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Show 1 in two THE BOX ELDER TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AVGUST ELDER NEWS TIIE BOX Established ( and 7 lk) , r ; ' 7- - y JOURNAL ELDER 11XJ9) TIIE BOX(Established Inc. Published by The Box Elder General & Manager WILLIAM M. LONG, Editor DAVID H. MANN, Advertising Manager Published every Tuesday and Friday afternoon at Brigham, Utah, and entered as Second Class in Matter at the post office in Brigham, Utah, of March, 3, 1879. act tv,a under l!)Oft, January, Subset lption Rates: Anywhere in Box 50 a year, $1 25 for six months, J5ca County 00 a year. month; outside Box Elder County, $3 advance. in be paid Subscriptions must Publication offices, 44 South Main Street. MEMBER OF THE UNITED PRESS to the The United Press exclusively is entitled to this credited news of all use or republication herein. paper, and also the local news published All rights of publication of special dispatches also f' r - ,V FOR A WALL MOTTO: We must all be tough And vicious, To beat those Nippon Sons ambitious! BEAUTITFDE: Blessed arc they who take themselves seriously; for they shall cause much Three doity boids Sittin on the coib, Eatin doity woims editor twice Wherein the News-Journweekly puts his neck away, way out. You are invited to jump on, if you wish. And sayin doity woids. A boy and a goil Named Boit and Moit Saw the doity boids And was they pertoibed Parents Will Do It cut-dow- aj-e- a effort. There is more to war than bombing attacks and great guns thundering on the high seas. There are more casualties than those caused by guns and torpedos and tombs. And the good citizen is going to be a good sport and realize that if anyones to little monkey in Tokblame, its a slant-eyed yo and a megalomaniac with a foolish mustache in Berlin. d thin-voice- Lower Taxes Just Like That! r 1932 j Mari bo; Le Jli' diked. A New York man old-fas.- ! if offers a $1,000 war bond to the first American enlisted soldier to set foot on Japanese soil. Though not as lavishly, we all look forward to the day w hen a few thousands of our troops will be taking steps to collect the dough. . Engineers have figured out again the old trick of saving gasoline by cutting out half the cylinders on your car. Maybe I shouldnt have taken the old buggy to the garage after , all! When I was a kid our gang used to get awfully good mileage out of the gas we bought, in Rosebud. Rosebud was a Model T touring souped up with a battery and a generator, disc wheels and a roadster top over the back seat for a town car effect. She was painted American Beauty rose and Talisman yellow with rose leaf green wheels and a delicate rosebud on each door. She was a thing of Leauty, but far, far from a joy forever. Rosebud was named, if I recall, for a certain heifer who was a motif of some sort for Whiz Bang, a magazine one of the boys woud buy sometimes. Whiz Bang wasnt considered a very reputable magazine, and I never could see that it was very funny, but divorced from its implications the name Rosebud was innocent enough and could be used in the most polite and parental society. Rosebud was principally for chugging around town, kicking up an annoying dust from the unpaved streets, going duck hunting on fall and winter mornings, and going to football games. There were two reasons why we got good mileage out of the gas we bought for Rosebud. The first reason is that we got a lot more gas than we bought. In the days of the old type gasoline pumps which measured from a glass tank up above, a careless filling station operator would empty the tank and go home at night leaving as much as half a gallon of gas in the hose. The nozzle wasnt locked into the pump, so all you had to do was visit four pumps, after the stations were closed at night, squeeze out the hoses, and you had two gallons of gasoline. We didnt seem to consider this dishonest, or stealing gas, and if a careless operator had left the glass tank full I dont think wed have taken any out