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Show JUy Prints' 24. 1941 mittee for the Celebration of the President's Birthday were or 6.1 per cent of the total net amount raised. The President received the campaign report in his executive office at the White House. The total figures were revealed for the first time in an inscribed testimonial report and audit handed him by Keith Morgan, national chairman of the committee, and Basil O'Connor, president of the national foundation, and former law partner of the Birthday $136-996.6- Lbration For 1941 passes All Records Pr president's Birthday funds for the National for Infantile Paraly- total of $2'104-5a president Roosevelt was Lay This was $697,214.79 11 e $1,407,245.74 raised mark. 040 the previous high ' - .. National ( nm. rr-,h- 10 3 ? K S IB Expense THE MURRAY EAGLE 1, ji HEW BEER GARDEN JUST REMODELED! Ntw for All . . . New Hardwood Floor and SCIILITZ BEER on Tap . . . Booths FISHER Youihs Get Jobs Through NYA Wheat Marketing Card Required Of All Producers Resident Project in telephone offices. Dillon, a graduate of Granite high school in 1937, has been working in the machine shop and taking shop mathematics at USAC while a member of the NYA resident project. Johansen graduated from Murray high in 1939 and recently has been studying flight training and radio while assigned to the NYA resident project. Both boys will be applying their NYA work experience in their new jobs. The two boys were assigned to NYA work experience in February and completed their training in just over five months. Assignment to the resident project at Logan is not relief in any way but is an opportunity for youth to gain experience under conditions simulating those of private industry. Work experience under NYA is recognized by OPM as a major factor in training men for defense industries which are seeking skilled personnel Producers of wheat this year must have a wheat marketing card in order to sell wheat. These cards may be obtained in Salt Lake county by tailing at Room 401 Federal building where the AAA office will check the records to determine whether the various producers are in compliance with the wheat program. Farmers who have planted in excess of their wheat allotment or in excess of their average wheat acreage under the terms of the wheat marketing act will be required to pay 49 cents per bushel penalty before a marketing card will be issued; or the producer may furnish a bond, deposit a warehouse receipt, or deposit cash in escrow in lieu of paying the penalty tax of 49 cents. Under the terms of the marketing agreement purchasers of wheat which is classed as excess wheat or commonly called "hot" wheat, are liable for the tax of 49 cents per bushel in case they purchase such wheat. For this reason all buyers of wheat should make sure that the seller has a marketing card. This applies to individual buyers as well as commercial buyers. Owners of excess wheat will be required to pay the tax even if such wheat is fed upon the farm of the producers. All wheat growers are invited and urged to utilize the facilities of the AAA office in obtaining proper clearance on wheat for the market. Crickets Eradicated Due to a vigorous control program virtually all Mormon crickets in Juab and Utah counties have been eradicated, according to State Control Leader George F. Knowlton. Control measures are still being carried on in Tooele county where severe infestations still exist. Dwight Dillon, whose former home was at 3442 South 9th East, Salt Lake City, and Joseph of Murray have just left the National Youth Administration resident project adjacent to the USAC campus in Logan for good jobs in private industry. Dillon is leaving for Seattle for employment with Northwestern Airlines and Johansen has accepted employment with the Western Electric Co., where he will be installing switchboards J0E RUBY'S ... Ice Cold JOIN THE CROWDS at 179 NORTH MAIN STREET Midvale, Utah rZl V- - M : Wheat Situation Sumner Welles, acting secretary of state, warned the international wheat conference that within another ye ar wheat surpluses totaling 1,500,000,000 bushels will hang over the international markets unless the world's nations take constructive measures to solve problems resulting from the war. He said the United States. United Kingdom, Canada. Australia, and Argentina have a common interest in conditions which will prevail in world wheat markets when the war is wheat-producin- over. GetthelXmS! MEAT CHEST CRISPER BIN VEGETABLE POLAR UCHT MAGIC SHELF, Dtlntml m rwr kthbtn u"tt yYtar Pnttttita PUm and LftoJ 1 axtt txtns. if GRANITE FURNITURE CQ. 4810 South Slate Street Phone Murray 496 y PROTECTS jVC? COME IN TOR THESE BARGAINS-AN- mitmeie