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Show The 1943 tber 9, BEAR RIVER VALLEY PORTAGE . three members Mrs. Virgil C. Harris LEADER, Utah Tremonton, th Malad sen went to Ogden Saturday to tage held a cottage mating ee r d3e" "ho is in Xe lhe hon of Mr- and Mrs? 01 Jhn Dusgan Gibbs f ami- - hospital there. They report his a reunion at the Logan condition is slowly improving. Mrs. Ladetha Hosklns left Sat-- : iry hel,d TeraPleSeveral tarn- Word was received by rela- ednesday urday for Eureka. California, froin ere in sroups lly Portae lives here that Feme B Flint, where she will spend an indfi- aitcnaance. a former Portage of Clearfield, time. nite is in the Dee hospital in resident Mrs" 1Ia11 Kalherine returned Mr and Mrs Dave Green left home Monday after a ten day's a Sri0US condlUonTuesday for their home in Plas- -' v'lth Mrs RtEelHan at g" Wendell Harris, Clayton Con- ant Grove, after spending den" ley D0"116 Harris, J. R. Gibbs, f eral days as guests of Mr ' and Mr and Mrs- E- T- IIoskins and Cleon John and Norman Ekins Mrs. J. V Gibbs Mrs. Royal left Saturday for Seattle, Wash. Mr ana Mrs. Mack Chennej n daughter and son, Halford and Mrs j w Knud. The stake missionaries of Por- and iarruly of Salt Lake spent the weekend with her mother,- 'Mrs. Grace John. Mrs. John F. Conley left Thursday evening for Albuquerque, New Mexico, where she will visit with her son, Keith Conley and family. Mrs. Stanley H Castleton and1 The - .ELEMENTS fready until you ,t S Hersney's them? use r ;i' jJ ROHDE V.ayS people's OIL vMe ED AIR WARM FURNACE COMFORT! General ii the . J. h furnace you peratur It winter long. ? sev-ivi- 475,-00- : Every drop efficiently from less fuel. of oil is burned h atom-- the famous Uation method. G-- E by j daughter Tamara and Mrs. J. B. Allen were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Castleton atj Garland last week. The infant son of Mr. and ilAIQBOW GRAf3!TES Mrs Chester Neal is recovering! THOSE WHO CARE from pneumonia. Mrs. Cecil Harrison and Mrs., Joe Morgan of Malad visited Fri- day at the J. C. Howell home. D. D. Hyer of Lewiston, UtahJ was an overnight guest of the! Devere Harrises Wednesday. The retiring Relief Society presidency consisting of Bernice Darley, Rachel Gibbs, Maurir,? Gibbs and Eliza Knudsen were honored at a party given Tues-- : day by the Relief Society mem- bers, with President Zine E. Harris in charge. Each of the ladies was presented with a gift. Mrs. Ruby Nielsen of Garland 0; v. from m - 1 ' OHNSON V to w WJ Tuner, itin W I PAnpn A uorr JOHN II. GRIGUAM -- rV , " V , SONS CO. CITY. UTAH ' Race for Uranium on the horizon is what the Russians now are doing in Saxony. e uitenium deposits aeral Electric Features found in this southern Ger- are want jre what you man state and the Russians Electric comfort of General been working feverishly to have make this furnace tity features mine them. They have been ustimes its low cost price. iany ing a great deal of labor and coupon today. going to great lengths to scrape up this uranium, which Is so PLUMBING low grade that in Canada it would be ignored. The fact that the Russians are COMPANY taking all this trouble over such in Germany TREMONTON poor' quality uranium one 1 126 thing: obviously means only worth-whil- e They . don't have any uranium of their own in Russia. 1 S ' 635,000. nace j - - - j slt - 15,000; 22,000; 19,000 ; 222,000; yourGeneralElectricFur-- J V ;JW will mean more heat f - - fOZ ECONOMY.' i Draft Plans 8,000 ; is, too! encouraging sign Most atomic-energ- y Low-grad- M L. 1 n Corporation Gravy While the cost of food to the housewife has zoomed, here is what has happened to the dividends of big corporations. The figures were presented reDemocratic cently by plain-talkin- g of Wyoming, Sen. Joe O'Mahoney as compiled from official reports: Profits of 100 corporations after i i PRESENTS ITS CREATIVE MASTERPIECE... V'''.. taxes: 3 1940 1945 1947 $1,875,000,000. $1,943,000,000. $3,730,000,000. O'Mahoney also cited a Federal Reserve Board report, stating that exbusiness profits this year will i: which ing to individual corporations rehe this in bonanza, have shared piano, "treas- ugiveaveritable ! - ported that General The pride finest pleasures"! The 1 joy of its incom-- I The happiness tone. r Wings to the and in select home. your Kim- - 'f'ft piano! TAYLOR rPuno. A Better Price" Elvd. Ogden, Utah Washington 316 -- i f.zr:: :r. its, O'Mahoney charged. inMeanwhile, he declared, wage creases have been obliterated by inflated living costs, as evidenced consumby the fact that American dollars 37 billion ers are paying more for what they buy this year than .: ! ' .. .1 fn TUk t f( . Electric comprofits in ex- pany now is making cess of 20 per cent of net worth, General Motors, 19.9 per cent, U. S. Steel, 10 per cent. The 1947 profits of General Electric, before taxes were paid, were five times greater than its 1939 prof- Mg the world's I v-- ceed the dizzy high of 1947. Point- 1 A KIMBALL V : f V V I ; f; 5 i Jt T ' . ,IM 4 mm in; ii M in 