna Banks, the business meeting was conducted by President Ethel Hunger. Magazine Director Marie Ma-rie Smith, who is leaving the stake board to assume the secre- taryship of the Fourth ward, was presented with a gift from her fellow board members. Others present included Udine Wing, Mada Peterson, Eliza Logsdon, Liliane Anderson, Dorothy South-wick, South-wick, Eudora Ross, and Jeanne Jackson. Printed jerseys are ideal transition f "" fl dresses! Though you don't put away f'i" Irfff J your jewel-tone wooU and velvety blacks, brighter days will seem more Li springlike if you're wearing a. frock with just a few light lingerie touches! Isaac Woodhouse of Normoyle, Nevada, is visiting in Lehi with his sister, Mrs. Rachel Anderson. Mrs. Ralph Davis is entertain ing members of the Auctus club at her home this evening. Mrs. Noye Chrlstofferson is in charge of the program on Russia. Miss Elvera Dansie, who is con fined to the Bingham hospital, is reported much improved. Earl Woodhouse of Idaho Falls, Idaho, and Jesse M. Woodhouse of Sandy visited with Lehi rela tives on Sunday and Monday of this week. Mrs. William B. Hayward of Denver spent Sunday and Mon day in Lehi with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Davis. Mrs. Hay-ward Hay-ward is the former Donna Davis of this city. Mrs. Effie Fay Peterson and baby daughter have left for Arizona, Ari-zona, where they will join Mrs. Peterson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Val Zimmerman. ' -i( iwm ; 1 .T. ,N0' 'II 1 V II V---- 1 u; it in So Refreshing for Transition Day$ NEW ACCENTS ON AUSTELLE DRESSES Mrs. Edward J. Larsen attend ed a bridge luncheon at Club Radar in Provo Wednesday afternoon, af-ternoon, as a guest of Mrs. D. R. Norton. Mrs. Reuben Russon was hostess hos-tess at a shower honoring her daughter, Maurine . a recent bride, Wednesday evening. Mrs. Margaret Potter and son, Wester, of Kaysville spent the week end in Lehi with Mrs. Potter's Pot-ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Schow. Miss Ruth Worlton, chairman of the Junior Red Cross in Lehi, and Mr. and Mrs. Ross Nielsen attended a meeting of the Alpine district Thursday in Pleasant Grove. Miss Vivian Stewart, national na-tional regional chairman, was present on her official visit. Mrs. Jean PhW'ps entertained a group of littl6.i is January 17, in honor of the iourth birthday anniversary of her daughter, Sandra. Games and refreshments were enjoyed, with a large pink and white cake. Guests included Margaret Ann Webb, Kay, Linda and Gene Webb, Elaine Haws, Nan Broadbent, Linda Flygare, Le Grande Asay, and Lola and Bradley Webb. Mr. and Mrs. William Skinner received a telephone call from their son, Reed Hutchings, who is stationed at Camp Roberts, California, informing then that he will arrive in Lehi Thursday for a short visit enroute to Officers' Offi-cers' Training camp in Georgia. His wife, the former Beryl Curtis, and little daughter, Penny Rea, of Southgate, California, arrived in Lehi Tuesday. Expected to Lend Punch to Knock Out Axis. NEW YORK. The U. S. navy is counting on rockets to provide much or- the punch to knock out both Nazis and Japs, Capt. G. D. Llnke, navy bureau of ordnance, told the reconversion congress of American Ameri-can industry. Linke revealed that the navy laid down its first rocket barrage at Tarawa, and that since that time rockets have sharply reduced casualties casu-alties during amphibious landings by reducing beach defenses to rubble. The navy also uses them to supply the initial impetus for planes to take off with heavy loads on short landing strips, he said. Linke's remarks came as the reconversion re-conversion congress the 49th annual an-nual meeting of the National Association As-sociation of Manufacturers turned Its attention to discussions of postwar post-war industry. Industry plans a quick reconversion reconver-sion when the government gives the signal. William P. Witherow, president, presi-dent, Blaw-Knox company, Pittsburgh, Pitts-burgh, said that 49 per cent of industry in-dustry will be able to swing over into full production. the day the government gov-ernment gives a green light and that an additional 27 per cent will be able to resume civilian output within with-in four weeks. He said 95 per cent of all industry can complete reconversion recon-version within eight weeks an 76 per cent of the firms can reach peak production in that period. Dr. Gustav Egloff, Universal Oil Products company of Chicago, discussing dis-cussing prospective developments said: "Postwar dwellings will hardly seem real when compared with our present homes. "Developments in synthetic textiles tex-tiles are likely to overshadow or outmode the products of the silkworm," silk-worm," he added, saying that textiles tex-tiles are now being woven from rayon, ray-on, - nylon, rubber, spun glass, woods from wood and soybeans, fibers from milk, casein and metals. 