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Show IMS- 10. y, May - B EAR in the Pacific: jHh Ernie Pyle RIVER VALLEY LEADER, NOTICE OF FINAL TAX SALE All sales will be nmde subject to the general taxes for the year 145. I.tst t mentioned or described in frojerty the foiitjwirg hsc is situatNOTICE is thton ed that math and west of the Halt Lake - in any ..r May, l4a,given at 12.00 o'cloi K Meridian, United Slates in ""on, at the trout door nf tlx? County liox Elder County, State Survey, of I'tah, 'UIt ""us J in Brig-hahead-mi! in ail Instances where the City, Bx ami v (lunty, i tan, I will jiffer for oi the property here listed shows 1" at Pu,,lio auction and stil to the inside certain the said lots, bidder fir cash, pursuant to block and i!at8cities, higher are taken from the re VI official of said plats and survey l. tan ynnwioni Owi Annotated, 1M43. the folcities. In this list the following ablowing describt-rwil estate situated breviations are used for words the in na id xunty and now held by it un- - used opposite them, viz: aer preliminary tax sale. No bids for a., ac for acre, acres. !rss tnan tne total amount of taxes, add. for addition interest. and costs which are -- for avenue ave a charge Penalty upon such real estate will be befc. for beginning accepted. blk. for block bet for between bdy., bdrs for boundary, boundaries ch., chs for chain, chains com for cont for commencing containing for deg. degree, degrees for distance dit K for cant H'ly for easterly ft. for foot, feet frac for fractional in., ins for inch, inches for link, links lk., Iks It., Its. for ' lot, lots for minute, minutes m., inin. or for more or less in. or N. for north XE, for northeast NR'ly for northeasterly X'ly for northerly 1939 N'W. for northwest NW'ly for northwesterly. Dc Luxe Tudor for point pt V sec. for quarter section r.. rs for range, ranpes 1937 rd . ri14 for rtd. roriA W of for right of way KK. DeLuxe "85" Sedan sec. sees for section, sections S for south 1937 SM. 'for southeast for southeasterly SFO'ly "85" Coach S'ly for southerly st. for street sub for subdivision 1933 S.L.M. for Salt Ij&ke Meridian SW-fsouthwest Tudor Sedan t., tp., tps. for township, townships th. for thence 1938 U.S. sur. for T'nited States Survey II. S. ii. for Uintah Special MeriCoupe dian W. for west for 1936 westerly. W'ly. PRELIMINARY TAX SALE Sedan 30, 1941 January Recorded in 1940 Tax Sale Book oiif Cronauist 1 1142 The 1935 NW.4 of the NW.W of sec. 7, tp. 11 X., r, 1! W., S UM. cont. 40 ac Coupe $4.39 Eugene Petersen E 1160 of sec. 8. tp. 12 N., r. 9 W.. NW.'i 1934 7.89 S.L.JI. cont. 160 ac Coach Edith M. Hewett E 1298 XE."4 of the SW.14 of sec. 7, tp. 12 X., r. 13 W., S.L.M. Cont. 40 ac. $4 3! 1932 ' ' A." ' G. Mahan" jr! E 1410 S. Sedan half of the SB. 14 of .sec. 27, tp, 12 X., r. 13 W., S.L.M. Less W. 10 Acres Cont, 70 ac $6.40 1937 Phoebe Tims F 1307 NE.14 of the SW.14, SW.14 of the SE.',4 Coupe of sec 27, tp. 14 X, r. 3 W., S.L.M. Less 7 acres to Box Elder County. The E. 31.58 Acres of the SE.'l of 1934 the SW.y, of sec, 27, tp. 14 N., r. 3 W S. L. M. Cont. 104 mc. Sedan - Sounds of War Fill Night on Okinawa Strange Intermittent Gunfire Breaks Eerie Silence Below Star Bedecked Sky -- By Ernie Pyle Ernie pyk as leveral dispatchei ahead when he met death machine gun on le island. This newspaper will continue to print tlap Uiwr't jar 1 1 (by navy radio). -- Our first night on Okinawa and full of old familiar sounds iha OKINAWA ormv little sounds of war. been six months since I'd slept on the ground, or a rifle shot. With the marines it was about the same. weary ft had keard aeine along with a head seemed to me as I lay there that I'd company 01 a regunem. - never known anything else in my coungrassy a hereon pretty, ahnnt a life. And there are millions of us. I was 1 I i front lines were The . trOoos J. ---- -aneaa. nthpr Msand yarus 3 -- 11 ..tiin id bivouacKea au aiv 37- , I . ... a lew Cere were still i v:j : kuP officer was brought before dark, shot through the tltet s our toes So We were on at dusk three planes new An i ,,st t Iteach We paid no attention. lor t. weren ijfy w overneaa .imflT all hell cut loose Our entire fleet Lfteeuns ashore started throw- ...tufif into the sky. I've never ack-acJ kb a thicker batch of I As one of the marines said, there a moment th beach. to i fremore bullets than there was jU Those Jap pilots must have ijroght the world was coming to an lad to fly into a lead storm like land-Is- ! tat only 10 hours after we had were shot All three Okinawa. ? on