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Show Kirk Realty Co. "7 MILFORD, UTAH "J - - i.J 2-BISDROOM MODERN, LOVELY BRICK HOME, i North Main - $4500; terms. j i 2-BxCBROOM NEW BRICK HOME, Strictly Mod- 'A era; oil heater, oil furnace, full basement. 20 u years to pay. I: ' 40 ACRES, HIGHLY IMPROVED - $4000 fiji $1S00 down, balance 4 annual payments SEVERAL CHOICE IMPROVED FARMS. Bargain Prices and Choice Locations. NOW IS THE r' TiME TO GET YOUR FARM ! ! S SEVERAL GOOD DEALS on Weil-paying Ranches ;: CHOICE CITY LOTS - At Bargain Prices WE TRADE AND EXCHANGE ANYpL E f , Cash for Homes If Priced Right W. '; . ( j MORE HOUSE LISTINGS WANTE1' g SEE KIRK TO BUY OR SELL P .: 1 Phone '7' l": for FREE K X5JTM PICKUP AND XMfm DELIVERY J OF YOUR LAUNDRY AND CLEANING I WE APOLOGIZE For the Type of Service We Have Been Forced to Offer Milford. WE HAVE NOW NEW, EXPERIENCED HELP OUR NEW EQUIPMENT IS INSTALLED AND IN OPERATION We Can Now Offer 4 to 5 Day Service Y Milford Laundry and Dry Cleaners Phone 7 fS Beginning Monday : Closed 12 to 1 Daily j CTTT- you plan a zzzi vacation ez ' Mail coupon below ' r . I II When planning your summer or fall and the Pacific Northwest. ' 1 1 vacation, this handy folder will help Begin your vacation with relaxation ' I you decide where to go. rest as you ride. Your journey by 1 it l i a f fv rail will be a high spot of your i A It contains a pictorial map ot tne r M West; also description of famous va00 lon a7s- j r& western vacation regions including Union Pacific serves more western 1 Yellowstone National Park, Colo- scenic regions than any other rail- 1J rado, Arizona's Grand Canyon Na- road ... the world's greatest vacation t i tional Park, Utah's Zion and Bryce travel bargain. For unexcelled rail : Canyon National Parks, California transportation service . . . j j? til t I o i I t J " I MAIL COUPON TODAY 1 M P I I ONION PACIFIC RAILROAD I UNION PACIFIC Hot.l Utah. Mam & So. I.mpl. St. I r n m " Sall Lak. City 1. Utah 'j '' & R A I L R O A D rW wrud trM copy "Wtrn VscoSoolind. " I ' ,oao or TMt -taZ6 r.t CAA!f' j N.m. 3 Addren 3 (WMrawinptt Cily Slate . I J i ah 1 istop vfiC: il I HORN 5s$f I When in " fvv Jf 1 MILFORD ! Remodeled Vs? j p I I decorated , h Horn Silver Hotel I Mrs. Maudell Crane, Mgr. v.;;.v..v v : Ara you toying to yourself, "Svrm, we want to ge more tourist - butinms ... but how do we go about it?" That where the : experts in the Utoh State Department of Publicity and Industrial i J" Development can help you. A representative of our department I , will be glad to call on you right in your own city, and offer concrete suggestions and workable plans that will help yo get added tourrsf business, rf your problem is urgent, writ at once, and we will give you assistance by mail. No. 77 o-t o series to promote greater tourist trade for Utoh iVii.. , - - trvm EATING OUT i f ta'rVr',!.1 i'isi-5,!5'f- Vour whole familty gets a i V'- -fciitj " thrill from eating out vjiML Mother doesnt have to ft cook the children enjoy lxl, V l( I ordering from a menu "n and Dad likes the home- i cooked taste of every course. And everone en- I joys the delicious food. ! I Everybody likes to eat 1 OUR SPECIALTY : out! "Coon Iuikd Chicken" S Walker Cafe Hm would you CHART YOUR COURSE? Pictured here are the records of four "life lines" of our business-four things which largely control the destiny of any business, wlHibr it be a farm, a factory or a store. They are Wages, Materials Mate-rials Costs, Prices, and Profits. Suppose these were pictures of wi.at is going on in your own affairs. How would you chart your future course from these facts? PPR CVr PER CENT 160, , , , 'An WAG 2 5 j( so MATERIALS I ?'roposed 1946 increos., I I not included i.o I I increose 40 . . 130 ' ; 30., ! v." o t up- 0 tfo I no '00V I I ! I 100 I I I I -ii '43 '43 44 '45 '46 41 42 '43 '44 '45 '46 ' V)- the proposed increase, wage rates By the end of 1945, price oa oil com- viii ,iave risen from S0.85'z per hour in modi lies other than torm product! ad 19": to $1,331; in 1946 a gain of food hadgoneup!9.29fciince 1941. Chart 56.1-. Weeklyaverage would be $53.40. does not show effect of 1946 incratM. 