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Show - r? IlMtTf 'TTIItt vt TffTf???IMTn fXtiXUVXX' vx't? ' wxXArit's ttTT rrf TffvrrwjV'v - "v r tiie jqurnal. lqc &yr TAGE EIGHT TTTTTTT1 V cixyrcAgHE counti;utah. - UTAH CLUB BOYS AND GIRLS OFFERED $500 SCHOLARSHIP 4-- H Funeral Rites At Lava For Former (Continued from Page One) winners of the 100 scholarships, and shall further select a list of 100 from which alternates may be chosen to receive any scholarships left vacant by default of the holders. The winners and alternates will be announced at the annual Harvester company luncheon to club members during the tenth club congress in national December, 1931. Selection of the 500 candidates club management by the and of the 100 winners by the judging committee shall be based on the relative value to agriculture of the club service performed by the contestants between January 1, 1931 and October 1, 1931. In order to secure representation In the awards for all the diversified major phases of agriculture, scholarships shall be allotted for the different club projects as follows: Matron Mr. and Mrs. George M. Wilkinson arrived home Tuesday Horn Lava Hot Springs, Idaho, v.here they went on account of the Illness and death of Mis. Wilkinsons mother, Mrs. W. J. H i ii s g I . I u ren: Mrs. John 4-- 11 4-- 4-- H 4-- Moriev, Pocate- llo: Mrs. George Wilkinson, Logan; Mrs. D. H. Kidd, Salt Lake City;' Mrs. David Evans, and Miss Lorraine Fife, Lava; and I, eon Fife, Lava; and Alvin Fife. Pocatello. t ) i 4-- H Idle, who died there Saturday morning after a lingering illness. Funeral services were held at Lava on Monday afternoon at 2 oclock in the ward chapel under the direction of Bishop Rowsell of Lava and Undertaker W. W. Hall of Pocatello. Mrs. Fife, with her husband and famuly, formerly resided in Providence. They have made their home In Lava for the last 38 years. Mrs. Fife was born In West Portage, May 14. 1874. She is survived by the following child- 4f '. ' : Wednesdayy December 10, small Com, 16; cotton 7; grains, 6; potato, 3; tobacco, 2; baby beef, 6; pig, 10; sheep, 4; dairy, 16; poultry, 8; .and open, including heme economics, fruits, vegetables, etc, 22; total, 100. No scholarship may be used excgpt to defray the expenses of the recipient toward a regulcourse in agricular four-yetural course selected by such recipient. Use of each scholarship must begin within one year from the date of the announcement of the award. A scholarship winner must notify his or her state cii leader in writing on or before August 1, 1932 stating his or her intention to use the scholarship. Should such winner be undecld-ed-a- s iE. to use-of- or for other causes such as sickness, death, or removal be unable to utilize it, such scholarship shall be' awarded to the alternate who as nearly as possible represents the same major phase of agriculture and whose residence is nearest to that of V the winner. ar sh ' : : v : 1930.- - The sum of $200 of the scholarship fund shall be paid to the winner as soon as practicable after matriculation. An additional $200 shall be paid February 1, 1933. A further sum of $100 shall be paid at the time the winner registers for the second collegiate year. All these payments shall be contingent upon receipt of a favorable reclub state port from the leader that the contestant is properly qualified and is in attendance at an agricultural cok 4-- H lege. The details of administration of this plan shall be supervised by the national committee boys and girls club work, North Michigan cago, . Blinds. Chi- Avenue, -- - Yashin gton (AP) Billy Chicago racer, has been formally declared America s 1930 driving champion by the American automobile , association. The diamc'nd-studdc- d medal Arnold, the honor will presented next year on morial day at Indianapolis. A r; be Me- .. : Woolgrowers Convention Today (Continued from Page One) mittee. of. the National association has proposed a fund of $4uo,Ooo as a mark at wnlch 4 . ; - . to aim. Roger Glllis of Del Rio, Texas, president. cf . the National WooL Marketing eerporatianr-i- n an address said that since the corporation began operating in Februariy this year it has controlled 25 percent of the Domestic wool output and 85 per cent of the mohair crop. A total of $37,000,000 has been advanced to - growers by the corporation, whose policy is to advance staDilize prices and