1946. Cabinet Pains President VisitorSfwho called on President Truman at the White House after 1 -- 'the Juit U, should be takand en before they passed the eligible ageJ. This was later decided. The selective service boss estimated that 9,000,000 youths were available for the draft, but only 1,386,000 would be eligible plan under the loophole-riddle- d for deferments. Of those" who will be caught, the bulk are under 22 since many of those over 22 served in the recent war. The number eligible for the draft in each age group was broken down by Hershey as follows: 24- OIL-FIR- I committees recently. He told the solons that the selective service machinery would be ready to process the first batch of draftees by October 15, but estimated the second call would not come before January 1. jSershey told the senators and congressmen there was strong pressureat that time to start drafting first, since they were not ready to settle down and would be less likely to be upset by army service. The two armed services commit tees; however, argued the opposite. Unanimously they agreed that the led LESS L. details have NOT all the officially yet, been but Lewis Hershey, selective service director, gave a brief report on draft session of plans to a closed-doo- r the" senate-hous- e armed services h't Machine Works Everything ' Z7?W FEARS UN at1 Members of the Guy Johnson mi!y had Thanksgiving dinner Howeil Monday evening. John F. ' together at home Mr and Mrs Conley and Wyn John were the noy1 D. Nelsm of speakers. son came from Salt Lake and Byron and Vera Jean Hall of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Cannon of Ogden visited hen? the first of Tremonton were present. the week. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Malan of Ogden spent the weekend with Thanksgiving dinner guests at Mrs. Eliza Knudsen. the J. II. Fronk home were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Krey of Ogden, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Krey and LEADER WANT-ADPAY Mr. and Mrs Wayne Fronk - I r ,w ;V ,M. 1 they chief congress opened, found the executive hopping mad at some of his top executives. He was parof ticularly irate with Secretary UnderKenneth Royall, the. Army H. secretary of the Army William of chief the and army's Draper staff, Gen. Omar Bradley. Mr. Truman said he was fed for up with Royal! and Draper House White of their sabotage of repolicies. Diaper's policy the at building Germany of her neighbors and Sec retary Royall's inept handling of army racial discrimination had got under his skin. The President was more hurt than angry at the way his fellow Missourian, General Bradley, had reaffirmed segregation and the after army caste system 24 hours issued had commander-in-chief his an' executive order curbing iy t dust-proo- 32-4- ' W 89c wlM.,. Spaatz Speaks reason air chief of slafi the "Tooey" Spaatz retired from do could he felt he was that army outon the more good the air force side. For the first time, hi now is fear-- i preparing to speak his mind and One JE BLAZE 'COAL r; f f o - Mi ,utRCOAL! ,. H BAp! j.j J '""ARE '"'Er.fic i ' & i.f maeazine articles, Unhampered by military newspuper Du,tproofed !'v"'jTASH SToifco .; nr.nH restric-- t how ;p!,wU wui tell bluntly he thinks America should meet the threat of another war. j ,.Tremonton U VL CO. I Cosrt C.ri..i " mnu j i . Munich, Cultural Center Munich, a cilv f,f some 800,003 people, is the famed cultural center ' ..,' ever been more sifiniBcant than the one No Cadillac announcement has Cadillac present. It. creative .hich appear, on this pae. For, this year. enftine-wh- ich Is, beyond masterpiece- -a who.ly new V:tyPe attained In automotive power plant. aH doubt, the highest deve.opment yet basic t.ulldinft-f- or been twelve vears In the This ftreat power plant has unusual aua.it.e. which .et started In If 3. It has many development work of I., kind. I. U far more alert, powerful lt apart from ali other creation, t aHords an Increase In ftasoUne economy and responsive to the ,hro1e-.v- et 4nd the manner of Its twenty per cent. "b H.uid .moot the imagination. eiht-cyhnd- act:; cafiei beyond all er e.perknce: vet .he power rP - , -- ' J. - The car seems almont the driver is scarcely aware of the engine's eiistence. Cadillac owners must to move by automatic propulsion. Even eiperlenccd of performance when they drive the put aside all previous conceptions There silken start to silken stop. 1949 Cadillac. It'ls a revelatlon-fro- m In addition to the are, of course, many other advancements there is a enftlne. There Is new beauty In the front ensemble; at your finger more attractive Instrument panel, with all driving controls and body will he found thoM- characteristic tips; and throughout the chassis search for perfection. refinements which result from Cadillac's unceaina It Is not only the Tut the Hit Cadillac story, for 1949, is performance. Is beyond the world's current conception. world's new standard-- It hiatory-makln- newly-desifine- - Co. Motor Sandall Wayne TREMONTON 95B d, ft - |