BOLYARD’S GROCERY and MARKET

1
THB^VESTERN NEWS. LIBBY, MONTANA Thursday, May 17, 1945 PAGE two- Western News [a slight Peek into ! History's Pages k I T II* f ; man, the veteran P-51 Mustang | men, among the most battle-weath-! Rugged fighting M/Miir I /NTfighter unit has scored more thundered troops in General Jacob L. 1 them among first Americans to bat- ill W\ 11 HIV If I (ll victories over the luftwaffe. Of Deveres6th Army Group, fought tie on European soil when they I lV/1 T J I will I |U V/l these, 260 were destroyed in the for three days against completely-1 waded ashore at Salerno. They took , « a ** air. ; manned Siegfried defenses but1 the treacherous heights of Mount r rh n n i I im/< a |m § The Mustang fighter which Lieu- smashed through to get in on the Maggiore and on Mount Castellone . By uKOWe ... I I Mi 11 IM I fl tenant Larson will shortly take in-1 kill of two German armies in the ; beat off a force of 1,000 Germans L Chinese scholars have probably j I II Mill I I 1 M to combat is one of the worlds Saar Basin. They observed their, with 400 men. Playing a key part j been snickeung in a quiet ^ay. | most formidable single-engine air- second anniversary overseas by i in one of the most brilliant ma- l\!ntV-iLaeir ian a or wnate'u u s , f* cflrft. It mounts six 5-calibre ma- boosting their total of Germans ; neuvers of the war, they infiltrated the Chinese do to^ express^ sly hum- I \ /AHN AH chine guns and attains a speed of captured to 10,000. . I enemy lines two miles to take remake ! YI Lui I I wll more than 400 miles an hour in' Commanded by Col. George E. I heights overlooking Velletri,* opened our sconce ïruSe'aid rZZ f IVUIM VI I , level t light. j Lunch of Orlando. Fla., the* men the gales to Rome, and became the human nature. They might well j * _ Set John CorTetTleft Sundav ev °f thÜ ^ achiev. ed a spectacular first unit to pass through the capi- $2.50 quote the old proverb to the ef- | Bits of News from Here fto reoortat Salt Lake^cltv fuC°rd T * J and Fn?nC? ,wh. e^ tal city. 1-501 dr theaLnheAndSthe0yhmfghntet^irSs1 and There Aboutthe Boys before being transferred to an em- beaches! wîged From the beaches Southem our New Deaf wJ sRedlfme thoïï! | from Home. ^katmn po.nL H^has^pent^he | warfare; and6 affected rapid thrusts Prance, these doughteel sped north sands of years ago. | j^r. ancj j^rs Qeorge Corbett, and i deep into enemy territory. (Continued on page 51 Libby friends. i ............ ..... ................. in Italy saw AND LIBBY TIMES Published every Thursday at Libby, Mont., by Western'Montana Pub- lishing Company, Inc. Entered at the postoffice at Libby, | Mont., as second-class matter. W. R. LITTELL, Editor and Manager Subscription Rates: One year .. Six months OFFICIAL PAPER FOR LINCOLN COUNTY About 140 years before Christ the COLLECTED FROM ALI£ Chinese Emperor Wu Ti national- p/vpvriTRC np TUIT wnpi n ized the natural resources of China. bKo Ur 1HE WUKLL1 . established governmental control of! •. Hugh Hennessy, C. C. S., is tern-! transport and tràdo, fixed prices iSßt. William Stolarczyk came porarily stationed in San Francisco, for commodities r^culated oublie i lefst week to spend a furlough with according to word received by Mrs. works to cK-cupy Unemployed the home folks, Sgt. Stolarcfyk has Hennessy. His plans failed. The ^ost of food j had three years of active duty and clothing skyrocketed. Wu Tis Africa and Italy. Bob Petrusha, W. T. 3/c, on a L. subjects wanted to boil him in oil. :ias ^een nioved from the At- About A. D. I, theÆmperor Wang Sgt. Fred Metzger returned home lantic coast to the South Pacific.. Mang nationalized the land of Monday from Barstow, Calif., where His brother, Darryl, has been in China, distributed it in equal shares is stationed in the ordnance the Pacific a year and says pros- *< among the peasants, made govern- repair department of the Marine poets^ of getting home look pretty ment loans of low interest to pro- Corpslarge supply station. Sgt. slim . He is on a destroyer and ductive enterprises, fixed prices, Metzger has been with