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Show Utan. Rich Countv Reaper, Hndo1ph. SAVE TIME-LAB- OR Make Hayi Easier Faster ' Order From Sears Today Tractor Sweep (Buck) Sake 2 Good Ranges for Sale Cheap Cole Hot Blast for wood and coal; 1 reservoir grates and lop OK. three burner wickless oil range with oven. LeROY SHELBY. Miss Phyllis Norris returned from Evanston Wednesday, where she has visited for several days. Mr. and Mrs. V. B. Jackson went to Ogden Wednesday evening. Miss Marion Smith returned home with them. Richard Jackson is reported as not- being so well. Mrs. Maud Corless and Biillie Lou and Mrs. Lota Kennedy returned from Oregon after visiting there for some time. Wayne Argyle was operated upon for appendicitis at Soda Springs on Sunday morning, July 15th. Jay Thomson arrived home onPa-a 15- day leave from the South cific. It 'surely seems good to see these boys come home. BORN To Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Johnson, a baby boy at Kemmerer, Wyoming, July 19th. Wayne Kennedy was taken to a hospital Wednesday night and was operated upon immediately. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan D. Kennedy at and family spent laslt week-en- d Ideal Beach. Mr. Kennedy returned home Sundlay and Mrs. Kennedy remained a few days in Randolph visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. George Kennedy went to Ogden on Wednesday. Mrs. Ivan Kennedy and family went back with them. Mr. and Mrs. V. B. Jackson took Richard Jackson to Ogden fox med ical aid Thurusday. Alva Smith is home from overseas for a furlough. A well baby clinic was held on Thursday July 19th. Corp. Maurice Marshall, Dan and Grant Marshall arrived Monday night, July. 16th. Dan and Grant returned to Ogden Tuesday, while Maurice, plans to visit his folks for Width 1Q9.99 with top Handles hay miniMounting speed! mizes strain on tractor. Turns, lifts more Attaches, deeasily. taches, in less than five minutes. Follows ground .Wear-resistaclosely. Carries big load. cast-iro- n on tips yellow pine teeth. FITS FARMALL H, M; JOHN DEERE A, B; ALLIS CHALMERS W. C.; CASE, - ... nt oil-treat- ed 0, r C; FORD, FERGUSON. ct gout, Order From Salt Lake City. Ogden, Logan, or Provo, Utah ' WOODRUFF NEWS LAKETOWNNEWS (Continued From Page One) Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kostin and daughter Colleen of Salt Lake, visited Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Osro Cornia. , Miss Glenna Jackson of Evanston was a guest of Edith Oox for several days this week. Mrs. Alton Cornia and children of Salt Lake, come Sunday evening to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Cox and other relatives and friends here for three weeks. Dud Murphy of California, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Luther Bry son. This boys mother was Florence Walton before her marriage a sister of Kate Bryson. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Lake of Evanston visited Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Eastman Sunday. - Saturday George Brown arrived His sister, home for a furlough. him and with came spent the Mary, week-enoverbeen has George seas for quite awhile, and we surely axe glad to have him back home. (Continued From Page Oner Mark Austin returned to the Nebeker ranch after spending a week at Salt Lake. d. with us. This last week a quilting party was held at the home of Mrs. Mil.. ton Cornia, also at Mrs. Lily some very They ..completed beautiful quilts and the ladies had an enjoyable time' together. Mrs. Beatrice Dean and two boys of Randolph, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dean. Mr. and Mrs. James Stuart and Barbara Nieholls spent the weekend at frovo with the daughter of Mrs. Stuart, Norma Jean, and family. Her husband is to leave forvthe Cor-nias- armed forces. Mrs. Emily Frazier has been ill, and her daughter, Mrs. Deiora Frod sham of Evanston came and helped her and Shirley Dee stayed to help her grandmother. Gus Youngberg motored to Salt Lake Sunday evening and was accompanied by Mrs. Clara Dean, who will visit her sister at Taylorsville. Hy-ru- m Miss Merle Thomas returned home from Ogden where she spent a week with the Leslie Webb family. Mrs. Vann Price is spending part of the summer at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Price. Adrian Kearl and son and Udell Kearl of Ogden were visitors