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Show BOX ELDER 'Brigham City. " NEWS' Wednesday. March 29. FOR RHEUMATIC FEVER FUND Deca Members 1950 weekly newspaper, established In 1896, published at Brigham City, Utah. William M. Long, Editor Charles Claybaugh, Business Manager Published every Wednesday and entered as Second Class Matter at the post office in Brigham City, Utah, under the act of March 8, 1879. Subscription rate in Box Elder County: $3.00 per year payable in advance; in combination with the Box Elder Journal (published Fridays) $4.00 per year; $2.00for 6 months; singe copy 5 cents. Outside Box Elder County, $3.50 per year, combination rate $5.00. Member United Press, Audit Bureau of Circulations. Utah State Press Association. National Editorial Association. Advertising Representative: National Advertising Service. A Who Robbed Us? Yesterday, seated at our desk, we were struck in the face by a fact. It was an interesting fact but not really what youd call pleasant It came to our attention because of an insignificant little green piece of paper weve had tucked away for over 10 years now. It says Postal Savings . . , Two Dollars on it, and its stamped with a 1940 issue date. That piece of paper has quite a history although, as we said, its rather insignificant itself,. An amazing number of things have happened since a friendly, efficient postoffice clerk stamped it and numbered it and, smilingly, handed it to a nervous older who, having made his first investment, clutched the new certificate and ran from the Ogden Symphonic Choir Prepares Attend Confab e City as follows: Atomic Age-Seco- nd Generation y period. Law Affect Farm Workers RUPTURED? Amendments to the child with questionable Bapgrlmanttng the ripens of pour health will prove provisions of the Fair Labor at once for the let pour Phpaician and act Standards (federal wage end we will fill hit fiaiioiii satisfaction. to ieu ha entire in prescript hour law) now give children Jf pour condition has already been ITS A BIG agriculture the full protection of i mined end pou art not securing the proper comfort or relief, pop us a nut at the act during school hours if sbm be convinced that under com and the crop is for Interstate com- paOsnt hands, tnu fitting has been reduced 151 CU. FT. edeaco eliminating aO guess work. merce, it was pointed out here R. Dille of the "ffl7y-5iFREEZE- R today by John labor. U. S. department Within the next few weeks, Store, nearly 600 Ibk of frozen food. bntanHy odjuitable to many children will be taken out quick freeze at 10 below zero or economically Horn at zero. of classrooms to help with the Operate, for a few cent, a day. Dependability backed by spring farm work, he said. If d We feature the famous line of Warranty on Maled-b- i iteet mechanion. Content, of the farm produces crops for In- Spot Pad Trusses which held the rupture Freezer Section protected by $200.00 Food Protecterstate commerce, and is not with freetkm ef the pressure required bp for fow pennie. a day. tion Plan. appliances. Ws also have a complete operate, the home farm, prospective em- other aeesrtnuBt of Abdominal Support, Elastic ployers are warned that regu- Hoaisrj, Shoulder Braces, etc. lations regarding employment of children under 16 years old in agriculture are different than they were last spring. Before the wage and hour law was amended, employment 'SAY DRUGGIST of such children on farms was permitted when the child was not legally required toU attend school. Now, children under 16 may be employed in agricul ture only outside of the school hours for the school district where they are living. The new provisions do not of such prevent employment children during school , vaca tions, on holidays or after school Phone 4 South 58 So. Main hours. Nor do they interfere in any way with the right of a par ent to employ his own child on the home farm. They apply FOR only to employment on farms, other than the parents farm, that produce for interstate com DzYi merce. la-b- it bake for u Provide, ideal Ump.rotur. and humidity for .taring largu quan-tttiof frnih fruit and vugutablt. HU your. ruady to fruuz. or MTV. them. Chill a wholu mm of b,varag,i at a tlm.. Detroit oil the flavor. frozen food, under controlled temperature to daug . . . William i Ma bury, Burr S. Lake ter grandpar and n t Non-Ski- m erator ijlii' Jr-- Freez-R-ato- r stoi Frooi-R-at- pnzi33nnnnnz Thu that simple! For the big nearly 600 lbs. of frozen ft And it also gives you a buflt-3 cu. ft. refrigerator. Nool appliance can help you or save as much for you. a demonstration today. o-- Mrs Brigham weeks ahead, hi Only m S3 DOWN on our now, .tny hvrfgdfh & BIL RAI in the grealei Se here; writtei bullets chapte m CHARLES H. CLIFFOR Probably Not MACON, Ga. (UP) The state highway patrol never officially revealed whether Opal Goss won her drivers license but pedes trians who saw her ram a bus while an inspector sat beside her doubted it. MW9uQ3i T S CROPS and PROTECTION STiU R Brigham BEAUTY FOR HOMES LIVESTOCK and FARMS VACATION PLAN NOW TO GET f I'J use. Wire are heavy gauge, twisted or er strength, and lA9 for F0 48 Ornamental Fencing, SQUARE MESH STOCK foot per 20 rod rolls 20.J 39 47 20 rod rolls 36c THE BESTI spot-weld- triple-galvaniz- SALT LAKE CITY TRAVEL BUREAU BARBED WIRE NOW OPEN Deuble-t- Welded barbs. Heavy sine coating. SO red spool. 