OCR Text |
Show TIIE HERALD. JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH, PAGE FOUR. Expert To Address HERE'S MORE ABOUT SINGAPORE Whatcott will loud George M. Anderson, son of Mrs. Mr. the discussion before Sixth ward Gi ace Morris and grandson of Mrs. M Men and Gleaners Tuesday Anna Monson, Logan residents, has by: recently graduated from the Quan-ticevening, it was announced will Virginia, marine corps school class officers today. Topic concern war and Dietys attitude as a second lieutenant in the marine reserve, according to word toward it. received here. He is stationed in George is well known in Elder I). 1'latt' Woodland, son Virginia. Cache having graduated Valley, Daniel Mrs. and of Logan's Mr. from Utah State in P. Woodland, is a member of the last spring is also He a graduate of botany. famous Mormon Male Chorus of Logan and was prominent in high, has which appeared Philadelphia, basketball. in many programs throughout the Logan stake eastern states. The chorus, conThe first son of Mr. and Mrs. members and a sisting 6f eight won Gardner O. Hycr was born at acclaim wide has conductor, Hu'vaii, Thursday. Mr. for its accomplishments. D. Platte Molokai, agricultural coordinat Camden, New Jcr-- ! Hyer is the island. stationed He is the son jis ator of the scy. of Mr. and Mrs. Orson U. Hyer of Lewiston and is a graduate of erl Brou n of Trenton, driving the USAC. The mother is the 1 near S. U. highway of Nilsson along Miss Lola former Southfield Saturday evening, Nephi. and killed a stray horse, i struck Stowell. according to Sheriff Jeff Knrollees in the new shorthand It was impossible for the ofdriver class, which meets Mondays and ' to see the horse because the Thursdays at Logan Senior high intense snowstorm. Although the school, were reminded today that car was badly damaged, there the course will be held tonight at injuries to , were no serious 7 o'clock. This time will be obMiss Helen served henceforth. Lundstrom is instructor, and all has been members of the adult public are A marriage licenseissued at the county clerks office invited to register. to George H. Benjamin, 24. and C. I o, i i ! occu-pant- Eva Allen, 20, both of s. Salmon, Idaho. yis ; ,, t : social meeting of the Cache Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wilson of this city will leave tomorrow for San Francisco, where they will visit a son, Lt. Woodrow Wilson, and then will proceed to Riverside and Los Angeles, where they will spend the ensuing month sen, Cache presidency representaor six weeks. tive, will be in charge, while include Professor Evan Miss Amanda Olson has return- speakers and Dr. B. L. RichB. ed to Logan after visiting for the ards.Murray Lake in weeks Salt six City past "Lt. Charles P. Olson, son of Mr. Lloyd M. Theurer, Cache county Olson, school board clerk, is in Salt Lake and Mrs. Charles to"Time active duty has been called of the meetings City attending with the U. S. armed forces, and Utah Traffic Safety council. will be stationed at Fortress Eustace. Virginia, according to A minor traffic collision, word received here. Charles is "a Saturday evening at 7 former student of Utah State, and on the intersection of o'clock WashSecond North and First West, In- has been attending George volved machines driven by Arthur ington law school in Washington D. C. Mjacham of Logan and Floyd Checketts of Providence. There Mr. and Mr. Otto Tlierkelsen were no injuries. d announce the birth of an daughter, born at the The Logan branch of state tax commission will be closed during Cache Valley hospital last ThursThe child is the great grandThursday, Lincolns birthday an- day. of Mrs. Mary Kendall of niversary, according to Dewey daughter and granddaughter Nielsen, manager. Also he remind- Salt Lake City ed Cache motorists that the dead- of Mrs. Zina Burmingham. Mrs. was formerly Miss line for securing 1942 license Therkelsen L.eia Kendall of Salt Lake City. 1. March is plates II i A district Scouters, bishoprics and will be MIA superintendencies held tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the stakchouse. Dr. N. E. Munk, director of the Council's emergency service corps, has called the session to discuss features of the vital program. ElRay Christian- (Continued From Page HERE'S MORE ABOUT Utah Safety Meet 1) after weeks of figh-in- g in Malaya. The spokesman noted the Japanese had preceded their landing on Singapore island with a diversion the occupation of Pulau Ubin island at the eastern mouth of strait. Meantime, the Japanese were concentrating their forces at the other side of Singapore for the main attack. The army spokesman said that the landing was effected in a region of low mongrove swamps, tangled jungles and marshes, which Snaking