the marines has just recently gotten his F 1/c' bought excess farm products in r the past seven or eight years, rating, times of plenty and sold them in and was with the outfit at Guadal- times of dearth. This ended in in- canal. He was sent from that place ; Aboard USS Albert W. Grant aff temal revolt and theemperor was to the States for hospitalization, geaHerbert L. Zawadke 31 slain. He is in Libby on a 15 day furlough chinists mate, second class, USNR, But that didnt end their new which he is spending at the homeson of Mrs. Clara Zawadke, of deal experiments. In 1021 A. D. of Mr and Mrs. F. L. DeRosia. Libby, Mont., is aboard this 2100- another Chinese emperor announced He is Mrs. Denosia s son. ton destroyer, now back in action that the state should take the en- T: after undergoing repairs for dam-* tire management of commerce, in- Clare Russell Sugden came Sun- age received in the Battle of Suri- dustry and agriculture into its own day from Portland to visit at the gao strait. hands.He organized public engin- home of his grandparents, Mr and . The nigllt she was damaged the eering enterprises, financed the Mrs. W. W. Moody. Clare, who is Grant assisted in the sinking of a farmers crops, resettled the unem- m the merchant marines, has Just ( FuSo-class jap battleship ployed in subsistence homesteads, returned from a three monthsi ^jts with torpedoes, regulated wages and prices, na- cruise in the southwest Pacific. | -phe Grant wascommissioned tionalized commerce, established a ! Nov. 24. 1943. She played an in- budget system for governmental ex- Second Lt. Delvin G. Larson a shore roie in landing operations at1 penditures, and provided pensions fighter pilot, son of Mrs. Ç. L. j Hollandia. New Guinea; Saipan and for the aged, the unemployed and | Stocking, now of Kalispell hutjTinian in the Marianas; at Palaui the poor. (Seems as though we formerly of .Libby, is undergoing a and at Leyte in the Philippineshave heard much similar doctrine course in combat flying tactics. For her accuracy at Saipan and I recently.) This growing govern- with the Eighth air force 353rd Tinian, she won the nickname of mental power required a vast bu- ; fighter group in England. j Sniper Ship.reaucracy, which resulted in heavy I Commanded by Col. Ben Rimer-j taxation. Corruption spread through I________________________________ . . the vast bureacracy, war and rev- ! n , Army Group. Germanyolution came. i tighter sugar rationing at home. ! ,uaf) r launders of Libby A similar program was tried by Thats why your sugar stamp 36 \. '6 147n., Infantry Regiment, the Ptolemies in Egypt about 323 must stretch over four months in- ls,on^ of the veteran doughboys of B. C. It also ended in eventual stead of three. Thats why sugar I which experiencing some of their failure, for home canning has been cut to liarncst combat in more than 350 We are indebted to Will Durant a maximum of 15 pounds per per- »Vej r®c.ently broke 'through the Moder Line at Ober- SMOKE JUMPINGRegion One of the Forest Service is expanding aerial fire control in the headwaters of the Flathead, Sun River and Blackfoot, River drainages of the Flathead, Lewis and Clark, Helena and Lolo Na- tional Forests this summer. Smoke jumping, which began as an ex- periment in 1939, has proved so superior to ground methods of fire control in roadless areas where tra- vel is by foot or horse that last year many lookout and firemen positions set up in the forests for control of fires were abandoned in favor of smoke jumper control. Aerial fire control is not new. Experiments and actual effective Use of airplanes extends back over 20 years. Smoke jumpers have been used for five years. They have jumped 452 times to fires in some of our most rugged country. Their has been highly successful. Hundreds of tons of fire equip- ment and supplies have been suc- cessfully dropped to fire-fighters. Careful studies of records, statis- tics, survey data and experience have gone into the planning of aerial fire control for the Conti- nental Air Unit. This year another step in aerial control will be taken