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Show Friday, January 14, 1 9 , 4 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TifE SENTINEL, MIDVALE, Stock Show Names Owens and Sharp To 1944 Positions 15 YEARS AGO WAH BONDS January 11. 1929 Acid Indigestion RelieYed in 5 minutes or double your money back Wbw em:eM Jtom.-,ch ~ttl<! uu~ pllntul. IUli'M"dlnJ .... aour atomaeh and bea.rtburn, 4oet.on 0.1Ua.llJ' T~leu. No lu:athe. Bt>ll·an• brlnp mrnrort ta ., JUlY or double J'OUr monl!)' back oa retura Of boUle to ut. 2:.C at aU dniCJI.Itl. When Pearl Harbor burst upon us our ereat expanse of territory wa s protected by a one ocean navy ot a bout 350 first line ships with an addition or an approximate number building. - F ift ee n Years Ag o- Miss Oralie Rawson was hostess has held for the past five years. In addition, W. W. Owens, director of the Utah extension service, will succeed William Peterson, extension director emeritus, on the board of trustees for the show. Three other livestock men of Utah were named to positions on the board. They are John Booth, Dr. J. S. Alley and staff have moved into their new spacious and up· to-date building on East Center street. mayor of Span ish F ork and presi- -F iftee n Yea rs Ago- dent of the Spring L ivestock Show association, Ray Theurer of Providence, and Jeff Conover of Ferron. Manager Sharp advises junior livestock raisers of the state to begin preparations for the show now, by purchasing good stock and selecting calves with care, both to assure winning prize money at the June show. He emphasizes the fact that only 4-H club and Future Farmer members are eligibleto enter the events. Prize money, pr,emiums and sales at the 1943 Fat Stock show amounted to $102,000, Sharp states. Milan Canning, Lewis Dahl and a party of friends enjoyed skating at the Heath skating rink in Salt Lake last Wednesday evening. to members of her club Wednesday evening at her apartment in the Phelps building. -Fift een Veal'S Ago-- Now we a.re in a tive ocean war and we are required not only to pay for the building of enough ships of the line but also for hundreds ot Lib.. erty ships and auxiliary craft. The dmount ot money you invested in War Bonds when we had a one You can install Zona lite yourself in one evening. It's easy - and saves expensive installation costs. ocean nnvy wo.s all dght then, it isn't enough now. more War Bonds. Buy more and U.S. Trtasw~ D•f'artnlt'llt -Fiftee n Years A go- -Fifteen Years Ago- Mrs. C. A. Lemke of Salt Lake entertained Tuesday for Mrs. George W. Goetz. Besides the guest of honor those present from Midvale included Mrs. John Jen~ sen, Mrs. Hannah Anderson, Mrs. R . R. Fenn, Mrs. Andrew Larson, Mrs. D. A. Drown, Mrs. Olo! Olson and Mrs. J. A. Alcorn . Zonolite is completely fireproof. It never settles. Reduces heating hills one-third -every year! There's two sides to every question and the astute politician can be found on both of them. The Art Club met at the residence of Mrs. P. E. Sullivan last Friday. Luncheon was served at one o'clock, followed by sewing. FARM WASTES IN CORK SUBSTITUTE A new type of cork substitute, utilizing such farm wastes as the pith and fibers of sugarcane, corn- For full details, see or phot.e There's little good in telling a man that honesty pays if he is getting rich by being dishonest. Urging American• Lo "Keep 'em Flying" through tlte purcha..P of more War Bonds, the above poster acill soon make it1 appearance in ser:erol hundred thou•and •torcs and di1play •pot• tJ.rougho,t the country. It tea• painted by Georges ScJ.reiber, internationally kno1Dn a.rcilr, who&e picture.1 hang in the JU~tropolitan and Whitner Mu1eum1 in New York and other rnu&eum& in varimu citie1. U.S. TrtasNry D'PIIrlm...W ~eople do not like the bare truth so they dress it up.