of it. But anyway, while the mileage per gallon may have been indifferent, the milage per dollar was excellent on the gas acquired in this way. The second reason for the good mileage was that Rosebud was strictly a y buggy. Shed get you there, generally, but she d never get you home. Wed drive her ten or twenty miles to a football game, then have to talk someone from the home town into towing us back. None of us ever understood this eccentricity of Rosebuds. We just considered it part of her personality, if not her charm. one-wa- A chicken WANT ADS coop floors, paper, etc. Call at the office. Consult Clerk or District tf. REAL ESTATE SOLD REAL ESTATE BOUGHT REAL ESTATE LOANS LEE, Licensed Abstractor FURNACE CLEANING We Vacuum Clean and Repair AH Makes of Furnaces BEEHIVE COAL and APPLIANCE Phone MONEM N Store L. Hansen Variety Store of a Million Articles. ' INSURANCE S. Martin Rasmussen Residence Phone 98 Atty TRACTOR V LOOK CHEV-ROLE- BUY BONDS & STAMPS Deputy Court Sedl) DAVIS, industr Dean Johnson Joins Marines Dean Francis Johnson of 13 North 5th West, Brigham, Utah, joined the marines in Salt Lake City on August 12th. for Petitioner large m tive, pr ng pap New and Used SEWING MACHINES Cattlemen Breed Horses Expert repairing of Sewi; SEBRING. Fla. (UP) Cattle-ime- n Machines and Vacuum Cle& in Highlands county need era. horses and ordinary folk need An Arizona MER1 A. B. BATES musician was Your Local Singer Man V a means of getting about now pinched for having two ,ives. that war has cut automobiles to He wasnt much on the har- - Ph. 626 R AN 102 S. 2nd YUM la minimum. The result is that mony. three cattlemen in this country are making plans to breed more IWalk high class stock, according to DAIRY HERD IMPROVEMENT county agent L. H. ALsmeyer. j t T tf. ANIMALS WANTED WE PAY CASH and call for your dead and useless cow s, horses, hogs and sheep. Phone Trenionton, 112A2; Garland 3oJ3. Colorado Animal Co. tf. FOUR YEARS OF PROGRESS Grows It Tomatoes on Stem Ga. (UP) Any way you slice them. 11 tomatoes on one stem is some tomato growing. II. C. Roberts, of the Oak Grove community, came to town carefully carrying a stem on which the il hung. They weighed about one quarter of a pound each and appeareu healthy specimens. 1 No. Cows in Herd Ave. Lbs. Milk Ave. Lbs. Fat Ave. Test LA GRANGE, Two-bed-i- Brig-7- F Office end ORCHARD Panther tractor greases regu- larly sold at 17'ii, closeout, District VV1 SUPPLIES Approved quality insecticides, spray Ing materials Anderson Produce Co WANTED TO HENT-ro-om modem house ham. Telephone No. t1 The SELL your dead or useless horses and cattle to White's Trout Farm and receive more money. Phone Hyrum 11R3 Collect. Jy43 CENTRAL - , S. NORMAN CO. if hrs'fatheVs note7areTtilTthf Rhea searched for the pa: then turned away from the with a stru ken look on her f "They they, too, are gone" faltered Her heart cried out against facts that seemed all too clear openhad come here for the purpose She raised her hand to reach in- - stealing those notes beanng NOTICE In he District Court of the First side, then froze. The jewel case fathers signature. . . . The Juilici.il District of the St ite of Utah, wasn't there! of the jewelry had probably in and for the County ot Box Elder Oh! she gasped. In the matter of the Estate of N. P. incidental, a temptation he c Whats wrong, Sis Is there a not resist. . . . Anyway, he Fujihara, deceased The petition of Masao Shiotani prayRENE mouse in there? asked Dick, with gone off with both notes and j ing for the admission to Probate of a laugh. els, suddenly vanislung witiioi a certain document, purporting be to DEFEf Rhea swung round to face Mr. trace. . . . This was the man the Last Vt til and Testament of N P Fujihara, deceased, and for the grantMarkham, staring at him with wide loved, and the man who had m of of administration with letters will ing her believe he loved her. annexed has been set for hearing on ?ys O Dot The jewels are gone! She heard Markham at Friday, the 25th day of