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Show 'tXtA&ifa W raa rfUfrliiTigffv nfifrrniawii BOX ELDER NEWS-JOURNABrigham City. Utah. Friday. March 22. l946 secre- - Goodliffe DUh 5nnnrbTfiiI?rwinrii service rating central tarv irst Lieytenant t board, 220 Federal building, line, sou of Mr. anitJ Mrs. applicants Successful Ogden. be el- Goodliffe, and Obsban; for these positions will at Claire Peterson the igible for appointment Air ham City, Ogden arsenal, Pru. Ogden for separation the Service command Douglas .Technical separation center (Hill Field), and the Utah Army Lt. who ser. Service Forces depot, Ogdenof monthsoooaiufe, overseas as a Pile Applications for the position the air corps, is laborer at Clearfield should be 'sent to the recorder of the with six bro de-- , ribbon labor board, Naval Supply Philippine hberatio, in pot. with one bronze star As, application forms theater ribbon, and th r. Necessary ribbon. be information may full and of .He was commissions obtained from secretaries boards of civil service examin- air corps March 12 he entered ers located in post offices in rithe Salt Lake and Ogden areas, as an aircraft as well as from the labor board recorder at Clearfield and the anic at Ogden. rating central civil service President Truman, board, Room 220, Federal buildomic aides challenge ing, Ogden. S. Eccles statement costs might jump 10that Phone No. 7 when you have a under the president, neI news item. price policy. L Weird And Wonderful Spotlighting UTAH Utah Needs Research Experts There is a real place in Utali for trained research experts, declares Dr. A. Ray Olpin, of Utah president. Surveys conducted in tins state have revealed many important problems, he pointed out, and further explained that men specially trained in research technique could do more for the states industrial expansion than anything else. "Research provides a seed Dr. bed for industry, Olpin said. Um-ersit- y Crawford Named Commissioner Arthur L. Crawford, geologist and University of Utah professor, has been named to suceed the late Joseph J. Cannon, as Commissioner in the State Department of Publicity and Industrial Development. Crawfords past experience as teacher of geology and mineralogy at the Brigham Young university and University of Wyoming, his experience as raw .materials engineer for the Geneva steel plant, his work with the Utah engineering experimental station and the U. S. bureau of mines in ore dressing research problems, well fits him for the important work of research specialist with the 3- e Veterans Get Preference War veterans will be given over preference when seeking permanent civil service posts in Utah, it is announced by Clark N. Sthol of the civil service. men will have five to ten points preference in all examinations in competing for jobs held open for them during the war years, yet temporarily filled by incumbents, Sthol pointed out. Disabled veterans will still have a higher preference, it was explained. Applications for civil service which postions at Clearfield pay from 83 cents to $1.27 per hour should be made direct to the labor board, Naval Supply depot, Clearfield. non-vetera- L.D.S. Stake Purchases Ranch 'A 1500-acrranch is being purchased by Woodruff stake, (Rich county) and will be operated as part of the L. D. S. church welfare program.. The is on Bear property river, twenty miles below Randolph. the ranch will Normally, produce 800 tons of hay and pasture 300 head of cattle. The price being paid is between $26,000 and $30,000. The ranch has an adequate water supply. e "Run Off" Seen For Utah Lake Evidences that Utahs climate may again be entering into the wet cycle is indicated by the fact that Utah Lakes water level is the highest for March in 22 years. The last time the lake water reached what is called compromise level was in 1923. Compromise level means the point at which the lake spills over. David I. Cardner, Utah Lake and Jordan river commissioner, says the lake may not reach compromise before May 1, at which time the irrigation canals start drawing water from the, lake. For this reason, he does not expect difficulties on the Jordan river this spring. Last year, the highest level reached by the lake was 2 3 feet below compromise, and that was on June 13. Back in Pioneer days, before irrigation was in full effect, Utah Lake, full to the banks, had plenty of game fish. Lake trout weighing 25 pounds were often caught. Later, irrigation and a dry cycle reduced the lake to nearly a mud pond and most of the fish were lost. Today, the lake is revived and alive, fishing will be excellent this spring and a promise of water abundant irrigation should please the farmers. Centennial Gels Green Light The go ahead signal has been given the Utah centennial board by Governor Herbert B. Maw who made available funds totaling $150,000 from the special fund of the Utah Depart- ment of Publicity and Indus- trial Development. With the granting of the ap-- 1 the commissions propriation, request for a special session of the legislature has been with- drawn. The 