160 100 I 1 1 1 1 1 rv 1 1 ' 1 1 PRICES PROFITS 150 I i 90 N, j I , 140 io : o '30 70 ISO JO no I I I so LITTLE CHANGE . tf N. , f i i n I 1 II 1 n 1 4J T44 4 '4 "Wl ' ' ' Lhtno U. S. Bureau of Labor Statkrtc w ProSl pr dollar of uh kot dctbid 1941 prices aguallng 100, prices of fam SMII ki 1945 It wot .Itofclty tm Ihan (owr , nochlnery in 1945 wr onff 104.9. nntt, as ooair.il 8.4 emu In 1941. What abOUt WageS? materials continues to rise, obvi- ously our Company will begin to Wages have risen steadily for five operate at a lose at some point, years. Before the strike which be- The exact point at which oper- gan on January 21 in ten of our ating at a loss would start is a plants and which has choked off matter of judgment. Government nearly all farm machinery produc- agenqies and union leaders mny tion, earnings of employes of these have opinions as to where that plants averaged $1.15H an hour, point is. But if they turn out to not including any overtime. The be wrong, they can shrug their Union demanded a 34 cents per shoulders and say: "Well, it wasn't hour increase and a Government my responsiblity. didn't make board has now recommended a the decision." general increase of 18 cents an The management of this Corn-hour, Corn-hour, which would make average pany cannot and will not ay that, i earnings $1.33 Han hour. Weekly It dares not gamble. It has to be I average would be $53.40. sure. Continuation of our service ii. iLj. to millions of customers, the fu- I What aDOUt materials ! ture jobs of thousands of em- I No one seems to know how high ployes, and the safety of the in- materials costs will go. The Gov- vestments of 39,000 stockholders ernment has increased steel prices depend on our making as correct a as much as $12.00 a ton, with an decision as is humanly possible, average increase for all grades of 8.2. Steel is the most important What aDOUt future prices Ofl material we buy, but prices on . other materials are also increasing. Tami ITI3Cniner)f . What ahnnt nrirac? The judgmontof Harvester's man- nnai aDOUI prices. agementnowisthatwecannotsafe- Thcre has been no general increase ly make the huge wage increase in our prices since they were frozen recommended by the Government by the Government in early 1942. until the Government authorize Since then a few small increases adequate increases in the prices have been allowed where particu- of farm machinery to cover the lar machines were substantially resulting increased costs, changed in design. That is not a judgment that makes ub happy. The Company What abOUt profits? does not want to raise prices. We t,. , - , . r. prefer to lower prices, when pos- R.sk ,s part of the American profit flnd we knw ' CURtom8 and loss system, so we do not, of f; h(JV8 UR do thflt We have course, ask either our customers produced at 1942 prices, and hoped or the Government to guarantee U could continue to do so. We I (hat we can be certain of profits have dolaved seekinr roneral nrice I each year. The chart tells the ? ?'f ' PhJil .R i , , c, , ,i relict in tn nope that it could be AW? 7rfi U (UnnK rfH avoided. Now wo are convinced I Although Harvester Produced h . c t avoided an more goods than ever before, it , n-t - . J. i i u r longer. J ho price queRtion munt j had node",re V Kc,fr!c out(of Wf,.r' be settled. Until it is settled we 1 JLZ Z n 1PT. Alt d" " hw we can settle the gone down What our 196 profit quoRtion. Until the wage will be is extreme y uncertain. ! j j J question in nettled wc do not nee What is the next step? how "e ca." rPRUmo i"-'rJu'iti"n r and begin turning out the farm As you can see, our present Hitu- machineH which we know our ation is that with frozen prices farmer customers need. and declining profits, we are asked Because of the important stake k '- , lo pay higher materials costs and which both farmersand city dwell- Ur''t. I (o make the biggest wage increase era have in this controversy, we s " i in the history of the Company. are bringing these matter to your Can we do this? attention. Through the cross cur- y'ry'- Wages and materials consume rents of today'B condition, we are I all but a few cents of every dollar trying to chart a course that is fair l. ' ! we take in. If our prices continue to our employes, to our farmer ; frozen, and cost of wages and cuatomers,and toourstockbolders. :t IKTQRUATIOUAL n"n I HARVESTER Lud f f |