by not only expanding use of smoke jumpers fires but also in w* ma- Y use Ifou CAN HELP MAKE IT À SUCCESS scoring the reason hack of itto finance Victory. Tf.ou the benefits of owning all the bonds you canto keep prices down; to build future buying power. j4ettC 4ttem its up to you. in suppressing through substituting aerial patrol and detection for many lookout po- sitions. Scattered lookouts will be retained throughout the area to give detection coverage to the more haz- ardous areas and report paths of lightning storms. Aeras struck by lightning will then be patrolled by airplane with smoke jumpen? aboard ready to immediately de- scend upon any fire discovered. Delivery of men to fires by para- chute is well developed and its su- periority over ground travel in re- mote areas demonstrated. Aerial detection of fires is somewhat ex- perimental in that the airplane in past years has been used as an adjunct to lookout detection. Now, it is planned to reverse the process by making the airplane the prime means of detection assisted by look- outs. How successful this will be can be determined only by trial. Each method has its advantages. The lookout has the area under al- most constant observation but there are always large areas that cannot be seen becuse of intervening ridges. The airplane observer views the country for a compara- tively short tune but there are no blind areas. Last year smoke jumpers were used twice on the Kootenai Na- tional Forestonce in the wilder- ness area southwest of Libby and once in the rugged area north of Libby. In both cases the use of smoke jumpers proved very suc- cessful and practical. The Kootenai Forest has used aerial delivery of supplies and equipment to fires for a number of years past. Since this method of fire control in remote forested areas has proven to be both practical and economical, the Koo- tenai National Forest plans to con- tinue and even increase the use of aerial fire control measures on those portions of their protection unit where aerial fire control measures on those portions of their protection unit where aerial meth- ods are indicated. BUY ALL YOU CAN-HOLD ALL YOU BUY First State Bank of Libby for pointing out this bit of history son. And its not only the home- , ,, to us in an excellent article in the makers who will be taking a cut. : caPt,ured Wissembourg, and May Redbook. From which we So will hotels, restaurants, candy- .slashed their way through strong gather that our New Deal is merely makers, bakers and soft drink man- b1^'Ied defenses. 6 I These 36th Division infantry- an old deal undergoing a rejuvena- ufacturers. tion operation. ;- j Mrs. Walter A. A. Kidd just cant; Our housewives are finding they'bear to think of the suffering that' must plan this years canning witn j goes on in the world. I tell Mr. ! less sugar than they had last year. | Kidd,she says, that were real1 Some of them wonder why. Lets soldiers on the home front, what, see what the Office of Price Ad-| with' paying income tax, buying' j bonds and sending cheerful letters! Our sugar problem is a world ) to the boys overseas. By the way,Î problem, OPA says. Only about {shell say, "have you a spare shoe j one-fourth of our domestic sugar I stamp you can let me have?supply is produced on the mainland j ::of the United States. Because of j Mrs. J. Q. Clubb knows the | lack of manpower, and because beet l Black Market is wrong and run by 1 sugar production depends largely ! racketeers worse than in the days j on hand labor, much of an increase j of prohibition, but says, Yes, I cannot be expected from that i watch the ceiling prices posted in source. The Japs, have destroyed the stores and never pay more than the industry in the Philippines, so a cent or two above listed prices, we cannot expect any sugar from and then only if it saves me going there until well into 1946. Puerto elsewhere for what I want.Rican and Cuban imports wdll be reduced because of drought, hurri- cane and other adverse conditions. Our armed forces are still using tremendous amounts of sugar. And now that Europe is