RINSO LARGE 11 Giant Size 61c SOAP DUST Sister A.M., KSL Big SIZE SNEEZY .MONDAY thru FRIDAY KSL Grand Centra! Station Wed., 6:30 P.M. American GRAND CENTRAL MARKET HOFFMAN'S MARKET STOP and SHOP MARKET KALMAR BROTHERS Father TtT.SDAY, G P. f0URCIFT?) FREBm cannon DISH TOWEL Insid ry Pchi SILVER DUST .M. SPRY O. P. SKAGGS WORKINGMAN'S STORE Stories HERLING MARKET 11:15 A.M. Monday Thru FrlJoy REDWOOD MARKET TAYLORSV1LLE MERCANTILE Lifebuoy For full flavor GROCERY CUT-RAT- E Aunt Jenny'i KSL fpi MURRAY MERCANTILE CO. KIT A ' hold-er-r- if SAFEWAY STORE Bringing Up M OUR OTHER SPECIALS T) d one-hal- SPECIALLY PRICED AND DISPLAYED AT ALL DEALERS LISTED BELOW L UX Girl (From the Fill's of tho Utah Writois Project. WPA) John Spi'iH'or. who in 1874 was ' sitit into Indianola by the Mormon church as a missionary to the Indians, found few white settlers in the surrounding country at that time. Nevertheless he organized a ward over which he presided as bishop. The following year he moved his family to Indianola from Payson, Utah. Many interesting anecdotes were passed down by Spencer to his sun, Richard Henry Spencer, and today these stories interest those attracted by Indian lore. One story told by Spencer, who spent the rest of his life in Indianola as missionary, mediator, and interpreter, reveals the terrific hold superstitions had on the Indians of that day. From Thistle Valley north, there was an Indian trail leading to Spanish Fork, and also a trail leading west to the Uinta reservation, and these trails were often traveled by Indianola Indians visiting their neighbors. One Thistle Valley Indian who had large ambitions wished to become a medicine man, so he made a trip to Spanish Fork, where, from another Indian, he obtained a small medicine bag made of buckskin and filled with some strange medicine powder whose lowers were accorded great respect. In fact, so the story ran, the possessor of this medicine would become so powerful that he could cause an enemy to become ill and die merely by sprinkling the medicine across the trail where the enemy was obliged to pass. The Indians at Thistle Valley whose regard for their fellow-wahitherto not very high, became very much alarmed when they learned of his sudden increase of power and appealed to John Spencer to get his medicine and destroy it. Spencer called upon the Indian to see if the fellow could not be made to yield his medicine bag. but the Indian proved strangely stubborn and refused to give up the medicine which had such alarming powers. This refusal caused much excitement among the other Indians and they deputized a second committee to wait upon Spencer with the urgent request fur him to obtain the medicine at any and all costs! SH'ncer called upon the feared tribesman once again and finally persuaded him to accept three head of horses in exchange for his precious buckskin bag filled with no one knew what. When John Spencer returned with the bag, four reliable braves v ent with him to a cedar knoll f two and miles northeast of Indianola where they gathered wood nnd built a fire. Spencer put the medicine on a large rock on top of which the Indians placed the burning firebrands, and then they all retired to a safe distance to watch its destruction. The Indians were very cautious about keeping out of the way of the smoke from the fire, running some distance if the smoke should happen to blow their way, as they believed it would cause their doth if they should inhale any of the smoke from the medicine fire. All went safely, however, and the Indianola Indians returned to tl icir homes happy in the assurance that the dread magic would never be thrown in front of their paths. No one. indeed, tiMik the trouble to find out what was in the bag. but perhaps it was just as w !I the Indian grudges sacrificed his at godly power for the thtee head of horst s. John Spmcer was often called to various parts of the state to help make peace between the Indians and whitetnen, and he was never known to hesitate to enter any Indi.m tamp alone, regardless of how hostile they were. He had many close calls and came near 1impb his scalp on some occasion, for there were times n1 red hostile Indian w hen he and had his life threatencamps ed, H" died a natural ri ath at Indianola on August 2'). I!;n2. s In the same familiar carton Of Inieresiing Siory Of Indianola, Uiah . Stock upl FREE Anecdote Tells newly-acquire- I DAINTINESS 3 g 8REEZE7HW7HEtiEtf H - Page LUX TOILET Friday, 7 P.M. KSL 9 out or 10 'I CAKE Y FOR - RINSO ... 61c SOAP 25' m V- -f 9c - 22c 4 for 25c LIFEBUOY him 2-1- 4 for 25c LUXVSF SMITH'S MARKET Hollywood Premiere 22c LUX 3l h( an 57c 1 1.b.Can 22c Taylorsvillc Merc. Co. Tajlorsville, ftah Murray 29 |