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Show WASHINGTON NOWS An Independent Newspaper Devoted To The Interests Ot The People Ot Rich County and Lower Bear River Valley or FROM OUR CONGRESSMAN W. K. GRANGER A Handy Profession In Advance Under the State Capitol Dome THE GREATEST SHIPBUILDING PROGRAM THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN GOES AHEAD AT FULL SPEED la my article last week I explained that our shipbuilding program is divided into three divisions, normal, emergency and Naval. The emergency program means merchant ships of a standardized design ; war freighters of a slower speed, but designed for mass production. , Naval building. In order to double the size of our present Navy, an unprecedented program of shipbuilding has begun. By 1944, we expect to have finished most of our program, which will mean 206 destroyers, 17 hutre haittleshiipsi, 12 airplane carriers. SI submarines and 54 .cruisers. In addition, the Navy is building around 400 boats. For the patrol and next three years the Naval program will take up more than, half of our available ship yards. Our normal merchant, ship program is. 50 ships a rear, .but this has been speeded no to such an extent that instead of 50 by the end of the year, we will have 100: a lid the emergency program will add another 260 ships to this total by .Tune 1942. At this rate rmr shipbuilding program will turn out 400 ships year. This in Itself is an undertaking of gigantic proportions. Yet, in addition, we are producing 770 fighting ' ships. fhoto by Highway Information Servico iCDOADS are urgently needed for national defense, Utah Congressman J. W. Robinson, member, U. S. House Roads Committee, tells delegates to 38th annual Convention of American Road Builders' Association. He is pictured during speech before highway men from 48 states and 15 foreign countries, who met in New York City, Januto plan roads for hemiary spheric defense. R . '.-- $1.50 Per Year Randolph, Utah. Friday Feb. 28, 1941 Volume 14 Number 7 (By Uarda McCarty) The fate of Governor Herbert B. Maws farreadhing government reorganization piLan rests with, the Utah state senate following tihe surprising and practically unanimous passage last Friday toy the house of representatives of HB 82, the single measure encompassing all of the chief executives proposals for executive, department, and commission' revamping. It now remains for the 23 State se nacre to decide in what form they will consider the governors proposals as HB 82 or in the the one apparently favored assortment of 39 bills recently introduced in the upper house to individually cover the varied phases of the plan. Legislative experts predict that the passed house bill will toe discarded and reorganization enacted in t the series of attorney-analyzemeasures. Approximately 100 of the 382 bills and resolutions as yet unacted upon )ad to do with taxation and court or egal procedure divided about 50 each Another 50 had to do with state Fourteen reorganization. concerned education, 15 traffic or high ways, 13 were of interest to labor, and 11 to water users. Thirteen carry apTen relate to elections. propriations. 10 to defense, five to housing, five to fish and game, six to welfare, six to liquor sales, and eight to health. A dozen or so have to do with agriculture and livestock. Others relate to ivil service, pensions, and marriage. Several are of regulatory nature, while nearly 10 seek establishment of commissions or hoards. d 27-3- 1, Former Randolph Citizen Passes i This is the story of the man that harvests the wealth of. mother earth Mr. Miner. He is the man who daily puts on rough clothes and goes down into depths of the earth in Utahs deep mines to drill the holes and tamp in the dynamite and muck out the ore that pays the wages, the trans- portation costs, smelting costs, power bills, taxes and all of the many items which go to make the operation of a mine successful. is interested in these costs, for he knows that if the total big, the operator will he pts forced to shut down the mine and he will be forced To join ths swollen ranks . of the job- hunter. Mr. Miner also knows that the lower the cost of operat- lug a mine becomes that a lower Afid.Ah? grade,, ora , can chanees of lengthening the life of his job are better. Mr. Miner has a good job, respon- sible job and he likes it. He knows that the operator and their stock- holders hive invested thousands of dollars to make his work possible, work requires skill and experl- ence. Mining is a vigorous, hardy profession and it requires stamina, courage and alertness In case of emergency, Mr. Miner may start in his pro-fession as a mucker; most miners His job is to go into the stopes and load the muck, which is the miners name for blasted ore. He machine may operate an built for mucking in place of the shovel. Mucking machines are used wherever possible in Utah mines, He has opportunity for advance- -' ment to the jobs of miner, timber-...