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Show I 8 The Herald-Journ- February Wednesday, Coast Slayer Found al 27, 1916. Meat Prices About Town Sane By Jury Summer Session To Hear Federal Aide Mr. and Mrs. Floyd White and and Mrs. family of Richmond SANTA CRUZ, Feb. 27 t:.I!t Ruby Jensen of Logan visited in WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 r.pi Thomas H. McMonigle, convicted Salt Lake City during the weekof of the kidnap-murdend. The Whites also went to Lehi The government announced yesterprices will be inThora Chamberlain, was found to visit Mrs. Whites father, H. J. day that meat cent creased for the averper sane today by the same jury, which White, who is ill. age family within the next month deliberated only three minutes in as a result of wage increases in the returning its verdict. Competent radio repair service. industry. Lee V. Rector, phone 1373, 435 East meatpacking The jurys findings made execuAt the same time, the wage stabchamSouth. in San the First tion Quentin gas ilization board released three ordber mandatory, unless the governor ers to clear the way for settlement becourt intervenes, or supreme Also members of the high school of the wage disputes which resultcause the original verdict of teams which will enter ed in a nationwide strike and govdebating murder was returned the tournament at Ogden March ernment seizure Jan. 26 of most of for leniency. first and second are Robert Soren- the meat packing industry. Dr. E. W Mullen of Agnew State sen and Jack Simmons. The One of the orders directed the hospital, Dr. Stanley Dowling and tournament will be held at Weber agriculture department, the govDr. Alfred Phillips, both of Santa college. ernment operating agency, to put Cruz, testified earlier that Me-- I into effect a hourly wage M. O. Mrs. Bell Monigle was sane and healthy at and left Mr, increase for 90,000 the time the Campbell, Cal., high Tuesday for their home in Los workers in seized plants of the five school girl was murdered, Angeles after visiting here. They major packing companies. The girls body was never found. came to attend the funeral service A second order provided for the In a series of conflicting confesfor their brother-in-laJames same pay increase for 36,000 white e San Cal., the Mateo, sions, Davidson. Aecompaning them to collar workers employed in the but driver repeatedly changed his California were Mr. and Mrs. same plants. l and of the her death disposal James Walton of Pocatello. story The third order established a of her body. for the wage pattern packing inHe originally said he shot her in under the governments new dustry Santa Cruz county and threw her Soil wage-pric- e policy. It granted autoover Devils Slide, a steep cliff into matic approval of wage inthe Pacific ocean. Later, he assertcreases for all packing plants ed the shooting took place in San whose wage scales normally follow Mateo county and that the girls changes in the wages of the big body was flung in the Crystal dam " five. in the same county. Feb. 27. (U R WASHINGTON, The house appropriations committee today recommended a er m Dr. John B. Hutson, undersecretary of agriculture, will be guest lecturer during the t'tah Stale Agricultural college rural education conference, scheduled June 18 and 19 in connection with the 1946 summer quarter. Professor Milton R. Merrill, summer dean, announced today.. Dr. Hutson has been president of Credit corporation Commodity since 1911 and director of food administrafood war production, tion, since May, 1943. Arrangements to secure him as speaker were made through Utah Senator Abe Murdock. connected In 1930 he became with the foreign agricultural sereconomic vice, where he made studies of the tobacco industry in Europe and its possibility as an outlet for U. S. tobacco and products. He was chief of tobacco u'hen section, AAA, from 1933-3he was appointed as advisor, International Sugar conference, London England. Dr. Hutson was assistant AAA administrator from 1936 to 1940. deputy commissioner for agriculture under the National Defense and Advisory commission, 1910-4director of agricultural defense relations, U. S. department of agricuture until 1941 when he became associated with the CCC and WFA. 1. HELP WANTED TWO GIRLS FOR PACKAGING MEATS HORUCHERS first-degr- production j Forms Cabinet Parents Offer To Will one-tim- Conservation Seals Excellence of Utah Go On Sale For Richmond Game Pay Kidnap Ransom Vegetables Lauded LOS ANGELES, Feb. 27. (UP) Ro- The kidnaper of chelle Gluskoter was promised to-- 1 day that any ransom demand will be paid, if only he will return the child. All we want is to get Rochelle Mrs. Merean Gluskoter back," said. "Friends and relatives have made funds available to meet any random demand." She promised not to call police if the abductor contacted .her. The parents desperate appeal came as sheriffs deputies expressed doubt of finding the friendly, brown-eye- d girl alive. She has been missing since Feb. 15 when she ran to a stranger who called her and climbed into his car. ld SEWELLS BLOOPER SAN BERNARDINO, Calif.