OCR Text |
Show I . I (C QnpsaD I IT Aofl 3 Forthe NEW FORD TRACTOR t Turn square corners without strain oa tractor or operator I Leave headlands levell Eliminate all possibility of getting mired down in soft spots! Here for the first tim f-im S?T " 8X6 disc harrows with Finger rtSEPu Tip Control that straightens or n" angles the gangs with the trac-X4Xr3fT trac-X4Xr3fT tor moving or standing still. C v3i QSw' Tandem Disc available in 5 sjJ 4y and 6-foot widths; single disc ia 10-foot size. Let Our Expert Mechanics Keep Your Farm Machinery in Repair SAVE FUEL Have the engines of your machinery ma-chinery looked over and adjusted. ad-justed. SAVE TIME Have a greasing job done to get the rust and slowness out of your machines. ' SAVE THE MACHINE Small Repairs now will without with-out a doubt prolong the life of your farm equipment. Visit Our Shop Vihen In Town TIRACTGMR CO. Alva C. Snow, Mgr. Roosevelt, Utah gpiiiniiiiiiraoiiiiiiii ! NOW-IT'S HERE! I g U i esssisszssj i jj THE NEW3. 946 1 H ' H This New Plymouth is ih in comfort, safety and econ- j s stand-out car in the low omy. It's new all through. B priced field. Husky and Don'i lake our word for it. m H handsome, it's outstanding Come in today and see for g H for performance and styl- yourself the many im- B ing. And there's outstand provements that make the g 0 ing smartness and luxury New Plymouth four years p wherever you look in the better than before. For n B new roomy interior, soonest possible delivery. jj Plymouth's a stand-out, too, place your order now. COME IN AND SEE IT TODAY j CRUMBO MOTOR CO.-1 0 ROOSEVELT. UTAH My Face, She Shine! Delicious, Mais Oui, I pick up ze pot, I .... look my face, she looks back. ricn rai8m So clean, my kitchen. So bread clean, my hands. Everyzing at ze Laura-Lee Bakery, clean like ze wheestle. And my bread, my pastries Ah, Loaf - madame, zey are like heaven. Try zem today! 14c ROOSEVELT'S OUTSTANDING BAKERY Laura-Lee Bakery AT NORTH END OF TOWN" !p 1 You aren't getting machinery, Mr. Farmer, because... PUCBaET'OMES have taken the place of PIWPOTiM ONES! ... so don't blame your Implement Dealer! Your implement dealer had planned earnings In the ten plants, not includinf and expected to have his display overtime, were $1.15H. If present wage pro-floor pro-floor filled with new implements and tractors posals are adopted, this figure will becom weeks ago. And we had planned to make $1.33X per hour. them had told our dealers and our fanner When the strike began, negotiations were customers they would have new equipment broken oS by the Union on the issue of com- and plenty of service parts for the 1946 spring pulsory union membership. The Company work. And we had hoped to sell these ma- has no deeirt to weaken the Union. It recog- chines at no advance in price. nizea certain reasonable needs of the Union, B tn j it u c . But the Company does oppose compulsory Real Production Had 5farted unionism. It feels strongly" that an em- When the war ended, our organization bent ploye's membership should be a matter of every effort to increase production, with the his own choice, result that in the last months of 1945 ma- . chineiy was being built in very substantial Material Costs and Price Relief quantities. Here are a few figures: Wages and materials are the great costs of production operating our business together they con- item NOV. 1943 Die 1941 mime all but a few cents of every dollar the Tractors 7,271 7,432 Company takes in. Wages are obviously Combine 2,343 2,526 going to be high and nobody knows jurt Cultivators. 3,482 3,308 ' kw high material costs will go. . Hay Loaders 209 92 In the faw of rismg cosU of materials, th ;; wlTcreaT Z Plow. or. mad. In our Canton ond Chottonoooo Worb, ment &(jt jt de&olU hkh ar.noton.Wk.. January production wu 747 ptow. Mtisfactoy .ce from the Govern- Both your dealer and we were encouraged by ment that reasonable price relief will be this production picture at the turn of the granted to the Company within a reasonable year. But the strike changed all that. Aa you period of time. This matter is of such im- know, the CIO United Farm Equipment & portance that it will not be discussed here. Metal Workers of America called a strike in but will be covered by future advertisement ten of our plants, on January 21, 1946. devoted to both prices and profits. Speaking for our dealers and ourselves, we What Is The Strike About? can assure you that no customer ia more Wages are a basic issue. At the time of the eager than we are to resume production. We strike, Harvester employes were among the are doing and shall continue to do everything highest paid workers in American industry. in our power to bring about a fair settlement When the strike began, the average hourly aa soon as possible HHTERIini0E3M TYl HflfiVESITISB -LMu |