town. darkness came on we got I and settled down go our foxholes lit the night The countryside became as silent as a graveyard sill jtiii, that is, between shots. The only I sounds were war sounds. There I mre no country sounds at all. The I deep As riot of stars. Brown was in the fox-M- e Tom Capt As we lay there next to me. was a sky looking up into the said: our backs, sb sky, he starry Dipper. That's seen that since "Here's the Big j!te first time I've lht been in the Pacific." this For, division of see, marines iave done all their fighting !you . under Big Cross, where our doesn't show. Southern lie .Dipper darkness came, flares begin lighting the country ahead of ii over the front lines. They were I As full from our battleships, aned to burst above our lines, and 5oat down on parachutes. That was keep the country lighted up so in shells shot to the Japs If they tried infiltrate, which is one of their Svorite tricks. lie flares were shot up several w could see to minute from dusk until soon came out full. It was '!fight after that and the flares pa ,'sot I the very were needed. Bat all night long kept up a slow two or three shelling of the ijs hills where the Japs were sup-;- d to be. It wasn't a just two or three shells w us and I found that passing ;4eUs have the same ghostly "win-shad- e rustle" on this side of the j WM as on the other. I Hy foxhole was only about 20 feet where two field telephones and field radios were lying on the au night, officers sat on the Kwd at these four pieces of and directed our troops. A!llay listenIn8 in the ft, the conversation was startling-!amiliar-twords and the ?hts and the actions exactly as H town them for so long in the bom-itodme- com-fuacatio- ns he ..jiaatry. ! J night over 1 i"1 could hear these low the phones-voi- ces in tV?iCeS fmen runnin war front. I il0ngifter dark rifle shots There would be a little ahead, maybe a dozen silence for many min- - "J nn ! there would be another flur- the left- - Then silence. ivr, ZJ of JJce. ft a machine scattered single ,few framing it. Then a Spooky. lXrni like . Mt Flares ."ien SJl then,ght- - 01 Passing m"ted voices stars, the feel of the w,Je fa W lU,nd,erthe "id sky Jiat &C Zi ? ,n kind of life I had Side of the world. Jmbedded in my soul ba into it again.it Spends Night in Gypsy Hideout The company commander. Capt. Julian Dusenbury, said I could have my choice of two places to spend the first night with his compiy. ' One was with him in his command post. The command post was a big, round Japanese gun emplacement, made of sandbags. The Japs had never occupied it, but they had stuck a log out of it, pointing toward the sea and making it look like a gun to aerial reconnaissance. Captain Dusenbury and a couple of his officers had spread ponchos on the ground inside the emplacement and had hung their telephone on a nearby tree and were ready for business. There was no roof on the emplacement. It was right on top of a hill and cold and very windy. My other choice was with a couple of enlisted men who had room for me in a little Gypsy-lik- e hideout they'd made. It was a tiny, level place about halfway down the hillside, away from the sea. They'd made a roof over it by tying ponchos to trees and had dug up some Japanese straw mats out of a farmhouse to lay on the ground. I chose the second of these two places, partly because it was warmer, and also because I wanted to be with the men anvhow. My two "roommates" were Cpl. Martin Clayton Jr. of Dallas, Texas, and Pfc. William Gross of Lan sing, Mich. Clayton is nicknamed "Bird Dog" and nobody ever calls him anything else. He is tall, thin and dark, almost Latin-lookinHe sports a puny little mustache he's been trying to grow for weeks and he makes fun of it. Gross is simply called Gross. He is very quiet, but thoughtful of little things and they both sort of looked after me for several days. These two boys have become very close friends, and after the war they in tend to go to UCLA together and finish their education. The boys said we could all three sleep side by side in the same "bed." So I got out my contribu tion to the night'" beauty rest And it was a very much appreciated contribution, too. For I had carried a blanket as well as a poncho. These marines had been sleeping every night on the ground with no cover, except their cold, rubberized ponchos, and they had almost frozen to death. Their packs were so heavy they hadn't been able to bring blankets ashore with them. Our next door neighbors were about three feet away in a similar level