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Show Communities In Cache County Post Municipal Tax Levies For Year Residents of Cache Valley paying the highest taxes this year vnll be those living in Smithfield, increase to pay where a off the community's share of the new armory addition" brings the total property tax to 68.94 mills, according to official tax notices now being prepared. folLogan, with a 67.13 mill tax, out. The bodv was recovered by Bernard Christensen and Tom Jackson, both of Hiawatha. Road Show Scripi Utah Women's Leadership, School Slated same; 12.00, - 14-1- side laboratories and sick rooms has placed them in an embarrassing position. Doctors arc discovering that unknowingly they are largely responsible for creating him in the first place. some of the stronger germs build up resitsance to the drugs in- stead Adminislratioh Veterans physician explains that when doctors iniect antibiotics, like penicillin, into their patients, A of dying. THESE MICROBES then pass immunity to their offspring. Thus, through the years an army of germs resirtant to one or more of the antibiotics has been formed. Since, hospitals use these drugs to a great extent, they have heroine natural breeding grounds for the super getms. on the The VA doctor points to alarming evidence of super germ infiltration in a Washington State hospital to show the threat which could face other medical cen- y ters. Washington physicians report that within three and a half months, 100 out of 189 patients Infections developed bacterial after being admitted to the hospital. The infections contributed to the deaths of 21 of these patients. Within two months after returning home. 32 others became Infected. Later one died. Utah Crop Report Posted e Club Observes A good newspaper strives to separate objective reporting and editorial opinion, clearly and unmistakably. A newspaper may interpret the meaning of the news in signed columns and in editorials. It may even crusade with conviction for what it considers a good cause. But it will always present the news, this history of everything in the news, yet seldom has time or space to tell its own story to the public." The speaker concluded by reviewing some of his observations, reached after editor aging Journal. 20 years as manThe Herald it annual observance of National Newspaper Week Prof. Edwin O. Haroldsen, chairman of agricultural information services at Utah State University, and in At charge of the program, while Roy J. Larsen, first vice presiFirm dent, directed meeting procedure. Vocal solos were given by IDAHO FALLS, Idaho Mrs. Blaine (SpecTucker, soprano, accompanied by Mrs, Coburn ial to the Herald-JournaPaul H. Williams. Maeser, who taught Biology and Inducted as a new member of Botany for two years at South Logan Kiwanis Club was Dr. Dean F. Peterson Jr., dean of Cache High School, has joined the the College of Engineering and Atomic Energy Division of Piul-lip- s Technology, USU. Presenting the Petroleum Company as a initiate W'as A. Alvin Bishop, health physicist. Mr. Maeser chairmen of the clubs education earned a Bachelor of Science decommittee. the gree at Utah Stale University in Mr. Nelson, stating that theme of National Newspaper 1952. Week this year is Your NewsMr. and Mrs. Maeser and two noted that children live at 1450 Kearney paper Services," most of us take our newspapers Street in Idaho Falls. But pretty much for granted. Phillips Petroleum Company when a newspaper ceases to exist operates the Idaho Chemical g in a town or city, the need for Plant, the Engineering information about that communi- Test Reactor, the Materials Testty, as well as about more distant ing Reactor and the Special Power Excursion Reactor Test places, is immediately felt. "It is said that the eye sees (SPERT) facilities for the Atomic everything but itself. This is Energy Commission at the Nasomething on the order of the tional Reactor Testing Station average newspaper, which covers west of Idaho Falls. Former Teacher South Cache Joins Oil l) Pro-cesin- AT SOUTH CACHE - Evelyn H. Lewis Wins Scholarship Mrs. Evelyn Hodges Lewis, assistant professor of social work and member of the department of sociology staff at Utah State University, has been awarded a $2,800 scholarship from the National Mental Health Institute to continue study toward the