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Show s i jjage u Engineer Starts 66th Year as Railroad Man c 8 Sky's the Limit! ... aren't but thcy's quite that high and delicious, tall and frosty on a hot day. .... HAMMOND ICE CREAM CO. 4959 South State St. (Next to Murray Theater) URAY 5 R, II. Towers f. II. A, Towers Plumbing Heating General Repair Work 130 East 46th South Phone Murray 717 "Prompt, Eflieient Sorvice!" for increased egg production was cited this wetk by extension Carl Frlschknechht, State AgriUtah at poultryman cultural college, when he urged to keep farmers and poultryment into them turn and their pullets of laying hens instead thisputting sumthem on the market will eggs more mer. By so doing food Sam's Uncle for be provided and producfor defense program be will greatly supers' incomes plemented. shortThere is no definite egg be m age now but there raay production unless egg the future People is increased, he says. home, at more eggs are eating the army needs lots of eggs, and scheduled to large quantities are The governshipment over seas. ment recently asked poultry producers to increase egg produc- a tion 10 million cases during period ending next summer; and the producers have responded, although latest figures indicate the increase will fall short of that figure. "We know that we can produce all the eggs needed in the food for defense program," Mr. Frischknecht said. "It's just a matter of having plenty of laying hens and taking care of them properly." He maintains that this is the year to fill all available poultry laying houses with pullets, especially since a favorable price ration now exists and the government has announced that it will be main, tained. A recent U. S. Department of Agriculture report shows that about 10 percent more chicks have been hatched since January 1 than a year ago, but the increase in numbers of young chicks on farms on June 1 was disappointing, Mr. Frischknecht says. This would indicate that many pullets are being sold as moat along with cockerels for the broiler market. , A special effort should be made to withhold all pullets from slaughter, he declares. The market for chicken meat can be fully supplied from the cockerels of this year's hatch, and prices will be better if the broiler market is not overloaded. j VA d d fd 4 are thinking: of buying: a NEW or I'SF.D CAR, 1 11 greatly appreciate your giving- me an opportunity to show you our large stock! Every car Li guaranteed for 90 days in writing and our terms are the fairest and lowest in the business. - I represent Fred A.Carleson Co. Distributors for Cadillac ar.i Vomlac 547 South Main St. Salt Lake City You can buy with every confidence frtwn me, I will guarantee you a good deal. Phone 41991 and ask for . . . Dutch Siauffer during the day time or phone Mt'RRAY 696-in the evenings. supporting depression. Now, with the conditions made by another great war upon us; supplies costing more than, they did, money worth less, it might be Well for every woman to get her house in order. To shorten sail and batten down the hatches before the storm. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of INA EUGENIA RING-ROSsometimes also known as Ina T. Ringrose, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at office of W. Douglas Allen, City Hall, Murray City, Utah, on or before the 20th day of SepE, 1941. R. RINGROSE, Administrator for the estate of Ina Eugenia Ringrose, sometimes also known as Ina T. Ring-rosDeceased. W. DOULAS ALLEN, Attorney for Administrator. First publication. July 17, 1941. Last publication date, August 7, e, 1941. PHOTOGRAPHIC ! When there's a difficult shot to be taken, you'll be glad you have PECK'S equipment. It's the true lest of all photographic supplies, and you'll find PECK'S photographic supplies come out on top . , , Think of PECK'S when you think of photography! CAMERAS OF ALL TYPES The New ARGl'S AGFA Sri f DUX, C-- 3 Complete Outfit For Home Movies S7995 A Few of Our Camera Specials Includes: Fine Camera, 8 mm. projector. (4) rolls of x nuitive film, big screen and stand. with Synchronized Flash Ti p value of 1941, F4 5 $33.50 Lent. $29.00 ARGl'S Model AJ for the discerning camera fan With the addition uf a built-iexposure meter. $100 n TRADE CASH TERMS PECK'S CAMERA SHOP 03 South Slate Street Phone Murray mmMmmt . Pt J? Applicants must not have ta their 50th birthday on closing date for receipt of apDli cations unless entitled to veter ans preference.. They must show that they have had at least one year's experience directing the activities of a group of chauffeurs or motor truck drivers. Applications must be on fie with the Secretary, Local Civil Service Rating Board. War Ogden and vicinity Arsenal Station, Ogden, Utah, on or before the close of business on August 7, 1941. ed FIREMEN! KEEP COOL with a it? THE NOTICES of the disclerk (Consult the trict court or the respective signers for further information.) SUPPLIES The Civil Kprvi announces an open eompctS examination for filling the Z, tion of Motor Vehicle DispatcS." $1,320 a year, at the Qua ter Corps War Department, ? rt Douglas, Utah, and at the Q, termaster Corps, War IWt ment, Ogden, Utah, and any oth Governmental agency in the vioi nity of Ogden or Salt Lake uty Utah. buck-yar- d PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP WILLIAM vehicle DisPauhe farm-store- LEGAL NOTICES tember. AD. LJ94 opi-nc- well-develop- If You FIREMEN I 3 SfctK farm-store- egg-fee- d 10c PLUMBING CO. NU