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Show Page Four SOUTH MRS. NORMA BAXTER Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION j One Year Service m RATES in the Urited States Men (mailed By GEORGES BENSON President of Harding College Searcy. Arkansas News Editor (Phone 39) $1.50 direct) LAST spring a woman of culture left her home in one of Americas principal cities to spend six months in Arkansas. Soon after her arrival she came down with a common ailment and needed a $1.00 Legal paper, published every Friday at Hyrum, Cache County, Utah. Entered at the Postoffice at Hyrum, Utah as second class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1870. surgeoni Her new neighbors almost failed to convince her that the village doctor was safe to consult. She asked: "If hes so wonderful, whats he doing here? A really good doctor can make a lot of money in a city. She was right on tnt point. This doctor could make a lot of money in a city. He has not fared poorly where he is, but he neVer will be rich. He is not so much interested in money, however, as in a certain kind of success thats not measurable in dollars. He has a priceless estate of human lives. He cant leave his house without meeting people who owe their very existence to his skill. A Prayer Poem For March 25 YEARS AGO IN HYRUM Takm from the South Cache Cour- Each day is mine to mar or make, ier of that time from the file of God, keep me strong and true. Let me no erring take. John A, Israelsen. No doubtful action do. needed improvethe most One of Let there be something true and fine ments at the South Cache High When night slips down to tell School has become a reality. Thru I have lived this That day of mine the efforts of the good people of Not well. but selfishly, walk Hyrum, an excellent gravel Anonymous has been constructed across Salt by-pa- th Hollow to the school building. Students may now get to the school building without being molested by autos, teams or livestock, and may feel safe to go to school without fear of spoiling their clothing with mud and water splashed from the wagon road. The students and faculty feel grateful fcT this improvement and wish to thank those who contributed money or labor to make the walk possible. Much credit is due the Mayor of Hyrum and Street Committee of the City Council and also the efficient service of Street Supervisor, G. W. Allen. There were many citizens who wished to help in this worthy cause but were not needed. We wish to thank them for their willingness. Mr. Le Roy Hill unloaded a trench digger at the station Thursday and drove it up to Paradise to help the installation of the water system there. Attention Old Maids Confidentially, Hollisters Rocky Mountain Tea is your last hope for a sweet breath, rosy cheeks, sparkling eyes. Don't give up without trying it. Hyrum Adv. Drug Co. The Hyrum District School will start again Monday, Febr. 23, following the Flu quarantine. A full attendance of all grades is earnestly desired. Mr. Shupe, the blacksmith on Center street, moved his family here from Ogden on Monday. A force of men are engaged in the building of a pea vinery which is expected to be completed in a short time. High School convened Tuesday after their Flu vacation. It is expected that a full attendance will be on hand for the first classes on Monday. Mr. M. A. Gill is attending the Bee Keepers Convention which is being held in Salt Lake City at the Hotel Utah this Friday and Saturday. Mr. Fay Facer was down from Pocatello Monday to visit his wife at the hospital. Mr. Facer just got over the flu but is better. Mrs. Facer is also progressing nicely. Next Monday is City Bond Election for the improvement of our city water system. Be sure and cast your vote for the bonds so we may get good drinking water. Mrs. Jane Molen of Logan is visiting here with her relatives. -- Mr3. Victoria Hansen and Mrs. Ruby Hess spent this Friday with their parents. A missionary farewell party will held at the Third ward next Thursday night, March 4 at 8 oclock for Elder Rulon Nielsen, who has been called to labor in the Southern States. He leaves Hyrum the eighth NEWS OF THE LEGISLATURE My Doctor SOUTH CACHE COURIER GILBERT V. McDOWELL March 2. 