liberated we must send more sugar to the starv- ing people there. All of this means ministration says about it. n l A A t\\ Wm -■ Alfred M. Savage was first in his district to register for Ration Book 1. He believes that price control has definitely kept prices down and made distribution fairer to all. He thinks his neighborhood market man is uncooperative, however, if he wont accept ration stamps which have expired only a day or two.FRESH EGGS is FLOUR St" Grade A 69c ratio of efficiency between govern- ment and private operation in some cases. The government never really goes into business, for it never makes ends meet. And that is the first requisite of business. It just mixes a little business with a lot of politics and no one ever gets a chance to find out what is actually going on.$2.59 ire or Gold Medal Wheat—Kitchen Tested50 lb. bag Marilyn Credulous is engaged to a boy in the South Pacific, works hard at a war plant, and, although she weighs but 105, is a member of the blood doners gallon club. However, she applies for all extra canning sjigar rations and uses it to make candy. But I dont even use it in my coffee,she explains when w'ar sacrifices are mentioned. CREME WHITE SHORTENING 69c 3 lb. ctn. 30 points Creams almost instantly A BAD MIXTURE Before condoning the expenditure of billions of tax dollars, duplicat- ing on every sizable river in the nation the tax-exempt government, hydroelectric power projects such as dot the Tennessee Valley, Ameri- can taxpayers should make sure they know what they are getting for their money. The Clarksburg Telegram of Clarksburg, W. Va., turns to one of historys greatest scientists for an answer: Since we are indebted to Edison more than any other man for the development of the electric indus- try, his views of hydro power are particularly interesting .... In an article published January 5, 1929, Mr. Edison said: Water power is a political is- sue, not a business one . . . There is far more danger in public mo- nopoly than there is in private monopoly, for when the govern- ment goes into business it can al- ways shift its Losses to the tax- payers. If it goes into the power business it can pretend to sell cheap power and then cover up its losses.Further along in the same ar- ticle the wizard of Menlo Parksummed wp his views on govern- ment in business by relating an ex- perience he had during World War I, He said: CALUMET BAKING POWDER Dependable .................... ................................... 25c 25 oz. can SUNDAY IS FISH DAY LOOK OVER OUR VARIETY OF FRESH VEGETABLES Krispie l Crackers ÎSc Asparagus 2 pounds ...................... Green Onions 2 bunches ..................... Cauliflower Pound ............................. Fresh Strawberries 2 lb. box lie rJ. \ S' 22c 31c B&i Kj Mkt. LIBBY FISHERMEN Have you got your onion sets, onion plants, cabbage and tomato plants? Crecot Cheese, qt Fresh Oysters, pint . . . 75c 45c The Fountain is offering two steak din- ners to the angler who catches the biggest fish Sunday, May 20th. Entrees must be brought to The Fountain not later than 2 p. m. Monday, May 21st, and will be dis- played on ice in the window. Fish that get awayand those bought at meat market not counted. Halibut, Salmon, Fillet ot Cod BOLYARDS GROCERY and MARKET "When I was in Washington during the war I needed to have a special article made up for me out of tin. It was not at all a difficult thing to make and there was at hand a Navy shop entirely equip- ped to make it. I wanted that ar- ticle in a great hurry. I kept send- ing messengers o^er to the bureau and they brought back encouraging reports of progress. In four days the article was delivered. Some time after I was curious to ascer- tain how lotig it would take to make the article in my own shops, j So I sent for one of my tinsmiths ! and told him what I wanted. He ! delivered it in two and a half hours. I think that is just about the We will be closed all day Sunday. Happy Fishing, Folks ■OwmA Ob Mill MaOiW Mm Urn V, It Pays ; Phone 105 Free Delivery THE FOUNTAIN m To Kol I m Compare Phone 40

