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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Page Four at the home of President lone ing I A Suggestion: B nave Your i Udy Wednesday evening. Mrs. August Forsberg went to Salt Lake Sunday to visit with her daughters, Hilda Peterson and Ruth Eow- FARM IMPLEMENTS cutt REPAIRED NOW Dr. Jex Capener and family and axe ready g Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Capener, of Salt until you wait Why to use them? g Lake, were calling on relatives here last Sunday. I1 I 1 H. C. ROHDE Mrs. H. V. Heist and daughter, Mrs. Max Leggitt and son, Johnny of Salt Lake, and Mrs. Anthony Papko of Oakland, California, visited Saturday with Park Stumra and family. Mrs. Heist and Mrs. Papko are sisters of Mr. Stumm. g Blacksmith and Machine Works "Mends Everything jj 1 But People's Ways" RIVERSIDE Dinner guests at the Dick Allen home Friday evening included J. C. Allen of Salt Lake City and Messers Johnson, Watson and Ward, state officials who had been in the valley on business during the day. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ashcraft and family returned Sunday from a two weeks vacation trip, most of which was spent In St. Anthony, Idaho, as guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Ashcraft. Mrs. Donna Brough and son, Scott and daughter Betty Lou, of Los Angeles, returned this week to their home in Los Angeles, after visiting for two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hyrum Christensen and other relatives. CLUB NEWS 4-- H club held The Penrose Boys their monthly meeting Monday evening at the home of D. M. Grover. The assistant county agMr. Broadbent, of ent for Brigham, visited in Penrose on Thursday, calling on each club member and inspecting his project. 4-- H 4-- The Seven Kitchen Queens met at the home of Leila Woodruff. The meeting was called to order by President Leola Koford, with six members present and our two leaders. The minutes were read by the secretary, Dot Kay. A demonstration was given on cereal by our leader, Mrs. Hunsaker. Then the members made 3 different kinds of cereal. Bo Dell Hunsaker and Leola Koford gave the lesson on table service. Our next meeting will be held at the home of Leola Koford. Bo Dell Hunsaker, Reporter We Can Supply Your Every r 1 I FARM I BUREAU NEWS I Envelopes Statements 0 Office Forms 0 Cheeks Hr . f FOR SALE 1 grain binder, 1 two way plow, 1 potato planter. See Glenn Mason, phone o 79-0-- 1. 7-- 13p. Bear River Valley FOR SALE uail deader at James tip 7-- FOR SALE 100 New Hampshire pullets, 12 weeks old. Call 109. Up 7-- Pacific Manifold FOR SALE Used Heatrola. Call 23.J. Book Co. 1 tip tip 7-- 2. PIE CHERRIES are ready Walton farm. Tremonton rinirn 300 young chickens. 7-- Selling Agents for ii.n.rmrm O.y-- ' n ij FOR SALE Chevrolet Stanfill, 14.1-5-- Large wieners; also pickup. Call Starlin 5. 2 J tfc f1 1 H SAVE YOUR OLD MATTRESS LOW COST TO YOU. H -- Up and Deliver Thone 23.J, Tremonton And Our Driver Will Call East - First South, Brigham City, Utah 1 -- 5 I ' J Vs I I- - the Wires Clear for VITAL Calls! THE TELEPHONE HAS GONE TO WAR, TOO! Some of our operators and repairmen have been called into the service. Our Lines are needed for war calls. WANTED Please cooperate by using your phone only when necessary Information of the whereabouts of PLEASE USE YOUR PHONE DIRECTORY Our Operators are too busy to look up numbers Telephone Units Through Your Cooperation, We Can Assure You which have been left in homes when service was discontinued. Of Service When Your Phone Is Needed BEAR RIVER VALLEY We Need Them Won't you let us know where they are? TELEPHONE CO. Bear River Valley Telephone Co. wyywyMWM-Ms- g M oversea?' . . . r fighting-powe- E G. Grace, president, Bethlehem Steel I, ft Am ; r .', A tf -- hA waft li i v v"j5W " 4" J "- -' 4 .a.x t .""...HW....J.: rt--- - . - .vr.'.- i ,r- : t' ."v 1) - i- Front Home on the is ?&!M i ; jj& - , . i v.A- . i. tfcjmMA.lt- -i ii mil. -- ii rr Thousands oi men arriving for work in a Bethlehem shipyard. Down this yard's busy shipways slide many of the nation's cruisers, destroyers and aircraft carriers. Bethlehem repeatedly has made records for delivering vessels well ahead of schedule. This is the story of manpower in Bethlehem steel mills and shipyards, of men and women who have come by the thousands from all walks of life to do a job in backing up our fighting forces with a continuous flood of materials. These men and women are vital to the battle of production. Manpower at Bethlehem Steel has been multiplied three times in three and a half years. IK re are the figures: KUMBEI1 Or BETHLEHEM EMPLOYEES