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Show :esp on keep on Vy? WITH 17AR OOI1DS with IVAR BONDS Thirteenth Year 51.50 Ter Year HOME PAPER FOR HOME PEOPLE 62 West Center Telephone 700 Ixijjan, Utah, Tuesday, January 18, 1911 No. 23 JCs Slate Anniversary Fourth War Loan Drive Inaugurated Week Banquet Friday Distinguished Service Key to be Awarded week) ear from January 14 to 21 In The annual anniversary of the founding banquet of the Logan Junior commemoration national organization on of the be held ill a commerce Chamber of 1920. 21, Purpose of the Friday at 7.30 p. m. In the Hotel jjanuar la to acquaint the observance help waa announced by today Ecclea, It general publit with acUvitlea and Curtis Miner, Jaycec president, the Feature of the event will be c.vlc project carried out by -: dIsUnJayoees. of the the presentation at the banquet will Ingulshed service key to a young! Guests civic man of Logan, not necessarily a dude representatives from ell comof chamber senior the Jaycec, a ho has contributed the clubs; ; , ; Proclamation WHEREAS we recognize In our community on organization known as the LOGAN JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, the member, business and profesship of which is made up of young, energetic to is acquaintanceship, which of enlarge the sional men, and purpose foster good fellowship, and encourage a live and active Interest in civic and community projects; and, WHEREAS, we wish to recognize further and show appreciation of the accomplishments of this splendid organization in its activity for greater public safety in the fields of pedestrian and automobile traffic, in fire prevention; for its activity in many phases of the war effort atid its interest at election time in getting out the vote, and in order further to encourage increased membership and call attention to the possibilities of this work and in harmony with the desire of the National Junior Chamber of Commerce; NOW THEREFORE, I, William Evans Jr., Mayor of Logan City, do proclaim the week of January 14 to 21 as NATIONAL JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE WEEK, that we might show our am preciation of this activity in our city. Signed, WILLIAM EVANS JR.. Mayor. outstanding public service to the community during the year. The award last year was by Fred Thompson. Selection of the winner is made of Logan business by a group of the men and representatives most t merce ; , , of Anniversary Week is held every Committees Flan For Coming Year Flans for the annual meeting, review of accomplishments, recommendations for 1944 and approval of a full camping season for next summer featured the of the final meeting Sunday Cache Valley Boy Scout Councils 1943 committee. New committees will be set up prior to the annual meeting on Janary 28 and will begin work in February, Executive Preston announced. Reviewing W. Pond briefly plans for the annual meeting, H. R. Hurren, chairman, announced that Oscar A. Kirkham of Salt Lake City, deputy regional scout executive, will be speaker. Tickets for the banquet will be limited to 160. Mr. Pond reported that the council exceeded the membership goal objective of 2200 by 42 and enrollment was up 91 over 1942. The organization and extension com-- n ittee, in charge of membership, recommended that a goal of 2300 be set up for 1944 by the new committee. Dr. H. Loran Blood, committee chairman, praised the; Smithfield districts for their and Oneida fine membership achievements. He announced these districts had enrolled the remarkable total of 88 per cent of the available boys of scout age in the program. and activities The campaign committee report showed a big increase in the camping program and that the number of summer camp scout hours was more than doubled over 1942. They recommended continuation of the summer camping program as was carried on last year, with the operation of Camp Hunt on Bear Lake, New Fork Lake camp in Wyoming, to be followed by the annual Bridger Hike in the Winariver mountains. will be Increased emphasis the year on coming placed during backyard camping, to give on page Four) a i JANUARY vice President; Guy Reed N. Cardon, vice president, Wangsgaard, secretary; Ixrnis