Transcript of BOLYARD’S GROCERY and MARKET

THB^VESTERN NEWS. LIBBY, MONTANA Thursday, May 17, 1945PAGE two-

Western News [a slight Peek into! History's Pages

k I T II* f ; man, the veteran P-51 Mustang | men, among the most battle-weath-! Rugged fightingM/Miir I /NT fighter unit has scored more thundered troops in General Jacob L. 1 them among first Americans to bat-ill W\ 11 HIV If I (ll victories over the luftwaffe. Of Deveres’ 6th Army Group, fought tie on European soil when theyI lV/1 T J I will I |U V/l these, 260 were destroyed in the for three days against completely-1 waded ashore at Salerno. They took■ , « a ** air. ; manned Siegfried defenses but1 the treacherous heights of Mount

r rh n n i I im/< a |m § The Mustang fighter which Lieu- smashed through to get in on the Maggiore and on Mount Castellone. By u‘ KOWe ... I I Mi 11 IM I fl tenant Larson will shortly take in-1 kill of two German armies in the ; beat off a force of 1,000 Germans

L Chinese scholars have probably j I II Mill I I 1 M to combat is one of the world’s Saar Basin. They observed their, with 400 men. Playing a key partj been snickeung in a quiet ^ay. | most formidable single-engine air- second anniversary overseas by i in one of the most brilliant ma-l\!ntV-iLaeir ian a or wnate'u u s , f* • cflrft. It mounts six 5-calibre ma- boosting their total of Germans ; neuvers of the war, they infiltratedthe Chinese do to^ express^ sly hum- I \ /AHN AH chine guns and attains a speed of captured to 10,000. . I enemy lines two miles to take

remake ! YI Lui I I wll more than 400 miles an hour in' Commanded by Col. George E. I heights overlooking Velletri,* opened

our sconce ïruSe'aid rZZ f IVUIM VI I , level t light. j Lunch of Orlando. Fla., the* men the gales to Rome, and became thehuman nature. They might well j * _ Set John CorTetTleft Sundav ev °f thÜ ^ achiev.ed a spectacular first unit to pass through the capi-

$2.50 quote the old proverb to the ef- | Bits of News from Here fto reoortat Salt Lake^cltv fuC°rd T * J and Fn?nC? ,wh.e^ tal city.1-501 d“r theaLnheAndSthe0yhmfghntet^irSs1 and There About the Boys before being transferred to an em- beaches! wîged From the beaches Southem

our New Deaf wJ sRedlfme thoïï! | from Home. ^katmn po.nL H^has^pent^he | warfare; and6 affected rapid thrusts Prance, these doughteel sped north

sands of years ago. | • j^r. ancj j^rs Qeorge Corbett, and i deep into enemy territory. (Continued on page 51Libby friends. i ............ .....—.................

in Italy saw

AND LIBBY TIMES

Published every Thursday at Libby, Mont., by Western'Montana Pub­

lishing Company, Inc.

Entered at the postoffice at Libby, | Mont., as second-class matter.

W. R. LITTELL, Editor and Manager

Subscription Rates:One year .. Six monthsOFFICIAL PAPER FOR LINCOLN

COUNTYAbout 140 years before Christ the COLLECTED FROM ALI£

Chinese Emperor Wu Ti national- p/vpvriTRC np T’UIT wnpi nized the natural resources of China. bKo Ur 1HE WUKLL1 „ „ „ .established governmental control of! •. Hugh Hennessy, C. C. S., is tern-!transport and tràdo, fixed prices i Sßt. William Stolarczyk came porarily stationed in San Francisco,for commodities r^culated oublie i lefst week to spend a furlough with according to word received by Mrs.works to cK-cupy Unemployed the home folks, Sgt. Stolarcfyk has Hennessy.