12 of U. S, Casualties Suffered Jn One Month WASHINGTON, About 12 per cent of all army casualties occurred in one recent month. The latest army list reports a total of 461,508 casualties, covering casualties reported through November Novem-ber 15. This was an increase of 58,-984 58,-984 over the total reported for the period through October 14. Casualty statistics usually lag about two to three weeks behind the fighting. -This' would place the period of the 58,000 casualties between be-tween the latter part of September and mid-October. (During that time the greatest number of American ground forces in! history took the field in western Europe. In the same time the American Fifth army was pushing against the heavily fortified enemy line in Italy, and army troops under General Gen-eral MacArthur were moving against Jap strongholds in the southwest south-west Pacific. '" V " ' ,' Moreover, activity by American air forces based in England, to western west-ern Europe and in Italy reached unprecedented un-precedented proportions at that time. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Radio Physician Cures Patient Far Over Sea SOMEWHERE IN THE PACIFIC. Seaman Elmer Hall of Louisville, Louis-ville, Ky., fell unconscious recently on a ship in the Pacific and there was no doctor aboard. The radio op- 1 Tl J . l a TT 1. .1. . Mrs. Lillian Mclff announces ' nt7 . Miss Florence Mclff, to Ernest medlcal J018"" soon La J. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Smith. The young couple were united in marriage Wednesday morning in the Salt "tLT"; i,w tv, . .microphone, ents and Mrs. Lillian Mclff ac companied them through the temple. The bride is a graduate of Gar- microphone and Hall's symptoms had been described. "Put a stethoscope over his heart and put the earpieces close to the the doctor told the men at the patient's side hundreds of miles away. His instructions were obeyed. The doctor listened intently, then said: ' 'Your man has an asthmatic at- field County high school, and has1 tack Wra Mm in blankets with been employed at Fort Douglas hot water bottles and give him aa until the last few weeks. The injection of adrenalin chloride. Then groom is a graduate of the Lehi get him to a hospital." high school, where he was active, Hall has recovered and returned in school affairs. to duty. A wedding reception honoring ' the newlyweds was given by the mother of the bride Wednesday evening in the Fourth ward hall, with a large number of friends and relatives in attendance. Mr. Smith leaves today for Fort Douglas. Mrs. Smith will remain in Lehi with her mother for the present. AUDIOMETER TESTS COMPLETED Public Health Nurse Day Set For Friday Friday the entire country will be celebrating National Public Health day, a day devoted to the valiant public health nurses, who have labored so diligently in raising rais-ing our health standards. As the civilian supply of doctors has dribbled away, It has become more and more the responsibility of the public health nurse to help the people guard their health, and care for their sick. Mrs. Mabla Jones, public health nurse of this district, which includes in-cludes Lehi, Cedar Valley, American Amer-ican Fork, Alpine and Highland, has given ten years of service to her community. It is fitting that our people become acquainted ( with the valuable service she and , other public health nurses are doing. The duty of these nurses j Is to assist with prevention and control of communicable diseas-1 es, aid in diagnosis and care of the sick, sponsor classes in home nursing and health education, and various other branches of public health service. During the ten years Mrs. Jones has served in this area, 500 women have taken the home nursing classes, and thousands of inoculations have been