Mat-senitson, treasurer ... W. Bennie Dcgn, past president and state vice sident; Kenneth Longhurst, state director; John M. Anderson, Grant Keaton, Marvin Davis and Ralph Cates, members of the board of directors. - Pianist Slates Concert Here Scouters Hear Review of 43 14-3- 1 Hann- pre-mitt- ee 1 Mr. Miner, who is chairman Jose-wo- or chamber of commerce. L. T. Wallace is chairman of the com-- the committee on arrangements for the dinner, reported that the and chic officials, he said, Assisting Mr. Miner are current n officers of the organization, Ph HYRUM REACHES QUOTA ONE MINUTE AFTER NOON; COUNTY COAL I.s $1,391,000.00 FAMED METROPOLITAN BASSO WILL APPEAR HERE FRIDAY Hazel Griggs, eminent pianist who has specialized in helping children enjoy music, will present the Logan a piano concert in tabernacle Saturday at 2 p.m., under auspices of the Logan chapter of the American Association cf University Women and the Logan city schools, Mrs. Stillman Wright, committee head, reported Monday. Students of both the city and Cache county school systems and adults are invited to the program, Mrs. Wright said. Tickets priced at 15 cents each for children and 50 cents for adults are on sale at the schools and at the City Drug store in Logan. Miss Griggs, seeking to expand juvenile interest in good music, has arranged concerts especially for children, introducing each selection with a story or poem which will foster childrens interest in the composition, Mrs. Wright said. After a heavy barrage of light anti heavy artillery at close and distant range, the Fourth War Loan drive was launched in Cache county th is morning with more than 800 volunteers pledged to reach their objective by February 1. Field Marshall William Feterson reports that his officers and men, including a well trained regiment of the fairer sex, pushed off w ith enthusiasm and determination in a campaign to raise $1,391,000 in the county to help give the axe to the axis. All troops concerned are well equipped and have gone through indoctrination courses to fit them for the particular assignment In every sector on the Cache front. Douglas Beattie is Second Civic Music I'erformer It's an old established custom at Itahan epera house to blost-cup the box office receipts by r ; letting ambitious young American j singers appear behind the footj lights for a priee. the average foreign Indeed, vocal student in Italy take it for granted that he will have to buy . j his debut ! Not so young Douglas Beattie, who will be heard here Friday j night in the Logan tabernacle. . This San Francisco basso had been studying in Italy just 13 months when an enterprising opera man- - j eger offered him a debut on the usual basis. DOlGLAS BEATTIE He turned down the offer flatly and for four months continued to refuse similar offers several i times a week. On each occasion he informed the manager that if any lira were exchanged in the course of such a transaction, Howard Israelsen Was they would have to come into his Serving in Navy pocket, not out of it. offered John Howard Israelsen, 21, son Finally an impersario him a debut in Genoa grata. ITc of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Israelsen accepted Following that periorm-niic- e of Hyrum, died Friday In a navy he was immediately engaged hospital in Norfolk, Vt., a navy for twelve successive appeal anecs department telegram Informed his fer which he was paid a parents Saturday. He was a boatswain's mate secfee. During one of thes p'. foimances he had the cvcLng ond class, and had arrived In the experience of haling a ju:o.i United States a short time ago after a trip on a troop transport. Italian singer si cut a c" of epithets at him right in Tlie telegram gave no particulars the middle of the second net of las death, with the exception when the young American unin that he had been in the naval Unf'on.uiy cut in on some uncx- j hospital a short time with a head reded nnd unrehearsed 'tag bn.n- -' injury. Two recent letters told of his ne.