His plans failed. The ^ost of food j had three years of active duty and clothing skyrocketed. Wu Ti’s Africa and Italy. Bob Petrusha, W. T. 3/c, on a L.subjects wanted to boil him in oil. —:— ias ^een nioved from the At-

About A. D. I, theÆmperor Wang Sgt. Fred Metzger returned home lantic coast to the South Pacific..Mang nationalized the land of Monday from Bars tow, Calif., where His brother, Darryl, has been in China, distributed it in equal shares is stationed in the ordnance the Pacific a year and says pros- *< among the peasants, made govern- repair department of the Marine poets^ of getting home look prettyment loans of low interest to pro- Corps’ large supply station. Sgt. slim . He is on a destroyer andductive enterprises, fixed prices, Metzger has been with the marines has just recently gotten his F 1/c'bought excess farm products in f°r the past seven or eight years, rating,times of plenty and sold them in and was with the outfit at Guadal-times of dearth. This ended in in- canal. He was sent from that place ; Aboard USS Albert W. Grant aff temal revolt and the emperor was to the States for hospitalization, gea—Herbert L. Zawadke 31slain. He is in Libby on a 15 day furlough chinist’s mate, second class, USNR,

But that didn’t end their new which he is spending at the home son of Mrs. Clara Zawadke, ofdeal experiments. In 1021 A. D. of Mr and Mrs. F. L. DeRosia. Libby, Mont., is aboard this 2100-another Chinese emperor announced He is Mrs. Denosia s son. ton destroyer, now back in actionthat “the state should take the en- “T: after undergoing repairs for dam-*tire management of commerce, in- Clare Russell Sugden came Sun- age received in the Battle of Suri- dustry and agriculture into its own day from Portland to visit at the gao strait.hands.” He organized public engin- home of his grandparents, Mr and . The nigllt she was damaged theeering enterprises, financed the Mrs. W. W. Moody. Clare, who is Grant assisted in the sinking of afarmer’s crops, resettled the unem- m the merchant marines, has Just ( FuSo-class jap battleship ployed in subsistence homesteads, returned from a three months’ i ^jts with torpedoes,regulated wages and prices, na- cruise in the southwest Pacific. | -phe Grant was commissionedtionalized commerce, established a ! Nov. 24. 1943. She played an in­budget system for governmental ex- Second Lt. Delvin G. Larson a shore roie in landing operations at1 penditures, and provided pensions fighter pilot, son of Mrs. Ç. L. j Hollandia. New Guinea; Saipan and for the aged, the unemployed and | Stocking, now of Kalispell hutjTinian in the Marianas; at Palaui the poor. (Seems as though we formerly of .Libby, is undergoing a and at Leyte in the Philippines’ have heard much similar doctrine course in combat flying tactics. For her accuracy at Saipan and I recently.) This growing govern- with the Eighth air force 353rd Tinian, she won the nickname of mental power required a vast bu- ; fighter group in England. j “Sniper Ship.”reaucracy, which resulted in heavy I Commanded by Col. Ben Rimer-jtaxation. Corruption spread through I________________________________ „ . . „the vast bureacracy, war and rev- ! n , Army Group. Germany—olution came. i tighter sugar rationing at home. ! ,uaf) • r launders of Libby

A similar program was tried by That’s why your sugar stamp 36 \. '6 147n., Infantry Regiment,the Ptolemies in Egypt about 323 must stretch over four months in- ls,on^ of the veteran doughboys of B. C. It also ended in eventual stead of three. Thats why sugar I which experiencing some of their failure, for home canning has been cut to liarncst combat in more than 350

We are indebted to Will Durant a maximum of 15 pounds per per- »Vej r®c.ently broke'through the Moder Line at Ober-

SMOKE JUMPING—Region One of the Forest Service

is expanding aerial fire control in the headwaters of the Flathead, Sun River and Blackfoot, River drainages of the Flathead, Lewis and Clark, Helena and Lolo Na­tional Forests this summer. Smoke jumping, which began as an ex­periment in 1939, has proved so superior to ground methods of fire control in roadless areas where tra­vel is by foot or horse that last year many lookout and firemen positions set up in the forests for control of fires were abandoned in favor of smoke jumper control.

