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Show 1 PAGE SIX THE BOX ELDER NEWS-JOURNA- L Neuio'-Sourn- al A Semi-Weekl- Newspaper Successor to y THE BOX ELDER NEWS Established and 18) (Established 1909) Published by The Box Elder News-Journ- er s'eal Central Manager VWIJJAM M LONG, Editor O O I.IN'NAB ARY AilveiliMm Manager ( I0k es candles Dutch j coin ed Published every Tuesday and Friday afternoon at Ungham, Utah, and entered as Second Class Matter at the post office in Bnghana, Utah, In January, 1904, under the act of March, 3, 1879 such I Elder dont have the same sneer UP AND DOWN MAIN STREET on my pan you see on nd )i ! y RE pa . i I'i't U' uk'1' he hi .,,o,w 1 w P u.d w iiig h n i nn.iHib rig it " li ' a p mu vv i t ( i EV 1 1 t l I v t VRA.D i v OV Kcntuiky Straight Bourbon Whukey I CHEERFUL AS ITS XAME w v . ex-ait- lv I ever get any sleep. I can remember when I lived on Main street, two or three moves ago, two or three times a night along early in the morning some particularly large and powerful truck with a particularly worthless muffler would w ake me up with its particularly loud exhaust. Main street is beautifully planted, and and the city maintains the parkways, but its going to get to where citizens who have formed the habit of sleeping at night had better move east, or west. These noisy trucks are likely to reduce Main street property values, if they arent careful. Theres the problem how are you going to make them be careful? Maybe a truck driver likes an especially loud exhaust on his truck, so he wont be so apt to go to sleep. Some trucks, I suppose, just naturally make a lot of noise. But some of them make so terribly much noise it must be or imperfectly that they have functioning mufflers, or something. Maybe it would help if the police would stop a couple and inquire, very politely, if they couldnt role their multi-to- n loads over our city paving a little more quietly. Not give them the idea we dont appreciate being on an artery of commerce and transport, understand but just ask them politely. Maybe word w'ould get around. And .Main street residents w'ould get a little more sleep. d, cut-out- s, Shilling For The N. Y, v st us lubricate ye g and Iroduilb Corp mil jiti't Dont wait 1 - National Distill- t t Sitting here on Main street well, not right out on Main street at two, llnee oclock in the morning, hatting out Ihese literary gems, I wonder how' in the world anybody living on Main street can -- UTAH COMPANY FIISf3$ 0 i is the oil you should have because of its high quality. Its also time for specialized lubrication . . . complete lubri-canlubrication of all moving parts with fresh Vico w and inspection of transmission lubricant levels. When ycu change coupons it s ts and differential time to change oil! )o.n Ihe ealvage drives . . . eliminate unnec. Save anti treeze. Buy 2b share your car. (.aiy d.ivmg. Drue under United Slates War Bonds and Stamps. Oil is ammunition use it wiitly. HFLP YOUR GOVERNMENT: o e BY ERNIE BUSHMILLEi OKAY, KIDS--- Y - WHATS ON YER M'NDS ? Maybe it isnt sporting. Maybe it isnt But youve got a lot of old Kansas boys .and, I hope, young ones and Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn to convince! Semi-Pr- o sport. Well be doing quite a bit of plugging for the Utah State Semi-Frtournament, to be held in Rees Pioneer park the evenings of perhaps somehow the town will be benefiTuesday through Saturday, August 3 ted. through the 7. Maybe itll start Monday And then too. by golly, maybe the Peachevening, if enough teams enter. Right now es will win the tournament! it looks like all of the best teams in the state o and most of the good ones will be on deck to have a try at the prize money. Were strong for the tournament because it looks like beyond any question of a doubt it will present five or six evenings of the finest baseball contests to be seen anywhere in the country. And we like to see fine baseball contests. Thats reason one. Reason two is that we think the state tournament belongs in Brigham City, home in' the past of the most successful state tournaments ever held in Utah. It belongs here because thanks to a highly cooperative city and a lot of hard work on the part of some superfans, Brigham City year after year has a good strong contender for the title; because for the same reasons Brigham City is a good baseball town with a large number of men, women and children and this year service men who like baseball; because yet again for the same reasons Brigham City has possibly the finest baseball plant in the state. Reason throe if the series must be rounded out with a third reason is that were convinced that even this year and more particularly in years to come, the tournament will be a good thing for the town of Brigham. Financially, some years, at least, it will return profits which will help finance baseball here and thus