12'i gauge wire - M&il 1st. w Heavy duty. Let our Travel Expert arrange for your transportation, sightseeing, and hotel accommodations IN ADVANCE. $8.00 POULTRY MESH mesh for coops, poultry runs. Galvanized. Double twist top ond bottom. 48 in. por roll. $6.80 Hex-styl- o Coupon TODAY for 6KEYHOUNO TRAVEL lUKEAU 107 W. South Temple St. Self Uke City I, UUh ! fhme unf Greyhound'o Amatmi 4 meric Vacation FoJdar, firrmj tuIL daacnptire 4a tmilt about ef tour eerafre Nru PLANNING ON BUILDING? If you are contemplating a building or remodeling program this Spring or Summer, come in and let us help you with your plans. Well be glad to give you estimates on your building materials. Addmwu. City a ad Ststt-Yeur feral Orayheusd gladly amwt Aat Call J75 GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT Howard Hotel h ! ee For All Your Building And Repairing Needs See the Right now, for your spring repair jobs, may we sugTri-Stat- e. gest FREE FOLDERI ! Barb; 1 12-ye- ar ... 265-da- OGSSIMia l, ht Harwood had America "hi holly for egg production," now dead, laid 3ei )iinjll(y (jsy, or -- C Tenn Ha a hen otlhdte or ... MEMPHIS, Save money on choir. Preparations were Pj'mother and her sweetheart from the nouncements, recent ' Wednesday tor the appearance Wons. etc., at the Phone your news to 1,000. here in the L. D. S. tabernacle of Thursday (tomorrow) night Ogden Symphonic choir of 65 voices under the Brigham City Business and Professional Womens club in an effort to raise its rheumatic fever funds quo-t- o for the year. This is the fifth anniversary of the choir, and with Glenn L. Hanson, Ogden high school music director, as director and Mrs. Wilma Boyle, Bunker, one of Utahs " accomplished pianists, as accompanist, it has risen to unexpected heights in western American ratings. (S-xdteotittn The program to be presented Thursday night is varied from deeply religious, including 6uch numbers as Adoramus te, Christie by Palestrina and Bach- - Gounods Ave Maria, and on to Griegs Springtide. Another special number will be the trio from the prison scene in Gounods Faust, sung by Gae Peterson Cowley as Marguerite; Joe Harrop as Faust; and Ray H. Linford as Mehpistopheles. Heres the modern way to This number is done in costume. numbers Then come special thrifty and save work. Do sung by the mens choir in one bulk of your shopping 3 or group and the womens choir in another, with Betty Doman and FT. ITS A 3 CU. times a year. Buy foods i Don Jones as soloists. Lois Hobson, a remarkable dramatic soMOIST-COL- D prano, will sing of the love of quantity when prices are loi the heroine for her deceased est. Cook when you fed REFRIGERATOR e Changes In Labor For Appearance Here Tomorrow Evening A group of nine students of the Distributive Education club of the Box Elder high school, and their instructor, attended a state-widconvention held at the Newhouse Hotel last Wednesday and Thursday. Miss Flora Hansen, club instructor, and members, had as their honored guests from Brigham City, Chet Hamilton and You can expect unpleasant weather on Aif Freeman. Easter Sunday, and you can expect unpleasThe convention was composed ant weather for conference, but it took Sun- of members of 14 clubs from who belong to the Distribu-tiv- e day to remind a lot of people what to expect Utah Educational Clubs of Amertwo-deewhen you pile them up Boy, ica. we it! thats asking for it! And got A banquet was held Wednesday evening at 7:30 oclock, folCanasta is just about the same as any lowed by a dance. Featured other game. Its more fun to win than it during the convention were many clever displays telling of is to lose. the clubs activities. The local miniature So far as we know, Penneys on the front club display showed and ice cream dolls selling of section have second the the page today candy and participating in astwo-colfirst ad ever to appear in the sembly programs. Miss Audrey News. Anyway, its the first within our Petersen was awarded a beautime, so far as we can remember. It wasnt tiful manicure set for a clever entry. particularly difficult to produce, and it humorous ad from Box Elder Attending wasnt very expensive. No one had ever school were: Ray Harper, high (high-pressure, asked us for a two-colad before, so Eugene Anderson, Maxine thats us!) wed never sold one. Audrey Petersen, Reva Ann Reese, Lily Nakamura, Ver-LeE. V. Durlings "On The Side column in Petersen, Gneil Jensen and the San Francisco Examiner recalls Brigham Barbara Burt. A Californian recalls that when he visited Brigham