-- s calculated to focus attention on the Italian. Translated into! return to the United States and he was to be home. He ) rntrble English, the text of rh.s'how glad violent addition to the lhietto iias participated in several war rs. including the South v nt 'omething like tbit: 'you i ald Mediterranean, t . an American! Go b '.k horn in Hyrum in June to jour own country where jou 1222. II,s parents died while he belon ! an infant and he was adopted, Some six months lotcr the 'was named and raised by Mr. and Mrs. me. come barn to Lis villa n IsraeLen. He was educated In ownc-untrbut notuntil nehadHyrum schoolfii graduated from y lan 0j', ia Ptr" South Cache school and athigh formances. tended Utah State Agricultural In the interim he ahe managed college. to win the close friendship of tne He accompanied Mr. nd Mrs. irate artist who had consigned Israelsen to Norway where they him to perdition and America. were called to preside over the When he left Italy, Beattie was mission in 1939 but returned at ere of the few fore.gn arl.sts to the outbreak of the war in ld a cessera or singers union On return his he enlisted r0pe. csia, ent.tling the holders to pro. jn the coast guard and subsetection against faLe con.racts. quently transferred to the navy Back m California Beattie was department. The body will be sent to Hyrum signed ten important roles with the San Francisco Opera. In 1933 for funeral services and burial. he became a member of the MetSurviving besides Mr. and Mrs. sister, Mrs. ropolitan and has appeared for Israelsen, are one three seasons with the Chicago James McBride of Nibley and a He also grandmother, Mrs. Andrew Isreal-se- n City Opera company. of Hyrum. tours in concert each season. to Ease Nyman OrClCrCQ I Ruling that the arrangement effected in Logan city court in the case of Hyrum Boy Dies In Navy Hospital De Wayne Nyman consti- tuted a probation rather than a continuance and was ' outside the city courts jurisdiction, Judge Marriner M. Morrison today ordered that a writ of mandate be issued to City Judge Jesse P. Rich directing him to hold or complete a preliminary hearing by January 2G to suo.-tun-ti- al determine if Nyman should be bound over to District court or released. In the three hour court session, most of the original case witnesses testified, but Judge Morrison declared most of this testimony was immaterial to the point of law at issue. He invited Judge - Pa-vilL- en cc 1 STAKE SLATES ANNUAL BALL Eu-ho- Hope Beck Named Gold & Green Queen Miss Irene Beck, representing will ward, Eighth the Logan of the Logan reign as queen stake Gold and Green ball Thursballday evening in the Dansante announced by was today it room, Mrs. Marjorie A. Henderson, stake dance director. Votes were cast Sunday by the the various 12 girls representing wards of the stake, selecting Miss Beck. She will be crowned during the which will feature intermission, a clever floor show. Two dances, Waltz in Four, and Hail to the Queen, will be presented by the following dancers: Jean Budge, Janet Earl, Rose Marie Earl, La Ree Keller, Marilyn Hansen, Pat Mary Trotman, DOn Clayton, Johnson, Reed Nelson, Luana Gibbons, Lillis Pearson, Mervyn Speth, Margaret Lewis, Dale Jenkins, Margaret Bateman and Max Rigby. Queens and the wards they rep- resent, are Wilma Abrams, Col- Lucille Christensen, Logan SeFirst; Shirley Wiley, Logan cond; Necia Nielsen, Logan Sixth; Seventh; Nina Hadfield, Logan Cloteel Otte, Logan Eleventh; Emma Alder, Logan Twelfth; Cora Stirland, Providence First; Joy Heckman, Providence Second; Ella Bowen, River Heights, and Enid Olsen, Young. Admission will be by budget or issued by ward guest tickets bishops. Cache stake members are invited to attend, using their ward budget tickets for admission. Music will be furnished by the Dansante orchestra. Escapes Injury Villis Purser, 41, of Hyde Park, escaped with a lacerated shoulder Monday at 8 a.m. when the auto he was driving collided with a freight train and was dragged for several feet before it was virtually wrapped around a utility pole. Sergeant T. Earl Hunsaker and Roland Reese of the state highMr. way patrol reported that Purser was driving west on the Hyde Park road and did not see Centan approaching Utah-Idah- o ral railway corporation freight train until he was unable to stop. The collision demolished his 1935 model sedan. Mr. Purser was taken to a Logan. Logan hospital