- .. man, foreman or higher. If he is dependable and alert he might be come a cager which is something an elevator operator, or a hoist-maand spend, his working hours at the control of a giant maChine which lifts and lowers the s in the deep cages and air-driv- gov-rmme- nt Word was received here by relatives aud friends of the death of Catherine Peart SnowaibLl, better known as Katie Snowball. She was born at Ran rloiph, Utah, Oct. 16, 1877, a daughter of George A. Peart and Jane McFaii. She was married Sept. 20, 1896 in the Logan temple. She spent the greater Bhaft. part off her life in Utah, living in RanSenator Alonzo F. Hopkin of CroySalaried Jobs also are open to she 35 While here for years. dolph -' now total hold postdon last week introduced S.B. 266 lifeline,., Many oyer.sea'S was! very active iir church' work." Was y; 1 1 o n s of ' superintendent, about. 1.200.000 tons. Transferred - to president of the the special tubercular inshop removing young ladle? organ! so forth, mill foremen and bosses, neuto England were 199 ships and demnity fund tax levy from range zation ; secretary for the Relief Soafter starting as muckers, S. B. 259. tral nations friendly to Britain. 85 He also cattle. Mr. Miner is not unlike the rest ciety, Sunday school and Primary. Also to have to commission us. of Work is only a part of his foreign registry The transfers providing an advisory worked in the Religion Class. When He home routine. has his com about Commission daily and fish Maritime netted the game work with the the Woodruff and1 Bear Lake Stake and family, his hobbies and mission. $9,000,000 and American nrimte own- was was made secretary creation. His object, like the rest divided, she ers about $50,000,000. of which twenty-fiv- e of the stake Relief The third district senator was honof us, is work to support these the , Later Society. million has been turned over to with appointment to the import. ored things. family moved to Ogden, whenq they senate the commission to finance new ships. ant sifting committee to which lived for 12 years. From there they is authority to report out delegated RANDOLPH LITERARY CLUB moved to California. There she found AERONAUTICS COMMISSION ail measures remaining on the calendar CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS work to do in the church. First was ANNOUNCES commitCongress will be asked to authorize president of the Primary, then presi- FREE FLYING COURSE The Ladies Literary Club met at the or in the hands of standing session. of the close the the Civilian Conservation Corps to dent of the Relief Society in the Riverhome of Lois Johnson, Feb. 26, 1941, tees until voted no on S. B. Senator Hopkin iTse $3,000,000 of its funds for opera- side, Calif, ward. hostess, The Utah Aeronautics Commission with Ottalee Corless assistant reprohibiting trespassing on state tion and maintenance of its motor A Patriotic Evening Surviving are her husband, five sons wants several hundred Utah youths The program, or remCval for azin v pair division. Allen, Gass, Peart, Milton and Mor- to take a complete course In aviation With Music, was under the direction resources. natural tal Snowball, all of Riverside; two free, according to an announcement of Edna Rex. The club, accompanied BOARD TO DETER- daughters, Mrs. Clifford Nanny and made by Director Joseph Bergin. The toy Winnie Rex at the piano, sang a MINE PRIORITIES A 'new Vorldng Mrs. Adam W nStover, both of River-hid- course includes a complete ground number of patriotic songs. The proTwo comet one sister, Mrs. Mae Brough, arrangement for the operation of the training course and then an advanced gram was as follows; Ninth family tragedy lifting the which the under I ; solos r 40 system hours Smith, George to accompanied cf three 35 by brothers, jama priorities Randolph flying course including of the Lambton Worm? A bul- Curse determine pri- A. Peart of Calif. ; also 15 grandchildand Navy Board will in the air. The course would cost a on the piano by his mother, Mrs. Edna ' DurRocked in the Cradle of let in the head of the Earl of ority ratings for a critical list of nuili ren: Funeral services were conducted minimum of $400 if the students were Smith, a of out a rounded airson cycle has hams as guns, tanks, the Deep, and b In tbe Gloaming. tary items, such Monday at Riverside L. D. S. chapel. required to pay for the training. an- an when deaths violent announced was prophesied and ammunition, Burial in the Riverside cemetery. planes Ogden Is ready to start a pilots Comet solo, Measer Rex, accompanied water slew the monster with nine by the Office of Production Manageschool and needs 20 applicants im- by Winnie Rex, entitled Victory. Read about this strange curse mouths. esment Authority over priority ratings Comet solo, God Bless America, by Other schools will.be WOODRUFF NEWS mediately. the illustrated feature in The Am-- i for all raw materials and extensions tablished in the state as fast as stu- Miss Edna Rex, with Winnie Rex at distritou-e- d of ratings below the first subcontractor he piano. These young people display-- criean Weekly, the magazine A 'party was 'given in honor of Mr dents are available. ANGELES will be in the hands of the Priorites real talent and we were very proud led with next week's LOS be between the Applicants jmiu and Mrs. Irvin