-N- ational league hitters will have to face a bigger and better "blooper ball this season, pitcher Truett iRip) Sewell, the originator of the pitch, warned today. Auguste de Schrijver, head of the Christian Socialist Party which wants to put King Leopold back on the throne, will form a new Belgian cabinet as icsult of bis partys victory in the recent election. Far-flun- markets g For Cannon Child Funeral services for Lewis Lloyd of Mr. and Cannon, month-old-so- n Mrs. Lloyd Cannon, were conducted Tuesday in the Kenneth Lindquist mortuary chapel by John of the Ninth ward Christensen bishopric. Organ selections by Mrs. Thelma Lundquist, vocal duets by Pat and Thelma Jacobsen, accompanied by Irs. Lundquist, the comprised musical eulogy. Speaker was Bishop George Nelson, while prayers were offered by Walter Read and Ray Cannon. The grave In Smith-fiel- d cemetery was dedicated by Eldon Cannon, and burial arrangements were under direction of the Lindquist mortuary. It if, "7:' Case u. of Utah NUERNBERG, Feb. 27. (I'.Ki United Nations war crimes case prosecutors closed their against the surviving leaders of Nazi Germany today and court officials indicated the defendants would open their final fight for life on Monday. Russian Prosecutor Smirnov wound up the United Nations case with a summation of Nazi crimes eastern against humanity' in operative. Contracts indicate that iolume leads will be shipped co- - 2', no next the manager stated He sauly demand was strong Souther Utah potatoes, which were rate. fr especially high in California. Mr. Gerber is confernn. Wr Cache Valley Green Toin,,t0Gr ers association on the shipment 0 green tomatoes. Dr. W. P. Thomas, head of th Cache Canvas la Put BV DK Meeting s drive in C Bid Mss MAN ON THE STREET IS BACK eampui, arts of t tard prai te Red Ci ynt mori an prism fielt tinned f runs duty in ter of Ca ini driv The under 315,4 lairman oilman ol Preston was idler to ins, exp ickages Cross id ' irmany. -- n ed for tl Cross merican ive yetui Bit ML Martin Dormanns hearing was being held in Absentia view was that and the he had been kined in the siege o. er semi-offici- - . Europe. His presentation completed ar. array oi evidence which required more than three months to unfold and whic.i tne anted powers were confident would send the 21 surdzi v.a.curus to ueain on viving the gailows. Actually, 22 Nazi leaders and six organizations were oa t. lai, dui Deputy-Fuehr- Sept '''Z ing the excellence tables, Utah State Agn, l,ilUra vtge tol lege students and faculty member. heard from John Geibii of Utah celery coopeiatn manage assoc is tion, Tuesday. Utah last year shipped 3'j loads of celery which oi'ped s' markets, giving the growers price advantage, Mr. deiber More than 400 cars of other tables were also shipped by the Trials The to spent tost felt h istcresi al Berlin. price pi Dairy Production A Cross eeat to Payments Continue Favors Reduction of (untie taf peril Dairy production payments will be continued through June.., 30, Frank Nelson, member of thq Ita-Sta- te AAA committee in charge o. tiiis program, announced today. Mr. Nelson said that the rates tor April will be 70 cents per 100 pounds of whole milk and 17 cents a pound for butterfat. Ths rates for May and June will be 35 cents per 100 pounds of whole milk and 10 cents a pound for butterfat. These payments will be subject to termination or revision in the event any general increases are made in price ceilings for .either milk or milk products, Mr. Nelson World Armaments v In Nazi -- uly agricultural economic- -- clepurtmen" made arrangements for the tali A ton of water must fall a mile Dr. Leonard Pollard, assoc, to develop the energy equivalent professor of vegetable ciops an his students participated also to one pound of bituminous coal. Needh am Prosecution Closes agriculture department outlay for fiscal 1947 after lambasting its major research bureau lor engaging in social studies and suggesting lower cotton prices. The committee aimed the rebuke at the bureau of agricultural economics for activities beyond tue "bounds of functions intehded by congress. It cut the bureau's appropriation sharply. At the same time the committee restored a proposed budget cut of 143,900,000 in soil conservation payments to farmers. The action was taken after Secretary o Agriculture Clinton P. Anuersun warned that farmers might lose laicn in the department u it Uidn't lulfili , its promises. Inc total amount approved for the department to carry on iia work uuring the year ending uite 30, 1947 was 74,000,000 more than ine appropriation lor the current liscal year. It was $4(1,000,000 less, uuwcvur, - than tue total recommended oy tne budge bureau. 