througn the swampy jungles along the wfjt coast from the Kranji rivr southwards, the Japanese started to push back the Imperial troops at some points and to filter in toward the interior as they had filtered ail the way down the Malaya peninsula. It was then that strong Imperial forces were thrown into offensive ter J. Johnson of 373 W'est Cen- is being held by Logan police on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon following his arrest Saturday evening. Carl Frisohknncht of Logan, poultryman for Utah State Agricultural college, has been announced as a speaker for the mn teenth annual convention of the Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative association which will be held in Salt Lake City February 18 and 19. ! f H. W. Ballard Jr. of Benson, president of the Utah Poultry Producers. will take charge of the annual convention meetings. Other Cache people on the convention program included Mrs. Rena B. Badger of Logan and Mrs. Elthura Merrill of Richmond, and Kenneth Pardon of North Cache F.FA. chapter. Actual construction of the new Logan-Cach- 1 e airport is progress- ing satisfactorily, it was stated this week by C. W. Schuler, resident engineer. Following the removal of snow from the field, the W. W. Clyde Construction company now haa a trenching machine and crew at work removing dirt for installation of drainage pipes. The Clyde company contract calls for draining, clearing and fencing the field, and constructing three runways. Robert Brobcrg w e k n o w n Cache athlete and son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Broberg of this city, left today for San Diego where he will join the U. S. naval forces. Bob enlisted Saturday in Salt Lake City. 1 1 boats. Browne Sidney J. Williams An invitation for all Utahns interested in traffic safety to attend the anuai election meeting of the Utah Traffic Safety Council at the Capitol on Tuesdtay at 2 p. m. was extended Saturday by Governor Herbert B. Maw and Julian M. Bamberger, council president. Sidney J. Williams, Chicago, director of the Public Safety Division of the National Safety Council, is coming to Utah for the first time to be the principal speaker. Mr. Williams has been on the National Salety Council staff for over 20 years and haa been director of the Puplic Safety Division since its creation in 1924. He has been identified prominently with the development and promotion of traffic accident prevention technique in all its branches in most of the larger cities and practically every state In the union. MISSIONARY FETE action. Bombers Used SETATHYDEPARK Screaming Japanese dive bombers joined bigger planes and wasp-lik- e fighters in bombing and machine gunning the imperial lines in A missionary farewell has been the emperors shock troops' path. set in the Hyde Park ward WedBritish Hurricane planes in early nesday, February II, at 8 p. m. stages, probably downed three for Lynn Balls and Waldo Cook. others and damaged 13, the comThe following program, to be munique said. followed by a dance in the In the first Japanese plane fleet, hall, will be given in the one army-9- 7 was destroyed and ward chapel: two accordion solos two army-9- 7 bombers, one navy-- 0 by Harry Fern; a cornet solo by fighter and three other Mcrvin Peterson; a duet by bombers were damaged, it was Martha Daines and Carma Balls; asserted. a vocal solo by Alton Harris, and In a second raid, two Japanese short talks by the two missionplanes were destroyed and seven aries and Bishop C. A. Hurren. damaged. Sergeant T. Earl Hunnaker, coOn a later patrol British planes ordinator of the Cache Civilian wrecked a Japanese truck in a Defense Council, announced today machine gun attack on road transHERES MORE ABOUT that the executive committee of port, the communique said. the five the council, including It was added that to date 73 JaCRITICAL WEEK chairmen and division panese planes had been shot down advisory heads, will hold a special meeting and 27 more probably destroyed (Continued From Page 1) Tuesday at 9 p. m. in the court- since Japanese attacks on the isroom of the county courthouse. land started. The group will plan a general As the imperial forces fought in the past two months. The infilteration tacts, used sucmeeting to be held in the near the Japanese on the northwest coast, on the peninsula, sltould ; ;" future. ' other imperials ficed the Japanese cessfully not prove as easy. There is, howwho yesterday had occupied desertever. the The first week in February saw ed, unfortified Pulau Ubin (Ubin danger of massed para1.32 inches of moisture deposited island) half a mie off the north- chute descents, which would accomthe same purpose. The deplish by snowstorms and rainstorms in east coast of Singapore. fending