OCR Text |
Show ADVERTIZE IN THIS PAPER IT MAKES BUSINESS! TWENTY-THIR- Plans D YEAR Complete-Fo- r SAUNA, UTAH, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1942 More News From Boys In The Service Of Uncle Sam a letter came to the Sun Monday from a progressive young student, who, when he had completed a college course, left for service in the Utah Legion United States Army. The letter was signed by Lieutenant Don Rue Hickman at the following address. Col Delegates From All Sections Are 304th Inf. Ft. George G. Mead, Md. Expected To Attend Meet In Irovo The letter read as follows: Dear Thursday, Friday And Saturday Mrs. Cherry: It just occurred to me I GETTING IN THE SCRAP CANNING aiding phases ry were always very interested in my generation, a fact I, as well as many others of my age, appreciate very much. Since I saw you last, I have had the privilege of attending the Infantry school at Ft. Benning, Georgia. May the 19th, I graduated from there and received my commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Army of the U. S. Since that time I have been stationed here at Ft. George G. Mead, Maryland, just 15 miles from our National Capitol. My unit is the 76st. division, newly activated was known in the last war as the Liberty Bell division. We aim to make it the best in this war and hope to take our place in the front lines soon. I think of all my friends'll)' Salina so often and enjoy the Sun which my mother faithfully sends me. Please give them all my regards and let presiding. them know that we have not yet Auxiliary members will register begun to fight. beginning at 1:00 p. m. in the hotel, followed by a department executive A card received from an aunt of committee meeting at 2:00 p. m. in Benches in California stated Boyd the Provo Community church. that the young man was making a Delegates to the state convention satisfactory recovery from a spine infrom Salina Post No. 36, chosen at jury received on a practice flight in a meeting held at the Legion Rooms Canada. Thursday of last week are: Leon Boyd enlisted in the Royal CanadHumphrey, Leroy Bird, David T. Mar- ian Air force and was inured while in tin and Miles Curfew. Alternates: He had a birthday on AuIt. W. McAllister, E. W. Petty, Ivan training. and 11th, gust anyone desiring to conL. Dyreng and N. P. Willardson. tact him may do so at the following Auxiliary delegates are: Mrs. Ed- address: Boyd Bench, Jeffrey Hale win F. Peterson, Mrs. Miles Curfew, Hospital, Quebec City, Quebeck, CanMrs. Ivan Dyreng, Mrs. Norval Crane ada. and Mrs. Leon Humphrey. Alternates: Mrs. Melissa Crane, Mrs. Tuesday of this week, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ferguson, Mrs. H. S. Gates, Alford Jensen received a card from Mrs. Ralph McAllister and Mrs. their son, Therral Jensen, stating Bruce Geary. that he had arrived at his base safeBUY U. S. WAR STAMPS, BONDS! ly and was well. His address is: Ptv. k Therral Jensen, 39675284 MAURICE GATES SPENDS Co., 53rd Infantry, A.P.A. 944, care VACATION IN UTAH of Postmaster, Seattle, Washington. Maurice Gates, who works for a large storage business in Los AngeWord from the navy states that les, California, Mrs. Gates, Wendell Blan Gates, 24, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gates, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Delos Gates, arrived from the coast Garry A. Gates of Salina, enlisted in Friday and visited Saturday with the Navy Friday at Salt Lake City Mrs. Millecent Jensen. Sunday and as an aviation metalsmith, third He leaves Tuesday for San class. Monday was spent at the Fishlake for indoctrination before being Diego lesort, where anglng was a pleasant and profitable pastime. The visitors assigned to duty. returned to California Wednesday. Dan Osborn, son of Mrs. Charles KEEP EM FIRING WITH JUNK! Ferguson, has received his classfica-tioLOVELL CRANE ON according to information received by his mother Tuesday morning. SIX COUNTY JOB Lovell Crane, who is reemployment Dan passed the examination for pilot representative for six counties took training in the U. S. army air corps over the new position some two weeks and was sent to a training school for pilots, bombadiers and navigators at ago. Santa Ana, California. His address is: W. on He covers the reemployment P. A. projects in Sanpete, Sevier, Pi- A. C. Dan Osborn, Squadron ute, Millard, Beaver and Kane coun- Clafn. Wing, S.A.A.A.V. Santa Ana, ties. The postion was formerly fill- California. ed by Emil Henderson, who recently THROW YOUR SCRAP accepted a position at the Capital INTO THE FIGHT! all out Victory progiam for the United Nations in World War 2, will converge on Provo Thursday for their twenty-fou- i th annual convention to be held in the Garden City August 13, It and 15. Legion Auxiliary mem-hei- s will hold their convention in conjunction with the Legion. National Vice Commander, W. C. (Tom) Sawyer, of Gilbert, Arizona, will highlight the convention with a address to the Legionnaires and Aux- -' iliary members at 11 a. m. on the' opening day. 