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Show 4 TIMES. PAROWAS. PAr-.uV.-A- S UTAH AUGUST SO. IMS fleece ProUl. tad average. Average weight per the ten For further infui n.aUon r with 612 pounds compared 1933-y- ear since In 1946 was the highest ive Signers. average of 7.98 pounds Credit notice to creditcri Meantime the Commodity that il In the Matter of the announced has Corporation Fsv, I, NATHAN C. HENSON, older lots of wool will be reappraiswhich Creditor wdl ed in a three step program wools vouchers to 1943 of lar per ton. to be added to cvibnjf includes; Repricing the unlt.rwf.'T1,i at all levels and reflected tn rrlad owned by CCC at levels m keeping residence at IVouan. iCr CCC owned wools of State of Utah, on or pi ices of "super and mixed fertd-ters- . with prices for 46: downward prday of D ever. .her, a D D44 Iabor cost increases, and high the years 1944-4scoured Dated tins "Ui day uf V fi eight lutes are reasons given for ice adjustment in prices of Scents D. 1946. shorn wool, averaging about the raise in price. GERTRUDE W. a pound; and adjustments in prices , Urgent Need for Hay and Failure in of wools which are deteriorating Seed Adaunat.-The demand for hay and pasture storage. MORRIS & MATHESON seed is still far in excels of current Notlca Attorneys for Administratrix Guardianship and Probata supplies and farmers are urged to For Further Information Consult the Bank of Southern Utah Bu harvest every pound possible to City, Utah. Clerk of District Court or Respectmeet requuements m this country ive Signers. and in areas being rehabilitated ab NOTICE TO CREDITORS road. Provisions of the Agricultural In the Matter of the Estate of Conservation Program to encourage IL CLARK. Dcseased. WILLIAM seed production are continued for will present claims with Creditors the 1946 program, with a special the undersigned at her congressional appropriation supple- vouchers to Parowan. Iron County, at WANTED menting practice payment funds to residence of Utah, on or before the 23rd State to Girl help farmers harvest to be Linotype 1S46. day of September, A. D. erator. Must be out of average. D. A. 1 of July. Dated the 8th day have good knowledge of Farmers cooperating in the AAA 1946. conservation program may earn a hours, plesc-nvc.ekmg t. PEARL C. DAVENPORT. ditions. practice payment of $3.50 per acre Administratrix for harvesting alfalfa, red clover, or Apply at PAROWAN TIMES ulsike clover, the three seeds needed most. In addition, the 1946 AAA pro MORRIS 8t MATHESON, Administratrix gram provides payment of 7 cents a Attorneys for Utah Building, of Southern Bank LICENSED ABSTRACTER pound for alfalfa and alsik clover, Utah. Cedar City, and 9cent s a pound for red clover Affiliated with on seed sold into commercial chanSECURITY TITLE CO. and Guardalnship Notice Probate nels. The poundage payments are Offict at Court House, Puovu For Further Information Consult the more than double the 1945 rates, giof the District Court, or ResClerk ving evidence of the urgent need for WOOD in the stick or sawed, ta farmers to save clover arid alfalfa pective signers. for sale, See Clair Lister COAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS stands for seed harvest, even though 2313, Parowan. telephone low yield harvests are in prospect. In the Matter of the Estate of SALE in ton or try:. COAL fOK 1946 Harvest Seen as Nations BigERNEST FLINT GREEN, deceased. lots. Harrell load Dalton, phone Sa Creditors will present their clgest. Further improvements in U. S. aims with vouchers attached to the For Tba Bvtt In All Kind 01 crop prospects during July now will annexed at thd offices of Cline, makes the 1946 outlook 3 pointi