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Show The -- Herald-Journ- , al Logan, Utah, Tuesday Evtmng, July V 17, 1913. Ogden Livestock ' China Air Boss About Town Ca'th1 9 Bearh0"" head i! 16.50i I -- ,r mo'if fairgrounds. President George E. Stratemeyer, above, has been appointed commanding general of U. S. Air forces in the China theater, with headquarters at Chungking. He formerly headed the Eastern Air Command in India and the U. S. Army Air Forces in India and Burma. Lt.-Ge- n. K. womans handbag, lost in the the Fourth Aggie stadium during "ces o! is still being held pageant, July Id hsj police department. bn the Logan 1500- -1 The loser may call at headquarters ruviet and make proper identification. A urged today by L. chairNelson, general committee be man, that all crafts committees present at the apprentice training at 8 meeting to be held Thursday Ip m. in Logan chamber of merce. All committees should decide on how many apprentices they can take care of in their respective crafts, and the nature of the course of study to ,be taken up first, as well as when they want to start the course. September 1 inis the date tentatively set for It was I ie lty Hjr.. Frii Melir.-- I lie ear inda as struction to begin. set Ijenqi- of Reese won Lars' Smith-fiel- d, due to shortage of help and supplies, will be closed daily until I p. m. 4 adv.) Alle P jenqu. trover. Joy First Lieut. Seth Maugh&n, forAggie star athlete, has been the army personnel attending service school at Lexington, Va. mer sellers of gasoline may no longer use their retail margin of October 1941, in compiling ceding prices, Richard A. Paradis, OPA price specialist, said today. Retailers ceiling prices must be determined by adding the authorized increase in tank wagon gasoline prices to the individual seller's highest price in March 1942. in This may result in rollback pnees at some service stations in the state of Utah, he said. Retail enjovr g P-- ' va Ju: on, Lu Ramil"; Petti from the army under adjusted service rating plan on Sunday and Monday were Corp. Vurel L. Buttars, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orson M. Buttars, Lewiston, nd Allen A. Seamons, whose wife is Mrs. Afton L. Seamons, Logan, and who is a son of Mr. and Mrs. George V. Released the Russell Rou'ndy, 29, Logan, was of forgery in Second convicted district . ' V, court in Ogden Monday sentenced by Judge Charles Cowley to serve not less than one and not more than 20 years in the state penitentiary. end 0- Donald D. Ralphs, S-USN, son W. W. Ralphs, Ireston, in trying aboard a destroyer escort i the Atlantic. He is a "plank ontttr" of the ship, having served hoard A since her commissioning. J. Webb, seaman, first ike navy, son of Mr. and rs. Joseph L. Webb, Preston, who V stationed on a fire control Ptform of his battleship during t Luzon invasion, was the first mn to spot an incoming Jap 8 ter plane which the ships don'reraft 8ns in,mellatey shot rlovv n J we have been s! tlle coun,y clerk's office James Steele- - 26' Syra-- v. v ,'7 'and S0W,S Oty of i Northwestern tlMf road officials said, No passengers or crew members were injured when 13 of the train's. 17 c?rs iumPed the railS' officials said Only the diner, unoccupied when the accident occurred at 5 a. m., cwt, turned over. The remaining cars remained upright on the roadbed. The engine and first three cars loosened rails 7affed, Vrh the 75-1- efficient lubrication Complete car wash-m- i, irrviee, tire repairing, and battery service. We will car. call for and deliver your 96 East Center. ian Robinson in reading 'The Rest tersen (adv.) Cure1' by Patricia Codings, Thursphone 602 Witt lub t rairoad w day at 11 a. ni. in the college Little Theater. Jeen was a prom-o- f inent student at North Cache high last year, am! is now nttundinu USAC sunmie rsehool back-injur- For sale: Baby chicks. New Hamlin Smith lamps. I'll. 933-J- . Adv Poultry Farm, I Mr. and Mrs. IjtVnn Owen of Ogden today greeted n new daughter their fourth girl at the Cache Valley hospital. Mr. Owen is a new places. former Logan city fireman. One of the biggest of these populaFor effieient, dependable auto tion-transfer problems involves servicing call in at Allen's Conoco the Sudetenland, in western BoService, 3rd South & Main. (Adv. I hemia, which was the material cause of the Munich 1938 agreeNew babies at the Caehe Valley ment. At Potsdam, Russia may inhospital include a son to Mr. and sist that this problem be solved. There are 3,500,000 Sudeten GerMrs. Leslie Critchlow of Hyrum, When and a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. mans in Czechoslovakia. Viggo Kaye, 508 Park Ave., Logan. Prague was opened again to the Czechoslovak government, Dr. EdCleanup of men's dress straw ouard Benes announced that all hats. $2 to $2.45 values for $1.39. nazi Germans in Czechoslovakia must leave, but that "good Ger(Adv.