· COOK COAL &: LBR. CO. Phone: Mid. 10 WILLIAMS BLDG. SUPPLY Phone: Mid. 700 -Fifteen Years A go- CONTIUE HOG PRICE ADJUSTMENTS Adjustments in hog support prices, which have been in effect in numberous markets during December, will be continued until further notice, with minor exceptions. At any mark ets where no adjustment of the support level has been announced, the support price shall be one dollar per hundred weight below the m aximum price in effect at such m arkets on November 29, 1943, under regula- •talks and peanut hulls, has been developed by the Department of Agriculture's Northern Regional Research laboratory at Peoria, Ill. The Agricultural Research administration says the substitute is the equal of cork disks used in bottUng beverage products. A branch o! the bottling industry is now building a large scale p ilot pl ant t o develop manufacturing procedures a nd costs. tion of OPA. Tightens Rationing Regulations As a further move to stamp out the black market in gasoline, OPA has ruled that any local board or special hearing officer, after a proper hearing and a finding that the tire or gasoline regulations have been violated, may not only revoke a gasoline ration, but also may prohibit the use of gasoline in the violator's possession which was obtained as part o! the ration. Lend-Lease Farm Machinery Less than three per cent of the United States production of farm machinery went for Lend-Lease between March 11, 1941, and No vember 1, 1943, according to the presidept's report to congress on Lend-Lease operations. Allied need for farm machinery was increased because of military demands. American flying fortresses now use airfields which four years ago were among Britain's best fanns, thus necessitating reclamation of marshes and rough hill land for farm acreages. When Autsralia was threatened by Japanese invasion early in 1942, thousands of Australian farm tractors were conscripted for construction of military roads and airfields. Moreover, British and Australian farm machinery manufacturing facilities early in the war had been converted to ordnance production. Civilian Meai Supply About two-thirds (67 per cent) of the Un ited States supplies of meat available for all needs in 1944 has been allocated to U. S. civilians, according to the War Food administration. This allocation will allow about the same per capita civilian meat consumption in 1944 as in 1943. On a dressed weight basis, it is equivalent to approximately 132 pounds per capita for the year compared with the pre-war 1935-39 average of about 126 pounds. Pork and Beans Released About 440,000 cases (approximately 20 million pounds) of canned pork and beans will be released to civilian consumers within the next !ew weeks. M ore T ea for C ivilians About 76 million pounds of tea will be available to civHian conSLimers in 1944-wartime limitations on shipping space permitting. This is about 16 million pounds more than civilians got in 1943. In these uncertain days if you do nofknow what to count on you can still count on your fingers. L adeez AND Gentlemen ! Come R IGHT in and see our GREAT exhibit of fine-flavored COFFEES ! P eople buy 'em so fast we have to get N EW supplies constant ly, and so every package is B OUND t o be ext ra-fresh! Y ou pays your money and y ou takes your C HOICE of favorite brands ! Get t he coffee, HERE at S afeway, t hat will ma ke that SECOND cup taste even better than the first ! N o RATION points needed these days. NO W you can buy all you WANT ! Come right in a nd buy, T ODAY! Our Specialty- WEDDING INVITATIONS and ANNOUNCEMENTS * /Jtit/it~le ~elftiHel . HIGH QUALITY - * LOW PRICES ARNOLD C. TROESTER RPM Motor Oil - Batteries tbs. Harvest Thrifty Famlly.. 50 lbs. Other r;ood Values ,. 37r11' Coffee M'llk Cherub Top Quality 391'r1 >'ILTERS 5,/ Milk 1' Coffee Tea -~~-~-~-~-~-~-~~~. .~~~~~. -----~lb. 231 Sugar ~.'-~~. ~-~·~'····-···-····lo 671 Postum .'".~!.~~-~....................••• 421 Regular ...- .... .large pkg. (1 pt. each) ........__ ,..... 4 for Sego, Morning, Carnation (1 pt.. each) _, __ ..,_.4 for Paper or Cloth _____ pkg. Beverly ~~ft~u~~~~..~~~n~'h~. 45¢ IIIIEWIIY Ft11m-Fresll PRODUCE /lfltioned Items !21 Lard ~~-~ '~.~~~~~~~-···-·-···-·····' tbs. !51 Shortening "':~~-~.~.a.~.'~.......... lb !51 Shortening ~~~.~o ".:~·.:...~.:..... , lbs. 721 221 681 {3) Cheese Krart•s Relish or 17"1' !61 Margarine 1:>~~:~.~.