Toland invaded, September 1939 100,000 Fall of France, summer 1940 Tearl Harbor, December 1941- 120,000 - 190,000 I Tunisia, May 1943 290,000 Employment in Bethlehem's shipbuilding and ship repair-yardalone has grown from 15,000 in 1939, to nearly 180,000. The enlistment in our manpower army continues from week to week and from month to month. The total of Bethlehem employees will exceed 300,000 by the end of the year. To reach this total force, and provide for of those going into the armed services nd others, many thousands more men and women will be hired. Facts About Bethlehem Workers FROM ALL OCCUPATIONS Manpower is the betirt of Bethlehem's current production. of a ship a day. Manpower makes the meeting of its large commitments for ordnance and other war-stej possible products. All other problems such as materials and supplies are secondary the essential dependence it on manpower. Thousands of men from trades are joining Bethlehem armies. More than 13,000 women are employed at Bethlehem plants and shipyards, and the number is constantly increasing Veteran employees are zealously teaching the newcomers, so that they can quickly handle their appointed tasks. New employees cam while tlicy in special training classes and m training. Muuy 01 cjtii person s anilities puts square pegs in square holes. Wages are the highest in the history of shipbuilding and steel, and in the top group of an industries. Promotion is rapid, as opportunity to advance comes far more swiftly than under normal war-wor- , Bethlehem Workers come from virtually every walk of life to serve in these armies. Here are 60 instances of former occupations of men and women who are now producing ships and combat materials. war-wor- k Actof Antiqu- Dealei Architect Artist Automobile Race Driver Hnkcl barbff Hartrndtt ' Beautician Bond Salesman Bus Boy Bus Driver f Coal Miner Ch-- Bethlehem employees arc friendly, high grade people. The great majority have education in the high school grades and thousands arc graduates of colleges, crafts and professions. More than 50,000 Bethlehem employees are now serving in the armed forces, a fact which gives added seriousness of purpose to those working to produce the supplies. To work in Bethlehem shipyards and plants is to be in the front Line of industry, doing a real job to help win the war Some New Bhthifhfm r.MnoYrrs 1rom Various Occupations r y er j t 1 Prof-sj- ot Conduitor C ontractut IVntut Die Make- - l - ; ) . m to IMctiint piratar. t elry, kwnf. Dome s it Druggist Dry Cleaner Electrician Elevator Operator Farmer Fireman Florist Football Coach Garage Mechanic Cias Station Operator Housepainter Housewife Insurance Salesman Interior Decorator (anitor Landscape Architect Lawyer Linoleum layer Magazine Editor Mail Carrier Minister Motion Picture Operator Osteopath Plumber Printer Kadio Commentator Real Estate Dealer Reporter Salesman School Teacher Sign Manufacturer Silk Mill Worker Soda Fountain Clerk , Store Clerk Surveyor Trainman Typewriter Repairman Waiter Watch Maker FrtmauloMltsman, o nattriaU intpcetor. nii'T Xry-- t 'It Umcla, rront nrni-- r on k r ' f & can I' r ii "AY'.'hr I NY Keep . BVEKTON MATTRESS UPHOLSTERING CO. 51 IL fj I Lit Conditions. Bring it to us, and unless completely worn out, it mav be cleaned and made into a comfortable, .useful mattress at We Pick rTf vv i,,v ;f n. GOOD PRINTING Mrs. George M. Potter and Mr and Mrs. Carl Braithwaite, "an uncle and aunt. Ready For Action An exception to this rule is made only in the event the two buying processors are not hi the same class of purchasers. OPA states that purchasers in the same class ordinarily are those which compete with each other in buying from producers and in reselling the milk. . Manpower ? Liane and Oneita Bunnell last week in Nephi where spent they visited with their grandmother 1943. w- i jjc-un- The new amendment to maximum price regulation 74 which imum price regulation 329 issued by OPA on May 5. In the event a producer discontinues selling to one processor and commences selling to another processor, the maximum amount he may charge the new processor is the same price he was charging his previous buyer in January, rl it h HAVE BUYERS for good farms, Irrigated or dry. List with: James Brough, Realtor. Tremon-toUtah. tf sup- the farmer during January, 1943, according to amendment 4 to max- ' 10-1-- accomplishes this change brir a very slight incre amounting to about 1 cent per loo ui jwuiiry Ieea contain S o per ceni oi proteins. tankage. The ceiling price which may be paid a farmer by a milk processor is the price which was paid to 12-1- 11-R.