-- ) Jessens. mans", who did no harm during the nazi occupation could remain. Czech sources have set the proportion of good to bad Germans at about 1 to 8. That means about (Continued from Page 1 three million Germans will be up- ooted from Bohemia and the Center, enumerating many benefits to Utah and the areas in- Sudetenland and must seek new homes back in the reich. volved. Mr. Leavitt pledged that the Exchange of Prisoners Xhe Prague government is now road commission will do its best to secure federal routing for 30-exchanging 300,000 Czechs and and will "stay on the job. trying Slovaks in Hungary for 500,000 That our best to secure sis improvement Magyars in Czechoslovakia. conforms with the program for the road." armistice. But when Numbering System Roy W. McLeese, chief engineer Prague began the expulsion of for the commission, discussed the the Sudqten Germans, . with Mosproposed numbering system for cow's approval, London stepped in U. S. highways, and observed that and demanded a postponement unthe state road group can not make til the whole problem could be commitments that would be im- thrashed out in a general plan of shifting populations to be dispossible to carry out. Attending the meeting, and mak- cussed by the big three. Meanwhile, the Prague governing responses on various road Mr. ment had seized more than 270,-00- 6 subjects, were Mr. Leavitt, farms, comprising about McLeese, Mr. Hovey. Mr Bowcutt. acres, chiefly in the SuW. L. Anderson, assistant chief by Germans, engineer for the road commission; detenland, owned Layton Maxfield( commission mem- Hungarians or trators and colber; Carl Fonnesbeck, district en laborationists" generally. Prague resident already has arrested 5,000 nazi glneer; Earl Mickelson, collaboraL. engineer; Ray Robinson, Cache "fifth columnists" and for trial. It has completeReid tionists commissioners; county German language Wangsgaard, member of the Jay-ce- ly forbidden newspapers, the Sudetenland or road committee; James A. state senator; Mayor elsewhere in the country. It has Russell Waldron and City Council- closed German schools and has man Douglas Cannon of Tremon-to- banned from Czech schools all Cache Representative John children of nazi and collaborationH. Schenk, Amos B. Robinson, ists. It has closed the great GerRich county representative; N. .1. man university at Prague. Dr. Benes has announced the Hodges, chairman of Rich county Czech governments desire to be memO. commission; Guy Cardon, ber of Logan chamber of com-- .. forever rid of the German andmerce road committee; 'Guy N. HunSarian minorities. Czechosloof GerCardon, national Jaycee director, vakia was the first victim man aggression, he contends, and and Prof. H. S. Carter of USAC. the last to be liberated. The martyrdom of Lidice, the student MEDICAL OFFICERS massacre in Prague and the WASHINGTON, July 17 ,r.p. of nrmy has released 900 medical termination of hundreds Czech8 in German since Jun. 1 and plans to sands blames on German 7,000 more in the next ' son c8171!8 nine months, the war department fiflh columnists inside his coun-sai- d trY and their denunciations. today. arriv i't l it i.!,u i net h nl ot T ip- - ist afiir! vs h e ii. t .44 t ' t b! i M S.it-ii- ( They writ1 l.tur'i nt ''incut v M1- ) ami Hokkaido sliowtd that iM H" lapancso ships anti small to th bottom and 2'.', snt Rail- damapd a total of 37 here toniht- - The H H L08 Angeles, on a regular Ja'so'ij --1' ' 40 hour run from Los Angeles 32 double 975; uround Sheep to Chicago, ordinarily arrives here lumbs no offered; mostly early at 12:15 p. m., cwt. double late sale; Monday three good and choice 96 lb. Idaho range POOL AT BUSHNELL lambs $16; sorted 30 head $13; BRIGHAM, July 17 (I'.IP Deditrucked lots few yearlings cation of a new $135,000 12 medium to good shorn will highlight the pool swimming ewes No. 2 and 3 pelts third athletic field meet for patients at Bushnell General hospital July 26 and 27. The first Tough Task general hospital In the United States to organize a field meet (Continued From Page 1) for patients, Bushnell has added several new events to this months stated on May 15 his policy:. "Ab- meet. Among these will be a solute insurance against German wheel-chai- r