spot on the hillside, and they had roofed it similarly with ponchos. These two men were Sgt. Neil Anderson of Coronado, Calif., and Sgt. George Valido of Tampa, Fla. So we chummed up and the five of us cooked supper under a tree just in front of our "house." The boys made a fire out of sticks and we put canteen cups and K rations right on the fire. Other little groups of marines had similar little fires going all over the As we were eating, anhillside. other marine came past and gave Bird Dog a big piece of fresh roasted pig they had just cooked, and Bird Dog gave me some. It sure was good after days of K rations. Several of the boys found their K rations moidy, and mine was too. kind and It was the we finally realized they were 1942 rations and had been stored, probably in Australia, all this time. Suddenly downhill a few yards, we heard somebody yell and start cussing and then there was a lot of laughter. What had happened was that one marine had heated a K ration can and, because it was pressure packed, it exploded when he pried it open and there were hot egg yolks over him. Usually the boys open a can a little first, and Page Seven Tremonton, Utah- - l SPRING SALE upon all the stock issued and outstanding of said corporation, on said date, payable to the secretary of said corporation, at his office No. 23 First Security Bank Build in, Brigham City, Utah, on the 28th day of May, 1945. Any stock upon which this assessment may remain unpaid on the 28th day of May, 1945, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 18th day ot June, 1V43, to pay delinquent assersmer.t, to gether with the cm tu advertising and expens? r f Fa1?. Gv'.rge 2.'. I.iaoon, - Qu;a;er First publication April 26, 1945. Last publication, May 17, 1945. Vitamla C source of a?cor!jfc acid, or vitamin C. cabbage should receive even more attention as it becomes harder to obtain other vegetables. As a good , 1 Ford Ford Ford Ford or Buick Buick Chevrolet Chevrolet Chevrolet m 1 Plymouth $109.53 , Steward P 1880-1- 5 The 10. half of the E. half of the SW.14 of the SWJ4 and the W. half of the E. half of the SE.yi of th SW.14 and the W. half of the E. half of the SE.14 of the XW.'4 of sec. 5, tp. 14 N., r. 11 W., S.L.M. Cont. 30 ac $2.62 Georpe Mullen F 1880-1- 3 The SW.14 of the SE.14 ot the XW. '4 of sec. fi. tp. 14 N., r. Jl W., S. L. M. Cont. 10 ac $2.00 George Stewart F 18S0-2- 2 The E. half of the W. half of th SE.14 of the SW.14 of sec. 5, tp. 11 X., r. 11 W S.L.M. Cont. 10 ac. George Nash Sedan TRUCKS 1942 Chevrolet IV2 Ton 1935 Dodge V2 Chevrolet V2 Ton O 3 FRESNO 3 Wisconsin Stationary Scraper $2.00 148-3- 4 of sec. 11. tp. ML VJOUU o Quaker Crystal Salt Co., a poration, Tremonton, FRONK CHEVROLET CO. Tremonton cor- Utah NOTICE is hereby given that at a meeting of the Board of Di rectors of the Quaker Crystal Salt Co., a corporation, duly and reg ularly held on the 24th day of April, 1945, an assessment of ten 3?V. Monti 4' ' ' J' s i. " - inn ) ' ' every minute of tha da- y, Bringing you enfertainmenf tht family washing Doing , ii Cooking better meal Making ironing easy ""rlllMBIlll Protecting yowr food Supplying plenty of hot water Giving 'you the convenience of table appliancek V.ficn drives me whenever I have appliances art Sa!ti available, buy from your release the pressure before heating, so the can won't explode. rftS rV,Pfc'Y.Bu"Vitere t E 5ideS l ha, ;tKNew wnTer. accmplishments Bm?rVlv'nshut - Isby of He is known marines. yU can hardly tell jinnee Buzz on tht transport coming up to Okinawa. He and a friend would give an impromptu and homegrown concert on deck every afternoon. They would sit on a hatch in the warm tropical sun ard pretty goon there would be scores of marines and sailors packed around them, listening in appreciative silence. It made the trip to war airiest like a Caribbean luxury -- arist. 1(0 fJectrial fkaler. nf! Tarines I f io NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT Motors Phone 20 OGST TIBS Willard Petersen F 1904 All 1 X., r. 12 W S.L.M. $39.67 Cont. 640 ac IX WITXESS WHEREOF. I have hereunder set my hand and official seal this 26th day at Annl. A. n. 1M4. J. EDWIN BAIRD, Auditor of Box Elder (SEAL) County. First Publication April 26, 1945. Last publication May 17. 1945. F Ton g. 1935 it SIGN, V0U GMJ Dodge 1937 CM 0. GJ. Songsters Lighten Buddies' Cares d Co. Ctyi a corporation. of Used Cars AND ii BONDS. TO UTAH poweh WAR Y - . t ii mi ii,,i,ini ....in rur i. 0 ,,,., II E I P S P. E, LIGHT a ..,.,. j,i t CO. ,.,ni,lii.ii.i.iiiil.. . D VICTORY |