5150.000 is ex- pected to be sufficient until the next regular meeting of the legislature. The centennial board's budas get calls for expenditures follows: $48,000, promotional purposes; $7,000 for music, W. - ft A Fairs land In Vivid Colorings best describes the spectacle of Bryce Canyon National cand Bark in southern Utah. Bryce is a huge yon filled with countless rock formations tinted in every shade of the rainbow. This is one of the most unusual of our national parks. pageantry, art and drama; . . . bowl-shape- $22,-oO- for sports; $15,000 for administrative purposes; $13,000 lor beautification; and $5,000 for use of the historical comfund mittee. An emergency of $26,000 will be held in Job Development Campaign Begun Memorial Highway Proposed Clark Rasmussen, local manager of Ahe United States Emantoday ployment service, nounced that employers in Brigham City will be solicited for job openings to be filled by returning veterans, former war plant workers and others. The local job development campaign, he said, parallels a stale and national campaign to promote the listing of jobs for approximately 6,200 war veterans, those who formerly held jobs in war plants and other employment seekers. There is a widening gap between the number of returning veterans and the jobs listed in public employment offices that veterans can accept," said Rasmussen. This is also true of exwar workers and others who are in the labor market. Up to the present time approximately 500 returned veterans have been placed in jobs, but at the same time there are approximately 212 applications on file with the local Employment service office from veterans who have not found acasRasmusien ceptable jobs. serted there is a total of 325 applications from job seekers on file in his office in the First Security bank building. Furthermore, increasing numbers of veterans will be back during the peak of demobilization between now and July 1, adding greatly to the number of jobs which must be found. Rasmussen believed that most veterans out of jobs now have good qualifications for a wide variety of jobs. If they did not have work experience before entering the service, many gained experience and skills which fit them for a wide variety of jobs in civilian industry. Soldiers and sailors discharged between now and July 1, are also entitled to good jobs, he said, As and will need employment. a matter of fact, the veterans represent in many cases the cream of the labor market. not have Since we do which enough job openings match the experience, training and abilities of these applicmanants, the Employment we arc going ager continued, to make every effort to find them. We need a wide range of jobs, good jobs in a variety of with the occupations, listed Employment service in every case in order that qualified veterans and other job applicants The Franklin Delano Roosewill velt memorial highway fulfill the long needed improvement, a four-lan- e highway from the Pacific northwest to the Atlantic southeast. This proposed highway connecting with the new Alaskan highway at Vancouver, British Columbia, passes through more than 12 states and will connect with the national highway in Cuba and the highway in Mexico, via ferry from Key West, Florida. This tentative route would connect more than 100 cities from Seattle, Wash., on the north, to Miami, Florida, on the south; thence through Key West to Havana, Yucatan, Mexico City and north to Laredo. This highway, endorsed by the Puget Sound-KeWest Transcontinental Highway, Inc., would pass through the states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. of the By Joining several present highways, improving others and rebuilding some to make it more direct route, there is hope that this might be one of the first post-wa- r projects. Upon completion, this would be the longest highway under one name in the United States. This route, with a change or two, has been endorsed by civic leaders, chamber of comnot only merce, newspapers, through the states through which it will pass but by national publications. The much talked of project becomes actively a reality as public sentiment has, for years, endorsed the idea that the great northwest section of the country be opened direct with the great northwest section of the country be opened direct with the southeastern gulf states and it will not be long now until the exchange of merchandise, not to mention the betremendous tourist travel tween these two great sections of the country, will be an actual fact. The highway would fulfill a future military need as well. It is a national project and one that all interested in the prorelations gress of inter-stat- e should endorse and enjoy. As a super highway for truck freight lines, an ideal private auto or bus trip for thousands of tourists, this new route will become a source of activity both ways. Rulon Baron, mayor of Brigham City, has been accepted as Creomulsion relieves promptly bea member of the advisory cause it goes right to the seat of the board. trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inThe