OCR Text |
Show l EIGHt A& UtLf UK landed lds ward will "US' Wilson To Utah rSSSSSinnn MaMe Baseba" Team Mandell "Ug" Wilson, who last of bringing in a couple of "pitch- summer held down the second rs". r.ot throwers, whom he If the present plans of the Help base spot for the Utah Distributors knows can really win tell games. er ward of the Church of Jesus Helper's entry in the Utah In- - He played with them while in the service. Tie especially was hopeChrist of Latter Day Saints are league ful that Zaccaria will sign as an completed, the ground surrounding distrial recently was seoutfielder along with Herb Bab-cocthe chapel will be improved Mack Peyton is almost cerlandscaped next spring and sun-filer- . lected to manage" tain to be back along with Orson According to a report issued the eani in the Bailey and Mike Woods. by Bishop Lynn Broadhent last litis season sucFrank ceeding A former Gemrnell Club star, Sunday, the general church offb-e:- ; Wilson played with Provo in 1946, have surveyed the grounds and Zaccaria who pil to but was signed by Zaccaria have submitted a suggested plan oted the club wear a Helper uniform in '47. He of landscapping and improvement. during the last 1916 and was given full authority to line up Thp Hplnpr wnrrl mvns (rronnd half of the ball team, which he said would 300 feet square and the improve" Tne new men- probably consist of about 14 ball calls for grading and leveling the tor a attended which players including himself as manis and rather rocky property ox lne ager. He said he did not plan on I hilly. East of the chapel will be raeeun and dir being an active player. planted into shrubs and possibly officers " wnson to in seiecun-"i me ciuo ivianaeii Wilson-"ugjrcaes, with the north lot being 1948 was the officers Monday the and manage The team, night full alfalfa. into given parking planted facilities will be expanded as a authority to begin building a team and directors were loud in their part of the project, and paving for 1948- - He was given a salary praise for the fine work done by flaced along the street sides of budget figure to speculate on, and Zaccaria and appreciative of the assured the meeting that he'll splendid manner he cooperated the grounds. a baI1 team that can and will with the entire organization. The At the regular Sacrament meet- - fieId wi"Although Wilson has not 'fact that Wilson was selected as A. Kirk J. last Sunday evening lug anv players on the dotted manager was definitely no reflect sine1 Jjam. chief clerk for the Utah RailBe nas n,s eyes on a ew new ,on on the wrk of Zaccaria. but "ne He was talk the speaker. 'way Co., d on the missionary work of the Prospects, and Is hopeful the main the directors were of the opinion ot 1947 will again wear the that he could be more valuable as Apostle Paul and other ancient HelPer uniform. la player than as a prophets. Waldo Gale, member of the bishopric, was in charge of the Realizing wasthat the pitching de - Mr. Wilson will keep in touch with the weak spot of the local officers and report his partment meeting. Next Sunday will be fast Sun- - last year Wilson said he had hopes progress in lining up players. regular testimonial '4y, with the scheduled to follow Odd Fellows Elect being meeting KENILWORTH MINE Immediately after Sunday school. Westbrook As iiK 4-H'- U Wins National Honors er 14 1 - i player-manage- ' New Noble Grand Orders taken for 8ale Books, (printed to ault) at the Helper Journal. WHEN COMMENDED L. Westbrook was elected last Tuesday. Recemher, 23 to pre- GIVEN INSPECTION side over the Helper I.O.O.F. Lodge No. 56 as Noble Grand at the election meeting. He replaces Nearly a score of recent safety in the 3,610 C. G. Gaswell as the Noble Grand improvements Kenilworth mine at in the footsteps of his Following Carbon county, Utah are father, the retiring head of the Odd Fellows, is P. C. Caswell who commended and further was elected Grand sue ing and added haulage and elec trical safeguards are proposed in Mr. Westbrook. ceeding IX Clyde Miller was agai.i the a Federal coal mine inspection rechoice for secretary be! ' redect port released today by the Bureau ed without opposition. Alter six of Mines. Operated by the Indeteen years the lodge will have a pendent Coal & Coke Company, new treasurer. Marvin Lambson the mine employed 412 men at who has held this post during that the reinspection in July and AugAJKPP-annomination ust period declined the John Iticardi becomes the new Although haulageways and face treasurer. C. S. Harris was the: regions were generally for trusee. dusted, Inspector Kopp advocated at several Other business of the meeting better the appointment of a com- - cations to minimize any dust- to serve on the Days of plosion dangers. To