OCR Text |
Show Register For Sugar Quota May 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th, IT H TTN TT 0 at School tie Leni. irree irre LEHI'S WIDELY READ LEHL NEWSPAPER HOME-OWNED OTT. UTAH, THURSDAY. APRIL 30. Hot Metal PLAHT TO BRICK -- --- Vital Stream A No. 35 1S42 LEHI URGED TO FIGHT PETER JOHNSO'l LIQUOR EViLS CALLED BY DEATH BE LOCATED HERE . TO GET SMALL LEKI INDUSTRIAL PLANT SUGAR RATIOIIIIIG REGISTRATION NEXT Dean Prior was assured a reliable source today that had been selected for a brick Mayor from Lehi WEEK plant which will employ sixty local labors and Lehi people will register fort heir welcome addition to the a prove this is just the sugar rationing books, Monday, jrea. K is hoped will follow Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, others and beginning May 4, 5, 6, and 7, at the elementhis present plant tary grade schools from 3:30 to 9:00 Mayor Prior also states that we p. m. each day. acute are experiencing housing One member of the family, who to for needs due military problems must be eighteen years of age or defCamp Williams Personal and It Is urged that over, may register for the entire ense workers. family. Jt will greatly expedite prospective builders Investigate the matters if only one member of the government F. H. A. loans at the comes to register, for the family local bank or lumber dealer. entire family. There should be an applicaton of the for every member filed SIX STUDENTS Will household whether there Is more six pounds of sugar per perSCHOLARSHIP AWARDS than son in the home or not Your application must be made in order annthat you can get the sugar later on. B. Adamson Principal Lloyd ounced six students, five of them You are allowed six pounds per person on hand but must register juniors, as the winners of scholarscurrent for awards the year. the amount you now have on hand. hip Before coming to register you The lone senior in the group is must have the following inforof Marjorie Cravens, salutatorian mation: the graduating class. 1. Name. The other five are Maurice Tayl2. Height or, Dawnita Hansen; Laura Jeanne 3. Weight and Leone Brown, Betty Logsdon 4. Date of birtho f person or perJones. sons for whom you are going to Mrs. David W. Adamson and littregister. 5. The amount of sugar per perle daughter, Clarine, of Salt Lake son Mrs. visited Adamson's City, you have on hand in the home. with mother, Mrs. Alice Phillips, TuesCEDAR VALLEY PEOPLE TO day and Wednesday. making (orty to REGISTER 1 CRAZY STUFF BY One of he got our customers said that along fine with his wife a long for GOODWIN time and then she came home. customer gave us a shock, the other day. She asked us why we never advertised. When we surprise, as our ad or less regularly. told her we did advert- ise, and to prove it due un one of our ads: "Yes she said, but they look too much like all the rest; why you don't you spice 'em up like used to do?" , - That set us to Maybe she was We thought of thinking. right. a lot of ways to make the ads sensational but decided that columnists got more readers than most writers. So we decided to try our hand as a columnist Now we don't expect Will Rogers or even you And to be a a Win-chel- l, but we'll try to give a giggle occasionally. you guess ably talk wMch is "me. right, we'll prob- a little shout business especially good at this m ? Watcr for our literary spasms and in during the weeks ahead e meantime Keep 'em y your Jittery purchase of War bonds a"d saving stamps. "Lives of slow pays all remind us vuul men aont stana a e mofe ot production at Bingham mountain was around 75,000 tons ot ore la 24 hours. In recent months an average of 87,000 tons of ore has been mined each day, in addition to about 113,000 tons of waste, a total of 200,000 tons of material per day from this huge open-cu- t pit which sprawls over acres of mountain at Bingham canyon. Think of it, mining and delivering at the mills a total of 87,000 tons of ore in 24 hours or approximately 1,000 railroad cars, about 41 cars every hour, a carload every 88 seconds. The previous record copper production was reached in 1940 when 452,538,235 pounds ot copper were produced at Bingham mountain. The estimated production tor 1941 Is 514,500,000 pounds of the red metal. If it were not for the earth's crust are contributing a large scale operations at Bingham glorious part to the war effort. the mountain would today be Jus' Prior to the beginning of the a barren waste, as the ore contains emergency, the peace time record less than 1 per cent copper. . 