air force probably could Cache valley, according to the The terrific blast of Japanese not prevent it. local weather bureau. Although' siege guns on forward positions forbids had made it certain during' the night ernThe landing in (he northwestgovernment censorship of the island, the Jappublishing of moisture totals until that the Japanese would attack, anesepart are only a few miles from 48 hours following the storm, and the imperials were ready when the municipal water catchment cumulative readings for the week I visited the rear area of the fightarea, Singapores only remaining are permissable. Normal for the ing lines. source of supply, if the entire month of February is 1.46 Troops were moving toward forcan battle their way Japanese eastward inches. Thus, the normal has ward battle positions throughout and occupy the reservoirs the nearly been reached in the first the night, under the fire of the garrison and thebigcivilian populaweek. Januarys total precipitation enemy guns. tion, augmented by thousand of The Japanese used mainly morwas 2.03 inches, as against 1.57 would be refugees, in a had way tars. firing blindly into the northnormal. and might have to capitulate. western area of the island. While are they making their The troops were jubilant at the A. N. McDonald has returned big assault on from San Francisco where he thought of coming to the final test, panese have notSingapore, the Jalessened their visited his mother, Mrs. A. N. man for man, with the Japanese pressure on the wide battle front McDonald, who is suffering from who had filtered through the Jun- of the southwest Pacific. They gles of Malaya, never venturing a have loosened an illness. attack on frontal fight despite their over- Gen. Douglas MacArthur's valiant Mr. I .aura L. Fisher, wife of whelms g numbers. In the complete blackness of the little band on Luzon and are George H. Fisher of Bancroft, at Java in Idaho, died Sunday at 7 p. m. at forward area, light artillery ation for a landing.apparent prepara Lava Hot Springs, Idaho, hos- wheeled into place quietly and from further has been heard the wheezing of a or Nothing the pital of pneumonia following in- a hut, came "We fleet which was reare soldiera of ported invasion grumaphone, fluenza. last week to be steaming the king, my boys." along the China coast ."Listen to them guns up front, southward wou,(1 not be ,.ut. to the rear lines commented. find PROMINENT IDAHO a"Itmanbet inthem it moving soon surprising through the s strait between little yellow b Borneo and Sumatra are trying to land now. toward Java. The aerial bombardIn Danger Spot ment of Banaka Island in the They were in the acute danger Soerabaja spot of the island, the jungly, wn!!!V0f B?tavia and preliminary to its arrival. swampy northwest coast, a The are Japanese 61. Frederick Johnson, prominent stretch of mangrove and patches probably mak-in- g better preparations than they farmer of Chesterfield, Idaho, died of rubber and pineapple plantation, did m the strait of Macassar, where Sundav afternoon at a Lava Hot which assumes an undulating char- 1 ansport losses were heavy. Springs, Idaho, hospital, relatives acter inland. can get a solid here were notified today. The strait there is narrow and foothold JapaiM'se on Java, they will be Mr. Johnson was born September unusually shallow. It is hardly well m their a son of more than half a mile wide at way to conquest 22, 1880, in Richmond, of the entire Indies lairs Christian and Rachel Arbon tide. At low tide the water is high group, with even to f war materials. Johnson. more shallow. The allied his stronghold then would He is survived by wife, Annie (London quoted well informed to be Australia, an eventual-lt- y Estella Simmons Johnson, and the sources that it was not more than havewhich ts F. sons and being discussed seri-th- y daughters: following six feet deepflanked with even Austra,ians' Seeming- Albert Johnson of Collinston; Myr-lan- d more shallow stretches of n thf t0 their ambitions L. Johnson of Chesterfield; bottom. At high tide. London sandy or said, the scope of their operations Mrs. Veda Mae Crowell of Ban- the depth is about 15 feet.) everywhere at once. The Japan- croft. Ida.; Mrs. Rachel I .eon a McImperial troops went into action, Donald of Blackfoot. Ida.; Mrs. as soon as outposts had flashed redy are rePorted making the threatening gestures at Australia Sally Plewe of Cardston, Alberta, alarm and reports from the front The naval Canada: Mrs. Eliza Bradley of San said merciless fighting was in pro- Darwin on and air base at Port the north coast had Francisco. Cal.; Mrs. 1hyllts Olsen gress in the jungle swamps. an air alarm and a Japanese of Grace, Ida., and Miss Jo MaRea There was some belief that the