OCR Text |
Show thi: 4 YOUNG KOREAN VETERAN REENLISTS JUNE it;, JOURNAL The JOURNAL YOUR PRINTER - PUBLISHER GIVES BARGAINS A weekly newspaper publish-much to as the interests of the residents services skyiocketiiig and commodities With Davis ot Count.v , at Lajton the Utah the will at position as 250 per cent, take a look, it you printer and publisher. Kntered as second-clasYoor home-townewspaper is probably the only com- Layton, Utah, under themattert in cost March S. 1ST!). modity yon receive nowadays at very little increase over a period of the past ten years. Published By home in costs INI, XI) PRINTING (O. your for papei. The same goes advertising ader-tisin- g Phone; Kaysville 10 Over the past ten years, the cost of inserting display and 20 cent, legal per in this newspaper has risen only , 1 s n wl woi't turner Vine rpniHiMPfl t llP HMflK1 US A KOREAN VETERAN, Richard J. Wheeler, of Beverly, N. J.t is sworn into BEEF CUTS at of early 1900s. UTAH STATE PkhSV ASSOCIATION On top of all this, this newspaper strives for improveNATIONAL EDITORIAL ment in editorial content, pictures and reproduction, so that in ASSOCIATION your you, our readers may receive a source ot enjoyment these improveweekly reading. It goes without saying, that ments cost money. Natl Advertising Representative Our related work, commercial printing, is also a bargain, Newspaper Advertising Service. when compared to costs of other commodities. The 222 No. Michigan Ae. rise in this department of our shop has increased only about Chicago, 111. in the cent increase 150 40 per cent, despite a producing per Subscription: $1.00 Per Tear product. Payable in Advance. How do we keep our heads above water? You may ask. In combination with corner to that The cut Weekly Reflex. $:L00 per jear. every Well, its darn tough, and we have we can. We work long hours, for which we receive a certain Lloyd E. Anderson amount of psychic income. We like being country printers Editor Manager still are commodities our bargains. thats O. Anderson Richard why guess ar ; News Editor STRIKE INFLATION AT THE ROOTS HOMEMAKERS GUIDE TO The only was to fight inflation is to attack the roots. For inflation, like a pestilent tree that draws all the nourishment out of the soil, is not checked by price and wage controls which only touch its effects as a farmer prunes off some of a trees growth. Just as a tree improves under pruning, inflation, held back by controls, only stores up strength for new growth when the controls are removed. Inflation has been nourished by deficit financing and easy consumer and instalment credit, which helped enrich the soil for its growth. We can stop fertilizing the inflation taxation and allow the Federal tree if we adopt Reserve System to restrict credit. At the same time we should cut Federal spending to make taxation easier, so and increase productivity and production that well have to dollars. absorb goods surplus In this way we can strike at the roots of inflation and stop its dangerous growth. pay-as-we-- go pay-as-we-- go scon's SCRAP BOOK By R. J. SCOn J. V. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager Ernest R. Little Classified Advertising Manager BEET OUTLOOK FOR '51 GOOD OGDEN Present indications point from a good to an excellent beet crop in practically all sections of the Amalgamated Sugar com- pany territory. Weather and mois- ture conditions were favorable for generally earlier plantings than last year and as a result little replanting was necessary. Thinning is approximately SO per cent finished and some of the earlier planted beets in the Nyssa- Nampa district have already had one hoeing. An adequate labor supply has prevailed in most districts. Due to unseasonably wet weather during the middle and latter part of May, in some areas, thinning came on all at once, thus creating a tight labor situation for a short time in those areas. With the exception of these localities, few hardship cases have been fksiAPs At SiLHDmsf YlHqS OF AHY BIM BELOHq fo The FAIRY ERH OF 'frtL -- SOltfH PACIFIC. attend a wedding without an invitation. You wouldn't ACQAPSn niKO ,'7":OLE) S3" BEEF CUTS AND THE RETAIL CUTS YMZ TB0M EACI AturMimmU Rom where I sit ... fy Joe Marsh QuYoFEYfoYdEH FAMILIES U.S., HOW MANY ARE YOfcfH MORE IHAN Hope "Cappy" Told Him Where To Get Off! Fisher who Just retired after thirty-fiv- e years as a railroad conductor was telling about a salesman who was often one of his passengers. Cappy That man was ao busy, says Cappy, he used to bring a dictaphone on the train to catch up on bis letters. On one trip hed been rushing around so much he dean forgot to bring Us ticket Left it on his desk.1 When Cappy started to tell him not to worry about the ticket, the salesman busts out with Whos worried about the ticket? It's just that now I dont know what til I was going to get off at! 5,000 Looks p S7 Copyright, 1951, United States Brewers Foundation lna TALL ANY 'TIME. BUY Balanced rock The same thing applies when you go shopping. Atf'fWM FALLS, IDAHO, HAS Sloop 'fUA WAY FOR. 19)1, K i fcaMn, Sgrodion, lac. WwM nhv rixmi CENTURIES. Cappy might have been pullii our leg, but from where I sit, lo of us get so wrapped up in ou selves we often forget whei were going. Some folks get i narrow they even begrudge the neighbors the right to enjoy glass of beer now and then. Let not forget that just as trains rs on steam and oil, democracies rn on freedom and tolerance! t set bv statute in the ten-ye- the Army by Lt. Andrew Kotik at a Philadelphia recruiting station. Wheeler, now 17 and with his parents consent, goes back into uniform because he found civilian life too tame. He first enlisted at 15 but was discharged after six months of service with the Third Division in Korea when it was discovered he was under age. ( International Soundphoto ) j of that want your business will The stores invite you to come in. Let the Reflex and Journal WANT-AD- S Work For You Patronize The Merchant Who Advertises-H- e Wants Your Business ; I,' |