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Show 6 rTAH GOVERNOR George D Clyde proclaims Utah Conservation Week April 6 to 12 and 2 Wiidlife Week March in his office, ob- served by Roy Olander, representative of Utah Wildlife Federation. THE HERALD JOURNAL MARCH 12 WEDNESDAY Cache CountM Logan Mayor 1958 Utah 16-2- Dixon Presses Proclaims Battle For Library Week States' Rights WASHINGTON the U. afternoon, House of the approved Representatives controversial Harbors and Riiers and flood control measure, Including both an amendment designed to protect states water lights, and $520,000 for flood control on the upper Weber River, according to Rep H A Dixon. stares congressmen Western h id made a determined drive to have an amendment tacked onto the flood control bill, intended to assure states that their water rights an laws would be protected The amendment passed over musi-comed- FAMOUS MUSICAL Farm Electric Workshop Carousel' Ready At North Cache Announced against the states. Federal power has risen artificially mushrooming up through the overlordship of a mass of superimposed and sometimes obnoxious restrictive federal legislation, he said. Dixon called attention to fact that if the bill had passed unamended the corps of engineers or the Department of Interior would be at liberty to abuse states water rights. and disloof cate the whole economies western states. to lie urged the Congress bluntly and decisively validate once more the integrity of the water laws of the states. The supreme court ruling against states water rights in the case involving the Pelton dam in Oregon was labeled by 16-1- 7 i to Rep. Dixon, his- tory and tradition emphasize the water rights and laws of the states. Water rights In some of the 17 western states, involving 60 percent of the total land area of ihe United States, can be said to have existed long before the Untied States came into being. The federal government cannot N Citizens of Utah were urged to observe the week of April 6 to 12 as Utah Conservation Week, and to adopt meaningful conservation practices in connection with the states natural resources and other applicable areas. Hearing Set Preston FFA Dinner Is Tonight Smithfield; Mrs. Mullens, Mar- and garet Gregory, Smithfield Marjorie Weaver, Lewiston; Policemen. Clark Anderson, Newton and Blaine Hanson. Smithfield; Mr. Bascomh, Chambers, PRESTON The second annual ward, Richard Jensen. Richard Smithfield; the 3ryan Doctor, Lyle GodParent and Son banquet of Baird. Ronnie Cole and Merek frey, Cornish; Storekeeper, Bruce Preston's FFA chapter will be Hinckley. held this evening, in Oneida stake house Under supervision of Lynn Wimvard and Paul Bennett, a fine meal and orog-graare being prepared for today. woman allegedThe ly shot and killed her husband Feb. 16 after a quarrel. The victim, Boyd Hyatt, 32, was shot at the couples apartment here. Lowest Bid SALT LAKE CITY Construction Olson TP submitted the lowest of six bids here Tuesday for construction of a addition to Holy Cross Hospital here. Olson said It could do the Job for $2,954,269, more than $200,000 below the highest bid received. m Co. four-stor- y, d members and their parents. Guest speaker is to be Robert Dahle, principal of North Cache high school and a former instruc-lo-r of Vocational Agriculture. Mr. Dahle will point out achievements possible in the Future Farmer program and will relate experiwon ences of boys who have honors in leadership, farming and citizenship through their FFA training. The banquet is in one respect, one way in which FFA members hope to show their appreciation for the support their parents have The work will include a new mam hospital building on 1st South St. in front of the hospital's old central section. The old central section will be demolished. Plans also call for a new three-stor- y east wing for laboratories and other facilities. RECEIVING APPOINTMENT of 3rd class petty officer is Norman V. Preece, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norris G. Preece of Cove. Commanding officer making presentation is C. D. A. Cranen. Norman is stationed at Barber's Point Naval Station, Hawaii. Secretary Of Ogden Baha'i Unit To Speak In Logan Friday Mrs Clair Schneider, secretary Ogden Baha1 Assembly, will be the speaker at this months public meeting of