August, A D The 10 oclock A M at to 1942, lawyer Counthe her at in individuals him heard side, their stepped telephone, saving, specialists your h( Are you sure? ty Court House in the ( ourt Room of erator, give me the police! line. id Court in Brigham City, Box Elder She rummaged through the few wanted to stop him, but she co t Repape Countv Utah papers in the small boxlike com- - not move or speak. V ITNESib the Clerk of nd Court make it with the seal thereof affixed this I5tn PLUMBING fc HEATING partment, but the little case she had brought from the bank was able for No job too small be Satisfaction guar day of August A D N 1942 (To continued) MFRLIN COOK, not hidden among them. anteed Coleman & Sorenson. (The characters in this serial Clerk Pro Tern ed ploy Are you certain you put the Bv Lsyle Richardson, fictitious) OPTICAL GOODS '' lb. 10c. Court Brigham City, or respective signers for further Man to clerk in mail or bring: WANTED Telephone, grocery store. Steady employclassified ads to Hie News- ment if suitable. Marrieil Journal offiee at 44 South man preferred. ..Sycamores Main Street. Rates, lb per tf. .North Main. word per issue, 2,ie minimum order. Cash with order, except for firms carrying charge accounts with the New ' ' MEN momentarily concerned, tmnkmg that he had piobably been out at the Crystal Club until all hours gambling again.. Something, she tiiought, should be done about Dick He needed a strong hand. Then, she turned bark to the safe, started manipulating the dial. In a moment, the door swung LEGAL NOTICES shelf News-Journ- . t4 SALESMEN WANTED WANTED Reliable man wilh car lo succeed R. N. Price as Dealer in Brigham, Terry, Willard and Mantua. Over 2.400 families. Experience not necessary. A fine opportunity to step into old, profitable business where Rawleign Products have been sold for over 30 years. Big profits. Products furnished on credit. Write Raw leighs, I)ept. UTH 12 163,' Denver, Colo. Thieves Say Thanks SACRAMENTO, Cal. (UP)- -! If all thieves were as obliging! as those who robbed the filling' station of city councilman Peter E. Mitchell, the police could go out of business. The thieves tetuined tools, stationery, pen-cils, tne patches and other! items with a note reading: Thanks for the use of this A7-I12- 1 .Finally the coach laid down the dictum that no players couid ride to or from games I'OIt SALE Dark Red Durham Bull. Vi yrs. old. Call 587J2 in Rosebud. It seemed unreasonable, but or contact Wallace loung at no one argues with the coach. And on cold Perry. Al8pd. mornings, we found, it w as much more pleasant to go duck hunting in one of our dads BANTEI) A man for all around sedans than in Rosebud, who was, after all, work. Apply at Evert on Mat-ties- s a breezy model. factory on East First South. tf 1911 938 1" 11 (iJKiO S,33t 138.: ,'J.').").2 s j.z , w I MITII REGISTERED JERSEYS ) Breeding Slock For Sale Q WIT! OURS VISITORS WELCOME R. W. HUNSAKER TRE.MONTON, ft & SONS UTAH SALT LAKES NEWEST HOSTELRY ' DURING THE SUMMER OUR LOBBY IS DELIGHTFULLY AIR FOOLED 1 4jjnh stuff." RADIO I 200 ROOMS OR EVERY AM) 200 BATHS ROOM I don't remember what happened to Rose- LOST Between Bountiful ami bud, finally. I m quite sure the citizens Burley, a brief ease, containdidn t take up a collection to retire her, aling L.D.S. hooks and imiort-an- t though there was some talk of doing so. papers of value to Willard Aston of N.vssa, Oregon. I Perhaps, like a government loan, she liquidareturn to and ted herself! A 18 get reward. But Rosebuds initial cost was only $oft. During the year we operated her, the Irish WANTED TO RENT Furnished dividends for upkeep didnt total more than home or apartment for four $3. So with all her faults, every now and adults. Phone 7 and leave, then when I pay a garage bill on her current telephone number and ad- A18 dress. successor, I tind myself (like Citizen Kane) mumbling Rosebud. LOST Black wallet with ind-e- r News-Journa- Hotel Temple Square l News-Journ- '6 RATES $1.50 TO $3.00 a The