performed. per-formed. Public health nurse service is available without charge to anyone, any-one, of any race, creed, or color. ' Mrs. Jones invites , those with health priblems to call on her for her services. Let us follow the theme of public health day, "Know your public health nurse, who she is, and what she does. I r. V Our Entire Personnel and Store Stocks " are at Your Beck and Call , MAKE THIS STORE YOUR FOOD STORE MEATS-GROCERIES FRUITS VEGETABLES LARSEN BROS. GROCERS MAIN STREET LEHI PHONE 17 Income Tax Returns Due March 15th To Celebrate Day Income tax returns for the year 1944 must be filed not later than March 15, 1945, with the Collector Collec-tor of Internal Revenue for the district in which you live or have your principal place of business, a deputy collector reported Monday. Mon-day. 0.,U4-;1 Hn..MA4- AT T withholding or direct payments SfhnnSTS- Perf0rmed by Immunization Clinic Here Tuesday An i immunization clinic te whooping cough, diphtheria an: Mr. and Mrs. ; Heber Chase Featherstone will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary to-, smallpox will be held Tuesdai morrow, January 26, with their January 30, at 10 a. m. in k children and immediate family ( Memorial building. Parents are in attendance. Married in Amer- 1895, lean Fork on January 26, to the collector have hfion mario tslsnoP KODinson. by many persons, but all tax-1 The couple have had eight payers must file returns by the chiIdren, five of whom are liv-above liv-above date as specified by law. I inS; C. C. Featherstone and J. Any person whose income in I J-Featherstone of Salt Lake City, 1944 was $500 or more is required Mrs- Harriet Martha Fitzgerald to file. Use either the withold- , of Draper, Mrs. Verna Ann Wading Wad-ing receipt or form 1040. jde11 of Los Angeles, California, For all those who- would like ' and Mrs- Alice Afton Proctor of assistance in filling out returns a ! American Fork. They also have Deputy Collector will be at the lW0 step-sons, A. M. Turner of Memorial Hall in Lehi Thursday, February 8, from 9 a. m. to 5. p. m. Engagement NICHOLES-BECK. Mr." and Mrs. Victor W. Nich oles of Lehi are announcing the engagement of their daughter, ray Evelyn, to Tremonton and Newell B. Turner ot Lehi. Mr. and Mrs. Featherstone are both enjoying good health at present. They have lived in Lehi nearly all of their married life. Mr. Featherstone, a brick mason and cement worker, has constructed con-structed a number of Lehi's most beautiful homes. He. in mrt.- nership with the late Olaf Holm-stead, Holm-stead, laid the first cement walks Rfaff Rororoeiniv Theron F. Beck, son of Mr. and ! ? .V1' and many corners still Mrs. Stephen F. Beck of Ameri can Fork. The bride-elect is a graduate of the Lehi high school and a student stu-dent of the Brigham Young University. Uni-versity. Sgt. Beck recently returned from England where he took part in 30 missions as a ball turret tur-ret gunner on a B-17. He has been granted the air medal with three oak leaf clusters, for three daylight raids over Berlin, the distinguished flying cross and a presidential citation. He is a graduate of the local high school and attended the BYU previous to entering the service. He is now stationed at Santa Monica. Mrs. Nicholes is honoring her daughter with a shower January 25 in the Lehi Fourth ward recreation rec-reation hall. The wedding date is awaiting army movements of Sgt. Beck. Mrs. Mabel Jones, public health ; nurse, announces the completion i of the Audiometer tests for hearing hear-ing in the Fourth grades this week. 92 tests were given to children of this age group, and a number of slight ear conditions have been found. Parents of. these children will be contacted about their condition, Mrs. Jones stated. Army Is Getting Soft, Germans Being Warned LONDON. An exchange telegraph tele-graph dispatch from Italy quoted a German information bulletin which said that Nazi soldiers who shirk or discard their weapons should be I "spat upon." j The bulletin, issued to 16th S. S. I Panzer division officers, said that 1 "some German soldiers in the front ' lines and at home have become soft." c "Let us get an iron broom and ' clean up our mess behind our lines," 1 the bulletin advised. Scissors Handy Scissors are handy in the kitchen. They can be used to trim crusts from bread, to shred lettuce, to cut cooked