carrier raid was reported a Johnson of Chesterfield, and 20 west coast forces, who had landed dred m.les off the coast. few grandchildren. from the invasion barges at the The funeral is to be held in Banpoint farthest from the principal croft. island military and naval establishments might plan a drive for EVACUATION BEGINS Jan-ane- T -- all-o- bat-teri- RESIDENT DIES le H ; : f i Logan Home Building Society j NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING Notice Is hereby given that the annual meeting of the . i i I . l .! Stockholders of the Logan Home Building society will be held at the Chamber of Commerce rooms at 8:00 p. m. on Tuesday, February 10, 1943, for the purpose of electing a Board of Directors for the ensuing year, and for receiving financial report of the Society and for the transaction of such other business I as may properly come before the meeting. NEW SERIES STOCK AVAILABLE A New Series of Stock will be issued as of February 1, 1943. For Suliscriplious or . i Information call at the Office at the First Security Bank. Dutd at Logan, Itali, this Slst day of January, 1943. t John L. Coburn, Pres., II. J. Hatch, Secy. teeming Singapore city, little more SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. & a'.Pi than 12 1 miles to the southeast. The department of justice begins In their path were a big airdrome the evacuation of nearly 10.000 and the city reservoirs. enemy aliens from restricted areas Throughout Sunday small parties in California this week and there of Japanese had felt out the iswere indications that a "restricted land defense making suicide sormartiul law might be invoked to ties in variousby types of small craft force reluctant persons to leave. across itie straight. Patrols had dealt with them quickly, usually with hand grenades when they attempted to land, and it was understood that imperial commando troops had raided the Johore bhore. May Become Serious The Japanese attack seemed to Anyone suffering from Fistula, Rectal Abscess, Piles or other rec- establish clearly the wisdom of tal or colon troubles is invited to Gen. A. E. Percival. in command in write today for a FREE copy of ordering the dismantling of inan up - to - the - minute. stallations in possible invasion sec- book telling about these ailments tions, and the withdrawal of much and related disturbances. Also equipment to safer areas. describes the mild treatment sucNearly 3,000,000 defense workcessfully used in thousands of cases. References from every ers have received vocational trainstate. Write today a postcard ing in 1200 public vocational and will do. The McCleary Clinifc, H613 trade schools, 155 colleges and uniElms Blvd., Excelsior Springs, versities, and 10,000 public school Mo. shops. (Continued from Page X) at eight-poun- B. MENACE m. last Thursday, arrived yesterday at Lewes, Del. Only four seamen were injured sufficiently to require hospitalization. Capt. Paul Hoffman Browne, 48, of West New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y., said his ship was torpedoed twice without warning and then shelled 15 times by a which came to the surface 500 yards away and stood by until the crew pulled away in three life- offer advantages to both the attackers and the defenders. Natural Cover "There is plenty of natural cover," he said, "and two converging creeks provide defensive facilities which have enabled our forces to concentrate on a shortened strate- earth-shakin- SUB ber of submarines destroyed, however. The entire crew of the China Arrow, which was the victim of a bold daylight attach at 11:15 a. Jo-ho- gic line. Because of the terrain the opening phase of the battle was described as a fight, for the most part, between light scouting forces and specially trained shock troops. I visited headquarters of the Australian imperial forces and found the army command calmly directing the disposition of forces to meet the Japanese attack. The Japanese troops landed from invasion craft between 11 oclock lust night and 1 a. m. today, prog tected by artillery bombardment, the communique said. At day break great fleets of Japanese fighter and bombing planes came to their support, raining bombs and machine gun bullets into the imper'wl lines. FEBRUARY MONDAY, AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN A and his radio operator, Kenneth W. Maynard, 20. of Bellingham, Wash., remained aboard for 45 minutes after the first torpedo struck the China Arrows engine room hoping help would come. Maynard, whose radio equipment was destroyed by the first explosion, which followed by fire, rigged emergency equipment and sent calls for help. He said he withheld the ships position to prevent attracting other submarines. Before he and Brown slid down