the Lo-gan Baha'i Group. Mrs. Schnei-- 1 der's topic will be; The Great Sewer Fund FOR Preston FFA parent and son banquet this evening are Lynn Wmward and Paul Bennett. Death Claims SALT LAKE CITY OP The Utah Water Pollution Control Board has allocated some $70,000 in federal funds toward rebuilding and improvement of the sewage treatment plant at Monticello. The project will cost $190,000. Bear Lake Phosphate Plant Construction To Be Speeded Lewiston Man A prominent Lewiston farmer, Bertrand Heber Nelson, 64, died at the home of a son in Ogden, Monday night after a long illness. BY MENON.AH SHIRLEY Mr Nelson was born June 2, FISH HAVEN Construction 1893. in Brce. Arizona, to Heber of the phosphate concentrating and Elizabeth Jarvis Nelson. He plant of Central Farmers Fertilmarried Luzell May 15, izer Company in Georgetown 1914. in the Logan Temple. canon, which has progressed Active in the Latter Day Saint under favorable winter condiChurch, Mr Nelson was a ward tions. will be stepped up to full teacher and a High Priest in the scale this spring and summer, acLewiston First Ward at the time cording to Charles Miller, director ot manufacturing of his death. In a resume of plant facilities Besides his widow, survivois or begun, Mr. Miller completed include the following sons and said the branch from the Union daughters: Guy B , Ray Earl, Pacific railroad from Georgetown Keith L.. ail of Ogden, and Richsince last has been in ard. Oakland, California: daugh- fall. Electricoperation is being power Salt Lake furnished ters, June Iverson, by the Utah Power and City; Joyce De Hart, Ogden; one brother. W. J.. Ogden; sisters, Light Company, and telephone has been available by Amy Grimes, Montpelier, Idaho; service Rose Humphreys. Paris. Idaho; Mountain States Telephone and Co. over the cable laid Lily Bartchi. Montpelier; Verda Telegraph Haddock. Idaho: along the canyon. Gas is also at Bloomington, 24 one great- the plant site, carried in a four-incgiandchildren; line from the main line of grandchild. Funeral services will be con- Northwest Pipeline Corporation at ducted at 1 pm. Friday in the Georgetown. Also in operation is the com-- 1 Lewiston Third ward chapel with Milton Jorgensen, First Ward pany's water system from one well and a storage tank with a Bishop officiating. Friends may call at the family capacity of 150 gallons. Another home in Lewiston Thursday well is now being drilled to supp m , and after 11 a m. Friday. plement the present water supply. Buiial will be in the Lewiston The reclaiming hopper is comLemetery. pleted. Ore bins have been con j h and aie now being enclosed. Concrete foundations are complete for the null portion of the plant. Construction is also underway on a reactor plant for calcining the beneficated phos-- j structed phate oi e Major steps ahead in construction oi the ovctall pioject will follow as weather permits and delivery is made on equipment and supplies These include construction of the traik system at the plant. Placing of rotary kiln to mdulize the phosphate ore, to smelting in the elec-- i trie furnace, is expected to be delivered in May Concrete foundations for this installation are now being poured and this unit is scheduled to be placed in operation by late sum- mer or early fall. The piling and pile caps have been consliueted for the furnace proper and additional pilings will be driven for the electric fuinace and building acrossoncs. Covering of office and machine shop buildings is now in progress. aie nearly comNegotiations plete with the U. S. Forest Ser-- ! vice for utilization of a steep canyon northerly from Church Hollow as a storage area for tailings from the veneficiation plant This pond is to be formed by two earthen dams of 100 feet high and 70 feet high, and will have a capacity for ten years storage. The tailings will be piped by gravity flow from the mill, a distance of some 15 000 feet. Another phase of the project, among the very few in the west, is a down-hior regeneration mine conveyor system. This system will carry ore from the open pit mine to the stock pile area in Phosphoria Gulch, a distance of about one nule. Mr. Miller explained that the topography favored this type of conveyor system. To have trucked the ore from the mine to stock piles would have necessitated a steep graded road of about f'ur miles in length with several switch backs. Insofar as possible, local men will be employed as work picks up in the spring. However, the pioiect is expected to attract some outside laboi. Presently employed at the plant site are 60 to 70. By early summer this should increase to 150 to 200 and later between 250 and 300 as woik progresses. When in production. Central Farmeis expect to employ about 300 in mining and manufacturing. 