'the increases approved over last year reflected largely the committees ues.re to enlarge services tnat were curtailed during uie war. these include soil conservation, forest development and preservation, disease control anu agricultural research. -J- Jlay Reserved seat tickets for tiie River basketNorth Cache-Bea- r ball game, to be played Friday night in the Richmond gym, will go on sale throughout the various North Cache communities on a basis the same as last week, according to Amos Bair of the school athletic committee. Tickets are apportioned to towns on the basis of population, and may be purchased on Thursday tomorrow only. Following are the contact men for each town, and the number of seats he has for sale: Ariel Jorgensen, Amalga-Benso9 seats; Clarkston, Joseph Malm-ber11 seats; Cornish, Snowy's Cafe, 4 seats; Cove, Frank Last, 5 seats; Hyde Park, Vernal Seamens, 14 seats; Lewiston, Snowys R. Cafe, 35 seats; Newton, Cooley, 13 seats; Richmond, Frank Last, 24 seats; Smithfield, Dean Trenton, Cliff Rich, 48 seatl; Wiser, 11 seats. Budget Enlarged Funeral Rites Held Wheat: Feb. 27. WASHINGTON, House Republican Leader Joseph vtr. Martin, Jr., Mass., urged tue United States today to use its grtat worldwide intluence to get all nations to reduce armaments and aooiisti peace-tim- e conscrip- tion. Either the governments of the world want peace and do not need tne regiments and hardware o war, he said, "or we must conclude that they want huge armaments because they expect to use them. In either event, now is the time to said. find out. Martin expressed his views before the house military affairs committee. It is conducting hearings on his resolution to direct the president to seek a world agreement outlawing peacetime military training. In an apparent reply to President Truman's recent statement that his plan would not work,. Martin said: , "I say you will not know how practical it is until you try it and the least it can do is to test the good faith of th$ world powers. Nt( line Be Vsaid. IProf, Ev I the Cad mCtocl, local W pp. he pisofatcl p 1 lament be rais stated, .ted ter. T in the sponsor, producer, and participants in the first post- war production: S. E. Needham, Jr., Reed Bullen, Mayor Curtis Miner, Commissioner EIRay Robinsoo and Roy Larson. MAN ON THE STREET resumes after a two . year interruption. Pictured above from left to right are NEEDHAM'S YOU CAN BE SURE St. Joseph mei.ns guaranteed quality and economy. Demand St. Joseph Aspirin, world's largest seller at lOi. due Id, in c ital. Ur.Lohi ' Listen commi otas urf d a tl mass by ilunan irth; Wi n. D. A itant. ( To VN 1 2:10 On Your Dial ANOTHER FATALITY SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 27 (U.fii Utah today chalked up its 43rd traffic victim, of the year a toll more than double last year when Charles A. Sweat, 66, Fruitland, died in a Salt Lake City hospital. Sweat succumbed to injuries suffered Monday night when a car driven by Hugh K. Bauer, Glacier, Wash., struck him as he was getting off a bus near his Duchesne county home. IDEAS DIFFER V4 and miUlize ders, Bs n are li Your Mutual eht. ebe Friend lies li DAILY AT 12:15 Just After "CEDRIC FOSTER" And Just Before "QUEEN FOR A DAY" 60 of her is from the stuff that comes from your well and for every pound of milk she gives, she needs 4 to Sii pounds of water. A Fairbanks-MorsAutomatic Water System can give you big increases in farm profits. It will replace periodic watering with an ever available Yei WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (U: The administration's two key leaders in the fight against inflation today disputed the estimates bf Federal Reserve Chairman Mar-rinS. Eccles that the new wage-pric- e policy will boost living costs another 10 per cent. Reconversion director John W. Snyder said the new policy should not cause "any material increase in liying costs. Economic Stabilizer Chester Bowles said he did not expect more than a five per cent increase. er You will remember Needham's Man on the Street as the "Town Crier" known to everyone in Cache Valley before e supply. n a Fairbanks-Mors- e Water System needs no special wiring or extra equipment. Just connect to your water supply line and plug it in! C. C. Andeson Co. the war. This is the program which is completely unrehearsed a nd on which news of the people and doings of Cache Valley is freely aired. If you have a 'pet peave, an "ax to grind," cr just want the thrill of speaking over the radio, come down in front of Needham's any day excepting Sunday at 1 2:15. if you want to participate only os a listener, you enjoy hearing your friends and neighbors as they are interviewed daily over will KVNU. Needham, Jeweler, is the principal sponsor. The Pepsi Cola Bottling Company participates, and a large bottle of delicious Pepsi Cola is given to every person interviewed. S. The Drink of moderation . . . the E. Brand of Quality iftflty fonsoi vosan IECKER. PRODUCTS CO, OCDEM, UTR 125 NORTH MAIN $T, LOGAN. UTAH. r PHONE 15$W t 8 foment all fr, nii Kemen tl |