ropes to a lifeboat at noon, May- nard jammed his transmitter with a book so the distress call was repeated until the China Arrow sank. The survivors spent 56 hours and 40 minutes adrift before they were sighted by a navy plane. They were rescued at 8:20 p. m., Saturday, 100 miles off the coast, Browne said. The China Arrow was a sister Indian Arrow ship of the 8,327-to- n which was sunk off the New Jersey coast last Wednesday. The China Arrow's sinking brought the total of tonnage lost in United States waters to 106, 98L The 8,207-to- n American tanker Malay was damaged in an attack Jan. 19 but managed to make port. Four hundred persons arq known to have been killed or are missing in the attacks, and 282 are Known to have been lost from crews whose survivors arrived in Canadk. The sinking was the second announced by the navy in 24 hours. Saturday night, it disclosed that Swedish motor ship the 15,355-to- n Araerikaland had been attacked two and sunk by submarines last Monday of Cape Hatteras. Eleven of the Amerikaland's crew of 39 arrived here Saturday night. FORMER CACHE Frederick Haycock, who lived in Wellsville and Logan until about five years ago when he moved to California, died in his Los Angeles home Saturday morning, friends Jiave v'been advised here: He was born in Beaver, Utah. August 3, 1871. He labored as an LDS missionary in the southern states for two years. He responded to a church call in 1899 to assist in the colonizing of Alberta, Canada. Later he made his heme in Cache county. In 1896 he married Ida Weaver in the Logan temple. She and seven sons and daughters survive bim as follows: Mrs. A. R. Homer of Philadelphia, Pa.; Paul W. Haycock of Calgary, Canada; Mrs. Max Winder of Cardston, Canada; Mrs. Morgan Maughan of Poca John Idao; G. Floyd Haycock, John S. Haycock and Mrs. Reo W. Ellsworth of Los Angeles. He is also survived by two brothers and three sisters, as follows: Sylvester Haycock of Portland, Ore.; Walter Haycock of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Millie Han sen of Richfield, Utah; Mrs. Ven-ni- e Herbert of Los Angeles and Mrs. Alice Frandson of Iona. HERE'S MORE ABOUT ORSON WELLES tContinued from Pag AAA Sugar MIA Activities Beet Checks Distributed a WAR NEWS IN BRIEF LOGAN SECOND WARD The life and music of Evan Etephens will be the topic for the Logan Second ward MIA Tuesday BY UNITED evening. Music will include selecpKess tions by the choir and two numSINGAPORE of S. bers by composed quartet jd.M, land under an- an! art-L. McArthur, Eugene Bell, Francis Worley and Orval Eliason. It bardment ; climat Payments have been certified is requested all choir members be session of far i asi. r, rages. for J4.729.35 in the Utah State present. AAA office to start the first BATAWA-Tn- ,,. ELEVENTH WARD government checks on their way to growers who cooperated in the Honoring the late Evan Stephens, Batavia for fust 1941 AAA sugar program, Joseph a tribute to the life and works of other Dutch stvi. m,, J. raid Skeen of Ogden, member of the this great Mormon composer and assault onJaa ajij Utah state AAA committee, an- choir leader will be given by Mrs. start shortly. Russell S. Hansen at the assembly nounced Friday. BATAAN-MniT- jan Mr. Skeen said the amount program of the Eleventh ward attackjr, certified would go to 37 growers MIA Tuesday evening. A vocal pulsed. in Carbon and Grand counties. soio will be given by George B. MELBOURNE But an additional 1237 applica- Everton, and a girls trio under the Japane., tions have been received in the direction of Georgia Larsen will craft earner spotted severV dred miles on Darwin 7 state office and will be certified sing. naval base; Darn," hpg IWrit' . within the next few days. He SIXTH alarm WARD but no Japanese pwr estimated that the 5800 Utah growers who cooperated in the TheOfficers will meet at 7 p. m. pear. begins at program in 1941 will receive .ap- 7:30 general assembly RANG OO.N Civilian Tuesday. After the class proximately 3850.000 in payments work p. am.Valentine dance will be being evacuated. of the sugar under the provisions by the MIA with the line holds as Chines,- forc es program. Most of these checks sponsored ' will go to growers before March Beehive girls in charge of the dec- into battle positi,, in. or coration9. Ward are members 1. TOKYO -- Claim Japanese The average payment per grow- dially invited. n ly closing m toi mop-uer will amount to approximately ttJt Singapore. is about which per 3127.82 ton in addition to the amount COLLEGE MOSCOW received from processors. Under make ' gains around Leningrad. the sugar program for 1942 the be will payment government BERLIN--Admit death of around 32.40 per ton based on the Gen. Fritz Todt: claim 10 r increase from 60 cents