afford an insignificant amount of relief to the individual taxpayers and ticket-buyepocketbook. But the real value to the town is intangible (if we are correct in believing it exists). Call it advertising, call it good will, publicity, promotion or putting the town on the map. itll be another thing for which Brigham City will le favorably known. Some people in the state and throughout the nation know Brigham City for its peaches, some for its duck hunting, some for Peach Days, some even for the sign hanging across Main street. But some people who have heard of Brigham City for none of these things, will hear of it and know it as the home of the Utah state Semi-pra good baseball tournament town. You cant put a quantitative analysis on the promotion of a town. You cant say exactly which try does some good, or All you can do, as a town, is try everything, work every angle, keep plugging at things that look as if theyll help the town. And perhaps you make a lot of false moves and waste a lot of energy, but also al al rs o how-muc- rx Enforcement Youve probably heard about the Ogden sportsman who went up into Wyoming fishing, proudly had his picture taken with his catch, and thereby tightened the noose around his gasoline ration book. They say which is a nice way to launch something you cant prove and arent too sure is true that the O.P.A. has checkers forward auto license numbers of fishermen to the local boards, and a check is made to determine just where and how the Walton-ian- s got the gasoline to make the fishing trip. Up to now, gasoline ration compliance has been pretty much a matter of conscience. There are as many as there are knots in the lumber you buy these days, only theyre big enough to get through. It isnt quite fair for one citizen to walk, ride his bicycle, roller skate or stay home to stay within his ration of gasoline, while another employs a convenient dodge and pursues his peacetime pleasures without undue inconvenience. If were going to have rationing and regulation of mileage, it should be enforced. Thats our honest opinion. It must be honest it surely hurts! loop-hol- l I WONDER f IF HELL EVER COME HEH HEM, THINKS HOME-- IVE IM NANCY MILES FROM HEY OFF THE ru. AND ALL WEEK BEEN RIGHT HERE 1 town aa (Vtn ratW1 HEARD YOU STREETS PRACTICE -- in 7r,S N BLACKOUT es top-gra- WINDY AND PADDLES &HE RACE IS ON! At sa t Horse -1 C!(J3-'0IJ- m paddles TO BE IS THRvJ-- SS t-- '5 rs sv taemtv lensths7 try ING-8U- NO MA rent HE SEEMS T POP. Tr-- E sOuvlG-- R BY DICK MOORE: humph i had hoped paddles vMOULD MAKE A RACE FOR AwHiLS OP IT AT LEAST HOVN SORiWG! AWAKEN kt AT THE CONCLUSOsI tHS KA Ci of PHILLIPS. Ho HUM? tv E y R-- 3 The Cold, Cold Ground It seems the News-Journ- al carried a mis- then, downright inaccurate story in Tuesdays edition. The storv told of Douglas Christensen of Bear River City narrowly escaping death at Ilonev-vill- e when the horse he was riding was electrocized by a ground wire of a telephone line. The local telephone company, after reading the story, checked up and found actually it was a power line ground, not a telephone line ground, that damaged the horse and endangered the hoy. Telephone lines do not carry a shocking amount of current. A telephone line might get hot if a power line were to fall across it in a storm, or in some other extreme but imaginable instance, but ordinarily the kind of current telephone lines carry isnt the kind of current that could kill a horse, and the ground wires from telephones and telephone lines are as cold as the ration hoards heart when you walk in to apply for extra gasoline in vour fishing boots! leading okay, ERKiMER'S JOV JUMPED O- TO AM EARLY LEAD . . . AmD HE'S W'DEMMS IT VYITM EVERY STRIDE. uEMSf r-- VERS JOY LEADS PADDLES BY TWENTY -S AS THEY ENTER THE SACK STRETCH arunawan. dssjsted fans are Already f n toward the exits ... :-- s ss paddles Slm afraid to LEG-- of all the super- Sk.LiLCPnST'415 lS H BEAR j ',Y 4taWi s m on , , , T I V i); , V V " lit I ss in s I 1. Noise By Night 1 ll ooke i 1 vv cfitoltaJb lit" nc" Li f t when mention "rugger fishingmu og iml a a the faces of these dry-flWith Linny prima donnas h mtu.e Im th Mari No when the subiect is mentioned. I dont look s n w u pel The display shows hoc the sum t in upon dangling an inert worm or piece of in Suie a cussin them truck a h or no n si h oqi uv i taken caie steak or liver in muddy water as an un- diiveis - that keep me fum little felleis ana in s, tokes t. Eum sin the day ' - o ll speakably low form of sport, like crap- sleeping rules - with then cut- thniout n thi in it illy and is JW outs e and metfeetive nuffleis in and playi.n Vic l.sli l h quail. shooting, or the k. interesting g s a Chet Hamilton os ' in gittin U val Suie missed seeing ' a r. hi - put inter hi III I dont have my World Almanac handy, new windei rg uv tne Bwhive Coal ket! S fei how.ng up hi goods n iiti'i toe sun new but there are quite a tew people in Kansas .store mis last (oup'e well they am t nothing nhe end Appliance Lott i m aiue n.ub.le In n and similar adjoining states, and quite a ha Ol uv weeks w ridi s to making J m stone improvement.