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Show i Friday. May 2S, 1943 The Cache American, Logan. Cache County, Utah Patre Two ODK TO FORT ORD KEEPING THE HOME FIRES BURNING. THE CACHE AMERICAN CALIFORNIA Mendon By Corporal G. W. Hanrey Senrf-Wrekl- the Cache Mrs Eddit Muir entertained the member of the Happy Lour club at th home of her mother on An attractive bouquet l Wednesday. the Old Tort Ord' lonely spot of tuhps formed the cent rpieco Fuhung i he fog and the wind Newspaper, Published Turodnyi and Eridaya by American Publishing Company, at 02 Wait Center Street, Logon, Utah. WILLIAM C. ENGLAND, JAMES W. ENGLAND DAVID W. ENGLAND Manoglng Editor-Biuin- e Mechanical a Manager Editor Department , Subscription rUa: OuUlde County, ona year 12 00; Inride Cache IN). Advertising rate made known upon application. County, hike twenty mile with our Carbines Suffering exposure and thirst. Doing the work of a pack horse Were it boys from the thirty first. were At the beginning this day was set aside to pay trib- Wliile the cold winds blow In from the Pacific We'll ke'p fighting Indcflnaiely Hut I hoie we re considered not convicts Our objective Is fur Liberty. For the duration we'll keep driving forward far-flun- j CACHE AMERICAN Many years of sweet l.fe that we'll miss. It too bad that the draft board found us I assure you we d.dn't enlist. FORUM who Lhrt to present his views on a subject. Articles must be signed and the Cache American does not assume any responsibility for such articles. Opinions expressed are those ot the contributor and are not necessarily those of Thla column la open to anyone j d. 0 e shove Ford Ord down his NOTICE TO CREDITORS dirty throat. MORE RADIO BATTERIES To to farmers in areas of the nation, production if radio batteries has bren boosted to 425,000 a month, the Consumers Durable Goods division of WPB has announced. If the present rate of production Is continued over a twelve-mont- h period, normal requirements for the 3.200,000 radios estimated to on farms wiU bs rrPtbring relief - OPA WARNS GARMENT MAKERS In the District Court of the Flint Judicial District of the State of Utah, in and for the County of Cache. In the matter of the Estate of EDITH B. JAMES, also known as EDITH JAMES. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at his office located In the Arimo Building, Logan, Utah, on or the 3rd day of July, A. D. be-fo- 1943. L. E. NELSON, Administrator with Will Annexed. Dates of publication: April 30; May 7, 14, 21. 28. 1943. Becauc3 they violated ceiling prices for women's and children's dresses, coats, suits, blouses and skirts, 150 garment makers have WOOD WANTED Thatcher Coal . been formally warned Company. Phone 78. cj OP.-'.Their licenses will be suspended FOR SALE Hot Point Electric if they are guilty ,of further vio. cooker Range; has 2 plates, lations. and automatic oven.. plate After July 1 luggage will be $35.00. Call at 394 West 1st South. made in 7 basic typrs and will be FURNACE CLEANING, Repairing, Stoker Repairing and Service drastically limited in size and design. Wangsgaard Coal and Stoker Oo. 167 South Main. Phone 132. and vegetables, and riddle the leaves with small holes. Use rotenone or nicotine dust or spray. The potato bug or Colorado beetle, which may also attack eggplant and tomatoes, is red with black stripes, half Inch long. Spray or dust with rotenone or arsenic. are pale Potato leafhoppers inch long. Also green, found on beans, swarming on your approach to the plants, on which l. Nicotine or they cause rotenone dust or spray will control. Cutworms are caterpillars of various moths which hide by day and at night cut off young plants at the soil surface. Protect the plante with collars of heavy paper or cart board surrounding the stems, e tending an inch below the soil surface and two inches above, when the plants are set out. Squash bugs are reddish browa to black, inch long. They lay egg clusters on under side of leaves, and can be controlled by pyrethrum or rotenon spray or dust. The Mexican bean beetle is a black sheep of the Lady Bug family. Coppery brown, 8 black spot on each wing cover; it eats vine and lays yellow egg clusters on un der side of leaves, which hatch out into larvae with voracious appt-tie- s. Plants must be thoroughly sprayed or dusted with rotenone or arsenic. Tomato worms are green caterpillars with conspicuous yellow markings, three to four inches long. The worm eats tomato leaves but is easily picked off, or killed by a rotenone or arsenic spray or dust. The corn ear worm Is a caterpillar two Inches long, striped and marked green and brown, hatched from eggs laid on the young silk. teaspoonful eg Inject medical mineral oil in the silk channel of each ear soon after pollination. Cabbage worms are pale green caterpillars one and inch long, hatched from eggs laid by white butterflies, which are found on cabbage, cauliflower and other members of the cabbage fam-ily- . Dust with rotenone or calcium WANTED: Reliable man or woman. Experience not necessary. A fine opportunity to step into old profitable business where Rawleigh Products have been sold. Big profits. Products furnished on credit. Write Raw. Den-be- r, leigh's, Dept Colorado. UTE-22-16- PHONE one-eigh- th TAXI leaf-cur- three-quart- 35-m- man-mad- And Spot These Victory Garden Invaders And Learn How to Destroy Them other shall His How oft we've heard the story