ab- Wilson and Cline, his attorneys, at ove the all time record production Milford, Utah, on or before the 25th LIFE - FIRE of 1942. It is six poits above last day of October, 1946. AUTOMOBILE - SURETY BONDS Dated this 17th day of August A. year. The wheat forecast jumped 70 ee million bushels to a new record of D. 1946 W. CLAIR ROWLEY 16 billion bushels. Spring wheat is V.M. BURNS, Administrator forecast at 280 million bushels comwith Will annexed. RHEUMATISM 300 million last year;win pared with ter wheat at 880 million vs. 923 mil- First Publication: Aug. 23 1946 and ARTHRITIS lion last year. Corn prospects went Last Publication: Sept. 13, 1946. I suffered for years and am up 155 million bushels during the thankful that I found relief froa Sacred Mountain month to push the new corn prospterrible affliction that I wJ this Southeast of the city of Kars, ects to 3.5 billion bushels, 16 percent near the Iranian border, Is Mount gladly answer anyone writing ne above last years harvest. sacred mountain of Ar- for information, Mrs. Anna Paui Ararat Recard crops are in sight for com, menia and traditional resting place P.O. Box 825, Vancouver, Wash. wheat, tobacco, peaches, peaches, of Noah's ark. It rises almost 17,000 Pd. Adv. Laboratories feet. plums, and vegtable truck' crops. Near record production is in sight for oats, rice, peanuts, potatoes, pears grapes, cherries and sugar- Cudikir ' HIE PAROWAN TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY by lb CO AhOWAN PUB. 4 c PRINTING Hul-ur- ' i ji y .it .a V.V c I. M c Ur Way. 1 t m-- An.pl i supp.les "ndit i. " of four j pi ini .pal a 11 Mill K i H tl.. p! I it . i , tt,7 ) t Iiact f . tut'.Ltl (Mated tuns, laip'.-s- t i t r Si I'nivl CI.IS M.1.1 Milt" u,.. p.- -i Otfni- - at I'liriman. 1915 ( it tnlx r 27. I . I! - : Ine.ah tin t tit .i' .ac ih :e. M in I md Total 1 I a i a . i m:i ($1 i 'I';.- fur a 7 ' n f t I , wi i.M He m.e . 1 hi t! e -- t it i t tu : ! v j v Mo HI ri 915 ini' Si'i.ill h.nh y ji.iitly off was 118 3 "n null-rai- l ,f coin and huger pMxIuet- - ull Ora lit Ii p: duct fted. Smallest supply The new Hiiisiiima will cluster l.Vl'jt'H'k tH f.l, Nt'aS around the do tal dome of t! e far- HI mer M,m ti'i, of lndimtr la! Ait The HIS, lioWfM-- I ma lesult in suppliskelet' n laid l.Mt. a'nu d in the t es pm .innnii.il unit being about as t it if the fid atmnie had. la'Je this ye.H Must uf the itslaet-,.ij- i as a He Will 'I, u nr w.i! he in supplies of wheat 'u.mi lie iiii't mt tu tl e t and III oilseed take anti nullfi'ils, a mini! t" Uirudnma t" lay is alt rt ii ,1 imiimnuty. i e.,lt r and n.uie and bitter fed tha'i Iekyo. 11. ,.h lrutein Output may nnn-.ha- s Gin-pukirm tht"mo the 5 pe: cent lf.-- s than in 1945-4,ut ah he fi v en fui mt r - id, nt s confident e to Small ineit.tses in cotton acrereturn or age this yeat. hut r eductions in People don't fiar radioactivity ex i !T' lamed, one bad other am age of peanuts, so beans, flax"so long a t! ev tan see f i ass seed Pi itluction of Alfalfa meal growing. piubably will he n ar iccord. Major Hud. no Kihara said the will be fed Wheat and live present population is around DJ.onO uf wlnat um and is inmea'ing approximately to livestock, although The city housed half on fat ms while produced probably 5,0u(l a month. a million persons when the bomb be fan ly l.irije fell. Hay: Supj)lus fan ly Lirgf, though Hundreds of small wooden houses smaller than a year ago. Record have been erected. n recary-ove- r have Some businesses begun padly offset smaller this year. Probably ample turning to cui'iiite buildings which vveic gutted by lire but are still fur i es) ck requu ements. fe READER ADR ,, r Sl.n.vM ; ... a Ji ; . , , . ;i .it M v t i .i I pi.itit t'u! t, , i , r;:v ! , f: ii 2 ,, r ., f , I 1, , , .lit;".V ,11 a I . t . 