volleyball contest for ever or Japanese rearmament y patients. us." comes first with again The map of Europe may.be reOne birth in every 93 brings drawn at Potsdam and this will twins in the United States, inevitably involve tremendous and complex shifting of great masses of population. Germany showed the way by moving muny millions of civilians during the war with; out ever interfering with military transports. Now those millions must be shifted back to their homes and millions more Germans will be uprooted and moved to 1H o- Stewart invites everyone to par- o; I 5 1,4 county tha:l ser good-- i ; good-choic- ticipate. i 15.30- - 4 riding enthusiasts Horseback ere reminded today of the short the excursion, to be sponsored by7 at p. Canter Club Wednesday assemble at the m with riders to A. 25; good and choice 50; late Monday odd d tice. Irt 50-- 7 d chib will hold Hie Imperial tilee Wednesday at , sDecial rehearsal club rooms, prepara-ir- v g o m m the to their concert for the Dr. All mem0 Show that evening. the prac- to attend ber are urged l 5 7 n 30-1- continues. Jesuit if violation (iittor-inmmo- hon e fed steers 25; odd head good 14.25-1load good choice heifers bulk good 1115 lb cows 12.50; good 10 good beef bulls 11.50-1- 2 odd 20; medium-goochoice veulers 16; medium-goofeeder steers 12 stock 30 calves a Hogs 300; steady; spot check this Berrett, OPA. enattorney revealed to-forcement License suspension suits will E Ti mu ft' 'ill ,i o n Vi, l"25, canners state-wid- e V Derailed vsfem feeding the entire Imhisttial Id of the JupuncM' oast line began at II M ni i when Am! fleet w.wMnps 'helled H.miasln, 27n miles noUh-i si of Tokvo. This deMriietive assault was followed up with a bombardment Sunday morning ot n ii and industrial objectives at Minor an m southern Hokkaido island In 194i b Hitachi had a population ot SJ.S85. Due to its stiategu industrial situation, it was believed now to be a war boom town, with a onsulerably larger population in three destructive raids per cent previously destroyed 97 of one of three major plants of the Hitachi engineering works More than 1.500 American and British warplanes, launched from a mighty combined fleet, swarmed over Tokyo at dawn Tuesday The attack, which was the Fourth seaborne assault on Japanese homeland in seven days began at dawn and hours later the navy pilots were still at their vs ork. Fleet Admiral Chester V, Nim-i- t declared that this vast armada's presence unchallenged in the area brought the Pacific war to the stage." Nimitz said the attack was tinuing in great strength Admiral William F Halseys fleet sailed south to meet and the British Pacific fleet brought it under Halsey's rom- for the joint strike on maud Tokyo. The 35,iKKMon King George V and the 23,000-tocarrier Formidable were among the large British uar vessels pai ticipating in the .1 'Continued tioiu lagi In Iowa The CHICAGO. July 17 UT good merely gra$ crack Union Pacific streamliner, heiftrs 13 V', common in the eastbound City of Los Angeles, few good beef cows 12; supply was dei ailed early today near Dunmostly lowei grades; medium 9 50- lap, la., after a cloudburst loosened on those servite who purportedly nation operators indifferent to the octane ratas sold premiumof gasoline the Office of price adminttranon has served 19 license faming notices on Utah operators hfwere found in violation dui- t v steady; few grass ftd steers about Jtn. vommori-miMiiu- Warships Shell Crack Streamliner i ad Industrial (Voter Rmibardment of Hitahi opened 11 at p m (Japan time Moving a speed, the surface naval moved almost to the ates ot :ne Japanese capital before d 'levtleil tin big guns of its battleships. cruisers ami destroers against the selected targets H:t.u hi and adjoining Sukegawa arc the tenter of the largest and nm.'t important complex of industrial targets north of Tokyo Industries there are jammed info a (ompact coastal area along the Fukushmia-MiU- ) highway in Toch-ig- i prefecture. The cities tae on the ea of Nashima Nadu, along a slightly curved coastline. At that were pun i Halsey's battleship-- , scaicely 3u or 40 miles from Tokyo bay. separated only by the Hoso' for- e i over 2.500 bombs airos Nam- ul .u. lluatsuka, and Kuwana on Honshu, and Oita on the lioith-eas- t tip ot kvushu, Kile" Wee repotted raging in , the bombed all of which v'eic x4 nil'! trv amiaft or arms inU;s that have het nine prime t.iigctttdlownig the distinction ot Japan major war pioductnm ccntei s The super-loittarried the offensive into its 42nd straighi dav and tin-- tnaikcd the