1 Logan Woman Dies In Idaho Pearl Critchfield. owner and, operator of the Vogue Beauty Salon, Logan, died yesterday atj the home of a sister, Mrs. Rodet-- . ta Barnard, in Twin Falls, Ida. Funeral services will be conducted in Oakley, Ida., Saturday,! m. Wellknown for many years in Ixrgan business and civic life, Mrs. Critchfield had been active! n in tlve Soroptimist Club and and Professional Business Women's Club. Further obituary details will be ' published later. 2 p 4 ll Mission Head i Happy Birthday Years Old j MARCH 13 Alta N. Christensen, Richmond Cheryl Alvey, Richmond (leve Smith. Logan Esta Brown. H.vrum Provo celbrat-ePROW) IP its 109th anniversary here toPaul Marriott. Trenton II. J. Milligan, Logan day. Mrs. Leon Fonnesbeck, Logan Special observances included a noon banquet sponsored by Sons Mrs. Grant Mathews. Proviand Daughters of the Utah Pio-- i dence Steve Theurer, Logan neers which included tributes to Grant S. Nielsen, lfvrum residents who have lived here Debra Ewing, Smithfield since before May 10, 1869. d Dairy Festival Many new features are being planned for the 1958 Cache Dairy Festival which will be held in Logan June 27 and 28. At a Tuesday afternoon meeting of the committee in charge of the event several parts of the program began taking definite shape. There will be a deviation from the past system used in the world's championship mayors milking contest. This year the elimination contest for Cache counmayors will be held at the anWayne Long, Berkeley, Calif., ty Foresters club president and nual Black and White Days m Richmond. At the Dairy Festival Glenda Hanseen, Sciplo, Fores- the winner of this event will comters Queen, were on hand Monday to witness signing of the procla- pete with mayors from other mation in the office of Gov. Clyde parts of Utah and from other states. in the State Capitol. Professor A. J. Morris reported of an annual Primary purpose a letter from the American that said Mr. conservation week, Association confirmed the Long is vo bring before the public Dairy and professional conservation ag- appearance here June 27 and 28 encies the necessity for frugal and of the national dairy princess, wise use of the states renewable Miss Sandra Stout of Oklahoma. natural resources by the entire She will be present at many of the events and will be presented populace. to both the junior and senior prinThe Governor, in his statement on conservation urged citizens to cess contestants. rehabilitate and preserve the ar- forPlans also are In the making an outstanding air show that ea's valuable renewable resources and to extend conservation may feature some of the best known aerial in the practices to other applicable ar- country. It is performers expected, too, that eas of personal and public activsome professional acts and a ity. Conservation week will be cli- carnival will be included in the maxed by the Foresters with an schedule. Former wellknown events such annual award banquet on April as the princess and junior prin11, at USU. cess contests, parade, and street dance will be returned to the agenda this year. Those atending yesterdays fesf tival committee meeting Chairman Lamon Tucller, Mrs. Bessie Lemon, Elvin Dennis, Allred, Elmo Packer, ProfesInfluSALT LAKE CITY (If sor Morris, George Smith, Philip enza made a comeback in Utah Swift, Dean Smith and Ray last week, the State Health Gov. George D. Clyde signed a proclamation presented to him by officers of the Utah Foresters, whose members are majors in forest, range or wildlife management at Utah State University, founders of annual conservation week. Cooperating with them as sponsors are the Utah State Board of Forestry and Fire Control, Utah Fish and Game department, Utah State University and its conservation agencies, the U.S. Forest Service and the Soil Conservation Service. State Reports More Influenza