1 .11'- 1 Si c r, 0 i - igati" ; i P. r t.M Si NK . will !" u tl ! tu u i ' ii ;.i ',',,1.1 i!l,I I Mill! .Il'l'il in s IS. !', Ti!S, Kl.tW. u !,. I : r .it.-- N-- , , ( l)...i .1 standing. Farm Flocks Decreasing Young chickens luisetl on farms in tlie United States totaled 677,106 pu smallest nuin- U)(J jS ()f juno Other businesses are booming in small paintid wooden buildings. A motion picture house is showing Several sou- Watch on the Rhine. n i u'..tl!"H li ,.f v. at.'! I', .M .... I! l.rt ll'i .mi , .,1 P ..I.t S l.'iim H aid ! ;t in M Uni. Sri l1'. will holla'd , Ith.V.' V aS tu irr- M tu ,N" i ".!i'i ", : , ,f 'I, I', ai cd III ,i s I: MW I. T 2 , ; '!'. p- I , ' r; Va'i". H ,1,1 ),.,, Mu,li-n;i- . I'f atci fill II mtatlun ; am a l'i in v i 11 tu't 150 t UP ill p ,.t a P I'.lt S 200!) ft ' ii i .' .mi NE Cm Sue. 10 .. Ii! SW. lie W.itel Will 111' Uted M , h tu l :i mate 80 tu N'uv . .if laid in SI 2NW1 4 Sc. 10, 2 It , i I f- i ! 1 i:rv. t . 1 1 , Status uf America, 1. O. Box 1040, t at..Cnv, Utah, .045 sec. ft uf ,. fur rti ck watm ini' piupmes w ell, i a il. ill.-itpiipp il with -Min-, at a point S 10,808 ft W. 2 It. fium hi 4 Cur. See. 2, THIS. '! United !' S Si'i'VK'i1, ' l I ! Wallace E. Limb, 498N. 3ul Ce !,ir Citv, Utah, 3 nee ft uf fa. r mat lull u e f mn a 12 in in t 2oo and 3oo ft. d, ep at a !! and F. 1320 ft fimn S S, , 13, T32S. HOW The tu f: mn Api ll w Cl he tu inmate 80 acies of land ut i m NW1 4 uf Ml 2 Sec. 13, d .V, and fur year round duck .0-- . ' II t f - ' Uh hi 2 V. ft uf and tie. n at a pmnt S. 1370 ft. and ni ft ,uu hW Cor See. 13. HOW The water will be to it l mate tu Dee o' il ef ni embraced in Sec I'lvi.nCitv, a 'in ' i ' . 3; d 493N lamb, Utah, w-- t 12-i- 3 M'f. 150 1 W. HOW. a' ' Til ipvn R Abbott, P.tra-- . 2 5 e. ft. of water foi m ah, p ; o es fi om a 12m well i o a, t j for Navy Pilots bet 11 mi) t deep at a point N E into !t from S1 Cor The navy is WASIIINGTON. harness a deceleration testing shaped like a fencers vest to save pilots fiom being killed in crash landings. The announcement said the ltgi weight harness has not yet bet'n tried in planes, but in tests has withstood over 10,000 pounds of the equivalent of flying straight into the ground at 100 miles per hour. Volunteers on a spe- test rig at the Naval Medical Research institute, Bethesda, Md., barely grunted under the sudden ap-plication of 65 times the force of The violent strain specially processed undrawn nylon which stretches under the impact. The navy expects the idea to have commercial as well as military application, commenting that "loss of life m commercial airline crashes often results from passengers being thrown from their seats and fatalh injured is absorbed by Jails Out of Bread So DES MOINES. IOWA. Bread to some may be the stall of life but to 10 men chargi d with dtunkenness the lack theicof meant freedom. Municipal Judge Cl., i .es Cooler the 10 wh n :t was discovered the city jad had no bread. An i xt. not'd La.-cistrke has I made bit ad M.: i to get here. it will'd be easier for just deedtlie run to go cut and fli.d their own bread, the judge said. td CREDITORS v. : ,,f IT NDI.F.'IOX V M ii' v nr ' nt t t i ( " -- ii at )i Ci M i . Hi h-- ' 25: b n ' ! Skunk, Crow. No Foxes, in West Virginia Parks CHXRUS'ION M-.'- ' , A. A VM.Frrv PENDLETON A c. - - YA '.V - Efft rts of t: o Wist Vugiua Conservut on U rc evil n..u t I, e t . f a 3 vj ca a v j it )s r.