increase the '49 as the lodge's representative. haulage safety and to eliminate Those named were Mr. Westbrook, electrical hazards, Inspector Kopp Mr. Lambson and Mr. Miller. recommended the removal of fine The new officers will be install- coal from all haulage roads, sheled on January 13, 1948 at the K.P. ter holes along Lodge hall. haulage and slope entries, safer practices, frame grounds for certain electrical eqipment, City Budget Okhed and suitable overload protection (Continued from Page One) for trailing cables on all loading budgeted for contingent purposes machines and cable-relocomoin 1948 the fund is $11,624.08, and tives. set at $10,286.96. recent improveSummarizing Departments that are set the same as in 1947 are as follows: ments, Inspector Kopp commended Public affairs and finance. $11,000; better ventilation in one section, Water, $23,000; Public buildings, improved timbering at one loca$8,500; Statutory and general, tion, removal of some loose top $1,500; Civic auditorium bond sink rock, a separate split of air for ing fund, $4,000. and Electric meter ventilating the underground stable refunds, $2,000. According to the well - constructed containers for budget they set September 15, carrying explosives & detonators 1948 payment on the auditorium underground, wearing of protect'iond sinking fund will complete ive footwear by all employees, h"t project, that being the final warning devices for several main' nient of the bonds that have line haulage locomotives, and sevc 'ited since the building was eral safeguards. br"f and accepted in 1937. To Improve operating conditions ." "essed valuation of Helper further, inspector Kopp recom ' shown a decided increase mended tne mamtenace cit of exove- 'H7. The budget ordinance plosives and detonators in their new valuation at lists ' containers until ready for use, i compared w'th anaea mecnanicai safeguards, a new valuatioi based fireproof structure for a new M on a 1" levy will give Helper and the station, W. an-ti- STRAND ton-a-da- y Kenil-wort- WHERE THE BIG PICTURES ' h, rock-dust- - PLAY Vice-Nobl- e . WED. AND THURS. Matinee Thursday. New Yer-- 'i Day - - TWO CiG HITS - rock-dustin- g a. lo-w- as newly-develop- WW r v. man-tri- el PIRCY KILBRIDE JEROME COWAN GEORGE OIVOT Co-H- it "BEAT THE BAND" with LANGFORD FRANCIS T PHILLIP TERRY Gene Krupa and His Band FRIDAY - SATURDAY JANUARY 1. tent would demand premium prices mission Rulon S. Howells of the P. I. D., calling attention to sevfrom consumers. eral misleading highway signs on Highway U. S. 91 between Las West To Lure Tourists and Glendale Junction, Vegas A recent survey conducted by five leading national magazines Nevada. The signs urge travelers U. S. 93 at Glendale Juncand other agencies, reveals that to take route to Salt the famed attractius of the West tion as the fastest t Lake tnd Yei'jw.ton' City five will lure one out of every of the matter is highway U.S. the coming vationers 'American With heavy snows in the moun. season. The survey indicated that 93 through Nevada to Salt Lake tains and light snows in the val- the vacation trend toward the City. The St. George chamber of comleys ample water is assured, for West is increasing. merce points out that the tourist Utah for next season's crops. Deep business in their city has dropped snow in Utah mountains is like Choice Celery Sent Away money in the bank. Heavy snow- .. More than 12,000 packages of off 18 per cent as compared with the same period last year due to fall is equally important to other extra fine celery has been sent by states which depend on irrigation. lltahnc n inHiuiHlials thrOUdhOUt the diversion of traffic over U.S. 93. .because of the unethical road Snow falls, as a rule, during t .g by Sa,t in Nevada. some months of the year in 47 Lake firms who make a special- signs exthe Florida with being states, ty of shipping celery. Provo Has Boat Problem ception. Colorado gets the deepa with blanket white est yearly Kaiser to Operate in Utah Something must be done, it has decided by the Provo City heen average of 76.4, Wyoming comes Henry J. Kaiser officials report next with 65.7 inches, Montana that Commission to provide safer bast$1,150,000 are paying they with 53.0 and Utah with 51.0 in. for the "Ironton and Sunnyside ing on Utah Lake. The matter, has its complications, ;oke ovens blast furnace". They however, Primitive Trails Lure Scouts them tQ be jn operation 0y because the state owns the lake expept and the shores are mostly owned On the last three days of Ie - next April xhe plants are ln cen. cemher. the explorer scouts of the tra, and southeastern Utah, and by private citizens. There should be inspection, it was pointed out, Salt Lake Council will don their will tU.n out pig iron