were El-w- in The Inter-mounta- in 109 For Cache reported today. state had 211 flu cases Refreshing The meeting will be compared with 194 the previous held on Friday, March 14 at 8 p. week The new cases included 35 17 in Utah Counm. in the Oldham Memorial Build- in Kane County. and 50 in Provo. A ty Utah Man of the Ye ing Seven infectious hepatitis cases Education will be scl Mrs Schneider who became a Baha'i 25 years ago has had con- also were reported, including two March 19 during a banquet i siderable experience within the cases in Duchesne County, one University of Utah. each in The selection will be mar Grand, and Tooele organization of her religion, and counties,Cache, one in Salt Lake City the university chapter of has spoken many times about the Delta Kappa, national pi and one from out of state. many and varied aspects of this sional education f r a t e r serworld She has faith. growing Utahns previously selectee ved on one of the western regionBite of the short-taile- d shrew the honors were Mrs. Russr al committees., Friday evening is pcisonous from a secretion in Petty. Ogden, and LeGran will be her second appearance in its salivary glands. Backman, Salt Lake City. before she Logan, having spoken in on Club the Baha'i the campus fall of 1956. For some years she was associated with the Baha'is of Laramie, Wyoming, and has also been similarly active in Denver. where she lived for a number of years. Anyone wishing to know what the Baha'i Faith is all about, and why it is attracting so much attention today in all the continents of the world, and has established communities as far north as Point Barrow in Alaska, as TURN IT IN TODAY! Get well as in Australia and New a Zealand and hundreds of localities BIG CASH DISCOUNT in between, will learn some some up to $50 when you buy a of the reasons at the meeting on Automatic Softener Culligan Friday. The gathering is open to the public, says Mrs. L. R. HawCALL CULLIGAN thorn. secretary of the Logan Baha'i Group, and everyone is welcome. Bahai meetings are 2257 TODAY free; there are never any Salt1 SALT LAKE CITY IP Lake Lumberman John O. Tuesday was appointed! president of the Latter-- d a y Saints Church South Australian collections. mission. Simmonsen has been president and general manager of Lumber Co. here since 1932. Planning Begun Man Of Year of the given them. Assisting in details for the annual event are Stanley Fellows, Wood- Vernon Reeder, Wayne 9 Conservation, Wildlife Weeks 13-1- a - GOVERNOR NOTES better-informe- dream world application, in ivory tower abstraction, of a very earthy, powerfully held state and grass root prerogative. According t School duormum whelminglv bv voire vote. Dr Dixon termed the amendment essential to many western states, including Utah where 72 percent of the land is federally ow ncd. In a speech Dixon declared: "I am not a lawyer and I cannot permit myself to be bushed off as a layman by those who are lawyers, and I will not permit a fundamental percept all of us hold precious to be overwhelmed and buried by the growing avalanche of federal aggression Dixon as 4 16-2- 2 Tuesday S In proclaiming the week of March as National Libiary Week, Mayor T. Earl Hunsskei today called uoon citizens of Logan to participate in this significant endeavor National Library Wpek will focus widespread attention on reading and on he importance of libraries of all kinds, from the bookshelves in your home to the vast collections in public and libraries. university Through national and local events it can (1) provide a dramatic focus for continuing community reading programs throughout the year, 2 attract wide attention to library services and build the support needed for their expansion, (3) t3 ? H foster reading activities in homes, schools, clubs, businesses evy area of American life. (4i inWidH crease awareness of the importance of libraries as a major educational resource and (5) inspire y is this poster. The famous Broadway TYPICAL OF the schools effort to call attenmore people to do more thoughtful reading." is Thursday and Friday night. tion to North Cache high musical, Carousel, Because newsnr.pers and magazines are essential for citizens, books are t He conservers, transmitters and disseminators of the worlds w'isdom and knowdedge; the freedom to read is one