-f- j, - V I 3 16 GOOD JOB FOR YOU! s, r GRADES NOW OFFERED TO FORMER ' 5 "I. 1 or J yser. ( enllitmenta for man now in the Army parmlttad wo monthe of aenrica.) with 6 or 2- Enlietment age from 18 to 84 inclusive (17 with parent except for man now in the Army, who may reenliat at any age, M former aenrica man depending a length of aervice. . A reenliatment bonue of 50 M each year ef active aenrica aince Jeh bonue wae l.at paid, or aince entry into aervice, provided VMnliatment ie within 3 monthe honorable diacharga. 4. A furlough for man who olie within 20 daya. Full detalle of gw oit) 4 Jt can b Ob- other i ui ivugu privilegat tained from Recruiting Officer!. 6. Muetering-ou- t pay (bated upon length of service) to all men wha are diacharged to reenliat. 6. Option to retire at half pay for the reat of your life after 20 years' service increasing to after 30 yean service. pay All previous active federal military service counts toward retirement. 7. GI Bill of Right benefit for men who enlist on or before October 5, 1946. 8. Choice of branch of aervice end oversea! theater (of those still enlistments. open) on three-quarte- NEW PAY SCALE fall-pi- la AMKiea e Clethla,. FhS, Medical aed Qaatel Udlag, Cere. le eddlHee riflM: to pey shewn at Increase far Service MX H Member at or CUder Crews. IX Overs. flyl K Sants Hr lech I Years monthly retirement INCOME AriERl StarHnf Master Sergeant or First Sergeant Technical Sergeant Staff Sergeant . . Sergeant . . . . . , Corporal Private First Gas . Private V f .... Meet 165.00 135.00 113.00 100.00 90.00 MYaoCiaYeon Service Service 107.25 J185.6J 87.75 151-8- 6 74.75 65.00 58.50 52.00 48.75 80.00 75.00 avo-ng- e. n-- - Highlights of Regular Army Enlistments let-u- p s OCCUPATIONAL SPECIALISTS nearest Army Recruiting Station. , n-- ARMY Good jobs fa grades are being offered now by the Regular Army to qualified former servicemen! Veterans discharged on or after 12, 1945, who enlist r Kenlist for 3 years may be enlistedMay in the grade for which qualified, provided this grade is not higher than that held at time of discharge, and provided that at least 6 months of former service was in one of 400 designated military occupational specialties in which enlistment is now desired. Important, interesting jobs are open in hundreds of skills nd trades in the Army, with splendid training and educational advantages! These are in addition to free food, housing, cloth-tog- , medical and dental care, low-cos- t insurance. There s adventure, travel, education, a secure and profitable future m this vital, realistic profession. Get full details at your al s MORI THAU EVER BEFORE THE ARMY HAS A t j O po-o- pnt "Sorrier WV8T- - he W Reece R-lir- Zw, riew" end SX-Eessdea your radle. rf ewes " Aray learaMag SfeNa gad Mil H Wifit'daf i 2A M ( 13 now, dd-linpu- , i NUE-OV- 1 4 Judge Releases 10 Men TO Livestock Slaughter Up Meat production under Federal inspection for the week ending July 27 sooted to 384 million pounds,2 percent below the pieceeding week, and 41 percent above the same week cane. last year. Average or better harvests are in Spud Price Support Buying Contin- sight for hay, soybeans, dry peas, ues prunes, apricots, and sugar beets. Below average is the outlook for Up to August 8, some 1100 tons cf cotton, rye, sorghum grains, flaxUtah potatoes hud been shipped t buckw'heat, seed, dry beans, C.ihfuinia to be made into alcahol and pecans. under the program to support prices Late summer and fall grazing proto pi oducers. According to Adrian Fife, purchase representative for spects are only fair. The Departthe Production and Marketing Ad-- j ment said the fall movement of cattle is expected to be greater and earministration, about 6 cars a day are lier and greater than last fall. Grow being loaded. The potatoes are conditions during July were ing