Hole! Temple Square has a highly desirable friendl) Aou will always find it immaculate, suatmosphere. tax-payi- News-Journ- ll, iftb.bv 1 hundredths of a mill, seventy-four thousandths of a cent, may not sound like important dough one way or another, but. like the inch on the end of your nose L zip well, mine, anyway per. Contains California drivit becomes a matter for .74 of a mill higher? er's license. Selective Service serious consideration w hen its a tax levy per As a citizen, grateful to an draft card, travelling permit, dollar evaluation. alert board of county commissioners and all and ' l luh fishing license. Is that a gentle enough preamble for our others responsible, the is hapPlease phone 7. A18pd. announcement that the was in py to correct the story and that tax the say grave error in Tuesdays edition in an- levy actually is .74 of a mill lower, the total FOR SAI.E Roll ends of white nouncing that the total of state, county and levy this year being 22..U) mills print paer, clean, long conper dollar tinuous sheets, ideal for pie- school levies for the coming year would be instead of 23.04. iiic table covers, under rugs, Seventy-fou- YEVIW S " Editorial.... It wasnt good or pleasant news to Brigham City and Box Elder county to learn last week that the Baron Woolen Mills has been forced to eliminate two of the three daily shifts with which it has been operating, night and day, for the past eight years. The announcement meant that one of Brighams largest industries is being cut in third, from the standpoint of operation, for the duration. n did not mean an appreBut the ciable reduction in force. The force already had been reduced by causes which are becoming commonplace to the average employer in this these days: Jobs with the government in defense work; defense area housing shortage forcing removal to another area, where housing is less acute; entrance into the armed forces of employes or husbands of employes; and the same causes make it impossible to bring in new help to replace those who have left. Id be money ahead to shut down completely until after war, Baron said. And there is no reason to doubt this. A lot of excellent businesses are going to be operating at a loss these next few years. But Baron recognized an obligation to the loyal employes, many of whom have been with the mills for years and years. He recognized an obligation to the town, and most of all the government, for whom the mills is operating 10ft percent in producing woolen goods for the armed forces. A lot of excellent businesses are going to be hurt, and hurt badly in the next few years. Many already have been hurt. But it is the responsibility of management to recognize the fact that in carrying on the best it eari tinder these difficulties it is helping, it is doing its bit in the war Ui Of B , IOEM: Cest La Guerre Ji HORSE j,ojth Jense 5 Yes oh, yes! She lo Mi jyjARKHAM Rhea back to the Manor, as her bi other. You saw me V 0 ! 1 saw you put a leatuW he wanted to tell her grandthere, he said. Was that m tie 01'n. father that the money for the ers jewelry? j biases east field had been deposited in d Yes." Rhea paused. Dick M the bank and to arrange for dichi t jth ami Don t Chi is' silly! Whv w0, the payment of the notes the want jewelry? Besides, I dont on i bank held. j cut hi know the combination of the and s While he was with her grandMarkhams eyes turned i en his ra father, Rhea waited downstairs. and speculative. Who know", She had remembeied that she combination besides you and' , cenu'nt wanted to ask him about selling grandfather, Rhea? the family jewels. ig. 20, W No one. No one at all- When he came down, she led .he inf mi Then, she caught her him into the library. s Lton remembeiing Jim Mr. Maikham. I want your ad- - uj He sad coirected her7he arolsn 5 vice, she said. This money for dav when she had made daughte the east field will do no moie than in dialing! til T. Mi pay the Majors debts. Theie will , li'stant be nothing left to go on with. JUST as this