here over the Fourth. Miss Irene Robinson of Salt Lake is spending a few days at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Robinson. (Mrs. Morton Kearl went to Salt Lake Monday with her sisters, Mrs. L. B. Johnson and Mrs. Adch Thom-cc- k and niece Willa Kennedy, to the funeral of their uncle, David Midg-le- 30-d- - for ADANO ' By John Hersey i Here is a best seller story by the brilliant young war correspondent for Time and Life. It tells of an Italian-American major who tried to occupied town in Italy after the lines of his own American an re-bui- ld j upbringing. Finding that an ancient bell which the people had loved had been taken away by the Fascists to make gun barrels, he decided to get another bell for the town. And he did. A Bell for Aflano is rich in meaning for the future. You will find it in this paper. v READ IT NOW! j , y. Mr. and Mrs. Rothery , Kearl of Salt Lake and Almy Barker of Ft. Douglas were visitors here last week at the Barker home and the Morton Kearl home.. The Ben Dicks and Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Sharp and daughters of Montpelier and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Heap and daughter of Paris, spent the last week end at the 'home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hawkins. Mrs. Gifford Weston of Wellsville spent a week with her sister, Mrs. Venna Johnson. Charles Eller of Cedar City is here for a while with his family. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Irwin and Mrs. Alice .H. Johnson visited with kin and friends at St. Charles last Sunday. LaVere Nichols and family were over from the JF ranch on Bear River Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Corless and daughter were visitors here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Passey of Randolph were Sunday visitors here. Mrs. Zettie Kearl is here visiting the people of Laketown after spending the winter in Salt Lake and Og. . end. - Cpl. Clarence Peterson den. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hammer and cousin of Salt Lake were here visit- ing their aunt and cousins Alice H. Johnson and Ethel Irwin. Mrs. Albert R. Weston spent the week end in Ogden with her daughter, Mrs. Earl Grimmett, who is working there. Mrs Eliza Price is spending a few days with her mother and father Mr. and Mrs. Frank Price and daughter Carol June, fl of Miss Bonnie Jean Henderson Evanston, Wyo., is .visiting with Mrs. L. D. Lamborn for a week. The Misses Barbara Weston and Hazel Weston of Logan were herd" to spend the Fourth and the week end with their folks. We are happy to report the return home on June 30th of Sgt. Hugh L. Lamborn, son of Mr. and Mrs.' Dick Lamborn. He was taken prisoner by the Germans Nov. 5th, 1944, and liberated by the Russians May 2, 1945. After a furlough at home he will report at the Army rest camp at Santa Monica, Calif. Pvt. Richard D. Lamborn is home on short furlough to greet his brother. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Baker of Salt Lake were here again last week to visit at the Geo. N. Weston home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Siddoway and sisters from Coalville were here to spend the Fourth with their folks and brothers family. iMrs. Cora Barker returned to Salt Lake- - with Mr. and Mrs. Rothery Kearl to receive medical care. Mr. and Mrs. Farrell Johnson and Mrs. Gifford Weston visited at Logan and Wellsville over the week was awarded him posthumously. U. S. Treasury Department ", The Story of Garfield 'ifi ay Miss Arlene McKinnon returned from a weeks vacation in Ogden on Sunday. Miss Carolyn Frast came back with her for a short visit Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Gray were Ogden visitors Monday. A surprise party for Miss Marion Smith was held at the home of Miss Arlene McKinnon Tuesday night. Miss Marjeen Sorensen is working as a telephone operator.' Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hoffman motored to Salt Lake Friday and returned Sunday. Mr. Fredricks, the new county agent and his wife, moved Monday into the home vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Manwaring. Bishop Willard Peart was a visitor to Ogden on Monday. Miss Donna Lou Rex is vacationing in Spxingville. Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Marshall and Mr. and Mrs. Frank McKinnon spent Sunday at Bear Lake. - lie Bonds to support men Pvt. Donald R. ? his blocked withdrawal With Pa. by enemy . . Lobaugh, Freeport, platoons machine guns, he advanced alone and freed it. Crawling close to the enemy he threw a hand grenade and then rushed the position under heavy fire, time and again, he killed two of the enemy Struck he went. Nips, firing as before his last fall. The Medal of Honor withdraw others to and forced the HO wouldnt buy War few days. a J A BELL by WOODY 'COWAN 1 9990 12-Fo- ot American Heroes Locals and wife, Agnes Wahlstrom Peterson, spent Saturday and Sunday of last week at the home of Oliver Wahlstrom. Cpl. Peterson is a patient at Bush-ne- ll hospital, but is now on furlough at his parents home at Richfield, Utah.. He was wounded in battle in a dense forest in Germany, and held as prisoner in German hospitals for 45 days when he was liberated, and sent to France then England and then was flown to Bushnell, and will later be operated upon for the removal of a large bullet, lodged between his lungs and stomach. During the young couples visit here they were greeted in a family gathering by Mr. and Mrs. Arch McKinnon, and Mrs. Noriene Kerr of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wahlstrom, Mr. and Mrs. Delmas Kearl, Lt. Owen Wahlstrom and other kinfolks. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Esterholdt of Garden City spent Sunday afternoon visiting at the Clarence Cheney and Vara Cheney homes. iDr. J. S. Alley of Midvale, Utah, was a Sunday supper guest of Chas. Alley this week. Miss Helen Myers is in Garden City assisting Mrs. Norma Myers in taking care of the Claude Kimball sheep herd. Mesdames Evelyn and Mildred Alley came from Hyde Park Friday evening to spend the week end with their the Charles Alleys. Vernon G. Robinson took his family to Montpelier Saturday afternoon on a little pleasure trip. They attended the movie, as well as enjoyed refreshments. Included in the party were young McKay Willis of Lake- s, here molten metal It being drawn from the reverLiquid Copper beratory furnace at Garfield, one of the many process in converting rock to metal. (Editors Note: This is the third of series The pfod-oThe story of act, which is called copper matte. eight ariciea titled Garfield.) is drawn off the reverberatory fur-The Garfield smelter is one of the nace and transferred to the copper states large consumers of natural converters. This transfer from the gas, consuming approximately reverberatory to the converter Is 5,800,000,000 cubic feet yearly. This Interesting to watch. The red is enough gas to supply a fair sized molten metal Is drawn out Into a city with its domestic requirements, small ditch. not unlike a drainage and is'used largely in the reverbera- - ditch, which is lined with silica, After traveling about 50 feet In this tory furnace. The reverberatory furnace Is the ditch the molten stream trickel9 Its second major step in the process of way into a huge ladle. The ladle is smelting. After, the concentrates then picked up by a huge overhead and ore charge is subjected to a crane and dumped Into the operation, the calcined verter. material that is produced is then .. All through this process skilled Bent to a reverberatory workers move quickly and surely furnace having a temperature of to their various tasks, American from 2,200 to 2,800 degrees Fahren- - Smelting and Refining company em heit. As the charge melts the cop- - ploys over 1,000 men at the Garfield per, iron and sulphur combine to plant and they have distinguished : form a 'heavy liquid which settles themselves by having won the to the bottom, while the gangue Army-Navcoveted E" award for waste materials form a slag which their remarkable record In keeping up the flow of metal into the war andnmirert' intlf round draw..l?ft cone-likcars and transported to the slag PrSram-- ' (The fourth article In dump where it Is discharged over this series will be published later the dump. in these columns.) f copper-iron-sulphui- con-roasti- gas-fire- d y e No! You Buy Cant Come In an extra War Bond for protection against the wolves of inflation. town aiid small Miss Sharline Sims of Pickleville. Mrs. Willis E. Kearl made a trip to Logan Friday. LOST Saturday, June 2, in Randolph, brown butfold, containing about $45 in cash. Reward for return to Mearl Marshall. Remember Bataan Invest A Dime Out of Every Dollar in - U.S. War Bends ;! V I f |