them when conditions warrant. Paul G. Rcdington, chief of the Bureau of Biological Survey U. S. department of agriculture, sac; he was convinced the work of ridding productive regions of destructive animals and rodents was "a service of economic worth, real farm relief If you please." .He. replied... to crltlcssm of. the use of poisons in predatory an. imal extermination. "If the use of poison were eliminated altogether," he said, "the cost cf taking coyotes and other predators that are Injured tq domestic stock- and game animals woulck be greatly increased and the work of control correspondingly handicapped and tne lessening of deMany of predations delayed. stock and the agricultural apparently raising interested overlook the true value of rodent control. .. - i ft rs !. CARLSON RITES DRAW MANY TO FOURTH WARD (Continued from Page One) has reared a respectable family of fine daughters and a son. A vocal solo was furnished by Frank Baugh accompanied who sang by his daughter, also "Sometime, Somewhere," a vocal soio by Donald Smith. There were many, beautiful flowers and a large cortege followed the remains to their last resting place in the Logan cemetery where the grave was dedicated by President G. W. ' i t ' 1 Lindquist,. j 4 "HELP AND NOT KNOCK IS SLOGAN FOR UNEMPLOYMENT from Page One) Employees of business houses and individuals who have accepted the Logan City Counicl Employment Fund Plan. Lund-stro. Loga'n city employees, Furniture company, emW. . Lindquist ployees, Geo. and sons, O. S. L. Railroad company employees, Cache Val- ley Electric company employees, Bordon Western company employees, I. E. Johnson, -a! Bakery employees, Blue-light Gas and Oil company, employees, Woolworth company Hardware employees, Logan company employees, Evans and Cowley employees. Garage Central Milling company emA Dr. Jos. Geddes, ployees, Cache Valley Herald employees, Wukinson and Sons employees, Chamber of Commerce Holman, ployes, Jensen- - and J. C. Penney company employees, Cache Auto company employees, Cardon Jewelry company employment, and Olof Nelson construction company. (Continue m ) : i . THOUSANDS GATHER TO , SEE AVIATOR AND BRIDE I i I 2 ' (Continued from Page One) oceans, is the only pilot to have completed a westward flight across the Atlantic to New York and holds the re. cord for a flight between Eng land and Australia. PIIYSICIA L FIT EIGHTY AT (Continued from Page One) s were no less than seven stopped and requested to give him a ride but he refused them ail. Today Mr. Lowe soys he feels notae the worse for the hike. J On the 20th day of this year Mr. and Mrs. Lowe $ill commemorate the sixtieth anmver-- y aulo-mob.le- ufimr-svxudin- .A M M .4 A gr Z Consulting chief of the soviet's $110,000,000 dam and power plant In Ukraine Is Col. Hugh JL Cooper of New Fork (upper left). Map shows location of project, and American machinery In action is pictured below. By Dnieprostrol, Ukraine, U. AP) - Leading the list o! projects .In Soviet Russia's five-yeplan for Industrialization is a huge dam and power plant here to cost $110,000,000. An army of 22,0o0 workers, with 4,0o0 women for the lighter work, is pushing the completion job to scheduled late in 1932. Nothing Is being permited to stand in the way of its successful conclusion. and American machinery dominate American methods the scene, where three years ago there was only wilderness. Dnieprostrol now Ta a PP' ulatlon of 60,000. The power plant is expected Id Turriisfi energy for'lo" or 58 factories that now are principally in the formative stage. It also will transmit power to coal mines of the Done tz basin. The dam across the river Dnieper is Virtually two thirds completed. Owing to the shortage of labor, the red army has been aiding in its construction. Consulting chief of the job Is Col. Hugh L. Cooper oi New York, an American engineer. Asociated with him is A. S. Winter, a Russian German, a close friend of Lenin who was communist from expelled ranks. There also are several American engineers and some of the best Ruslan technical ' men. (These latter likewise are not communists, probably because of the limit to wages paid a member of the party. Joseph Stalin himself receives only about 350 roubles, or $175 a The month. engineers usually name their own salaries and get them. Cooper is t h e consulting chief, while Winter is the active man in charge. The American