thought Camf , HIM OV That's right, Rhea. Giegg But there are the family jewels ik uuck Ive had them appraised. Mast of doorway. Miss Rhea- Beg pardon. them are worth little, but there's She turned. "What is it, Gm fpKMA l!! a bracelet that might bring tw enty-fiv- e He came to her, holding ou ig. 18, thousand dollars hosier K upward. "Mauhj j And you want L, know whether hand, inpalm room Mr. Carra the this .dtion to I'd advise you to sell it? he said, when be the Yes. You see, it s been the fam- occupied cleaned this morning. m Box ily custom for the jewelry to be Rhea looked at the thing udson w given to the bride of the eldest in his hand an son. In the present case, that cameo god and brooch. Markham andt would be Dick's bride if he mar- also stared. quo ries. The Major wouldnt want to Then, Markham took the br !,g. 20. sell the jewelry any more than he from servant and disni wanted to sell the east field, but I him the baby b' feel we've got to push custom aside Mis A one of the coller this Is and think of his security." A big bi Maikham nodded. "I agree I Rhea? nodded dazedly. Yes She mmond can't imagine being plagued by but . . . oh, Mr. M a r k ah o! U debt, yet hanging on to some bau- couldn't have been Jim1 h a tr bles. Who appraised the jewelry The lawyer shook his head gra for you9 Mr. Harmon. He said he might Iv. We must be realistic a(' be able to sell the bracelet m New this, Rhea. Don't forget that Carradmes father is in prison 111 Iren, York Have you got the stuff heie at dishonesty And don't forget Jim has left here very sudde the house? I'd like to see it. without leaving word of his wh Yes I'll get it. abouts. Tell me did he ever RHEA went to the wall safe, yo,Vvcrc the Major open that sa fi! sta a! Dick came into the room. He n,ghi here"! ufa resale inat Bn looked sleepy, as though he had just got out of bed. Hello, Mr. Markham . . . Ill, Sis. he said, flopping into a chair. Glancing at him, Rhea aw that his face was haggard. She was accompanied aie roerved. Ilorvin Buntlerson, superintendent of the schools of Box Elder county, has published a notice requesting all parents of children who will attend schools in Brigham City this year for the first time to call at the office of the board of education in the Court House and register. The superintendent hasnt said that no new students will be admitted to classes who have not been so registered. There are no door prizes. But it is a pretty good bet that most of the parents who are newcomers to Brigham City and whose children will be entering the local schools will comply with the request and register. Parents will realize that it is going to be difficult enough to continue with some semblance of normality the educational routine of youngsters who are being moved from town to town in these unsettled times. And they are going to appreciated efforts of a school administration that is doing all it can to provide for the increased numbei of students probable, and afford them the same high opportunities in schooling that Brigham youngsters have enjoyed in more normal times. The newcomers will see that here is an outstanding school system, built up by the residents of the town and county over many years, which is opening its doors to their children. And in return only one small favor is asked: that they give the administration an idea of how many new students there will be, in order that they may serve them better in the classrooms. Yes sir, well bet the newcomers will do it ! m jewels in here, Rhea? XXXI CHAPTER News-Journa- Elder Srndtcata, b4 JOSEPH CHADWICK ' , aitcd ON A H HIGH A St mi Weekly Newspaper S'.icces'or to hr MiW RIGHT ON THE KNUCKLES Ncms-BJourn- al IS, NEWS-JOURNA- E premely comfortable, can al and thoroughly agreeable. therefore understand whv this hotel is: & Vnu HIGHLY RECOMMENDED al Vou can also ITS National Dutillsri Products Corporation, New York, N. IFHBPPBWMWM Y. A appreciate whv; MARK OF DISTINCTION TO STOP THIS BEAUTIFUL HOSTEI.R3 !K2W 90 1 L 1 NA1 Pkoi I H |