warmest clothing, snow shoes and of all boats using the lake to inold knap sacks and hike over the Professor Defends Utah Tax Rates sure that they are adequately Mormon Trail between Salt Lake ...."Utah is not a high tax state," quipped with life preservers. In and Henefer. They will spend two claims Dr. Dilworth Walker, dean the meantime the commission to in view of nights in the open. of the university of Utah school pondering the situation Next April, the Senior scouts of of business. He maintains that the fact that each year boating the Salt Lake Council will em- state, gas, income and sales taxes is becoming increasingly popular bark on a tour of the Colorado in Utah are low or lower than on Utah Lake. The problem is not only Provo's River, 'beginning April 5. In Au- those of other Western States. but is being met in other Utah gust, the Senior scouts will enjoy a "high adventure trek', into the Utah Business locations, it is pointed out. Each Expands overloaded boats wildest area of the High Uintahs. The Federal Reserve Bank of summer finds The last named trip will take the San Francisco says Utah's loan operating without life preservers scouts into a mountain and forest volume in .1947 is 29 million dol- on Bear Lake, Pineview Lake, Panguitch region rarely penetrated by man. lars above 1946. indicating a heal- Strawberry Reservoir, Lake and many other Utah resera business and of thy growth Are We Starving? and lakes. It is reported that continuing return to peacetime voirs more A Utahn, D. Clegg, who has de than one thousand boats are economy. owned by as many Utahns' who voted several years to research on move them to various lakes on foods and especially celery, points Maw Sees Huge trailers each summer for fishing out that it is quite possible that Expansion Program we are starving. While we get Governor Herbert B. Maw pre- and pleasure boating. plenty ot rood, ciegg points out dicts tnat "Utah will become the Secretary of Agriculture, Anderwe are probably eating fruits, veg- - oil center of the United States, is quoted as having said that son, atables and grains which no long- even i we don-- get a drop of oii is "the working man's drink' beer er contain enough certain vital fi.om wells in Utah, of "nutritional value." Mr. and minerals so important to health. "Geneva Steel," he says, "will Anderson doesn't know about mean "Healthy plants healthy ))e the Beart of a vast manufactur beer. Its just nutritional valpeople," says Clegg, "you can't lng empire. is purely a fiction the process ue a race on a mineral raise strong ..The war.. he out, of making ibeer involves the despointed depleted soil." In support of his .wol,d still be going on if it had beer claims Clegg had had soil samples not been for the great COntribu- - truction of food values. Any food value has which appreciable from various fields analyzed and tion o tne utah Copper Company is very poor beer and is quite can readily show the soils in many Mjne (now Kennecot Copper) to sure to be "muddy.'. instances are oeiow stanaara in the war effort.' calcium, iron and 14 other import-- . During the last three years of ant minerals. He maintains that if . D. Protests Nevada World War II, Russia manufacturfarmers would put back in the soil Highway Signs' ed 40,000 planes a year. Today, in the 16 minerals being depleted, 14 aircraft A letter of protest has been sent the United States, vegetables would be insect re- - to the Nevada Highway Commis-caus- companies are trying to subsist of their high mineral con sion and chambers of commerce of on a total of 1330 combat airplanes American vacations the coming geveral Nevada cities ,by Com. per year. UTAH 4 Elaine De St. & Jeor St. Jeor, of Provo, Elaine state winner, went on to win naHomo tional honors in the 1947 Improvement awards program. As a reward, Elaine received a $200.C) college scholarship provided by tto Foundation. Home Improvement proThe the gram, which is conducted underSen-icsupervision of the Extension will be continued in 1948. De Sears-Roebuc- e, XMAS FIRE COSTS KENILWORTH MINER HIS LIFE Shortly after a Christmas eve celebration with friends, George Ragicb, 44, Carbon county coal miner, was found dead in his burn ing trailer home here. Leon L. Lines, Carbon county deputy sherrif who investigated, said Mr. Ragich "apparently died from suffocation." The blaze was discovered at 2:30 a.m. Thursday when John Turner, a neighbor of the victim, left a dance in the Kenilworth amusement hall and noticed ithe burning trailer. Accompanied 'by Bill Hoole, Buck Topp and Joe Valpudo. Mr. Turner entered the flaming structure and found Mr Ragich "lying face down on 'the floor.'' adArtificial respiration was ministered. After 30 minutes attempts at revival were