first monument to a wos. bronchial mucous man in the United States was flamed Tell your druggist to sell you to erected Margaret Haughery, a bottle of Creomulsion with the unNew Orleans philanthropist. derstanding jou must like the way it qun kly allays the cough or you are to have your monev back. Lake Erie is 211 miles long. 57 miles wide, and has a mean for Coughs. Chet Colds. Bronchitis depth of 90 feet. y m-s- 1 By Local U.S.E.S. F. D. R. Safley Drive, May 15 In conformity with a nationwide traffic safety check program, L. C. Crowther, Salt Lake chief of police has been named chairman of the drive in Utah. The nation-widwill drive dove-tai- l with the state inspection campaign and will stress safety checks on lights, windshield wipers, brakes, tires and horn. Officers will be named soon in various parts of the state to conduct the drive. - can be referred to specific employers for the specific kind of jobs they are qualified to perform. The employer will benefit by listing all his jobs with the United States Employment service since he will have a better chance of hiring workers he wants than through other means. The employer who places orders for workers with the local office has a big adthe widest vantage today choice of available workers, veterans and others, since most of them are registered. Rasmussen said that in line with national policy the local office will continue to refer workers to jobs on the basis of qauhfications, giving the veteran preference when qualified or when the employer specifies a veteran. Since the jobs they will accept are not always listed, he said, people too often have to walk the streets looking for jobs, and then in many cases do not find the jobs best suited to their qualifications. This, he asserted, can be avoided in a great many nces, if the jobs are listed with the local office. We are doing everything possible to make the local Employment service office a central community job clearing house where all employers and all workers including veterans can get the best employment results, he concluded. OTHER EDITORS SAY a Homecoming ti SA H L y.? t . . an helps give this nation more quate army is, perhaps, important than any government printed m recent publicity for that carried except years, on bond drives. As a second consideration, to many editors would be sorry see the army, or any other bebranch of the government, come a big advertising customer of the country's newspaper. It for is a more healthful situation the countrys press to carry more free stuff than it would be to to give any of them a chance exert pressure on any publisher to follow any administrations propaganda line. Civil Service Lists 9Li&3 Snowball came home piggy-bacalong with the rest of the important gear carried by Staff Sergeant Anibal Delgado of Brooklyn, New York. Plenty of the knapsacks glimpsed as soldiers leave the piers these days contain similiar evidence of the popularity of dogs even far from home. . that matter of fact publicity ade- k, that it is foolish to suppose that it should undertake a natio- feeding project, regardless of its value. Most families would gladly have their children pay what the meal actually costs. The large number of youngsters who are continual ly able to cash dollar bills at the stores for candy indicates that most people could afford a few more cents for this meal. n-wide Howard Barrows in The Midvale Sentinel Takes Issue With Joe Joe Stallin blames the last two wars on the capitalistic system. It is strange that Joe would say this when the greatin the est capitalistic nation world has just rescued him from the Nazis and Japs. Had it not been for the United States military huge supplies and might, the Nazis and Japs would have knocked Joe Stalins kingdom into a cocked hat. Two Georgia newspapers announced last week that hereafter they would throw into the wastebasket all enlistment publicity from the armed services sent them for free publication. The war being over, the papers said, material such as this should be treated as a business Vernald William Johns in The Garland Times Discusses School Lunches The hot, balanced noon meals that are being served to pupils at the schools have pleased the students who no longer come to school with the old lunch box full of sandwiches which used to accompany all of us a few years ago. Teachers say that students are healthier and mentally more alert under the new lunch program. That may even be true. We can recall missing 14 entire days of school ourselves during our grade school career as a result of being ill one winter. And we never were too quick in arithmetic. A warm lunch might havg helped us over that snag. In those days dollars were worth twice what they are now and we could have had quite a spread for 15 cents and been spared carrying the tin lard bucket or red tobacco box both ways some thousand trips or so. The discontinuance of federal support for this project has led some to feel that it would have to cease. It would seem that if it is as desirable as it is generally felt o be