- 2, 194 about plies and more equitable distribution of meat proteins for poultry feeding, the OPA has established uniform dollars and cents ceiling prices on meat scraps and digester ft "Manpower af home is essential to support SELL your dead and useless horses and cattle to White's Trout Farm and receive more money. Phone, collect. Hyrum Price of Protein For Poultry Feeding Stuff In order to secure greater " Ceiling Prices On Milk At The Farm CASH for live poultry. H. A. Gam, 435 N. 2nd W., Brigham. Phone 1 698. tf We Make It Our Business to do A or 2 Inch minimum size base price plus 15 cents or $2.65 per cwt. Small additional charges might be made by the country shipper, in the event he packs potatoes in 10, 15 or 25 pound bags rather than the regular 100 pound bag. .. z. ot Classified j Ad Column! o - cwt itte 0 Scale Books Booklets Announcements 0 Mailing Pieces Window Cards - cwt. Less 85 per cent U. S. No. 1 base price, less 30 cents or $2.20 per cwt. base Size "B" U. S. No. 1 or cents $2.80 30 per price plus O. P. A. price regulations as they affect farmers on potatoes, milk at the farm, fruits and berries sold to processors, and cost of proteins for poultry feeds, as released at the Utah State Farm Bureau Federation today reflect maximum prices permitted. Potato Prices Dollars and cents ceiling prices have been established by months for the State of Utah on early white-fles- h potatoes generally the variety. The season for this type of potato is normally July, August and September and the base prices at the farm for those months Is established for the 1943 crop U. S. Grade No. 1 at follows: July, $2.50; August, $2.30; and September, $2.15. It la assumed that a new regulation to cover the regular storage potato crop will be issued when it is halvested in the fall. poThe new early white-fles- h tato regulation provides that if a farmer ships his potatoes to a wholesale terminal market he becomes a "country shipper" and may add the country shipper's allowance of 6 cents per 100 lbs. plus actual shipping costs. . Further, if a farmer delivers in or truck-lo- t less than car-lquantities to a retail store or institutional user, he may add the actual costs of transporation plus 66 cents per 100 to his basis farm price. However, if the delivery is made to a wholesale warehouse rather than to the actual retail store or institution, he may add only 6 cents actual transportation costs to his base farm price. In the event the farmer peddles his potatoes making sales directly to the ultimate consumer, he may add $1.06 to the base farm price plus actual shipping charges from his farm to the community where the product is peddled. The regulation also provides that a country shipper or farmer shall furnish an invoice or other document of sale or attach a tag or lable to each sack which indicates that state in which the potatoes were grown and the month of the year the sale was completed. Following is a chart showing the prices for potatoes which grade above or below U. S. No. 1 grade: U. S. Extra base price, plus The Seven Kitchen Queens enjoyed a swimming part at the Crystal Springs Friday evening. After the swim they had a 'delicious lunch. There were seven members and the two leaders present. Bo Dell Hunsaker, Reporter Letterheads Thone 23.J or $2.60 per cwt. 85 per cent U. S. No. 1 base price, less 10 cents or $2.40 per 10 cents non-storab- le Blaine Welling spent the weekend in Salt Lake and Ogden. Mrs. E. W. Ward and Mrs. John Ward were guests of relatives In Ogden several days this week. Fay Hadfield, of Salt Lake, was home for the weekend. Mrs. Louisa M. Bigler returned home this week after spending several months In Salt Lake. The Relief Society social was well attended. Mrs. Thomas Udy was the hostess. Several guests were in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Murry Moss returned to their home in California, after a pleasant visit here with relatives. Mrs. Murry was formerly Afton Udy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Udy. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Hadfield and daughter, Doris, went to Salt Lake Saturday to meet Lt .Ross Hadfield who came home on a' short leave from Aqua Caliente, Arizona. They also met Mrs. Hadfield at Ogden, who came to join her husband. Mrs. Hadfield was Wilma Lee Longron, of Junction City, Kansas before her marriage to Lt. Hadfield last September at Camp Rucker, Alabama. Melinda Dustin entertained a group of young folka at her home Tuesday evening. The Primary officers held a meet- - I) t Thursday, July 22, Froaa nlumbtr, to Riit- -r repairman. from oltitt citrk. From tftlimjr man, t to frattswoman. furiuci loadtr. ihi " BETOLEQErj STEEL s i |