vegetables into fancy shapes, to remove burned edges from cakes or cookies, to shape slices of meat, fish or fowl, to loosen o.rds from baked meats, to snip the centers in grapefruits. bear the mark of "Holmstead and reamerstone, Contractors." Trout Species 'There are seven species of trout -. rainbow, : blackspotted, brown mackinaw, brook, California golden and Sunapee golden- in Wyoming streams and lakes. Grade Label A grade labeled brand is one that states the ranking quality, as determined deter-mined by point scoring the impor-tant impor-tant characteristics, on the basis of established grade standards, in a single composite term, of such consumer con-sumer understanding, as excellent, good, fair, and poor; Determini factors are color and maturity, inherent in-herent in the raw material; and uniformity uni-formity of size and absence of delects, de-lects, representing the workmanship oi the processor. In Colorful Meals Plan your meals with an eye to color. All-white meals or all-green meals aren't very appetizing Fire Chief Skips His Own Burning House mGGINSVILLE. MO. - A $50.-000 $50.-000 fire swept through a lumberyard lumber-yard at this place, and ignited the house next to it. Better, let it burn, Fire Chief Fred Newman decided, and concentrate on saving sav-ing the other nearby homes. Newman's New-man's home, which was the one next to the lumberyard, was destroyed. Church Village he little town of Cholula. Mexi-oulated Mexi-oulated by no more than 3.000 is, there are at least 300 ch iches at one time the villa o boasted of a church for each day cf the year. This strong feeling for religion is manifest all through Middle Mid-dle America. Motor-Vehicle Fees Motor-vehicle registration fees,-the fees,-the original form of automotive taxation, increased from $260,000,000 in 192."5 to $439,000,000 in 1940. This j:iin in revenue results almost ohoilv from increased ownership of aui. mobiles, the tax rate having advanced ad-vanced only slightly. Telephone Lehi 90 With All News and ! Advertising: for the LEHI SUN Address" all Communications LEHI SUN LEHI, UTAH asked to have their children a; the clinic promptly, as the doc tor will be in attendance for onl; one hour. Children who have had whooping whoop-ing cough immunization before should come in for one booster dose this year, to 'be sure they are immune to the disease. Thos who have had no previous treat ment must come to the Tuesday, as three doses are need' ed, and only two more clinics will be held after this date.. Whoop ing cough causes more deaths among children under one year than polio, diphtheria, scarlet fever and measles combined, besides be-sides risking after-effects such as nerve deafness, speech defects and other disorders. Children from six months may be immunized. immu-nized. Be sure that YOUR child is safe from these dreaded scourges of childhood. Dont take chances, it may be too late another time! i If tr new 1 nexte the ci of the ingto permi vote f Hal from atton a hea the h as th concl had 1 bills' the n count be nc ficult lawm Th to bi an c fund ingc ! erati I riatii divid I new then I meai :j last 1 stan (D- i new DEAN PRIOR NAMED FIRST AID CHAIRMAN FOR RED CROSS Dean Prior has been named director di-rector of First Aid and Life Savins Sav-ins Instructor for the Lehi Chapter Chap-ter of the American Red Cross, it is announced this week. Mr. Prior, athletic coach and health instructor at the high school has at present a record number of boys registered in first aid classes. Heat Control A newly-invented heat-control it-vice it-vice makes it possible for each apartment in a large building io have individual heat. No longer doe one temperature have to be set for the entire house. Special types of thermostats control the heat to suit each occupant. Hospital News Mrs. Phyllis Cook and baby son were removed to their home on Thursday. Richard Sabey of Orem underwent under-went a major operation Friday. Mrs. Mildred Allred and baby daughter were removed to their home Sunday. A daughter was born to Mrs. Kathryn Booth Saturday. Herman C. Goates, who recently recent-ly underwent a major operation, was removed to his home Satur day. A son "was born to Mrs. IreDe Burnham on Monday. Dean Powell was removed to I his -home Saturday, following 8 j recent major operation. A son was born to Mrs. Re Zimmerman on Tuesday morD |