OCR Text |
Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. - Mr. and Mrs. Evan Beauregard are visiting at the home of Mrs. Jane Palmer. Mr, Beauregard is a member of the Armed Forces, and is home Mrs. Mae Madsen, Reporter on furlough. i Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Mason enterMr. and Mrs. Alma Rastian are tained at a family dinner and social, leaving this week for New York, in honor of their son, Gayland, who where they expect to spend the win- leaves this week to join the Armed ter months visiting with their dau- Forces. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Mason and Captain and ghter and Mrs. N. Marcus Peterson. son, Marvin, and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Mrs. Clayton Havward entertained Taylor, are visiting in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. James Curfew are Saturday night in honor of her husbands birthday. Special guests were spending a few days in Provo, visitmembers of Mrs. Harvard's family ing their sons, Miles and Lee. Mr. and Mrs. Evan Christensen of from Salina. A delicious hot dinner W'as served, and the evening spent Rexburg, Idaho, spent the week end in playing cards. visiting relatives and friends. Aurora News son-in-la- 'Washington Snapshots By James Preston ground rules which permit industry to make full postwar employment possible is one of the most urgent domestic anxieties of Congress. The lack of will More and more the gentlemen on Capitol Hill are convinced these dAys that the surest foundation to support jobs after the war is a sound and virile industry, encouraged by government rather than being subject to controls, unnecessary regulations, and restrictions. This growing feeling in ds summarized the latest report of the Senates is ih(better .. Discover very light, by changing to Winter OIL-PLATIN- Utah Mining Industry Plans for Postwar Era how g. oil-platin- oil-platin- close-fasten- ed oil-plati- ng nt te today at Your Mileage Normal combustion always leaves acids inside of your engine when it stops. Merchants Conoco station. Formerly it seldom stood idle long. Soon mileage and speed heated your engine enough to oust acids. CONOCO Continental Oil Company But nowadays rationing may force long rests, while corrosive acids gnaw. To combat corrosion, metals are plated. You combat acid corrosion with your engine OIL-PLATE- B Government bonds arc an excellent reset ve for farmers. Farm equipment is wearing out and it cannot be replaced under wartime conditions. However, when the war is over and new equipment can be purchased, a reserve in the form of defense bonds that may be cashed will be exceptionally helpful in replacing the machines, the buildings, and the other farm equipment that is gradually wearing out on Utah farms. During November and December, the months of seasonally lowest cheese output, the manufacturers of cheddar cheese will be required to set aside only 25 per cent of their monthly production for government purchase. Cheese to meet the requirements of war agencies is being purehasd on a seasonal, rather than curent basis. A beef animal can be treated for with only two to three ounces of insecticide powder when the rotenone is diluted with tripoli earth catte grubs or jihrophyllite. AMERICANLEFF HEROES BY MOTOR OIL No modern industry can survive rapidly changing conditions of the present day by adhering strictly to general rules of the past. No industry realizes this better than metal mining of Utah. Extensive staffs of research engineers are at work first on problems of winning the war and second upon the welfare of the industry and its workers in the postwar era. As metal mining normally employs directly and indirectly apthe population proximately one-hal- f of the state, it can readily be seen of the that much of the state in the postwar era depends upon the metal industry. Despite the progress made in the field of lighter metals, which in many instances will affect the metals, the metal mining industry is looking forward to the future with optimism. Copper, lead and zinc as well as the precious metals, gold and silver, will be greatly in demand in the postwar reconstruction period. At the present rate of production, however, there will undoubtedly be considerable copper, lead and zinc above ground and In fabricated form when hostilities cease. Eventually this metal will find its way into constructive effort, but in order to avert a complete unbalancing of the metal mining industry when the fighting is over, and before the reconstruction era actually takes hold, it has been suggested that the government stockpile metals against a shortage in the future. This plan is meeting with favor in industrial, labor and governmental circles, as it would permit development in an Industry which has badly depleted its reserves in an effort to supply the war demand. In addition it would be good insurance for a nation, against the possibility of not finding ore bodies for the future. Sell White Elephant Buy What You Want 5 A burBt was tuking Oil somewhere in INorlh Africa. It crashed into flame, lrivate Eugene A. Ganter rushed forward with three other oldier to aid the crew. The heat wa overwhelming but Ganter and hi companion, drenched from the hose of rescue apparatus, rescued three crew members from the blazing ship. Then Ganter returned to remove loaded 50 caliber machine guns. He wou the Soldiers