operates principally from his New York office, spending but a few weeks of the year on a trip of inspection. Engineers of his staff are stationed here, permanently however, many of them living with their families in comfortable cottages built for them.Almost all the machinery has been brought from America. Bill, known as "the roughneck American, is one of the reasons why the - great hydroelectric project here is light up to the schedule of the soviet five-yei plan. . His first name really Is Hubert. His last is a guarded secret. To the 'laity he is Bill. He has one eye. the oth?r having gone out in circumstances forgotten discreetly S. R. ar - ar CwNsyTk Srvf JHis, face is scarred, his shou- victor Eubank lders are broad and he walks Oh DOCTOR Jimmie has licked, Distracted Mother: with a slight limp."Bill came out here two the gum off dll the Christmas Seals. . WhafSHALL I do? Doctors Voice on telephone: Buy some more seals, explained a soyears ago, ciable Ruslan engineer, "to in- madam. . Theyre only a .benny a piece. stall some -- cranes we had ordered from America. He knew his job and hp did It well. "When he finished we offered him a contract to stay on and superintend one of the big r labor jobs. And to him we must i give credit for the way In which a large part of thtf work h,as continued at top speed. "It seems that when Bill came here he knew no Russian. The first thing he Insisted on belpg taught was how to -swear in Russian. Then he learned a - few necessary - sencrew tences and gathered his of several hundred men about him. He had carefully worked out a little speech. This was it: Yo u THE ELECTPIC GENERAL ; RADIO PHONOGRAPH COMBINATION "Now, listen fere, you blankety blank blank blanks. I am not - a communist, an anarchist, a republican or a democrat. I am just an American out here to do a job of work., I don't care what you are 'But on . th.'s job your religion or your politics don't count. Thats an old American custom. Yodre going to work. Get me,1 boys, youre going to work on this job or I'm going to kick seven kinds of disaster out of you. . And those Russian workmen gave Bill three rousing cheers. He never had any trouble with them, from the jump. He soon had several thousand men under him and if there was a loafer among them he didnt fast long. "Bill, it seems., is so tough the workers iove him. "Some time ago there was a big dinner given t,o the staff here. Bill was In a dinner coal, patent leather shpes and the rest of the bourgeois uniform" ."Somethipg happened to one of the big cranes on the river. Bill was summoned.1 He went out, patent, leather shoes and all, and, walking like a cat, out on the crane, 10 feet above the water, repaired the damage and came back to dinner. "I would like to tell you Bills last name, but ; I am afraid my life would not be worth much if ; he heard abopt it. with Home Recording Equipment Ha&SDr v .v l rV; iV' V T - LANE Cedar Chest : rf khys ?? ifr'W s n t . - . . ' What finer gift for her than a fine LANE Cedar Chest from you? What other gift combines more beauty? More Romance? More Protection? The chest illustrated above is, we believe, the greatest cedar chest value ever built. Its splendid hardwood exteriors and rich carvings will match up with her finer furniture. And its aroma-tigh- t construction insures absolute moth protection. LANE gives a free Insurance Policy against moth damage. See the actual' chest and youll instantly realize what a value this is. 250 .t THE Insurance Policy against v SUPER RADIO hop-stepp- ed Moth Damage FREE! Let us demonstrate Cache Valley Electric Co. 22 South Main : Minnesota' Sells Timber Minn. (AP) ApDuluth, board 22,000,000 proximately feet of state-owne- d timber is being sold by Minnesota. It is a genuine ... Phone 53 i Logan (Across from Hotel Eccles) : We give S & H Green Discount Stamps - Let : - ' Us Your Nest ...... Feather A f AA On Suits and Overcoats FOR THREE DAYS ONLY Thursday, Friday and Saturday, December 11,12 and 13, at (?.tsTSH?T5!.?-TOTfT- T TV? A TS? rtTEXDmm A A7W The Home of Kuppenheimer, Fashion Park and Griffon Suits and Overcoats 35 Selected New Fall and Winter . Suits for Men and Yeung Men. These suits were formerly priced at $27.50 to $35.00. Sale priced- - mis Merchandise Xmas At new, Lower Prices 20 Childrens Overcoats. Regular Values $11.00 to $12.50. Sale price Northern Utahs Foremost Clothiers h |