Aerial fire control is not new. Experiments and actual effective Use of airplanes extends back over 20 years. Smoke jumpers have been used for five years. They have jumped 452 times to fires in some of our most rugged country. Their

has been highly successful. Hundreds of tons of fire equip­ment and supplies have been suc­cessfully dropped to fire-fighters. Careful studies of records, statis­tics, survey data and experience have gone into the planning of aerial fire control for the Conti­nental Air Unit.

This year another step in aerial control will be taken by not only expanding use of smoke jumpers

fires but also

in

w*

ma-

Y

use

Ifou CAN HELP MAKE IT À SUCCESSscoring

the reason hack of it—to finance Victory.

• ‘Tf.ou the benefits of owningall the bonds you can—to keep prices down; to build future buying power.

• j4ettC 4ttem it’s up to you.

in suppressing through substituting aerial patrol and detection for many lookout po­sitions. Scattered lookouts will be retained throughout the area to give detection coverage to the more haz­ardous areas and report paths of lightning storms. Aeras struck by lightning will then be patrolled by airplane with smoke jumpen? aboard ready to immediately de­scend upon any fire discovered.

Delivery of men to fires by para­chute is well developed and its su­periority over ground travel in re­mote areas demonstrated. Aerial detection of fires is somewhat ex­perimental in that the airplane in past years has been used as an adjunct to lookout detection. Now, it is planned to reverse the process by making the airplane the prime means of detection assisted by look­outs. How successful this will be can be determined only by trial. Each method has its advantages. The lookout has the area under al­most constant observation but there are always large areas that cannot be seen becuse of intervening ridges. The airplane observer views the country for a compara­tively short tune but there are no blind areas.

Last year smoke jumpers were used twice on the Kootenai Na­tional Forest—once in the wilder­ness area southwest of Libby and once in the rugged area north of Libby. In both cases the use of smoke jumpers proved very suc­cessful and practical. The Kootenai Forest has used aerial delivery of supplies and equipment to fires for a number of years past. Since this method of fire control in remote forested areas has proven to be both practical and economical, the Koo­tenai National Forest plans to con­tinue and even increase the use of aerial fire control measures on those portions of their protection unit where aerial fire control measures on those portions of their protection unit where aerial meth­ods are indicated.

BUY ALL YOU CAN-HOLD ALL YOU BUY

First State Bank of Libbyfor pointing out this bit of history son. And it’s not only the home- , ,, to us in an excellent article in the makers who will be taking a cut. : caPt,ured Wissembourg, andMay Redbook. From which we So will hotels, restaurants, candy- .slashed their way through strong gather that our New Deal is merely makers, bakers and soft drink man- b1^'Ied —P® defenses.6 I These 36th Division infantry-an old deal undergoing a rejuvena- ufacturers. tion operation.

—;— —- j Mrs. Walter A. A. Kidd just can’t;Our housewives are finding they'bear to think of the suffering that'

must plan this year’s canning witn j goes on in the world. “I tell Mr. ! less sugar than they had last year. | Kidd,” she says, “that we’re real1 Some of them wonder why. Let’s soldiers on the home front, what, see what the Office of Price Ad-| with' paying income tax, buying'

j bonds and sending cheerful letters! Our sugar problem is a world ) to the boys overseas. “By the way,” Î

problem, OPA says. Only about {she’ll say, "have you a spare shoe j one-fourth of our domestic sugar I stamp you can let me have?” supply is produced on the mainland j —:— —:—of the United States. Because of j Mrs. J. Q. Clubb knows the | lack of manpower, and because beet l Black Market is wrong and run by 1 sugar production depends largely ! racketeers worse than in the days j on hand labor, much of an increase j of prohibition, but says, “Yes, I cannot be expected from that i watch the ceiling prices posted in source. The Japs, have destroyed the stores and never pay more than the industry in the Philippines, so a cent or two above listed prices, we cannot expect any sugar from and then only if it saves me going there until well into 1946. Puerto elsewhere for what I want.”Rican and Cuban imports wdll be reduced because of drought, hurri­cane and other adverse conditions.