well-matur- man-size- d ALL FLAVORS to Barley loans will be offered been cooperathave who formers , ing in the AAA farm program, Service (Bell Syndtcate-WFrank Lundskog, member of the county AAA committee announced today. He said that any operator or owner cooperating in the 1941 AAA program is eligible to receive a loan on barley produced this year. The barley must grade No. 5 or better, however. Barley stored as collateral for the loan may be stored on the farm in granaries which meet the requirements for farm storage or in public warehouses approved by the county AAA committee. Loans may be made through diapproved lending agencies or Crethe with Commodity rectly dit Corporation. These loans will be available on the 1941 crop until December 31, 1941. All notes will mature on demand, or April 30, 1942, and the interest rate is 3 percent. Insurance will be required on d all grain under loan. The loan values of eligible barley of all classes except mixed shall be based on the following grades: No. 1, 45 cents per bushel. No. 2, 44 cents per bushel. No. 3, 42 cents per bushel. No. 4, 39 cents per bushel. No. 5, 25 cents per bushel. that her girls and boy at home bard These rates to Mary got into such trouble when she kept a vacation school, with beach warein during the first unbearable summer she stored to and barley ley, cookery included in the course. picnics and houses provided the warehouse ORRIS N KATHLEEN receipt representing the warehouSEAS TROUBLED By se-stored barley shows that W ith war exer creeping closer to fact that thousands risand storage and charges .handling living expenses shores, American women our have been paid for the duration ing jailer than income in many warns us of of the loan. dragging their cases, Kathleen Xorris we plan unless difficulties, continfuture a Mr. Lundskog pointed out that households along in wisely for the future. Her examples these rates are around 10 cents their ual state of debt and disorweathered hate others how of per bushel higher than the rates will encourage many who ganization was one of the troubles concerned about the problast year. now are of the causes long Need 314-mil- e Plan For Barley the Storm Be a Good Captain Before Production In U.S. h Well, may bo our sodas Kathleen Norrisjays: For Greater Egg his road man. Next day, at 5:45 a. m., Tierney, of serv80 oldest railroader in point his started ice In the United States, to Junction City run regular and return. year, "This starts my sixty-sixteven gotten he said, "and I haven't around to thinking about stopping. This is my life." Clear-eyehealthy. Tierney once S. Sloan. was described by Matthew a "typical exam-pi- e as Katy president, devoted of the men who have a railroad the to making lives their efficient transand safe, dependable portation machine." -f- AAA To Extend Expert Sees Need PARSONS, KAN, John Tierney eased the long Katy passenger m.-- oa train to a stop at 6:10 p. climbed from the cab, tlme-a- nd work day in completing the last sixty-fiftstraight year as a rail- L Thursday, July THE MURRAY .EAGLE (33 MMtf4; lems that may lie beyond. Y trying for commissions and Mary, with, three children of grammar school age, counted up her liabilities and found herself $1,880.22 in debt. Just how she extricated herself I've told here before. First she moved to an old barn of a house In a part of town, behind factories and warehouses, but quiet Then she and spacious enough. into an apartment rooms four turned If you are In debt, get out of it. and rented It. The nearest school Begin tomorrow to pay oil longwas a dreary great structure swarmstanding bills by small degrees: two ing with the children' of foreign-bor- n dollars on this one, three on that. children who had Make a cheerful list of everything to be parents; 1 taught American speech, you owe, and show it to the children and use tooth to baths take taught when they demand dimes and quar to stop swearing. brushes, taught Wear cones. ters for movies and Not like her children! it slowly down, and while you are Opens Own School. poscut out every wearing it down Mary got Into such trouble when sible needless expense. Even if it home means following the experience of a she kept her girls and boy at unbearable friend of mine years ago. Living that during the first summer she opened a vacation In a quiet, respectable New York backstreet he was once forced to hunt school, with beach picnics and In the course. Included cookery yard and emergency in desperate pain school for a doctor. The family baby had In October she began regular 16 paid pupils at $10 a with work Dadinto little firm a finger poked That winter she enrolled 21, dy's eye, and Daddy was mad with month. next autumn opened the the and and apprehension. pain school with a registration of 40. Reducing the Overhead. The big eye specialist across the Now there are 20 boarders and street was "nt the clinic." the but- about twice that many day scholars. So Daddy dashed Mary has bought the old house ler announced. 