'Registration for the Legion delegates will begin at 9:00 a. m. in the Hotel Roberts lobby, and the opening session of the three day affair will begin at 2:00 p. m. at the Provo High school with Department Commander Ross C. Glussman of Ogden, As furnaces are roaring to produce more steel for tanks, planes,, and aircraft carriers. Uncle Sams scrap pile is rapidly The need for scrap and more scrap is becoming diminishing. more and more urgent. And Uncle Sam isnt the only one who is feeling this shortage. Hitler is also having trouble keeping the Axis furnaces fed with scrap. But what a difference between his way and the American way of collecting it! Confiscation of all unused iron and steel in Germany has been ordered by the Fueher, with the campaign enforced by uniformed police under the Gestapo Chief. We dont do things that way in this country. The War Production Board is organizing a vast scrap drive on a voluntary basis, and industry, through the American Industries Salvage Committee and other groups, is cooperating to assist the efforts of W. P. B. No, our industries dont need to have their scrap confiscated. They are eager to help! ry just one of many instances of industries that have on their own initiative, digging up obsolete machinery, looking in every corner, and even combing the sweepings from the factoiy floors, so that they might show Hitler who is really in the scrap. all-o- ut BISHOP AND MILS. NIELSON GRANDPARENTS The announcement that a grandchild was boin was an occasion for Kill Deer rejoiengin the family of Bishop and Mrs. N. P. Nielson. The message At Annual came from Provo Monday and it stated that a seven pound girl was born at three that morning to Mr. and Mrs. Doe Deer Authorized For Stanley Nielson of Provo. The baby 32,300 Annual Hunt New- Areas Opened is the first child born to Mr. and Mrs. Nielson, as well as the first grandBy Big Game Board child in the Nielson family. Reports are that the mother and daughter are The annual big game proclamation, fine. issued Saturday in Salt Lake by the THROW YOUR SCRAP state board of big game control, authorized the killing of 32,300 doe INTO THE FIGHT! deer, an increase of over 8,800 over W. M. Fowles, genial agent at the previous yers. In addition to increasD. and R. G. depot, and who local ing the doe kill, the board opened several areas that have been forbidden reached the anniversary of his natal ground to hunters for many years, day on Sunday, was joined by a large foremost of which is the area adja- group of close friends in celebrating cent to Fishlake, closed for 20 years. the event. Mrs. Fowles was hostess The Board authorized hunting on the at an outing and dinner served at the Ranger station recreational camp banks of the lake proper. A chicken dinner was sergrounds. In several areas, the length of seaand twenty-tw- o ved were at son was also increased. The area deone long table. seated at scribed under the Ephraim-Sprin- g City, Twelve Mile and. Dixie Districts KEEP EM FIRING WITH JUNK! will have a special season for the taking of both bucks and antlerless deer for the period October 17 to NovemLOW ber 1, inclusive. All the units defrom scribed under the Fishlake district and for the area described under the LaSal district, will have a special season for both bucks and antlerless The U. S. A. is the champion nation deer from October 17 to November 8. contests. We have hog callers for The allowances were made for deand drum majorettes knee contests, fense workers to include as many showineontests, and bathing beauties week ends as possible. have seen License agents in all areas will re- in high heels. I never yet anybody swim Mr. and Mrs. Max Sorenson en- ceive applications and fees for spein high (ming tertained at a novel dinner Saturday cial permits, and the applications and but also, I heels, fees will then be forwarded to the night at the Salina Reservoir. A typseen a never have ical sheepherders dinner was served, Fish and Game Commission offices beauty bathing mutton chops and sourdough biscuit, and the permits mailed from there water. near any with Antone Jensen, chief cook. direct to the applicant. The appliAnd in all the concant will be required to furnish his Twenty-fiv- e guests were served. tests so far no big game hunting license before an which difference application for a special hunting perone you gotta mit can be accepted. Permits for the show lots of teeth. Ephraim-Sprin- g City, Manti, all of Also, you gotta be the Fishlake, the LaSal and Dixie Jo Sera able t0 0pen up districts will be received beginning wide enough so everybody can see 127 million of us. Now she pits the September 20 and until the authordown at east to your tonsils. eastern millionaire against the west- ized number is sold or until the close I have seen enough dimples on disern farmer and hopes that the com- of the hunting season on these knees, etc., so I says to Henry why mon people will side with her rich tricts. can't we have something new. Why The districts and the number of friends. not a contest for the nations biggest In supporting the presidency in antlerless deer to be taken from each sucker everybody could enter. Althis war we of the west how to no as listed by the commission in their you could get into one. In every home out here even proclamation, is: Cache, 1,200, Para- right, says Henry, one that yourself you wouldnt need Creek, the children have stamp books. If dise, 1,300; Wasatch-Los- t show to tonsils, you could just your Mrs. iRoosevelt and her wealthy 1,000; Colville-Chal- k Creek, 600; show Henry pulls ignorance. your 600; Grantsville, 1,000; Hobble friends would give in the Bame prosome pretty good ones. Fork, 200; portion as do the poor on the farms, But down to business on suckers. 