of democracys most Is cherished liberties; and the development of lifetime Top national electrical industry reading habits is vital to the continualeaders will instruct the first tion of our society, the Mayer Farm Electric Conference workasked the people of Logan to inat Utah shop slated April form their and neighbors State University. friends of the and pleasures 400 from An energetic Allen, Cove; Enoch Snow, Jr., rewards persons Approximately RICHMOND of reading, with the throughout the 11 western states t and crew at North Cache Howard Grant. Trenton, and the purpose of developing a better-reaare expected to attend the Clair Troseth, d America worked long and hard to Heavenly Friend, Lewiston. The cast includes the sions, believed to be the first of have To in this worththeir kind in the nation. perfect Rodgers and Hammer- - entire family of Mr. and Mrs. while participate program, parents can take CarouDavid A. Ilamil, Washington, D. steins musical tragedy Leonard Johnson. the family to Library Week be will which presented C.. administrator of the Rural sel, Directing the dancing is Eve events; browse with the children 4 and Friday. March Reese, while Sid Perkes has con- in libraries and Elec trification Admonistration, Thursday bookstores; check at 8 p m. in the high school tributed a generous amount of will be among the speakers. local school and public library auditorium. work the art for production. Purpose of the workshop is to facilities and work to better them; The musical revolves around Members of the Stake Crew acquaint rural and industrial peo- the life of hard-nose- d local library budge, a Bigelow, Billy are Lyle Hillyard, Ted Hodges, support ple of the western states with the barker on a carousel who, Hal Bergeson, Alan Thackerel, drives; foster home libraries and latest developments in the elechours. from a fall on his and Brent White; Property man- family .reading can take time out trical industry and to show how after dying comes back from own Everybody knife, Ann Whitman: Tickets, ager, electricity can be used to live betto help guide the life of Bruce Allen and Kayleen Allen; for reading and rediscover the ter and farm better, explained Heaven his daughter, Louise. Make-uAnn Boyle, chairman: delights and challenge of the writGlen E. Stringham, USU farm Directed by Stratford and Lyle Programs, Esther Ann Roundy; ten word!" leader. electrification project Loosle. Carousel will be staged Publicity, Annette Ashcorft; BusA highlight of the woikshop with most effective scenery done iness Manager, Lyle Godfrey; " will be a banquet at which E. M. mostly in silhouettes The entire s(age manager, Shanna Hillyard Naughton, president and general stage has been rebuilt and the assisted Diane and Jackson by manager of Utah Power and lights and coloring for this pro- Sharon Talbot. Light Co. will speak. duction have been described as Some of Eldon Torbensons outstanding. Ljle is assisting string players from Logan High a parSchool have been borrowed for give what it does not have. Dix- with this peiroimance as tial fulfillment of the require- the occasion. on asserted. A matinee The Weber flood control ap- ments for a Masters Degree at was of Carousel at 1 pm. to propriation provides for $520,000 Utah State University. today presented A list of the cast members inin diking and channel work on junior high school students. the Weber river to avert floods cludes the following: Billy Bigesimilar to the disastrous one that low, Wenden Waite, Hyde Park; caused several hundred thousand-dollar- Julie, Lorna Nuttall, Benson; in damages five years Jiggers, Merlin Clark. Clarkston; PRICE M Mrs. Billie Jo Louise, Tamara Pond, Lewiston; ago. Carrie. Nansi Rees. Benson and Hyatt, accused of second degree Mr. murder in connection with the Yula Johnson. Smithfield; Snow, R. L. Pitcher, Smithfield; death of her police officer husNettie Fowker, Virginia Barson, band. was sheduled for preliminClarkston and Glenna Douglas, ary hearing in city court here "J'1 Do You Hove A Water Softene You'd Like To Trade in? If you'd rather have our Soft Water Service than th automatic softener above, we will give you up to months free Culligan Se vice exchan ie for tf you now have. Ju give us a call. FLOYD end JIMMIE JARVI in softener 369 North Main St. PHONE 2257 |