1915 t r CACHE COURIER Mr. and Mrs. Orville L. Lee of Paradise were guests of their son and wife, Bishop and Mrs. Orville S. Lee of Hyrum on Sunday. THIS country doctor has the unfeigned love of his neighbors. His work has their unqualified approval, but thats only part of the story. He likes them too. Nobody suffers for medical attenHe gets tion where he lives. Yes, paid for it, do you say? he collects from about half his patients. But the humblest share-cioppcan have the best doctor he eer heard of, and never see a hill. There are thousands of s :ch doctors. A Rich Estate Mrs. Maltha L. Jackson returned home from the hospital Wednesday. She is recovering satisfactorily from a major operation. er E. J. Wilson, manager of the Logan Cache Knitting Mill of Logan left Hyrum in Wednesday for a bus- iness trip to Los Angeles, Calif. Knowing the people of his neighborhood is worth a great i'e,il to a physician's success. Ez-- n who treats ,i specialist, it: angers almost exclusively, will sgrve hat a patient's history is :ore helpin' to the doctor than Miss Venice Nielsen who is in Ogden, spen the week end 'em-plov- with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. gar Nielsen. Ed- LaMar Wright submitted to (a major operation at the Budge hospital on Sunday. an examination. Thats why I dont want to swap doctors with you, and I hope you feel the same way. Together, we can save America from political, socialized medicine. A FIRM protest from the forks of the creek, mountain coves and farming towns can keep the Wagner National Health Bill, now decomposing In a pigeonhole of a Senate from ever coming to life. It was introduced with small hope of passage, its chief purpose perhaps was to raise the issue and start people talking about medical service as something to be standardized and rationed like The Case History . gasoline. My doctor is a busy man. He works more nearly 16 hours a day than eight. A standardized working week of, say, 40 hours for him would make two new doctors necessary in our neighborhood. Of course both new men would have to study the communitys health record, have to be as well schooled as the older doctor and have to receive suitable salaries. It would be a bad deal, three ways: (1) Some of my doctor patients would have to accept treatment from a man with al' to learn about them. (2) Since three men coet more to maintain than one, all of us would spend more money for medical aid. (3) My good doctor wouldnt be busy. The work he loves (tai estate of lives) would be taken away from him. I figure hl) agile mind would turn to something else, and that hed quit being a doctor at all. Team Up to Save Army IriNurses and iujDoctors j tiuii mini LU..UI Liv'-- s in Dee Wilson, who is serving in the Merchant Marine is spending a few days leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Hall have purchased the former home of Mr. G. Ray Petersen. The Petersens have recently moved to Logan to make their home. and Mrs. f Continued from page om , , committee recommended that the contingent fund be renamed and eiven into the control of the state board of . examiners composed of the Governor, the secretary of state, and the attorney general. The wail against this report led by Senator Lorenzo E. Ellgren, Salt Lake Democrat very much irritated Ira Huggins, the Ogden Democratic dean of the senate who is chairman of that subcommittee and his vociferous cohort, Selvoy J. Badgert another democrat, representative from Springville, The upshot of the argument hasnt come to earth yet. Efforts to get harmony among the democrats having apparently failed, Saturday Clifton Kerr, the Tremonton house republican leader apparently wearied, said, A a member of the minority party Im getting tired of tiying to serve as a referee for a democratic caucus. But despite the failure of the legislature to solve either of these problems, they did pass quite a few bills of minor nature touching general state problems only incidentally. With less than two weeks of legal tenure left to them the members had not yet solved school financing, broad post war planning legislation, appropriations to state departments, institutions and services, or special appropriations. The dapper Loganite, appropriating Adrian C, Hatch in the hous', warned that the special requests embodied in bills now pending total $9,250,000 or thereabouts, far more than anybody yet sees money for. Of course no legislature goes without a little fun. The curly haired and vigorous blonde representative from Summit, Lawrence Rasmussen, told the house a while ago that it would certainly be a shame if the members left their sense of humor at home after the house had been chided for levity. So the senate went out full blast on the polygamous bull act. The bulls and their amours were spread all over the record. The law now restricts em. But who enforces the law remains to be seen. Tom Argyle, Davis county demo crat, one time nemesis of the game poachers was still wondering what s regoing to happen to the proposed vision of the big game control commission. Tom Jones, the San Juan county stockman, demonstrated successfully the succulence of his Blue Mountain lambs at a dinner He gave off the record at the state fair grounds. Toms lambs didnt win any state fair ribbons.. They were too well and deliciously dismembered. Elisha WamfT, newspapering senator from Payson, put up a well documented plea !o the inclusion of the Central Utah Vocational School at Provo i..to the cnte vocational training progvm. Hi has come nearer th-- n anvbodv yet in getting real conrideration for that institu-- .