100; Nebo, 400; Ephraim-Sprin- g we could finance the war. As a starter maybe we could run a 1500; If she must be in the limelight, let City, 600; Twelve-Miland find out why so many contest her help unite the nation; not disrupt Huntington, 200; Emery, 200; Fishvoters that our new Potomac-typ- e figure it. She could add to her knowledge lake, 20,000 on the following areas: if it gets a foot in socialism, Fillmore of the United States by visiting the Oak City unit, 1000; unit, is not gonna homes in the west. No more patri- 3,000; Kanosh unit, 4,000; Gear the door of one business, in foot other its your business otic people live in America than the Creek unit, 1,400; Beaver unit, 3,500; put next. farmers of Idaho. unit, 4,100; Monroe Yours with the low down, G. F. Norris, Mt. unit, 3,000; Dixie, 3,000; and LaJO SERRA. 514 Legion Drive, Idaho Falls. Sal, 400. Game Commission Sets Record Meeting . - - At.-Tan- six-thir- ty n, 10-l- city. THE DOWN HICKORY GROVE st -- GET IN THE SCRAT! Mrs. Merrill Nielson was in Salt Lake the early part of this week. She was selecting merchandise for the holiday trade at the annual Market Week display in that city. Backs Sugar Beet Industry (Clipped from Salt Lake Tribune) Editor Tribune: We in the west applaud Senator John Thomas of Idaho in taking Mrs. Roosevelt to task for her squawk regarding our sugar industry. As quoted, she says, I hope and pray that we wont encourage the beet sugar industry . . . because it employs cheap labor. Her ignomce of the subject shines like a constellation. Isnt it possible that her opinion has its roots in the fact that she has interests in the Cuba sugr industry? And we know that conditions in the cane fields of Cuba smell to high heaven while the dividends paid to New York stock holders shock a Shy-loc- Isnt it time k. we heard less from Mrs. Roosevelt? For nine years, she has set union labor aginst the other Ka-ma- Creek-Diamo- Heber-Wallsbur- nd e, Salina-Fishla- ke s, g, Registration for the junior-senihigh schools and the elementary students will take place Monday, August 31, according to a decision made by the Board of Education at a meeting held Monday in Richfield. Due to the shortage of labor for the harvest this fall, it is anticipated that a longer beet vacation may be necessary in the county. The decision to open the schools at an earlier date than usual was made due to this fact. War conditions and the labor problem has also delayed the new addition to the North Sevier senior high school. Materials for the building are in readiness for the workmen, but the shortage of men has materially delayed the completion. It is not anticipated that it will be ready for occupancy until after the Christmas holiday. The buildings are being thoroughly cleaned and everything made ready for the opening. The school lunch, which became so popular with the students last year, will be under the supervision of Mrs. Rose Freece. Canning of vegetables and fruits started this week. Following is the rostrum of teachers slated for the schools in North Sevier: Salina junior and senior high school : Leon Newton, (Robert Anderson, Hugh Bird, LaVon Christensen, Preston Larson, Smith Peterson, Wendell Petty, Clayton Sorenson, Lewis Sorenson, Karl Stott, Beth Burr, Francis Christensen, Iva Nielson, Stena Scorup and Ada F. Nielson. Moroni Salina elementary: Jensen, Ellis Anderson, Bryant Burgess, Zelma Burr, Lola Durfee, Vivian Jensen, Ellen Scorup. Redmond: Leslie Davis, Esmont Jensen, Vera Sorensen. Aurora:: Beulah Cooper, Dorothy Day, Vaneda Morley. or Clair Tollestrup, son of Marshall and Mrs. R. L. Tollestrup, and well known to residents of Salina, was seriously injured Saturday when he fell 25 feet from the Toof of a two-sto- tion ceremonies. Thirty-Fir- st Names Of Teachers For District Released By Board Of Education School Lunch Continued Injured In California Gty Cost of the plant is said by the W. P. B. to represent the lowest capital investment per net ton of output during the Thus the scrap is now a monument to Ameri- emergency. can industrial initiative, said the W. P. B. official at dedicaThis is August Clair Tollestrup Seriously A case in point is the modern, efficient alloy steel plant, as dedicated by the War Production Board recently, which was built of used materials and contains equipment made solely from scrap material from three cities and two states. gone Open Schools Any housewife, who needs more sugar for the canning season, may apply at the office of the rationing board, where they will be allowed an extra amount for this purpose. The office, established in the