by the Cache fire department ambulance and was released after treatment. Seeks Workers Lieutenant (j.g.) Cecil D. HarClearfield Naval desty of the Supply depot will interview applicants fer work at the depot Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Logan office of the U. S. Employment service, Miss Gwen Hunsaker, editor of the depots newspaper, announced. The depot needs 500 men laborers and 25 typists and stenographThe positions ers, she reported. offer standard naval depot wages, dormitory and cafeteria accommodations and bus service to Ogden and Salt Lake City. Awarded Medals j I Doris Niles, internationally famous American Dancer, who will appear tonight at 8 p.m. in Nibley Hall on the Logan Senior high school campus as the first attraction of the winter quarter U S A C lyreum schedule. i Staff Sergeant Thiel of Logan, reported by department as missing o er Europe, has been t'ip air medal and oak ter. Wamsley the war in action awarded leaf clus-- I To spur the Cache salient to carry through from the first whls- tie, Clurence Bamberger, state vice Chairman of the drive, sent the following telegram Tuesday morn ing to Marshal Peterson: On the opening of tlie Fourth War Loan drive we are happy to the organizations that know throughout the counties of this state ore so well prepared to carry on with this greatest financial undertaking in history. You have a patriotic task which will be done with fervor and enthusiasm. Our country and our soldiers on every battle front are watching us. Tlie success of this drive Is our answer to them that we will again back the attack. Hardly had the first county salvo been fired when Cantril Nielsen, directing the drive for the southern division, sent word to general headquarters that Hyrum had already reached its objective and had $63,000 in the bag. Comment at GHQ was that somebody had anticipated tlie command and Jumped tlie gun . . . which pleases everjone no end. Tills is a repeat performance for the fighters on the Hyrum sector. They went way over the top in the Third drive and won the commendations of tlie general staff in the county and in the state. Tlie remarkable record of per- set up by the Hyrum regiment under the leadership of Mr. Nielsen, deserves a listing of the men and women who infilrta-te- d the lines and got their firstus with the mostus men. Here they are: First ward, Merrill Baxter, subchairman; Owen H. Hall, Dell Smith, Irvin Sorenson, Clark Nielsen, John Allred, E. N. Larsen, Mrs. H. E. Kellett, James J. Wilson, W. H. Jensen, Melvin Liljen-quis- t, Floyd Nielsen, O. J. Williams, Iva Allen, Bill Miller, Roy Warren Will McBride, Smith, Bert Charles McBride, Wright, Henry Brown, Willis McBride, Stauffer, John Jorgensen, Ruloa Wright, Eldrod Larsen, Ken Henderson, Silas Allen, Reuben Hansen, Elroy Nielsen, Elton Olsen, Norval Kitchen, Leo McBride, Archie Larsen. Second ward, with Frank Dusen-ber- y, subchairman; Henry Jensen, Raymond Nielsen, Leo C. Nielsen, Jesse Petersen, Milton Allen, Homer Petersen, Alma Sorensen, Elias Sorensen, Lowell Andersen, Leland Petersen, Albon Clawson, D. M. Reed, Victor Petersen, Hilda Olsen, W. F. Petersen, Alfred Fallows, LaVon Larsen, Joseph F. Nielen, Lehi Clawson, and Lewis Andersen. Third ward, S. A. Dunn, subchairman; G. A. Anderson, J. J. Arnold Hall, Ed Christoffersen, Nielsen, Eugene Petersen, Hervin Nielsen, DeWayne Eliason, Leonard Larson, Dewey H. Nielsen, T. Wfl Petersen, James G. Christensen, Einar Jensen, Carroll Miller, Will Lamont Rulon j Baxter, Larsen, e; Nielsen, Fred Carlson, John A. raelsen, Willard Petersen, Elroy Miller, Earle Anhder, Arthur Petersen, Grover Christensn, Verne Miller, Henry Monson, Lon Savage, K. W. Shaw, Irvin Anhder and Ellis Nielsen. romance i RATION RE3IINDER GASOLINE States outside the East Coast area coupons are good thru coupons January 21 and become good January 22 and remain good through March 21. MEATS, FATS Brown stamps R, S, T and U are good through January 29. Brown stamp V becomes good January 23 and remains good 4-- 9 4-- 10 through February 26. PROCESSED FOODS Green stamps D, E and F in Book Four are good through January 20. Green stamps G, II and J in Book Four are good thru February 20. |