told PUBLIC EXCEEDING Of when Jessu called them to His SPEED LIMIT fold. Suffer little ones to come unto Me Recent checks in 11 states For of such as these shall My showed average speeds as high as 47 miles an hour, the Public Roads Kingdom be. announced. has He saw in each heart and smiling administration the approximated Speeds face in Maine, Minnesota, Love and trust and forgiving grace limit only and Oklahoma, Carolina, North Willingness to share or give, in Minnesota the avthat except And keen desire like Him to live. erage speed of buses was 45 miles But men from His teachings j per hour. The average passenger car speed in Utah was 39 miles strayed away. Inventions power on each holds per hour. Earlier this year, speed counts showed national averages sway. of 37 miles an hour for passenger Their gross conceit in cars, 35 for trucks, and 37 for things Has crowded out their thoughts buses. The present national averof Him. age can not be accurately determined until additional reports are The decalogue became passee. received. to Him no longer They do pray For His kind care and their daily SALMON SEASON food. Or a knowledge of things for their OPENS good. Salmon fishing which will conCruel war puts hearts to the test tribute 5,500,000 cases of high proAnd the good must suffer with the tein food to thenationsuupps.eRh tein food to the nation's supply rest, A scourge around the earth may has started in Alaskan waters close to military operations. The total run. pack is expected to exceed last Bend mens knees one by one, And cleanse the world, then let year's by at least 10 per cent. q. r w:'re here ta defend our Probate and Guardianship Notice, country Consult County Clrrk of the Res. A worthy achievement to quote, Then some day we'll catch Adolph for Further pecllve Signer Hitler this paper. j and luncheon wa served to Mr. Charles Bulst. Mr. Carlyle Bird, Mr. Bill Long-trotMr. Wyne lliibnrr. Mr. Fred Sorenaen. Mr. A Baker, Mr. Ed Mi? I and special gurst Mr. E. J. Hancock, Mr. Verl Shelton and Mrs. Mar. vin Dunbar. of Mr. and Mr. John Ladl. Sugar City. Idaho spent the week end w.th Mr. John Ladle. Private Ralph Muir of Texa U an extended spending furlough with hi parents Mr. and Mr. Thomas Muir. Mr Dee Flamm and Mrs. Lucy Taylor of II. II. tigs. Montana were hou.se gu U of Mr. Lynn Wood Friday and Saturday. On Thur-da- y they motored to Logan, accompanied by Mrs. Wood, Mr. E. J. Hancock and Mr. Verl Shelton and acre dinner guests of Mr. Hal Furr. Private Grant Bartlett of Camp McClellan. Alabama telephoned long distance on Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bartlett. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Lon Wood, Mrs. Harry Bartl tt, motored to Ogden and were guests of Mis Della Bartlett. Mis Doro.hy Wood and Mi.sS Juanita Wood. But to fight a fire and want all that BY ROBERT CROOKSTON Well, it s known by everyone or pressure. Then there should be air chamIt should be that plumbing equipment Is hard to replace and so bers on tiie tank and ull the fixwe will put down here in printer's tures and this Is required by the In all cities Ink some suggestions of how to plumbing ordinance beside Logan. The air chamber prolong the usefulness of your consists of a perpendicular pipe 2 heating coll, range boiler, monkey feet long attached to a tee where and stove, sink faucets, bath-co- x the fixture is supplied and the end DIRECTOR OF THE EXTENSION DIVISION garden hose. In our issue of Friday, May 21 the Cache American As soon as the hotting coll, wa- of this pipe Is of course capped. The object of this air chamber monkey stove starts is to take gave a news story of the possibility of Director William ter Jacket or lime up the shock, the same a it will give as the air In a tire takes the Peterson leaving the State Agricultural college a? head lilling with warning. shock. of the Extension Division, he having reached the reThe symptoms are it fails to 3ust as soon as a faucet or tirement age. Several names were mentioned as pos- heat the water as much as when valve starts to leak It should be new, also It may have a rumbling repaired and not allowed sible successors. to be- bad come chronic. Andthe no In Thursdays issue of the local daily is printed an noise, and the water has a odor. last much longer when the nozzle editorial wherein the editor tries to place the intended If the thing Is taken out and is removed, the nozzle puts too removal of the director upon the political leaders of the attached to the 150 pound water much pressure on the hose. state, stating Ilis place is to be taken, the report says, pressure Ore lime will be blown with a GET 50 GALLONS by some one who wears the colors of the capitol crowd, out, by tapping it lightly some one who will jump when Tracy Welling, Governor hammer. The water pressure in Logan and OF GAS ANY TIME Maws former secretary and now state agricultural di- all tlie Cache Valley towns is too Farmers will benefit from a of ordinary change made in petroleum admin. rector, cracks the whip. Sarcastically the local editor much for the strengthshort-livei.itrative order No. 4, which al-- ! boilers and they are refers to the group as Welling, Maw and Co. It Is very good economy to In- Inws bulk deliveries of gasoline In We do not intend to enter into the matter only to stall a pressure regulator in the quantities of 50 gallons or more, say that Director Feterson