basement of the W. M. Fowles home, will be open every day from Monday to Friday, and the hours are 9:00 to 12:00 a. m. and 1:00 to 4:00 p. m., and Saturday from 9:00 to 12:00 a. m., only. Convention that I promised you a letter from Legionnaires from all sections of wherever I might land. It has always Utah, veterans of World War I, and seemed to me that you and Mr. Cherwho are in all of the tlorth Sevier To SUGAR ALLOWED FOR A TwentyFourth Annual No. 49 building. Latest reports received by Mr. and Mrs. Tollestrup from the injured mans wife, state he is in serious condition at a Vallejo, California, hospital. In landing, it seemed apparent from the information received, that Clair had attempted to break the fall with his hands and in doing so, broke both wrists, leaving the bones protruding from the flesh. In addition to the broken wrists, he received deep cuts on the forehead and chin. Clair and his wife have resided in Napa, California, for the past seven or eight years where he has been employed as a roofer, and at one time he operated his own business in the northern California locality. He is well known in athletic circles, having won recognition as one of the best boxers in his weight in the In addition, region. he did much to promote boxing in southern Utah, having helped to train many young fellows in the art. Mr. and Mrs. Tollestrnp,' Mrs. Tollestrup was the former Louise daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Willardson of Salina, resided in Gunnison and Salina prior to going to California. They have two daughters. Mrs. Willardsn left for California BUY U. S. WAR STAMPS, BONDS! to be with her daughter and Tuesday. Complete information CLUB MEMBERS as to Clairs condition is expected as ENTERTAINED Mrs Claud Christensen entertained soon as she arrives. for members of the Young Matrons BOMB THE JAPS WITH JUNK1 bridge club and a few guests, ThursBROTHER OF MR. MORANS day afternoon of last week. A course luncheon was served at the Main VISITS AT EXPERIMENT ST. W. J. Moran, a brother of E. A. Cafe at two oclock and covers were Moran, and his two sons, John and laid for twelve. Bridge was played at Francis, arrived from the East and Rubys Home with Mrs. Morse Burr visited Monday and Tuesday at the winning high score prize. Mrs. A. Salina Experiment station, a guest of C. Willardson, Mrs. A. C. Prows and his brother. Mr. Moran motored from Mrs. Hal Stewart were guests of the his home at York, Nebraska, and be- hostess. sides his two sons, he was accompanBOMB THE JAPS WITH JUNK1 ied by friends, who are visiting in Mr. and Mrs. Earl Jensen of Los Mr. Moran stated Monday Idaho. that his home state had planted a lar- Angeles, California, and Mrs. Clarger acreage this year and the crops ence Jensen and children, Marcella, were fine, and conditions were fav- Janice, Geraldine and Tommie ef orable for a good harvest. Mr. Mo- Springville, arrived Monday for a ran left for York on Thursday of last visit at the G. Lorentzen home. The week and the group traveled the dis- California visitors plan on a two weeks stay in Salina. tance by motor. inter-mounta- in Wil-lardso- n, son-in-la- Official Lists Fire Precautions Grazing and forest service officials joined in an appeal to the land owners as well as users of public domain, for greater care with campfires and other fire hazards that cause tremendous losses to our forests and grazing lands. Most of the losses on the Utah forests this year have been caused by e fires, few cases of lightning fires having been started. ignited Shortage of avilable labor also adds to the hazard. which measures Precautionary should be observed by all those using the forests and ranges, are listed by Blaine Betenson of the Fishlake National Forest, and apply to all districts. They are: 1. SMOKE ONLY while stopping in safe places, completely cleared of dry or inflammable materials. Obrules in those serve No Smoking forest areas closed to smoking. public-priva- man-mad- te 4. BEFORE BUILDING CAMP- FIRE, scrape away all inflammable material from a spot five feet in diameter. Dig a hole in the center and in it build your fire. Keep it small. 5. PUT OUT CAMPFIRE DEAD OUT before you leave. Stir the coals while soaking them with water. Turn small sticks and drench both sides. Wet the ground around the fire. Be sure the last spark is out. 6. NEVER BURN BRUSH IN WINDY WEATHER. Be sure you can control it. Take absolutely no Secure permit from forest chances. officer. SMALL ANY OUT 7. PUT FIRES YOU CAN. 8. REPORT FIRES AT ONCE. Time is most important. Get to the nearest telephone and call the nearest forest officer or state fire warden. REMEMBER: A burning match, a a smoldering IN MATCH YOUR 2. BREAK glowing cigarette, TWO before you throw it awy. This campfire can be just as disastrous to our forests as an incendiary bomb. makes sure that the match is out. Do your part. CIGARETTE 3. BE SURE YOUR it before Strict adherence by everyone to the OUT STUB IS throwing toset of rules should materially above for same The pipe goes away. bacco. Never throw them into grass, reduce the number of preventable fires. brush or leaves. man-cause- d, |