abandoned, officers said. According to Deputy Lines, the fire was started by an overturned electric stove, which had burned a large hole in the floor. The rest of the trailer house was burned to a "smokey black" color and showed evidence of "tremendous heat." Mr. Turner told investigators he had seen Mr. Ragich last about 8 p. m. W'ednesday. Skiers Organize In Carbon County. The newly incorporated Winter Sports Association of the Carbon County area has named Bill Jacobs as its president. According to Jacobs, his organization will promote ski areas and winter sports among Carbon County residents. The organization is the only one of its type in the state organized on a it basis. A ski shelter Is being complete! in the nioi.iiiins where hot lunches and a warm fire will be available to skiers. non-prof- New Items to Journal Phone that the next of kin or an authorized representative may arcept custody of the remains at the dis tribution center or the original destination. Then all arrangements and expenses involved in further delivery becomes the obligation of the next of kin, he said. Although the army may assist in making arrangements, army ed funds will not be used to reimburse next of kin, he declared. $1,982,-635.0$1,827,-466.0- 1948 Spotlighting a-- rd --'- THURSDAY, HELPER. UTAH KNAL L) Pit-fac- j ' e- - - t , e Meet Your Friends At... KDVA Tn E Diamanti Bldg. ag&fflfe - Entrance Through Gate COMPLETELY NEW AND DIFFERENT Carbon County's Finest Night battery- -charging $25,774.2' per cent SBSA1 HAYVMRD CSBEBT YOOIG JAlt GREER . 1948 , UtyWon'fBtlftM, JOHNSON . tom RITA owh) 1 SUN,, MON., TUES. MM II j rirvri$ i eA Jam X I FWAWT in Robert Riskia's "MAGIC TOWN m win nun R( t von wnim fow KUTSOMTf News Cartoon Short 100 Jr ORS DRAWN (Continue!1 from Page One) Ernest Flaim, From Helpc Nolan G. Davi:-- : Frank Pugliese, John Laboroi, Howard Dunn, Tony Rudman and Be : Milano . Willard From Castle C ti Craig and Leltoy Clin OdFrom Miller Creek dest er. From Clear Creak Jay M. Newton. From Carbonville Homer Healey, H. J. Beck el and Cleon Pilling. From Spring Glen H. E. Huntsmen. From Spring Canyon John Kink. From Wellington Darrell ton. From Robert Curdy. From John H. Brad- shaw. From Latuda James A. Mealy. From Rains Alfred Kilgore. From Hiawatha John Colos-imo- . CQJIJB wearing of protective goggles for all work. Co!. McGary Gives More Data About World War II Dead New procedures on changes in instructions by next of kin for delivery of World War II deceased to the final destination has been announced by Col. Graves B. McUtah Gary, commanding officer, General Distribution' Depot. The government desires to com ply with the wishes of next of kin and still stay within the rulings of the Judge Advocate General of the Army, Col. McGary N said. He explained the Judge Advocate General has decreed that when the remains has not been shipped from the port of entry and a net of kin requests delivery to a destination served by a distribution center other than the one originally scheduled to receive the remains, the request will be granted. But if the remains has left the port or has arrived at the distribution center, a change in From Dragerton Lyman F. delivery at government expense Leavitt expense All of the names drawn by the !Kranted at Komnient Jury commissioners, the full list u tne nnai destination Is in an appears above this story, are other distribution area, the colplaced in a box and the above onel declared. If the new destination requested named county officers drew these 35 names. When a jury Is re- by the next of kin is within the quired these 35 names are placed same distribution area, the cnange in a box and the number ordered will be granted even though the by the judge are drawn. Each remains has left the port or has term a new list of names is arrived at the distribution center, he said. drawn. Colonel McGary further explain - O 2 tax money, if a is made. Opens Daily AND at 5 P. BAR ilfl. Closed On MONDAY r'l.-vk- . Continuoua Showing Sunday From 2:00 w c FOB INK AND -- TYPE WRITIR ever tuadef PROPEL REPEL FAST AND EFFICIENT USERS SAY: "leaves paper clean" "No smudge on carbon coo!" "FrnAt jinalfl letter withnut trnt. "Finest eraser ing shield" I ever used" "Erases anything from ony surface, even from mefol." WE SAY: Buy a R today. If you oren't delighted with it, we will re fund the purchase price. ERASERS READY EACH TO USE itrmt rwkogt of h 25c Orchestra Music Saturday Nites & Holiday Nites No Cover Charge Except on Orchestra Nights Lighted, Police Protected Parking Space in Rear With Convenient Entrance to Club PLAN NOW to Enjoy the GALA NEW YEAR'S EVE and NEW YEAR'S NIGHT at The Beautiful, NEW KIVA NIGHT CLUB THE HELPER JOURNAL Phone 21 TELEPHONE NUMBER 348 V I |