doctors degree during the current year. Prof. Lewis has a masters degree in social work from the University of Chicago, according to Dr. M. R. Merrill, dean of the college of business and social sciences at USU. Mrs. Lewis will spend the year at the University of Chicago continuing work on her doctors degree. She has been granted leave of absence to accept the grant. Seminary Elects Officers Accepted By General Board Only senior siudent on the staff is Varda Hemnper, church hisShe is a tory representative. member of River Heights Second ward, and a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rulon llemneer. New Testament representative is Shirley Bingham, a junior from Mendon Ward, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Angus Bingham. The freshman is Burke H Thcurer, Old Testament representative. Burke is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Theurer, Provi- dence First ward. Awards 4-- H believe "bugs doctors hospital, a patient gets an injection are building up resistance to antibiotics. - " IN LOGAN CANYON ... " . Are Presented 4-- 4-- coveted Diamond Clover Pin and certificate for having completed 20 years of leadership was presented Walter Rindlisba-ke- r, Riverdale. Mrs. Owen Gibson, Preston, received the Gold Clover and certificate for ten years of club leadership. Five-yea- r Silver Clover Pins and certificates were awarded to Norman Smith, Cleveland, Mrs. Weldon Nash, Mrs. Donna Sevy, Preston, and Mrs. Erma Jones, Dayton. The awards were presented these leaders by Daniel Roberts, county agent, who represented the federal and stale extension services. In making the awards he pointed to the unselfishness of every voluntary leader to help make better citizens of boys and girls by teaching them useful things. General chairman of the Recognition party was Mrs. Lorin Bodily, Whitney, with Mrs. Lee Berg-quiin charge of the program. An dinner was served to the county leaders of who were in attendance. st out-do- o Is Club at Utah Anyone wishing to assist the State University, and Cache Val- Cache Valley Friends of Interley Friends of International Stu- national Students in their Satdents, have jointly organized a picnic Loforeign urday to honoring in Guinavah Park picnic gan Canyon for Saturday this students new in Logan and at weekend. USU, is asked to contact one of The - schedule, announced by the following: Mrs. Ellvert H. Pat Pendse, Includes: The Cosmopolitan 4 p.m. Leave eastern corner of union building in cars. Everyone will be provided with transportation. Townspeople having cars available are urged to share rides with students, assembling at the east of union. 4.30 to 5:30 p.m. Recreational games, such as volley ball and soccer matches. 5:30 to 6:15 Welcome speech with by Mrs. D. A. Burgoyne, talks by Evan Stevenson and Dr. 7:15 to 7:25 Address by Dr. George A. Meyer. 7:30 Departure for campus. A statement for Friends of International Students to Cache citizens inviting cooperation in the project, is as follows: Doctors report the germs can lurk in dust or on blankets and mattresses. It is also believed some of the Washington State hospital patients may have been infected through intravenous injections. The VA physician says that even doctors and nurses arc possible super germs carriers. They are exposed to germs so much that they have buill up a resistance, he explains. THE WASHINGTON incident doesnt offer a complete picture of the problem since it covers only a short period and information concerning other hospitals Foreign Students partment. PRESTON Awards for having completed long service records in work of dubs w'ere presented six Franklin county club leaders at an annual Leadership Recognition party. The Picnic To Honor Allen Stokes. 6:15 to 6:45 Serving of supper. 