to 80 cents S damagedEssay students at Utah State warships sunk, per hundred pounds of recoverAgricultural college Saturday were 12 riiore U. S ships sunk off able sugar, raw value. lantic coast. Because of war and the cutting getting under way on preparation off of some sources of sugar, of papers on phases of cooperaSHIP AIIkk farmers will be under no acreage tive fire insurance, as a special NEW 4 OKh. Feb. 9 qjRwjyy restrictions and will be urged to awards committee set April 1 as deadline for entry in the an- orities said at 4 p. u a, increase sugar beet acreage in the nual cooperative insurance con- about 00 workmen 1942, Mr. Skeen said. naj test been Bear below the River on trapM-sponsored by deck w n sugar Government payments Insurance company. starboard side of the hurnin, beets grown in 1941 Mr. Skeen Mutual Fire the Rules for essay competition Normandie. Worker begi, n explained, are made to growers said entering papers may deal with ting through tile side of tke k who met certain conditions outlined in the sugar act. These any aspect of cooperative mutual in ar attempt to revue Uxa. include provisions that farmers fire insurance or on the general Limit for the composition CARD OF THANKS plant within acreage allotments, subject. is 3000 words. Members of the family 0f that they do not hire child labor, Three whose students essays are Ralph vu-- h to extend ti that they pay a minimum fair best will be given awards sincere appreciation to the U: wage to field workers, that they judged of 330 and 330 at the colleges op of the Hvrum Third 350, carry out approved and awards assembly April and to everyone who and practices, honors 29. Last year Bryant Kearl of with the funeral services usuti and and that growers who are also Preston, 1941 editor of the USAC all who show ed kindness nd pay fair prices for student newspaper, won first processors to place couragement them at this m sugar beets bought from other in the writing contest. of their bereavement. growers. Dr. Joel E. Ricks, Assigned by The Ralph Family. conditional payments chairman of the USAC awards Special are made to growers whose honors committee, to direct and and fields are damaged or destroyed judge the insurance contest were by frost, disease, drouth, flood, Professor D. A. Broadbent of the storm or insects. Such payments agricultural economics department. serve as a limited form of crop Dr. Rex A. Skidmore, sociology, and insurance on which the grower W. N. Watson of the economics SHOW PtflCE 0F CACHE KAILP1" pays no premiums. faculty. i - p 31-8- SLATES Russ-un- ESSAY CONTEST , 1) OUTLOOK DARK (Continued frum Page One) air intensifying their softenjng-u- p attacks in an effort to destroy the outnumbered united nations' air force in the Dutch islands. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's men still held the Japanese on Bataan peninsula and, barred their use .of Manila bay but the Japanese are stepping up their attack, here, toe. There are indications they "may hope this week to drive from Bataan and hole him up in Corregidor or possibly Hunch a simultaneous attack on Bataan and Corregidor. There waq literally no encouraging news from the southwest Pacific. It was all bad and it be tokened worse. For the moment the Japanese drive in Burma was halted or slowed along the Salween river, roughly 100 miles from Rangoon. The Japanese, desnite willingness to absorb heavy losses and constant attacks, still had failed to knock out the air force defending the Burma front. n However, the fighter squudrons are not large. They have been fighting constantly. almost every day for several weeks. They are suffering losses which they may not be able to re ''re '"mediateiv. The fall of Singapore would enaole the Japanese to loose large forces In an attempt to break through the Burma front and carry their threat straight to the gales of India. The threat to Australia was equally immediate. A Japanese aircraft carrier has been reuorted some hundreds of miles off Port D.i'win, the north coast naval . hard-hittin- Mac-Arth- g British-America- Cachejanction anti-Briti- Its Many Say tter Em Even Than Sergeant Be- Yort Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dyson and three children and Mr. and Mrs. Alden W. Jensen and two children of Salt Lake City spent Sunday here visiting Frank H. Ballard, Mrs,. Russell Speers and Mr,. and Mrs. Merlin Ballard. Mrs. H. F. Wreyer of Pocatello, spent last week visiting her sister. Mrs. E. M. Tomblison and family,. Mrs! Doul Benson and family spent a few days last week visparents, Mr. and Mrs. aing her Dev,d Dahle at Clarkston. Mrs. Kathryn Rasmussen enter-tame- u her ciuo at her home on Thursday. The afternoon was spent playing pinochle. Luncheon was served to club members, Mrs. Eunice Cooley, Mrs. La Gene Grif-nMrs. Ruth Benson, Mrs. Mary Jenkins and Mrs. iMerle Larsen all of Newton and guests Mrs. Bernice Rasmussen, Mrs. Alton Richardson and Mrs. Joy Rasmussen. Mrs. Rhoda Brown of Salt Lake City is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Barker. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Godfrey of Logan were guests of Mrs. Doal Benson and tamily Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. La Vcrl Petersen of Brigham were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Barker, Sunday. Mrs. J. H. Roskclley of Snuth-fiel- d spent Tuesday and Wednesday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan n, SL , Mrs. C. G. Cluff and two children spent a few days last week at Salt Lake City. IT EVERY MINUTE IT! ANO CHEER WTfflTMlij PACKED SPECIAL EXTRA!! WORLD THIS MEL SCOOP!! Rasmussen. First Pictures Showing Actual PEARL HARBOR DAMAGE!! THE AMERICAN NATIONAL INSURANCE CO. radio-claim- 6 - - 40 PHYLLIS BLANCHARD Reporter Walter Huston for "All That Monand Robert Montgomery for "Here Comes Mr. Jordan." Contenders for the award for base. Darwin had an air raid alarm the best performance by an actress are Miss De Havilland for but no Japanese planes appeared. . Hold Back Miss Shortly, however, it seemed that the Dawn; arm of JapBette the Fontaine for "Suspicion; anese air power will be felt along Davis for The Little Foxes; Greer Garson for "Blossoms in the Australia's north coast. In Europe there was no radical Announces Dust, and Barbara Stanwyck for "Ball of Fire." Ginger Rogers won change in the situation. ed '4 The Berlin that last year. Films nominated as outstanding 10 British warships were sunk in last week and 8 damaged. pictures for 1941 were "Citizen the German submarines were said to Blossoms In the Dust,' Kane, have sunk 12 more ships of 85,000 Hold Here Comes Mr. Jordan, How Green tons off the U. S. coast bringing Back the Dawn. their total to 55 of 387,000 tons. The Little Fox' Was My Valley. There was a crisis at Tangier The Maltese Falcon, "One es, Foot In Heaven, "Sergeant York' over the explosion of a bomb in the luggage of a British consular and "Suspicion. For the most noteworthy official. Martial law was invoked rioting. achievement in directing, Welles after Moscow reported that fresh was listed with Hollywood's long soviet have smashed new troops Hall time ace directors. Alexander for "Mr. Jordan," John Ford for holes in the German lines around How Green, William Wyler for Leningrad. The Germans lost one 'Foxes and Howard Hawks for of their most valued technical experts Maj. Gen. Fritz Todt, 'York. Nominations for best perform- builder of the west wall and ances in supporting roles went to many other major nazi engineerWalter Brennan, Charles Cobum, ing achievements. He was said to Donald Crisp, James Gleason and have been killed in an air crash Sydney Greenstreet, among the actors, and to Sara Aligood, Mary Teresa Astor, Patricia Coilinge. Wright and Margaret VVychcrly, actresses. ey Can Buy. til 30 HERES MORE ABOUT MAN IS TAKEN tello, 1942. 9, : the Appointment of See the battleship Itak and Arizona wrecked!out w our fleet steam Harbor under fire! Another Great Scoop For the WORLD THIS WEEK , '5 v 20 Til TOXITE 25 G - TOMORROW BEIIBJI JHEK Relief At Last FISTULA 122-pa- "It ain't Sue's fault that she talks loud. The only way to be heard in her family was to yell louder than the others, and she got the IDAHO DEATH NAMPA. Ida., Feb. 9 tlJ!) A week end automobile accident on the highway four miles northeast of here resulted in the death of Mrs. Martha Francone Ward, 28, formerly of Nampa. Mrs. Ward was killed when the car in which she was riding ran off the highway and crashed into a fence and telephone pole. Police said a inch brace on the fence struck Mrs. Ward, fatally injunng her. The driver of the car. .John Calzacorta, Nampa, suffered minor injuries. two-by-s- ix ForYourCough and Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the T. MARLIN CRAG UN trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature As Special Representative in to soothe and heal raw, tender, inthe Cache Valley district. flamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you Mr. Cragun the local Amera bottle of Creomulsion with the un- ican Nationaljoins Muff with the derstanding you must like the way it of extensive experience In quickly allays the cough or you are the insurance, field. n He is to have your money back. in this area, and has established a reputation of integrity and outstanding sen ice. for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis ... well-know- Richard Dix-Pretto- ALSO - n Patricia Morris THE ROP'D-11- ! WEDNESDAY THERE'S MAGIC CREOMULSION - |