3RD WARD INSTALLS LOCAL BOY INJURED NEW SUNDAY SCHOOL we work, there grow oenma us BlS&er patches on our pants." . children and 15 greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p. m. In the Fifth Ward L. D. S. chapel with Bishop E. B. Garrett in charge. Friends may view the body at the A. H. Wing Mortuary, Wednesday evening and Thursday morning prior to the services. Burial will be in Fork cemetery. FORMER RESIDENTS BURIED HERE OFFICERS AT SCHOOL A new superintendency has been Residents of Cedar Valley will chosen for the Third Ward Sunday register for their sugar rationing School and were installed at last books at the Cedar Fort School Sunday moning's session. Leland building, Monday, Tuesday, Wed- Price has been selected as superinnesday and Thursday, May 4, 5, 6, tendent with Thomas Peck as first assistant and Benjamin Jorgenson and 7, at 3:30 to 9:00 p. m. as second assistant Miss Phyllis Dorton was retained as secretary, Miss Donna Hadfield as organist FUNERAL TO BE HELD and Miss Lpla Johnson as choristRetiring officers were Dale Hadfield as supcrntendent Leland Price Funeral services for Linda June as first assistant and Thomas Peck Chilton, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. as second assistant Earl Chilton, who died at her home in Shpllev. Idaho. Monday evening, will be held in the Lehi Third Wardj LOCAL STUDENTS OH L. D. S. Chapel, Thursday, at 1 p. . indY HONOR ROLL m. witn uisnop ijeoige Burial will services. the ucting take place in the Lehi cemetery. Iva Dell Sunderland, of Linda June Chilton was born in Mr. and Mrs. Thomas daughter Sunderland Lehi, February 15, 1939, a daughter and Don U. Johnson, son of Mr. of Earl and June Beck Chilton. The and Mrs Urban Johnson, represent famly moved to Shelley in Septem- Lehi on the honor roll of the ber, 1939. Brlgham Young University for the She is survived by her parents, winter quarter. Both students are sisters: two brothers and two freshman students at the Kerlin, Marta, Ronald and Deanna Chilton, all of Shelley, and the W. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. of Mrs. Fern Larsen entertained a all Chilton and Mrs. Sadie Beck, group of friends at a bridge lunchLehi. eon at her home, Monday. Friends may view the body at thA home of Mrs. Alma Beck, j L Thursday, prior to the services. Lehi the in Burial will take place cemetery. Short funeral services were held at Shelley, Idaho, Tuesday evening. the American DAUGHTER OF AT CORPUS CHRISTI Ensign Russell Bone, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bone, was recently injured in an automobile colli sion while returning to his base at Corpus Christ! from a visit in town, Details of the accident were not available but Ensign Bone's injuries were said to be not serious. He is in the hospital with fractured ribs, a bruised arm and cuts and bruises of the back. He is an instructor at the Corpus Christi Naval Air Training school. FOR LINDA CHILTON er. A Imagine our has run more Let us backdrop for a moment from the various battle fronts and see what is going on behind the scenes in one of the major industries supplying America's vital war sinews. One glance reveals that the world's greatest mine Is pouring cut copper, the red metal of war, faster than It ever did in history at a rate faster than any mine did in Its history. This is the Utah Copper mine at Bingham, Utah, where men, money and machinery are pouring out the ted metal at an e peak in an effort to supply those at the fronts with the needed implements to win and win quickly as possible. All previous records have been broken in production at Bingham mountain and the men who moll the Peter Johnson, .79 years of age, passed away Monday morning at his home folowing an Illness of heart trouble. Mr. Johnson was born in Wltham, Denmark, October 23, 1862 a son of Peter and Chirstina Jensen Johnson. He imlgrated to this country with his parents in 1874. They resided In Lehi for two years then moved to Pleasant Grove. He marred Ardella Holman on May 7, 1886, at Holden, Utah. She died in 1894. He later marrid Janet Yates of Lehi. In 1910 they moved to Lehi to make their home. He is survived by three sons and seven daughters. They are Mrs. Bertha Young, Kanab: Lawrence Johnson, Richfield; MIlo Johnson, South Gate, California; Mrs. Belva Strong, Alpine; Mrs. Hazel Comer, Mrs. Alta Parker, and Mrs. Bessie Farnsworth of Los Angeles, California; Mrs. Susie Jones, Harbor City, California; Mrs. Verda Kldd, Bluff dale; Leo Johnson, Lehi: two sisters and one brother: Mrs. Annette McAffee and Mrs. Christina Bateman of Lehi and Irving Johnson of Pleasant Grove; 32 grand- LEHI POSTURE PARADE WINS Patricia Ann Thurman, 6, daugh. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Thurman of Magna, formerly of Lehi, will be brought to Leh for burial Thursday. The child passed away at a Salt Lake Hospital, Tuesday morning of pneumonia and periton itis. Patricia Ann was born December at Magna a daughter of Douglas and Pearl Thomas Jones Thurman. She is survived by her parents, two sisters: Ruth and Lois Thurman, two brothers, Douglas and Donald Thurman. Funeral services will be held at Magnai 10, 1935, Lehi, Utah, April 29, 1942. On April 24th this year a committee of nine men met in Provo from different counties of Utah in the interest of enforcing the liquor and tobacco laws of the state. They are asking the schools and churches to in the schooling against this hazrd. They are asking cities that have Sunday closing ordinances of beer parlors to enforce this ordinance. They are asking stores to refrain from selling tobcaco to minors, and they are asking the liquor commission to have a uniform closing hour, j of all liquor stores. Our observation shows that when one town closes an hour later than the other it is a road hazard. Some people contend that if one town is open on Sunday for the sale of beer why close the other "Yes give them all they want and break the Sabbath." - If one country sells war materials to Japan why not all sell them "Give them all they want" Just as stupid. The sooner we repent of these things the sooner we will win the war. What a knockout blow it would be to the enemy if we had the money we have spent in the last five years for liquor and tobacco to fight them with. What a knockout blow it would be if we had the strnegth we have lost In the use of these things to hit them with. The raid on Pearl Harbor wouldn't have happened because the enemy knew some who should be watching were drinking and that It was a Saturday night habit France's weakness was wine and women. One writer tells us that two women led the fifth column. Germany worked through these women on the leading men and one said to the man she was stay? ing with at four o'clock one morning "Here comes the Germans," and she knew the fifth column was letting them through. These women were members of the fifth column and were companions of France's leading men. Fellow citizens liquor and tobacco are members of the fifth column, let's route them out of Utah even if our neighbor does harbor them. - E. J. CHRISTOFFERSON, Local Chairman. BAPTISMAL SERVICES SUNDAY HIGH HONORS DEFENSE MEETING POSTPONED ivn-n- The Lehi High School and Junior High School posture parade girls with their leader Miss Vera Conder, brought home two more fine trophys for the local school when both divisions won the coveted triple "A" rating at the invitational meet at Provo, Friday and Saturday. The Lehi posture parade groups usually win the highest ratings in invitational and division met'ts and their laurels are a credit to their school, their leader, their parents and the entire community. Lehi Is indeed proud of her girls. The civillian defnese meeting for firemen, scafling workers, or the protective defense group, scheduled for Monday, evening has been postponed to a later date due to the sugar rationing meeting being held on Monday evening. The regular baptismal services will be held in the Lehi Seminary. Sunday at ; f'i WINS HONOR Mother's Day CAC1DIES HONOR MOTHER ON MOTHER'S nff. ivil , rA O.UU W. GOUfZh DAY WITH A NICE GIFT GLADES TC- - Hosiery, House Dresses, Sweaters, Oxfords, and their son, Ernest ceived word that who is stationed at ton Washington, has been promoted to, and sergeant in the tank divisionan in-- . as fort the ...in remain at structor for the draftees in the tank' division. Air. uougn ceived his sergeants stripes. i, HAND DIPPED. HAND ROLLED CHOCOLATES Boxed Assortments 75c to 93.00 Handkerchiefs rwu WE SERVE THE BEST EATS ICE CREAM FLOWERS FOR FAST DAY SUNDAY The regular fast day services will be observed in all Lehi Wards, Sunday. I Mr. MILITARY PROMOTION JflTTlPS zi ....-,,- V7 LOCAL BOY RECEIVES TUfra p.m. Parents are Sunday. LOCAL GIRL Miss Zetella Price, daughter of and Mrs. George P. Price, a junior student at the Brigham Young University was intiated into the White Key, Brigham Young University service unit last week. Miss Price is a student In the School of 'lome Economics. 2 asked to have the children who are ready for baptism at the Seminary c Shoes for the Family MOTHER'S DAY Power's Slioe Store LEHI FLORAL CO. PHONE 60 CONFECTIONERY Cm |