6:45 to 7:15 Demonstration of dancing by physical education de- Effect Of Flu Happy Birthday field-hous- e. Former Preston Man Gains School Position PRESTON Lyman Bingham, former Preston man and son of Patriarch and Mrs, H. R. Bingham, has received appointment as principal of Central School at Casa Grande, Ariz., and will assume his duties as principal when the new Evergreen Elementary within the School is opened month. Mr. Bingham has been teacher of the eighth grade at- North School of District Four and teaching in the elementary school in Casa Grande since 1949. He is a graduate of Preston high school and University of Utah. He recei-v- d his masters degree at Arizona College, Tempe, Ariz. During World War II he served with the U. S. Navy in submarine duty. In addition to his teaching duties he has taken an active part in civic and church affiliations. He accompanied a group of 20 scouts to the national jamboree at Valley Forge. He is also engaged in conducting classes in Genealogical work in the Casa Grande ward. Last year he was named outstanding young man of the year by the Casa Grande Chamber of Com- that birdt get ..then get yourself some fine bourbonu u ,hsll ANO 'yon ttnow great Bingham is the former Thora Murdock of Heber City. The couple are parents of three sons. traiglit Eentnclry bomboa! Prices Received By iot Mebmume and tell tbs world Mrs. Farmers 6 Hold Fairly Firm years old The Department of Agriculture said todav prices received by Utah Farmers and ranchers in were the same or higher than a month ago for all commodities except corn, barley, potatoes, hogs, lambs, wool, chickens and aifalia hay. d scarce. The VA has set up a special long range program to thoroughly investigate the super germ situation. Six VA hospitals are working together on the project. They will try to determine to what extent antibiotics are losing their power and which germs are developing resistance. Work 2640-NMrs. Paul Felt, also will be done to insure paHimes, 2306-Mrs. Leslie R. Haw- tients against becoming Infected. And studies will be made to find thorn, 1333. a way to decrease the germs reThe picnic will be held Satursistance. day, Oct. 5 at 4 p.m. in Lower Guinavah Picnic area in Logan Canyon. Logan people who are interested are expected to bring either a food contribution or 50 cents. Those wrho have room in their cars are asked to stop at OCTOBER 3 the Union building to pick up Mrs. Scott Jackson, Logan OCTOBER 4 any who do not have rides. In case of rain, the party will be John J. Lamb, Hyde Park transferred to the Albert McCann, Smithfield These parties have been successMary Jean Hammond, Logan ful in the past, and public coKeith Newman, Logan Eva Godfrey, Richmond operation is appreciated. merce. Backlash several Secretary AT A VETERANS two-wee- Newspaper Week today, without regard to person al philosophy, politics or religious conviction. So declared Ray Nelson, managing editor of The Herald Journof al, as he addressed member Logan Kiwanis Club yesterday afternoon In The Bluebird. The occasion was the clubs TESTS REVEALED that germs involved in these cases had some degree of resistance to one or more antibiotics. The cases included pneumonia, breast abscesses, infections of the skin, surgical wounds add burns. Battery C Resumes Drills LOGAN KIWANIS South Cache high schools LDS Seminary is beginning the school year with a new type of student ' A road show script written by officer administration, and an additional been Wells has faculty member. accepted Deann Monte Nyman, North Logan, is bv the MIA General Board of the LDS Church and will be pub- the new member of the faculty. lished in a book of 20 scripts He will work with LeRoy Jorgenwhich will be issued to assist sen, semi nary principal, and wards and stakes in the presenta- Walter Litchfield, Mr. Jorgensen tion of road shows. has reported. Mrs. Wells script was preWhere in previous years the Sixth sented by the Preston student administration has includward in i956 and is called "The ed a bishopric and MIA system Proof of the Pudding is in the modeled alter the church proFating. LaRue Burrup was the gram, it is now organized with a director. president, vice president, secreand a tary and reporter-historiarcpiesentative for church history, one for New Testament and one PROVO (If Brigham Young for Old Testament. Five juniors, University announced today stu- a senior and a freshman have dent assemblies have been post- been elected to fill these posiponed indefinitely because of the tions. President is Terry Nirderhaus-er- , spread of iniluenza in the student son oi Mr. and Mrs. llyrum bodv. Wesley P. Lloyd, dean of stu- Niederhauser, South Logan. He is dents, said student activities for a junim, and is act ve in the Hello Week aLo were curtailed Logan Fourteenth ward. John Payne, a junior from Rivand tentatively rescheduled for next week. er Heights, is vice piesident. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Payne, and is active in the River Heights Second ward, and holder individual church Herbert of COLUMBUS, Ohio II Fisher admitted to police that awards. is Faye Miller, he made a false driver's license application using the name daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Miller, llyrum. Faye, from and address of Herbert II. Fischer, which he found listed in tlie llyruin Tnud waid, has larnea phone book. Fisher's plan back - several awards and is continuing fired when the Bureau of Motor luoik on others. She also is a Vehicles checked with Fischer, junior. Shawnee Milligan, a junior and city policeman. daughter of Mr and Mrs Clev" A total of 894,575 persons visMilligan, North Logan, is the new She is active ited Mount Rushmore National reporter-historiaMemorial, in South Dakota, dur- n the North Logan waid. now a kachef in the Sunday Sih'd. ing ISoO, (TP A germ is thumbing his nose at doctors right inside their own mpdical fortress the hospital. The reason the little monster can be so brazen is that shots from the enemys antibiotic arsenal just bounce off his chest. Hes a super germ. In addition to alarming physicians, his uninvited arrival in e. Not Asian Type City-Coun- ty Miracle Drugs May Be Spawning Super Germs Approximately 200 women have Providence, been invited to the annual Utah same16.50, 15.00, State Richmond, University Leadership River Heights, 10.00, School, slated here October same; same; Smi'hficld, 18.00, 21.00; They will come from virtually Trenton, 6.00, same, and Wells-vill- every county in the state and 17.00, same. will represent such groups as the Tbe Smithfield increase, ac- Farm Bureau Women, Parent-Teache- r cording to the city deik, is deLDS. Associations, signed to provide for the paying Church Relief Societies and other off of the communitys portion of civic and church groups, explainthe extension to the National ed Miss Amy Kearslcy, chairman Guard Armory, being completed of the general planning commitfor $11,000. The addition will tee, The four-daevent, sponsorhouse a kitchen unit and basket- ed by the Utah State University ball floor, and will improve the Extension Service will be held value of the armory for use in in the Rural Arts building. civic functions. George M. Mardikian, famous San Francisco restauranteur, author, farmer, and food consultant, will be speaker at a dinner the evening of October 17, climaxing the school. Daily sectional meetings will be a panel discussion on radiation fallout with Prof. Wendell Anderson and Dr. Norman Bauer of A joint federal-statcrop report Utah State University and Dr. 55 about of said today per cent Stewart Harvey of the Univerthe winter wheat crop lias been of Utah as participants. sown in northern and central sity Utah. Wasatch and Cache are the two main winter wheat varieties now being planted. Surface and soil moisture conditions are fair to good in most areas. , Total acreage of winter wheat seeded this fall in northern and Battery C, 204th Field Artillery central Utah will be about the same or a little less than a year Battalion of the Utah National ago. However, with the drought Guard, has commenced its fall broken in southern Utah indica- activity after being inactive durtions are for an increase in seed- ing the summer months, followk annual summer ing a ed acreage. acsuccessful, Auple harvest in Utah is ex- camp termed to Lt. T. Dee Brown, cording to be about Oct, complete pected 20 in most areas. Color and battery commander. Ten men have transferred into quality of the fruit are good in C Battery, and one new enlistee general but size is slightly smaller in some areas than in past has been added. The transfers are: Sp2 Allen Baird, Sp3 Goryears. don P. Wilson, Pfc. Johnny G. Cabbage harvest is underway in northern and central Utah with Remond, Pfc. Wayne N. Alder. quality good, yields, normal. Pvt. Norman I. Bowden, Pvt. Onion and carrot harvest .is well Allen S. Kinsey, Pvt. Earl L. underway but yields are below Duke, all from the 117th Enaverage in many areas. Celery gineers Battalion, Heber City; harvest is progressing with nor- Pfc. Fred J. Wagstaff, 118th Enmal yields indicated for most gineers. American Fork; Sfc. areas. Quality is good in some Preston L. Hafen, Battery B, 213th F. A. Ben., St. George; Pfc. areas