-keep vvitn a kw ol them are native sons, and mighty few the tight bine ,tnl rorneflu having stiei't ook.ng t uld git hi t llei .1 onlv ei sumetmng sin of the native sons who didnt spend a con- shining l.ke th n new nnkics the tei ag ee tne t on Ima. d but fium last k pints siderable part of their boyhood summers t t Ch he sez arijwa l iiu.g git out uv doing an moie wn nigger fishing. eer tnmming than neeessar and ou keen t blame a .ellei I never see an article about nigger fishfei tnat ing in a sporting magazine, either. Bait The Howaid Ho Cafe casting for muskies or pike, long and heated leopened agin - unrtm the man arguments over dry fly versus damp fly agement of Mr and Mrs P and damp tly versus soaking wet fly, surf Robert Jaeks in now' fokes casting for striped bass, deep-se- a trolling that ha been ewaduig - lioui s x. tei git sum for marlin all get a terrific play with the in the motm-'kin let out their fodder for armchair sportsmen. But narv bieakfast a hole ot two. belts an article on what I prefer to call still Ed Peteison - the lotund profishing. Modern Shoe prietor uv the and Mrs Pe Repairing shop lie May you remember the Tom Sawyer terson ha returned Bum and Huckleberry Finn comic page a Sun- a trip to California Pete se that fer hot weather this day comic, incidentally, with which I became the provei-bia- l acquainted long before I read Mark Twains country don't- hold to the - Sacie-- i yarns. In fact, I thought the book was mentocandle - but that they valley NafVjfc: "taken from the comic page. Tom the vacation enjoyed Huck were always going fishing nigger Down in West s winder - some fishing. Theyd carry a willow or cane pole, floor mgs witU long shaggy with a line the length of the pole (some pre- hair - looks az thick and soft I and curly - az the hair on a ferred a line about 18 inches shorter) and a uv comse with bobber and sinker and hook, And theyd angory goat out the smell - am t nothing ITII reduced driving, your oil is constantly exposed catch fish. a a tall that gives a feller to impurities, dust and other abrasives carried uv so much luxury Now theres a point Id like to make with feeling and, at the same time, it is exposed to through the air as hiz bare feet fair emphasis. Theyd catch fish, and so inter sticking uv a thick the soft nap the harmful effect of partially burned fuel particles! did I. My pals and I nearly always would pile mg Also, with todays limited driving at lower speeds, your Looking inter Peoples Drug bring home a string of catfish. Very few "cook off the water engine does not get hot enough to And that was w lnder I see sum - hair tnoic days we were skunked. condensation. and combustion which is formed by and fruni what it sez - on the summer after summer, day after day, while I wu wondenng label IF. the fish calendar and weather conditions man flush your crankcase and Let your Pep And we keep the sign across1 and the marine vegetation and organic life Main ico time you change coupons! street change your oil every burning bute varied from a to z. Some days when the sun was near, for about an hour at noon wed be yanking them out as fast as we NANCY could jerk our poles and readjust the somewhat-gnawed worm on the hook. Ive caught as many as five or six sunfish (not very big, maybe) on one worm. I Say i r h . "a on a a still y ou Kain vague bird of how di In ms I hi y tasted to y ou Then h '1 he J C I'eiii ey Cu big centi a.n-(i- i g.wn up then r t u r to a display hool h( Brigham City Nuiseiy a Side ci lption Rates- Anywhere in Box 25c a County $2 50 a year, $1 25 for .six months, month, outside Box Elder County, $3 00 a year. subscriptions must be paid in advance. Publn at ion offices, 41 South Main Street a w I DC - smn tew all cow ed a JCLyI 'V i Inc. & - sUla'ne I TIIE BOX ELDER JOURNAL EVEXINC. kin i.e needs sum Siam p b list vvuliint t shuld be i I,,, tl Ill Mt,e while the supnh iv ,'is'j' The bottle uv p r s, !u ed a 's week last n , p, v i in B1 do n much beti r plex wilduiuy .'dh vwm that I l,d. J in fact t l nkii. w li feller to get thl U the iff wer think it hi boss o weakening m ihe m 1 allurs believe v a v h dioi h that iv oughtei n t brH .eli is. i; a beta tie i good )j whuh oo nieich tnts N lute attel rule - w ill. .V the lady in the stoi y that new i ( um ship f only wt le w citing tnat din t u t I toui 1st-- , this y pir g w.l.'le w j'I s' that tal Piett. old ! tshlo a C j r t Jai inter ( ,an ba s w n 9 did viu when ou w u a kid IUD.VY SUPER-COLOSSA- L OF ALL : At the to tip. mils post HERKIMER'S JOY IS ST L pull 'NS Away. . TIME. nr not so loud. 7 AAR. SiLLBOAft PLEASE? AwAKEY MRSAK |