ln pmthusd from farmers and cer- favorable for the country as a whole at Sb45 P?r 100 lbs. ifuHir although at the end of the month, r giatde with not to ex- - there was some prospect of drouth ceed 2 percent soft rot. This price conditions developing in the Southis loaded on the car, bulk The price ern Great Planes area. f(1, N() and j g. ' 6Q ents' Declining Food Supplie Still Above an on Whipping Cream Reminder 1945. D.urv men and distributers of Meat supplies for U.S. consumers ' "eie (founded this will be larger than a year ago until "l'1 la (here has been no term-cilate this fall. After that there will be ln;,tt ir r relaxing of the ban on less meat than the near record supwhipping cream. Under the provis plies of last winter, according to the U)IK ,,f ;V., F()(d 0rdtT 13 the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. ivory to consumers of whipping cr-- There will be more potatoes, fresh abutteifat content of 19 fruits and vegetables for the balPeirt nt is banned This action was ance of 1946, compared with the taken to increase the pnduction of same time last year.. There may bebutte-somewhat less chicken and sweetpotatoes Lamb Crop Down The current abundance of meat The nation's lamb crop ln 1945 to results from marketings of livestock talod 26,110 000 head, nearly two held back in May and June. By Oct7 pe; cent smaller than ober. however a in marketM4a This ciop was mom than 4 and possibly larger exports million hoad or 14 ings percent below will reduce U.S. civilian tho 19.b-supplies be average and the small- low last farther Looking year. est lamb ciop since 1927. ahead. BAE says that 1947 meat proFarmers Prices Up duction may decline one billion poT.I.U f.H mots will feel the immed unds. or 4 percent below 1946. This (Me Mfects from the be due to earlier slackening of reduction would marketings of spring pigs, an expected smaller 1946 crop, and a in continued decline cattle and sh6 4 percent eep slaugter. ie eh, for all Per person supplies of milk and replacement e increase as ran y products will be seasonally mailer during the rest of the year. However, the total per capita food 'i m.ik-up'.'li pt consumption of U.S civilians for is expected to be 3 percent U.P of 1915. and 15 percent above fill war (" Wool Prop Smalle- -. Tho 1946 crop of 'ho-- n tuction, wtimated at 298.978 000 pounds, is the smallest since 1927 anti 7 below last years production Nine percent fewer sheep have been shorn since last year, and pm.-20 percent fewer than the 1935-41 gravity. NICE 1 sweet-potatoe- 1 T INSURANCE - But the fiery imprint of the bomb ina:y estimates b the Department is all around in charred trees wav- - of Agriculture This is 18 percent ing grotesque urtns and in the jlsS than 19 45 and 5 percent below sprawled rubble of buildings and jy.jg average. Commercial hatch- rutted streets. ings declined 19 percent, below 1945 levels during the first 6 months of 1946, and this downward trend is expected to continue. Layers on farms vveie the lowest since 1942--- 4 percent le.-- s than a year earlier. The preentage seasonal dt'erease was the longest in 16 years of record 1 1 i H. C. Parcells , V.imr, II ! I s Will III t I .) .Ill I p.iii,! S 2!'IU ft and n t . I. i' ' v 1 1 '"! l'.'l Shi low-yieldi- . L 'I 11 f ,.i fm-d- in i 3t, T31S. Si V.uii ,:.i II .1. I i 2'" "li tl N 4 A .',1 " .'I i lilt t.) I u i ii in I.t I i f it mv.iliM , I , ! . U.tv. C'i il.i U !, . . . i . A4 EEVc-- I I, l!)4ti 47 ,!. IAT'ONM. DITOPUAI ASSOCIATION lip idlil XL p.,7 Situation Brighter et-- am ! js'ruI!Ovi A ii A.- . r farm v J W 'r-ri- V Publisher. Mgr. B. Mitchell- - l bd it,.. . 1 4 U.S. ARMY RECAUITING OFFICE FEDERAL BLDG. CEDAR CITV H |