but poor in others. In northern Utah water level in Cordell D. Wood, Battery A, reservoirs is low for this time of 222nd F. A. Bn., Layton. enlistee is Victor R. year but supplies are sufficient. The new The water situation in general for Frank, Bountiful. Cadet of the Week" was namsouthern Utah is greatly improved as Wayne Berndt, picked for ed over a year ago. his general knowledge and apHarvesting of sweat corn is almost complete and tomato har- pearance. The public Is invited to look in vest is about 65 per cent finished. on Guard activities any Thursday Sugarbeet harvest Is just beevening in the armory at 141 ginning. North First W'est, Lt. Brown said. dise, Apparently Dennis Ray HIAWATHA (IP) son of Mr. Martinez, and Mrs. Daniel Martinez of Hiawatha, drowned Wednesday when he fell into the towns septic tank while playing with three other youngsters. The tot was pronounced dead on arrival at Price Hospital. Deputy Sheriff Frank Staver said the victim and thiee other youngsters crawled under a wire fence surrounding the septic tank. Slavar said Dennis fell in and a playmate, Pat Gomez, 5, threw some branches to him in a va'ti effort to pull the Martinez youth RSDAY OCTOBER 3 1957 Logan (Cache County) Utah null total. The bieakdown for airport, 87; and noxious weed Cornish, 10 00, same; Hyde Park, 8.00, same; llyrum, 10 00, same, both years is identical; general, eradication, .75. 7.00, Amounts levied in each com- Lewiston, same; Logan, 3:50; poor, .50; hospitalization, ,50; county roads, 3 00; county munity are as follows for 1056, 16.50, 18 00; Mendon, 14.00, same; fair. 28, couny library, .20; (given first i and 1957: Amalga, Millville, 8 00, same; Newton, county agucultura! agent, .20, 4 00, 3.0u, Ciaikston, 8 00, same; 17.00, 13.00; Ntble), 10.00, same; North Logan, 10.0C, same; Para- Utah Influenza Body Of Utah Child Recovered Till 9 80 lows. Newton and Arnalga comwhile munity levies decreased, taxes the Logan and Smithfield went up. Tax for state and state schools was cut 50 per cent; residents will pay 1 00 mill, this year, comLopared to 2.10 mills last year. however, district, School gan City increased from 35 33 mills to 38.33 School mills; and Cache County district, 3412 mills in 1956, is 37.14 in 1957. Total for residents living in the of county and outside the limits46 02 incorporated towns will be mills. Rates for Cache county government remain unchanged, at a current The enemy of Utahs remained influenza of outbreak additional anonymous today as State tests conducted by the negaproved Health Department tive to the Asian flu virus. tests It was the second time showed rfegative for Asian virus and prompted health officials to consider sending specimens for laboratories outside the state additional testing. The latest tests were made dozwith throat washings from a the Dragerton in en sick persons 1 and alt Lake City areas. All for failed to react to the test Asian virus. of Dr. A. A. Jenkins, director the health department's division of communi .able disease control, said several types of organism state epimay be involved in the other demic, Including Asian and less causing virus flu of types severe respiratory Infection. He said Cocksackie and echot viruses, reportedly have prevalent in Minnesota, may Utah. invaded conMeanwhile, the outbreak tinued its stranglehold on Utah CounCounty and northern Davis Salt the in off while easing ty Lake City area. Dr. Despite the negative tests. of Louis P. Gebhardt, professor of bacteriology at the University against immunizations said Utah, Asian flu should be continued where possible. He said it is possible the Asian virus may appear later this fall or in the winter. THE HERALD JOURNAL 6 Higher prices wete received for OFFICERS or Smith Cache I.DS Seminary clude. back row from loft Wilier Lichneld. faculty adMvor: Shawnee Milligan, Shiilev Bing in- ham, Fave Miller, Varda Ileninger: front row, John lawie, Tei v Ved.t hauler. Btnke Theuiei oung Niederhauser is president of the unit. i beef cattle, calves, sheep, turkeys, eggs, milk, butterfat and wild hav. Prices for wheat, oats, and milk cows remained from the pievioux month. 1 BjJ A rt 01 D HERMITAGE! PRODUCTS COMPANY, COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY KY STRAIGHT DISTRIBUTED BOURBON EY NATIONAL WHISKEY. 86 DIST PROOF |