has been an outsanding service pipe that serves the house to be made at any time. This will be particularly helpful to far-4leader in the state and in the nation. His knowledge of and reduce the pressure to 30 or nters who drive to town after work pounds. the agricultural needs has been sought by many people Dont reduce the pressure on the and buy gasoline in steel drums and no doubt through his efforts the farmer has been line to the outside, you may need of 50 gallons or more capacity. By Mrs. Ruby J. Christensen Ar- Little Iney care if were living They don't seem to give a dam. Amt tiieyll be the first to forget us Cause they loaned us to Uncle Sam. ute to men who had fallen in combat while in the service of their country, hut years ago the scope was widened until it included a solemn remembrance of all all see That of such as these Kingdom be. from Uie And we'ie eartnng our meager pay While guarding the rich man's millions a day. We get a buck-sixt- y near future. CLEANSING POWER the boy tillery known it is at the cross roads and that many momentous decisions and events will le terminated in the very ment, or demise the work has been picked up by a successor who has maintained the same standards and in most cases added a little more to the service. No man is indispensible thus far. If the board of Trustees sees fit to replace Dr. William Peterson we hope his retirement will be pleasant and that he will get a rest that so faithful a man as he deserves. He will, no doubt, be willing to render some assistance and give advice when sought but at the same time throw off the responsibility of the office. May his successor be as obliging, earnest, faithful to trust and successful in carrying on the important work that will be assigned to him. by We Yes TIMS MEMORIAL DAY Never, in the glorious history of this great land of ours, has Memorial Day meant so much to so many. This year has brought to every city, village, town and hamlet the realization that civilization as we have greatly benefited in his conducting of one of the most, if not the most, essential businesses in the world today, that of producing food for the human family. We do maintain, however, that there has never been a position held by one individual but that after his retire- swept camp In a land that God has fj.gut s departed loved ones. Sunday next, millions will trek to the countless cemeteries to strew flowers upon the graves of their loved ones and many of us will rememlter those who would otherwise he forgotten. g corners of the globe hund-- ' Today, in the reds of thousands of our brave young men stand ready to make the supreme sacrifice, if the need arises, in order that coming generations may enjoy the blessings of liberty and freedom. On this Memorial day, at least a good portion of our thinking and tribute must be paid to these Americans who at this present hour are standing between us and the unbelievable treachery of our. enemies who owuld enslave us for endless generations. As the day approaches, it would be well therefore to include a devotional hour in memory of the services now being rendered by millions of our brave, unselfish Americans in the armed forces of the Unietd States. 1 atorm aa Second-ClasMatter, November 2, 1931, at the Boat Office at Logan, Utah, und r th Act ot March S, 1897. Entered win Spotting Chart of Garden Enemies These Are the Insects Attack Your Victory Garden. Learn to Know Them So Fight Them. Victory gardeners have a spotting job to do. Like the watchers for hostile airplanes, they should be able to identify the insect enemies that invade their gardens so they may know how to fight them. Some of these enemies come by air, and some which cannot fly. Just appear suddenly like the aphids, you don't know where from. The chart which accompanies this article will give you the general characteristics of these enemies and brief descriptions, with suggestions for combating them, follow: There are red, black and green aphids, but those on vegetables are usually pale green. They cling to the under-sid- e ot leaves, or on the growing ends of stems of many vegetables, multiplying with amazing rapidity. Use rotenone, or nicotine dust or spray, immediately first specimens are m Will . Can k Asparagus beetles are inch with lemon spots, long. Use rotenone dust or spray while harvest is on, and these or an arsenic dust or spray after the blue-blac- harvest . Blister beetles are grey, striped or inch long, black, prey on potato and tomato plants. Use rotenone or pyrethrum spray or dust or calcium arsenate dust. The striped cucumber beetle is one of the worst home garden pests, yellow body with three black stripes. It breeds In the blossom ends of vine, eats leaves and spreads disease. Dust new growth as it develops with dust composed of 1 lb. calcium arsenate and 10 pounds of talc or gypsum, repeating until vines are several feet long. Young plants should be protected arsenate. from their first appearance. e Flea beetles are small Grasshoppers may attack all gar-- ' Insect which attack cabbage, egg- den crops and are best controlled plant, potatoes, tomatoes, turnips by using the poison bait three-quart- er flea-lik- 30 SOUTH MAIN FOR YOUR Plumbing Repair CALL BAUGH PLUMBING CO. STOKERS LINK-BEL- T Phone 57 Quality and Service Loans sio to $300 Furniture, Autos Livestock STATE LOAN COMPANY OF LOGAN 29 W. 1st North Phone 360 |