~.:-~~. ~::~-'.~'}b. 28¢ !61 Margarine ~~~~.y-~.~~-~ 25¢ 151 Ham [131 Pork and Beans .::~.:.c.~·~·····-·to ""· 111 121 Tomato Juice ~-~~~.:-.1:>~.~·"-·"* ""· 61 [181 Catsup ":~~-~~~~.-~~"...~~.~~~~.:. . u o• . 14¢ 121 Beans ¥::,~~~:',~"-.'~~.............• , b• . 341 121 Beans ~~k~~ ':.~~~: .."~. . ~~~~~--' 341 121 Limas 14¢ os . 111 Beans (Now [lSI Peas ~':,~~~~~~.::~.~~---. -...--........ as. 151 1101 Corn ~~~-~~~~~-··-·-··-··. ··········" o•. 13¢ 151 Beets ~g~~o'Id"'-·-··-·····-···-·--•o o•· 141 [4) Soup ~~~."-b~ . ~.:>:".~.~.'~.............. s tor 251 [41 Soup ~ei_N~:-r~sparagus 7t/ [11 Baby Food ~t~~~~~ ~.~ ~.~~~~;"ror 20¢ .... - ...........lb Cali f ornia. Large Llmu ....................16 oa. 20 KEEP RIGHT ON buying War Savings Bands to the very limit of your ability-Speed the VIctory! ,. Yellow........ lb• (Use Stamp No. !i, before they expire January 15lb) .. • Extra ·-·-·--...... 10 lb. cloth bag Airway, a Selected Mild Blend ················································································- ... - ...............can Standard Gasoline Spearmint ... - ........ 3 pkgs. • Noh Hill Quality Coffee 11 Complete Automobile Service 11· .. at J1 Saving ···········································································-····· Cut Green Point Free) .. ___ t 9 MIDVALE GARAGE ~ • lb•. 136 N. Main Hon-!lfltioned Items Lee Wright's 17J Bread Julia Enriched .... 20 oz.-2 for Duchess ~.~.·~~. .".':~~·~"._.pint 231 Gum Canel'a Stick 101 Calumet ~~:;.'.re~ ····-········" o•. 181 Flour ~~~~g~dc~~:~.....so $1.98 Blossom $1 79 Flour Fancy Blue Roae 97 T-J R•ICe • Silk Toilet 15 ]'"r1 TISSUe Tissue ·······-······-·' rolls Bleach ~-~~.·~-Mag·~····-· .,uart 101 Matches ~~.:!.~!~..a box carton 231 Oats Morning Glory Quick or 20" Wheat Hearts ~-p·~-:_ry;i o•. 211 Corn Meal Sperry•a 5 Ibs. 231'rl Suzanna ~f:J::~.~.o·, '!::r~~:g. 19¢ Honey ':~o· -~-~~~~.~,o tba. $1.98 Coffee ~~~·:·J'.';;JZ ~~~~~~····-··················-······ ·······-·········~b. jar 28.¢ Coffee ~~~i~: ~~~~-~·~·········· ··· ·· · · · ··················-·····················I b . jar 33.¢ lb. 24.¢ Coffee lb. 20.¢ Coffee - Pimento Spread ........ 5 oz. jar Tires and Tubes Page 'Thra. pr~rfbll tbe rutat-•rllnr mN.Jirl~• koown to~ nmptotu.Ue relld-medtclne. IIIF:e lhc:.e In lkll-m. S Ocean Navy Lou is E. Goff, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. I . G off, arrived home Friday after spending the past 30 months in the Swiss-German mission of the LDS church. Louis visited eastern points on his re... turn trip, and spent part of the holidays at the home of his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. C. M . Warner, of Herculaneum, Mo. vised to make plans f or the e ighth a nnual Intermountain Junior Fat Stock show, w hich will be hel d early n ext June in North S a lt Lake. A meeting of d irectors in Salt Lak e City on December 17• brought in new directors and laid out definite plans for the show. David Sharp, J r., assistant state 4·H club leader, was re-appointed manager of the show, a post he Phone Mid. 178 *'JI/Iud'lfou BIUf 'JIJUA* Noted Artist Paints War Poster Items taken Jrom the tiles oJ The Midvale Journal Members of 4-H clubs and Future Farmers of America are ad- 7Ae UTAH----------------- Grapefruit ~:!d.?~:. ~::':~~. =~~~.!Jb. 6.¢ Avacados ~~~r!~~~ft". 9 25.¢ Carrots T&"~.J::'c1!f> ................... 3.¢' Lettuce ~~1~rislR.e ...............-.. 10.¢ Yams ~;~s~~~~~········-··············Jb. 12.¢ Cauliflower Wn"!.':n8~.~..~·ib~ 15.¢ ORANGES Sunkist Sweet Juicy ... 1b. lb. $5.19 _$2.69 Case............. .lb. 10 Case...... Pound. ......... ·-··-··· ~ .¢' IIIIEWIIY luttrttnteed Mill T$ U alt Polat V alue Ualt P o lat Value Lamb Legs 36,/1' [6J Prime Rib Roast 291' 161 Grain Fed ....A grade lb. 10-inch cut .... A grade lb. ,J Sirloin Steaks· 171 Pot Roast-~.~.~~~~;{ ~r~~e 141 Sausage 11 Sliced Bacon ~13 .0.~. . 11 Pork Loin Roast ~~i,r 131 Hams ~i:~~k'H~r;~~.~..~~~1i>. [8) Tender Juicy ... .lb. lb. Farmer style .................................. lb. 4 lb. 4 lb. (5) HAlllS, Tender Skinned, Butt Half 39.¢ 26.¢ 32.¢ 41.¢ 32.¢ 34.¢ lb. 35t |