City, Utah, the .Brigham Hotel there had in the lobby a large glass tank filled with mountain trout. Guests could point out the trout they wanted for dinner, and it would be caught in a net and sent to building. The young investor has grown up, and the the kitchen for preparation. piece of paper has traveled with him and his tell us that the Utah Cafe, down by family back and forth many times around theThey Hotel Brigham, actually used to have United these States covering some 3,000 miles in the process. A war has come and the trout tank. But the Californian reporgone; the bombs have come and not gone. ted by Durling has a long, long memory. Panting from his bust bloody orgy and hopeBetty Seashore, who sent the clipping, lessly wondering why it all happened, the would like to have the definition or was it world waits for the next financial crisis, the an advertisement for coffee. Comearly next critical assassination, the next stiff ex! With or without cream and up, ing Betty of change diplomatic notes, the next panzer sugar? divisions, the next And so it goes. Of course, in that same Speaking of coffee, one of the Sunday 10 years a lot of good has come to the earth. school teachers in one of the wards was ex There are less people starving on street corners and more clean clothes per capita. plaining something or other, and inadverbegan an illustration, Now take the There are less foreign travel restrictions and tently pot boiling on your stove at home . . more good schools. There are pennicillin coffee before he caught himself and changed it to tablets and smaller hundred-wa- tt light bulbs boiling water. not to mention, first, fluorescent lamps and second, fluorescent lamps that leave One radio reception as buzzless as it was be- eral of the Legionnaires suggests a genup on flag etiquette fore the new cold-ligtubes came on the and public brushing use of the proper flag. Seejns like such scene. things slip during peacetime. , So there we were seated at our desk, ruminating about the length of those 10 years Did you ever get a statement on the first and addressing a letter to Postmaster, of the month that wasnt as big as you We were ready to cash in Greensburg, Pa. it would be? Well, dont lose hope. the little green slip and get our two dollars thought You might, some time! back plus the interest it had earned in the weve got a sneaking suspicion that it meantime. We remembered working for that two do- wasn't a person but an idea, an idea similar llars ; it took us all day long one Saturday to one of those expounded in the Econ. mowing lawns to make the money to buy the textbook. It inferred, in more or less these certificate. We remembered thinking those words, that mild inflation is probably a many years ago that we were giving up 40 good thing. As we see it, no matter how prettily econohamburgers big ones with everything on them! when we marched up to the postal mists and government planners put it, and savings window with a coin purse full of the no matter how many charts and graphs full fruits of our labor. of proof they print, when we lose (and now : We remembered reading the certificate were not trying to be funny about it) 30 carefully to our folks, pointing out the im- hamburgers out of 40 just because we saved . . . faith . . . United States our pennies when we were a kid when, beportant words cause of inflation, we lost 75 per cent insteat of America , . . solemnly pledged And then it was, seated here reminiscing, of gaining a rightful 2 percent, were not that we were struck by the unpleasant fact. disposed to regard any such inflation, howIn 1940 we could have gotten 40 hamburg- ever mild, as a good thing. ers for that money; now, when we cash the The worlds resources are not infiniately green slip at 2 per cent compounded sem- expendable; they must be conserved; they iannually well get back $2.40 and only be must be saved. And when mankind makes able to buy 10 comparable hamburgers (by obsolete the belief in saving, he will bring comparable we mean big enough to see just that much closer the day when there is and not loaded with bread crumbs.) Some- nothing left on earth cither to save or to how, in the meantime we lost 30 hamburg- use. Editors Note: Our thanks to Clayton ers, and wo feel, rather helplessly, that weve been robbed. Jones for the above article clipped from the Who robbed us? We dont know, but Lafayette Journal & Courier. Almost One o Bar-bar- p. oJIm mer. of The ladies trio, consisting s Mrs Mary Koldewyn. Miss Ruth Miss Gordon and Dorothy Kingsford, with Miss be heard West at the piano, will other special again, as will T. R. numbers, according to of manager business Johnson, Finance Farm or Home Improvements on Easy Monthly Torms ROLLED ROOFING ASPHALT ROOF SHINGLES No. 1 CEDAR SHINGLES Galvanized SCREEN WIRE aluminum sheeting nt tor roobj partitions, and , weight, .A proof. .oi guato 12 foot. 100 per rust-proo- f, i OEDeGEDB Q0G30GQ G pu |