Cox last Monday at Division. not and attending happy to listen to their beautiful EXAMINER, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Heber Cox ages of 19 and 26 and, if 2 Lucille Thornock read a very music. least at had the geneolOgical committee and college now,, to have For menu variety build a meal DEFENSE PROGRAM STIMITLAT by fine article entitled, Our" National AnIf work. applicants Mr. and Mrs. Cox will years of college their partners! An interesting article around activity eggs. ES INDUSTRY Industrial of them a Prayer, and Our Constitution leave for Syracuse, Utah, in a few are now in college only one year of the of with, egg recipes. Youll operation well given and during the first year to. run a farm there. The eve- completed college work will be requir- Divinely Inspired, very days stimFood ALman- it Housewifes the find in been strong defense program has enjoyed by all Edna Rex gave rambed. Ice in was games. spent playing ning and ulated by the construction of new deAll students wishing this training l.ing thoughts on patriotism and gave ac, along with other prize recipes, cream and cake were served, March. for calendar fense plants and by the direct orders gastronomical to register with the Utah much valuable Information concerning Bishop and Mrs. LeRoy Tingey are are requested for military equipment, but a more and Dont miss this popular feature in Tbe the CapiShe the State flag Commission, displayed flag. Aeronautics a of very happy over the arrival American Weekly, the magazine disimportant factor in the rise has been 23rd. But bad tal building, Salt Lake City, as soon tne club pledged allegiance to it. Edna Feb. boy Sunday. baby ANGEmen and forward buying by business Smith and Winnie Rex played two pi- tributed with next weeks LOS followed1 this when, their small as possible. luck later consumers who have anticipated ano duets, Under the Banner of Vic- LES EXAMINER. daughter, Nila Ruth, had to be rushed : We all Shortages or higher prices. tory," and' The Sleighride. to the L D, S. hospital at Salt Lake YOUNG COUPLE MARRIED WARD REUNION EdBanner. "Star the Spangled sang with a ruptured appendix. AT RANDOLPH Wednesday NOTICE na Rex received a big hand for this Mm Willard Tingey visited here The Randolph ward minion held FindElaine splendid, entertaining and educational James Greenie and Miss with relatives and friends last week. old The A delicious turkey supper last Friday was indeed a big success House and .lot for sale. Mr. Tingey came for her Sunday. He lay of Kemmerer, Wyo., were married program, O. L. five, hundred attending. A most home of the late Mr. and Mrs, was accompanied by his sister. Mavis at Randolph last. Saturday. The groom was then served to 25 members and nearly Garden near City. Iead at Picfcleville, '! is a popular OOC camp enroilee, sta-- : and Tingey. following guests. Esta Warn-- followed by a free dance. "mpuT KmWrite to Mrs, Sadie Pend 360 Holj. of Dickson lioned. 4 Mr, and Mrs. Sheldon . slay, Maud Corless, Mabel Richey andj cresting toasts or stories were told lywood Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah. merer. His home is in the east. Ogden visited here Sunday., Carol Findlay. The guests departed. during the banquet Among the out- The bride is the only daughter of The MIA sponsored a social Ia$t aud of BIRTHDAY PARTY saying its grand to live in America, of town visitors were President Tuesday evening in, Putnam hall. 'A Mr. and Mrs. Russell Findlay and President Mrs. James Brown, of land All reported ;he home of the brave and the crowd attended. Wyo. 'arge and Mrs. Mr. Mrs. , Joseph Williams, ReA birthday party was held at the having had an enjoyable time. The Reaper joins with the many 1ie free David Dean, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Smith wishFred Mrs. in off Mr. and home freshments were served by the officers friends of this young couple " Peart, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Spencer, Mr. : Thursday, in honor of Mrs. Smiths and teachers. r RADIOS FOR SALE ing them ail the joys of married life It was proand Mrs. Wm. Reese. birthday. . Mm Heber Cox entertained a few may their troubles be little ones. nounced one of the outstanding tihurch friends at a quilting Wednesday. If you are looking for a bargain in events. held Pioneers of the The 21 Daughters Under Criminals Gallons of lee Cream a used radio see Wayne Marshall. SevIn 1938 consumption of ice cream their meeting at the home of Mrs . Over 19 per cent of all persons eral different kinds on band. Subscribe for THE REAPER. arrested last year were under 21. was estimated at 275.000,000 gallons. Theris Cornia Thursday. AMERICAN SHIP AID TO BRITAIN OVER 1,200.000 TONS The United States has sunrliod Great Britain with more than 755.000 tons of cargo ships since October, 1959. Of this total, 60.985 tons have been transferred to Canadian registry. Including ships to going to alien registry friendly transfers American affecting Britain, . . - f . n ore-skip- Mr.-Min- er.' 4 re-H- is . ' K. ARMY-NAV- I10 Y e; Army I I K 1 I i. prize-winnin- . I . . 1 , ,. i , . . I -- Kem-niere- r, J : . . , g |