Our armed forces are still using tremendous amounts of sugar. And now that Europe is liberated we must send more sugar to the starv­ing people there. All of this means

ministration says about it.

n• l A A t\\

Wm-■

►Alfred M. Savage was first in his

district to register for Ration Book 1. He believes that price control has definitely kept prices down and made distribution fairer to all. He thinks his neighborhood market man is uncooperative, however, if he won’t accept ration stamps which have expired “only a day or two.”

FRESH EGGS is FLOUR St"

Grade A 69cratio of efficiency between govern­ment and private operation in some cases.

“The government never really goes into business, for it never makes ends meet. And that is the first requisite of business. It just mixes a little business with a lot of politics and no one ever gets a chance to find out what is actually going on.’ ”

$2.59ire or Gold MedalWheat—Kitchen Tested—50 lb. bag

Marilyn Credulous is engaged to a boy in the South Pacific, works hard at a war plant, and, although she weighs but 105, is a member of the blood doner’s gallon club. However, she applies for all extra canning sjigar rations and uses it to make candy. “But I don’t even use it in my coffee,’ she explains when w'ar sacrifices are mentioned.

CREME WHITE SHORTENING 69c3 lb. ctn.30 pointsCreams almost instantlyA BAD MIXTURE

Before condoning the expenditure of billions of tax dollars, duplicat­ing on every sizable river in the nation the tax-exempt government, hydroelectric power projects such as dot the Tennessee Valley, Ameri­can taxpayers should make sure they know what they are getting for their money. The Clarksburg Telegram of Clarksburg, W. Va., turns to one of history’s greatest scientists for an answer:

“Since we are indebted to Edison more than any other man for the development of the electric indus­try, his views of hydro power are particularly interesting ....

“In an article published January 5, 1929, Mr. Edison said:

“ ‘Water power is a political is­sue, not a business one . . . There is far more danger in public mo­nopoly than there is in private monopoly, for when the govern­ment goes into business it can al­ways shift its Losses to the tax­payers. If it goes into the power business it can pretend to sell cheap power and then cover up its losses.’

“Further along in the same ar­ticle the ‘wizard of Menlo Park’ summed wp his views on govern­ment in business by relating an ex­perience he had during World War I, He said:

CALUMET BAKING POWDERDependable ....................................................... 25c25 oz. can

SUNDAY IS FISH DAY

LOOK OVER OUR

VARIETY OF FRESH VEGETABLES

Krispie l CrackersÎScAsparagus

2 pounds ......................

Green Onions2 bunches .....................

CauliflowerPound .............................

Fresh Strawberries

2 lb. boxlierJ.\

S'22c 31c B&i KjMkt.LIBBY FISHERMEN

Have you got your onion sets, onion plants, cabbage

and tomato plants?

Crecot Cheese, qt

Fresh Oysters, pint . . . 75c

45cThe Fountain is offering two steak din­ners to the angler who catches the biggest fish Sunday, May 20th. Entrees must be brought to The Fountain not later than 2 p. m. Monday, May 21st, and will be dis­played on ice in the window. Fish that get away” and those bought at meat market not counted.

Halibut, Salmon, Fillet ot CodBOLYARD’S GROCERY and MARKET

"When I was in Washington during the war I needed to have a special article made up for me out of tin. It was not at all a difficult thing to make and there was at hand a Navy shop entirely equip­ped to make it. I wanted that ar­ticle in a great hurry. I kept send­ing messengers o^er to the bureau and they brought back encouraging reports of progress. In four days the article was delivered. Some time after I was curious to ascer­tain how lotig it would take to make the article in my own shops, j So I sent for one of my tinsmiths ! and told him what I wanted. He ! delivered it in two and a half hours. I think that is just about the

We will be closed all day Sunday.

Happy Fishing, Folks■OwmA Ob Mill MaOiWMm Urn

V, It Pays;Phone 105 Free

DeliveryTHE FOUNTAIN m ToKol I m Compare

Phone 40