Medal. Such are the men vour War Bond fight beside. and , G Have you ever been a new papa? Have you ever had to enlarge the hole in the nipple of babys bottle? The hot milk, just about as fluid as anything, barely comes through. Far "skinnier than small holes in nipples are many of the oil spaces in your cars engine. Thats still true after it is middle-age- d or beyond. Any oil... any oil... has a hard enough time coming through and spreading all around. Overweight oil easily thickened by cold is far worse. The lightest oil your engine can use this season is Tightest. You can know that light oil will stand the gaff when it includes the ability to give your engine internal Because a Winter change to Conoco N th motor oil adds g to engine parts, you can go your cars limit on lightness. Any good plating is a protective surface, and g so is attached all over your engines insides, as if strongly "magnetized there by a synthetic thats part of patented Conoco NA. Now every moving part must slide upon enveloped in its fluid film of Conoco Nth. Safety is the rupture-resistamultiplied! though your economical Conoco Nth is so light that your battery, too, has Dread Engine Acid is every chance to outlive the Winter, and the War. Oil-plaFought by oil-platin- which have be wf constructed for the A REASONABLE REQUEST war effort. Much thought is being given to the No matter how able businessmen problem of providing reemployment for men returning from military are, the Truman Committee points So far as is possible, old out, they cannot make plans that service. arc worthwhile until they know the jobs are being kept available. But conditions under which they will have this does not apply to one group in the service whose jobs were the reto operate." sult of years of training and individual effort. So keen is Congressional interest in contract termination and related When a doctor goes to war his job problems that five other House and cannot be preserved for him. His Senate groups, in addition to the patients must go elsewhere. When Truman Committee, are studying the he returns, he must find new pasubject which is so vital to full post- tients, a slow, tedous task that will war employment. not be made any easier by the fact that tens of thousands of other docThey arc the House Military Affairs Committee, the Senate Military tors released from the armed forces Affairs Contract Termination Sub- will be doing the same thing. committee, headed by Senator James However, the doctors are not kickE. Murray (Democrat, Montana), ing. All the average doctor asks is House Naval Affairs Committee, House Small Business Committee, a chance to work in the way that he With Representative Wright Patman is best fitted by environment and (Democrat, Texas), as chairman, and training the way of the individual the Senate Postwar Economic Policy doctor under the traditional Amerand Planning Committee, Senator ican medical system. It is a reasonWalter F. George (Dem., Georgia), able request. chairman. Oil this Winter of War The Lighter the oil "V' (Truman) Committee which investigating the national defense program. It asserts that private industry should take the lead after the war in providing employment, and that businessmen should be advised Viewpoint of the armed services in advance by the government as to seemed to have been succinctly put what they can and cannot do. by Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, chairman of the U. S. Maritime ComThis makes sense to Congress as mission, who told the House Military do the five steps that the Truman Affairs Committee: If weve got Committee is urging the government brains enough to negotiate the conto take. They are: tracts in the first place, we should 1. determine the method by which have brains enough to terminate and contracts are to be terminated after settle them! the war. 2. determine the advance notice which industry can have of the 3. terminations. Determine the methods for insuring the early removal of government from private plants, so as to make them available for the production of civilian articles. 4. Determline the extent to which the government will make or guarantee loans to provide business with work5. Determine the condiing capital. tion upon which the government will lease or sell the plants and facilities Special Scorn Overweight Motor U7?J V. S. T rtaiury Dtptrlmiul non-ferro- well-bein- r'A g non-ferro- 's' a ;o: ( 7 RAT ON MV F4W ML That's where I'll land if you folks wait 'til the last few weeks before Christmas to mail your packages and cards. Just finished handling the Christmas mail for our boys overseas and if was some job. Now it's your turn, here at home. BUT transportation facilities are carrying an unprecedented burden, and your Christmas gifts and cards cannot be permitted to impede military traffic and mail. The post offices are operating with curtailed and less experienced personnel. SO MAIL EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH! Or I'll be snowed under. (Worried) S. CLAUS. "THE WAR HAS DISLOCATED THE CHRISTMAS MAILING SEASON. THIS YEAR, NOVEMBER IS THE TIME FOR MAILING CHRISTMAS GIFTS SHOULD BE IN THE GIFTS AND CARDS. POST OFFICES BY DECEMBER 10TH." LAST-MINU- (Signed) V The Denver & Rio Grande Frank C. Walker Postmaster General Washington, D. C. UUestern Railroad strongly urge your cooperation Chriitmai mailing Now! do YOUR Bs I8) |