first laid undei the S army Strategic an font's of the Pacific headed bv (Jen Carl Spaatz, who directed the aerial deM ruction of Germany. It was revealed th.it in two strikes on Saturday and Sunday against the northern Japanese islands at least 374 Japanese ships ol small craft were sunk or Marianas, tnn. s , 4 Russo-Hungari- ALL r 311 Mr. Blaine and r, T'- - ex-T- thou-office- rs All Standard Sizes Hugie. , ,h Pehr-lo- 3x5 f ar Person met qv',arl He C tL fatered the service 1942 and ia he Paul y, division, e,r!d service October 1942 and i, 'f Seventh army in-fantry Th .I ey have another brother, hln!ent at the hospital at Camp hy wilh a knee They a. injury, S"S of Mr' a"d Mrs. taron ehrson of Millville. aat'-aircra- ft PICTURE 5x7 - 8x time n 33 months in stationed in Ger-b- y .I?arle ,he tr'P to Austria iLst Xovfmkl 10 Liqht and Dark Colors! Plastics! FRAMES Hard Or Soft Wood 1 ,Iarry Hudson ""ounwn 41 the Cache l8 1,1 hlrth T a baby boy Valley hospital July WeRle 36-M- tli ,ll(1 to 'ill ci r Our studio will be closed from July 22 to August 5, (Inclusive), 444 So. (Adv.) " J..- Mr Tillies. . daughter of Mr. 07 Lewis- Presented by Dr. Mar- - HERALD-JOURNA- L IS VACANT APPLY IN PERSON AVAR FOOD ADMINISTRATION ACHIEVEMENT X AWARD Your man on the distant battle front needs food no less than he needs fighting equipment. Good, nourishing American food and lots of it! No effort has been spared to supply him with all he needs of the right kind of food and to those who have doe and are doing an outstanding job, the War Food Administration awards an "A . . . the mark of extraordinary achievement in war food production an emblem pin for each employee a flag for the plant. This high honor has come to Sego Milk to all of the Sego Milk Products Company evaporated milk plants. We believe you will be interested in knowing why. 2. II a 15 day air Station with their Set. Paul J. At n; Mr and Mrs' w- - c- Hugie nor, w aai.. Mrs. Howard Will- is the former Ethpi v8' M'"more J?n,hr2l',r' JANITOR JOB n, m mid Uatoehampar SEG0 MILK PLANTS HAVE BEEN AWARDED THE R Rre spending m tlle Nav 111 Logan Jaycees and Winona Maughan, '(oman aged for a total of 159.000 ton. U. K. fighter from Iwo Jinui, 150 strong, strafed six airfields eastern Honshu yesterday afternoon, according to Tokyo. Gen. MacArthur announced Douglas that other warplanes under his command had sunk or damaged 42 Japanese ships and small craft in a series of sweeps along the Asiatic coast. a Chine-- e From Chungking, communique announced that Chinese troops have stormed the suburbs of Kweilin, former site of the great American airbase, and columns have that advancing pushed 20 miles to the north rutting off the enemy's retreat toward Hunan province. In Borneo, Japanese troops were fighting stubbornly attempting to hold the road to Samarinda as the Aussie seventh division advanced slowly east of cuptured Mount n enson; Franklin Lowe Clark. an and Dean Porter, Fr nevvly-niganie- d 9 This was the first night sea bombardment of Japanese i land targets. Factories in the Hitachi area manufacture aircraft parts, electrical equipment, precision instruments. wire, cable, diesel engines, radios and gears. Other potential targets for the fleet's roaring guns were the Hitachi engineering works, the Japan action. Mining company in narrow valley Superforfs Active behind the city, the Ynmnle wire Tile strike came a few hours j cable plant, and a based on the complex railioad after 5(H) super-forthomc-!ihm- splattered tue of Max Brunson Studio For quality production. Every can of Sego Milk shipped from our plants has measured up to the high standard of quality required by the U. S. Army Quartermaster Corps and the War Food Administration. In addition, during these war years, more Sego Milk has been pro-duc- ed and distributed to civilians here at home than ever before. is a record in output and in maintenance of quality, and the credit for it belongs It gratifying to the men and women in our plants and the dairy farmers who supply us. They have all worked efficiently and tirelessly with one purpose in mind to provide every possible can of Sego Milk needed in our Countrys war effort. We take this opportunity publicly to thank these steadfast people whose efforts have won the "A award for all Sego Milk plants as a symbol of outstanding production of food for victory! SEGO MILK PRODUCTS COMPANY Originator of Evaporated Milk in the Intermountain West The public is invited to attend the Award Ceremonies Thursday, July 19, 8:30 p.tn. Tabernacle, Richmond, Utah |