some method of local support for it should be worked out. The federal government is so far in the red now space for news articles which are not paid for, when the government pays for other services it needs, such as industrial sites, machinery, buildings, clothing, food, medical supplies and civilian labor, one of the newspapers explains. That is a point of view all right. It is one that, perhaps, has occurred to other newspaper publishers in the country at one time or another. Yet the majority of newspapers will not take the position assumed by the two Georgia publications. Most editors will feel that regardless of the fact that this is kind of publicity free work, the countrys press is under an obligation to go ahead and do it because it is part of the job of a free press in a free country. It is as much a job as the publication of similar material for any other organization, big or little, that newspapers for, on the carry publicity ground that people are interested in the organizations activi-te- s and that its purposes contribute to the public welfare. The only difference between the enlistment material and other similar handouts the newspaper carries is that the former is national in scope. As The Evansville. Indiana, Courier Discusses Papers' Responsibililv In "News And Publicity" proposition.We see no reason to devote Jobs Now Open for Additional opportunities fedpermanent positions in eral employment were announced today by the U. S. civil service commission office, Salt Lake City. These examinations are for the positions of laborer and warehouseman in the war department installations in the Ogden area and laborer at the Clearfield naval supply depot. Applications must be filed by April 2 in the case of the war department positions, and April laborer 3 for the Clearfield openings. The examinations are among the first in a program that eventually will cover all federal positions in Utah now filled by war service appointments. The commission is starting with the most common jobs, where continuous, faithful service will bring regular promotions through the years. The desires qualified government persons who can give the public excellent service and at the same time earn for themselves the many benefits that come to permanent employees. Departure from war service to permanent appointments was planned to give returning veterans an opportunity to compete for these permanent positions. Veterans have preference in the rating of examinations and five points for ten points for disabled. Disabled veterans making a passing mark move to the top of the applicant list. Applications for positions of laborer and warehouseman in the war department, which pay from 74 to 80 cents an hour. . "222? ,i MUSICAL INSTRUMENT REPS By Glen Bros. Music Co. 2516 Washington Founded Aims And Objectives in 1899 of the V. F. W. "The objects of this Association are fraternal, patriotic, historical and educational; to preserve and strengthen comradeship among its members: to assist worthy comrades; to perpetuate the memory and history of our dead, and to assist their widows and orphans; to maintain true allegiance to the government of the United States of America; and fidelity to its constitution and laws; to foster true patriotism to main- tain and extend the institutions of American freedom; and to preserve and defend the United Stales from all her enemies, whomsoever. All Service and Veterans with overseas duly are eligible for membership in the Veterans of Foreign Wars and are cordially invited to attend the meetings and affiliate with George Gidney Post No. 1695, Brigham City, Utah. MEETING NIGHTS: First and Third Thursday of each month at War Memorial Home, 8:00 p.m. Bld. Ogden, ti, ATTENTION! AVIATION PILOTS, INSTRUCTORS AND STUDENT PILOTS. For First Class Legal Reserve Life AVIATION Coverage, Call or Write Insurance THOMAS E. KIMBER, Agent Pacific National Life Assurant d COMPANY 211 South 4th West Phone BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH i lost 52 Lbs.! RAGS WANTED WEAR SIZE 14 AGAIN" MRS. C. D. WELLS. FT. WORTH At Pictured Hn You may lose pounds and have a more slender, graceful figure No No drugs. N'o laxatives. exercise Eat meat, potatoes, gravy, butter. The experience of Mrs ells may or may not be different than yours, but why not try tlie AYDS Vitamin t'andv Pirn lrxk at these results We buy clean, white, dust-fre- e cotton No knit-weaoveralls or stockings. ra r, In clinical tests conducted by niedital doctors mote thin 100 persons lost 14 to 15 pounds average in a few weeks with the AYDS Vitamin Candy Reducing Plan. With this Avds Plan you don t cut out any starches, potatoes, meats or butter vou simply cut them down It s simple and easier whei you enjoy delicious (vitamin fortified) A Yl)P before each rae.il Ab lutely harmless 30 davs supply ci Ad only $2 25. If not delight with results. idONEV BACK on the very Drat (xml Pbona 10e -B- RING BOX ELDER LB. THEM T- NEWS-JOURN- O- Al HAMILTON DRUG 1 YOUR CAR MUST CONTINUE ! YOU ! 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