-tion. Most legislators will be able to tell their constituents th true significance of the Geneva Steel plant when they get home because they saw it themselves on Washington s birthday. They will undoubtedly declare that every Utahn must pull fer the continued operation of that 200 million dollar enterprise after the war. Lobbyists are funny! Mostly because they are so utterly aparent. A lobbyist is a guy or a gal who tries to put the heat on for this bill or that bill. They take themselves so confoundedly seriously but they are an integral, though unofficial,, part of every legislature. Take em this time there are folks infesting the marbled capital corridors advocating to the harrassed lawmakers everything from cosmetics to more doush for the Supreme Court justices; from beer taxes to more dough for teachers: from air fields to peach mosaic. Now, as a matter of fact, a lot of these buzzers know a lot more about the particular subject than the legislators. And a lot of their information is of undoubtedly great value in shading laws. But their perigrinations are funny. Troy, the four months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lilenquist is recovering from a severe attack of bronchitis. - Mrs. Maudine Petersen is visiting in Salt Lake City, guest of her daughter, Mrs. Audrey Boyd. 4 , e, ' Mr. and Mrs. James . Leishman of Wellsville were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Grover A. Christensen. s f. y.j It V tx ' 4 m- Mrs. Elizabeth Nebeker and fam- ily of Layton were dinner guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Benson. Mr. and Mrs. J. Vern Nielsen were host and hostess to relatives on Sunday with a dinner party. Covers were laid for Mrs. Gladys Woodruff and LaVern McBride of Salt Lake City, Mrs. Robert Gibbons and two children. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gibbons all of Logan and the Nielsen family. i i ft h M ; KPB fry In a hospital In Belgium, Lieutenants Blanche Barrel of Npwton Falls, N. Y ond Margaret Farraher of Flushing, N. Y., Army nurses, perform theii duties as Instrument nurse end anesthetist. Ten thousand additional registered Purses erf needed Immediately by the Army Nurse Corps to relieve the shertage ff these trained women. t Mrs. Bessie Singleton and three children and Mr. and Mrs. Roger' Baur and family of Ogden visited has arrived in Germany and is serat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reuving with the F''ist army. Lloyd ben Hansen and Mr. and Mrs. Alleceived most of his training as a bert Nhdsen on Sunday. combat engineer at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma. He spent a few months Mrs. Elmer Obray and Mr. and Mrs. Jos. B. Gunnell. family of Ogden are visi.ting at the home of at Nashville, Tennessee. He entered Mr. and Mrs. Evan Bankhead and Ezra Obray in Paradise. the army in October 1943 and went Mr and Mr Geddes Maughan were conference dinner guests at the overseas in October of 1944. ' also that he feels states Lloyd of March. Following is the prohome of Mr and Mrs. Lehi Clawson gram which will be rendered next fine, but is homesick nevertheless. on Sunday. Thursday evening. We wish Lloyd good luck and Song, Congregation; Prayer; continued health. Subscribe for the Courier Piano solo, Ruth Nielsen; Reading, Della Dailey; Vocal solo, Jack Wahlenl Farewell address, W. A.. Liljenquist; Song, Leta Nielsen and Co., Response, Rulon Nielsen: Vocal solo. Ebba Petersen; Remarks by Bp. Maughan; Song by the Congregation; Prayer. '"TA2MEZ IKCWV t$ TVT7M6 20 CENTS OF tlfFZr WOOL VCLLARINTO tVMZOHVS SO WS MOST TANECAE OF OUR FLEECE' Mr. and Mrs. Lehi Clawson received word that their son, Lloyd i DANCE Every Saturday Night I r I 1 - . A new approach - , , to spring! ETTA GAYNES creates , t Under sheath i of a suit with every detail mindful of your slender figure. The jacket narrow and V the pen-sli"' shirt tailored in a fne'1 wool 100 gabardine by IA1RON WOOLEN, . lovely shades . . . Quality Spring rayon lined with EARL-CLSizes '10 to 18 and 9 to 17. ' , Waist-nippin- : h $45 ELITE PEGGYS STYLE SHOP FI ALL Hyrum MRS. KENNETH LONGHURST 113 North Main OWNER AND MANAGER Logan, Utah |