15 the adjoining property with two and waited three blocks to the clinic, Dairy Specialist Maps Plans For Annual Utah Dairy Day The tenth Annual Dairy Day, to be held at the Utah State Agricultural college experimental farm in North Logan has been scheduled for July 30, announces Professor George B. Caine, head of the dairy department at the college and chairman of the event. Planned according to the national emergency problems in dairying, the day will also include regular demonstrations and discussions of the pasture and feeding experiments that are carried on each year. Practical suggestions as to what Utah can do to help in the present emergency when demands have been made for increases of evaporated milk, American Cheddar cheese and milk powder, will be offered at the meeting. The Weber Central Cooperative Dairy association, Utah Power & Light Co., Agricultural Experiment Station, Utah Livestock Purchasing Cooperative and dairy and livestock specialists have minutes, had his free treatment, houses; she has painted back walls school been listed os among those who Her trees. and a planted prescription, green paid five cents for and went home cured. The office will never be fashionable, but It Is are contributing demonstration Inexpensive, as private schools go, and lecture material visit would have cost him just $25. for the And Mary licked A wife I know had her third baby and It is good. dairymen who will attend. In hospital ward last year. For the first depression and she knows the two earlier babies hospital expenses had averaged $100 for hospital visit, $100 for doctor, $00 for nurse, and about $25 for presents, tips, telephone, taxis and so on. Tlils third baby's tills came to less than $100. "It wasn't quite as comfortable," she reported. '"But then a baby party Isn't a picnic, anyway. Jim didn't know anything about it until he got home from a trip, so he wasn't embarrassed or shamed. The ward was amusing, really, and the nurses nicer than any private nurse I ever had. Meals arc Just the same all j ovrr the hospital. And Jim's bewildered face as he looked at my bills was worth seeing! Doctor $35, ward $1 a day, anesthetics and delivery room $20." If you Cannot possibly lessen your dells where you are now, with rent and schooling as high as they are, and the Car, radio, telephone, gardener once a week too expensive, then move. Move to ome other neighborhood. Put the chiMren Into public schools. Let Die maid go and manage with a cleaning-womaonce a week. Tut Domestic Vessel In Shipshape. For believe me, the time Is com. Ing when you'll want your tittle domestic vessel to be all ready for heavy seas. If the whole family It pulling together then, children understanding and helpful, Dad re assured as to solvency, Mother explaining and managing everything, then you're going triumphantly to weather the storm. But If you can't manage now to kern your headi above water, you most certainly won't be able to do It when taxation and higher prices and the strains, demand, shortage, depreciation of war days gather strength. Mary Caeman Is a Philadelphia woman who had to face Just these problems 15 years ago. The dcpjrei sion struck the Casemans early, from a salary of six thousand a year John Caseman was reduced to no salary at alL He struggled akrg , i - she can lick the next, if and when it comes. In years when dismay and doubt and change were shaking domestic economy everywhere, the Casemans knew nothing but progress, prosperity and security. You can assure these to your own family by taking matters In hand now. For the next few years, more than at any time In our history, we will need family unity, family and family strength. We will need freedom from entangling Indebtedness and extrava gance, so that our hands won't be tied by yesterday's mistakes Entire Family Must Help. We need, all of us. each other's Tired men help and confidence. must come home these days to peaceful and cheerful households, lo a hundred little items of good news to make up for the waves of bad news sweeping over a troubled world. Children need lessons In unselfishness and these are the months when they must learn to contribute what they may to the general home atmosphere of love and service and absolute belief In the eventual victory of good. We will survive these days, But meanwhile we must throw overboard everything that we may of extravaunnecessary cluttering gance, debt, wast, pretense, and with them their spiritual counter part of hate, fear, revenue, prcju-dicSo that when It comes we shall be ready for a brighter day. e. Device for Stopping Speeders "Hook cm if they don't stop," Is a plan of Denver It. King, of Seattle, to curb motorists who drive through red tramc lights. He has patented a device to hook thcrn as deftly as ever a bass was caught on a plug. As King explains It, his device would lay flat In ihe street where the traffic lights are irreen. then pop up out c f the pavement as they turoed red. A hook would snare a passing car, but would riot yank out parti of the chassis. Two ' Dip Just what the doctor orderei Two big: scoops for 5c. also have Freezer Fresh Cream, ready packed to home . . . t Ice take Pint 18c Quart 35c without somf Don't miss a dav of this delicious Ire Cream! j PRESCRIPTION! DRUG SOl'TH PHONE Ml 4911 ST. STATE KUAV W The Happy Meeting Point for Fine Fellows! HEIDELBERG Beer Farlcr Opposite City Murray, I t ASTOPa Hall ilt the .at the Sign of and the BELL Answer Real Driving Enjoyment . . . There Reasons Why You Should . . . 0 Not an Ordinary to 4 are Gasoline! When we tell you that we do not have an ORDINARY GASOLINE in SILVER BEp . . . We are going to make the following Statements . . . O No Driving Ping! O No u jou Missing on Ihe Hills! do not have time to brinf your car In. us a rlnr at Mt'ItRAY 303. We will call and car up at no additional cost and return It Hf it we can have jour car noon. e Silver Bell Murray's Origmal Tmrtrairlrt Inn 4400 SOUTH STATE STREET f 1 |