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Show -- rrnf f fyMrMTTTf r tTflffttfl rAGK SIX ' osphate JOY IN GERMAN MISSION LABORS The following are excerpts from a letter received by Mrs J. E Hickman,' 54 South Third West, from her son Thorval, now laboring as 'an L D. S. missionary in Germany. 1 i Germany, Frankfurt, a Oder, . Nov. 0, 1930 , , Cearest: This morn mg as I was eating breakfast the postman brought me a letter that took my you do not know what kind of a feeling came over me, I went pale, my district presi- ? - f- - dent asked me if someone was dead I said, no, only a transfer to Frankfurt, but that would not have been so bad had they only given me a branch Instead cf a district to preside over. I am shaking in my sfloes, I am surely humble X do not know how I will do, but I cant do anything else but take it and do my best. It is a real winter morning as far as the temperature goes, but as yet we have had no snow. The skies are clear the entire day and night. I am sitting by one of the German Denkmals (monuments) which they use to build fires in. I have had tha ferng burning for two hours, ' and the outside stones are just getting warm. I nearly freeze waiting for one of these to warm up Denkmal is a common name among the missionaries for these stoves. They are sometimes decorated like a monument and as for radiating heat, a monument would do as I ft ' well. moblles, he gave on this mission. it all up to Today it I hard for him to get enough ahead to buy a pair of shoes, but he does not worry as long as he is in his calling. His branch excels every other m the mission. There are between 80 and 100 members who (pay about 400 marks tithing each month. I doubt if there Is a branch or ward in Utah living their religion as Zealously as this little branch ofJFarso. In fee May magazine of the Relief society you will find an account of a bazaar feat Forst put on Read it and see what they did. They are preparing for another one this month, and Bra Lehing fee presiding elder, says," it wifi be bigger and better than the last one, and when he says that I believe it, his word cut like a knife, they have such force. In the Relief society of this branch We 44 members on fee roll book, and during the month of Get they had an attendance of 40 at each of the four meetings Does it look feat the peoplf here are more progressive than at home in Utah? I received another testimony as to what fee Gospel can do to a man and his family. We spent fast Sunday In November, with Brother Lehing and family. The family life was Ideal, every child knew what it had to do. Even the children 8 and 10 years old lasted With us I could tell you pages of things feat: impressed me m the life of this family. Sunday evening was regular M I. A. meeting at which I -- 30, spoke, , I left Madgeburg, Oct. Kustrta, eariy in the morn.ng to get to I visited Cottbus, Frankfurt by 11 oclock a m. to Landsburg, at the latter place, as attend a missionary meeting of Carl Sheffield is laboring junior companion. the district You ask if I have a testiThe 3 days previous to my departure were taken up in get- mony: if It is worth while; and ting reports of the branch in if I wish to retain- it.1 Yes, it takes time to grow and shape for my successor, and visdevelop. The gospel is the only iting friends and saints. You remember my telling you thing that will bring this or ot a Catholic lady whom I have anyother people to a higher visited a number of times. The level I feel an assurity feat last Sunday in Magdeburg, she what I am prcclaming Is fee invited me to tea, (peppermint truth. I have had my testimony tea). She had a number of other strengthened since coming to people there, among them an Frankfurt. It ay be I am a editor of a paper in Berlin. He little more humble Just at fee Is a Jew, at one time he Joined present. I am afraid a little, to go back the Catholic church but later became an atheist. He knew I to old associates for fear I Alwas a missionary, and was very would lose what I have. friendly to me. Someone brought though I have a testimony it up tile topic "The Churches of is hard sometimes, when tempToday. He became quite anta- tation assails one. to always do gonistic, saying all churches what we know to be right. were a fraud. We had a two If missionaries are sitting hours or more conversation and here and talking about home he agreed with me that we had and fee news about the football something feat he had not games. Some of the new ones heard of and our church would are eagerly wrapped up in fee be fee only church that could gossip, as for me, I have lost inhelp the people. He promised terest. It seems the nearer I me he would investigate fur- get to the end of my mirsfbn ther I feel my last Sunday in the more I dread it I dreamed fee other night, Magdeburg was not in vain. This Catholic lady bade me I was home, no one was parti-cuarl- y goodbye wife tears in her eyes, , glad to see me, not even promising me to also keep on at home, was fee joy so great, I was waiting for the day to investigating. Some cf the saints gave me leave home again, and I was little tokens of remembrance be- discouraged. When the good old sister, fore I left.. , At the district missionary where I was sleeping came to meeting, wh.ch lasted four wake me, I was happy to find hours, I met all my missionaries myself In Oermany. When I was of fee district, a very fine younger in my mission, I used bunch, Carl Sheffield among the to dream of home, and how glad number. I have under my direc- everybody was to have me and tion Six branches. One branch see me, and now it is just the is presided over by a local bro- reverse The whole district round ther. I have been deeply impressed wife the earnestness about here is flooded over withe and sincerity of this brother in water from fee Oder and War-thrivers. It has done considerhis calling Some six years ago he was called to laber here. He able damage, however had it was earning some 30.000 marks come two weeks earlier It would a year, and owned two automo- - have taken all their potato 'and ' .V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.VJ ' kti' Nov for Christmas! J- -l AlWYETIEIB, Kieot RAQMND , with the Golden Voice - you enjoy, on our convenient terms. & mm tw mm- --- -J SSSflSSI!!!! -- IT HAPPENS EVERY YEAR . e CLARKSTOti Ernest Horsley Clarks ton of Brigham City, member of the general board of fee M I A., spent Sunday in Clarkston, the guest of Mr and Mrs Kenneth Thompson He spoke In sacrament., meeting and In the general conjoint M I. A. meeting where the following program was earned out: opening sqng; prayer; duet, fee Mesdames Elva Ravsten and Sarah Godfrey; Barson God frey treated the slogan; talk, Mrs. Horsley; quartet,, , Edith Fisher and Blanche and Luella and Gwen Thompson! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shum-wa- y entertained fee children on Sunday in honor of Mrs Shumways birthday The town board has set aside The phosphate mining project started by the Consolidated Mining and Smelting company near Paris in Bear Lake county was described today by Stewart Campbell, state mine Inspector, as one of the biggest development in mining in Idaho this year. The company operates, according to Campbell, fee largest lead smelting plant in the world at Trail, British Columfee United bia, Just across States border from Washington, In connection with this plant a 17,000,000 phosphate pilant Is being constructed to use the phosphate mined in the Bear Lake beds. The operation was launched, Campbell said when the company sought a solution of the smoke problem about which the farmers on the - Washington side of fee line were complaining. They claimed that smelter smoke damaged crops. The principal method of g smoke at smelters, Campbell explained, is to make sulphuric acid, and one of the principal uses of sulphuric acid is in manufacturing fertilizers from phosphates. Finding no satisfactory phosphate beds nearer, part of the Bear Lake area was purchased. A market is being developed among the Alberta wheat growers who, Mr. Campbells said, have found it necessary to fertilizing their lands. Dec. - - DEPARTMENT P, S. BARSON, Correspondent In Bear Lake Boise, 9, T930.- Project 8 (AP) fee street south Automobile dnvers are requested to leave this street ' for the use of the children. Mrs Fannie Chandler and daughters, Clarmond and Lor-n- a, of Weiser, Idaho are visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs foe of coasting fee tabernacle. H. S. Barson. Ipa Mr. and Mrs Paul Clar&v were called to Sandy Wednesday last on account of Mrs. Clarks brother, Norman Carlson. being injured in an auto accident little Dean Thompson, who hurt when accidentally hit in the face with a shovel is improving nicely. Nine stitches were taken to close fee gash was ) painfully BRAZILS LEADER AT HIS DESK us-ta- be-g- ln beet crops, as it happened these were all harvested just In .tune. Sometme ago three hundred men were killed in fee mines along fee Rhine and around Madgeburg. About three weeks ago 200 men were buried alive and 100 or more injured. On fee day the 200 men were burled, another explosion buried 100 men and 50 Injured. It is one disaster after another and it is making a lot of people think. How is everything at home. Give my love to all and to those away from home when , you write I shall close with my prayers for you all at home and lots of love for you, mother dear. Your loving son, Thorval Hickman Turned Corsets Into Battleships i By Bess Furman Washington, Dec. 9 (P- iOthers may hoist of beating swords into ploughshares, but only Alice Roosevelt Longworth can lay claim to corsets Into cruisers turning A story first told to acquaintances by J. Leonard Deplogle, director of steel supply of the war industries board, during the World war, only today was admitted as accurate by Mrs. Longworth to a n inquisitive friend. Ardent admirers of the "Prin-cts- s Alice" quote It as apt illustration of sometimes challenged power in both the masculine world of governmental edicts, and the feminine world of fashionable dress Replogle related that during the World war. corset manufacturers came to him with an appeal for steel. Investigating, he said, he learned corset manufacturer had been making a $42,000,000 profit per annum, using 28,800 tons of steel, enougH to build two ' battleships." Was this essential Industry? He telephoned Alice Roosevelt It was not, replied the princess of sylph-lik- e figure. The corset men got no more steel. Strikingly contemperaneous ih fashion's annals was the arrival of the uncorseted figure, which flourished for 'a full decade during which matron and maid alike discarded steel stays, bobbed their hair and made it a flapper era, Not knowing fee steel story, the psychologists analyzed in the change a new freedom, feministic In Import. If Alice Roosevelt Lohgworth was indeed fee moving factor of the emancipation, she was far removed as possible from the crusader type of leadership. Only during the pist two social seasons has the corset fashionable scene to a marked degree and the new one la far less of the cruiser type. her the Progress Mothers At Work Entrust Of The Their Babies To Girl Scouts Logan Employment Asnorhitert . Getulio Vargas, provisional president picture at hla deek. Council Employees Of Leading Firms Endorse Funds Preati Photo for a new . , V..; Tne Blue Light Gas and OU company the Cache Valley El eettre company, the Royal Ba. kery, J. C. Penney company! The Logan Hardware company; Evana and Cowley garage and the Central Milling company are more firms which have reported that their employes have agreed to the two ppreent deduction in their salaries for four months for he Logan Employment fund. Judge M. C. Harris and L E. Johnson, manager of the- - Logan Fish Hatchery have also agreed to the plan. The Publicity committee desires to make it plain tha all managers and heads of the business houses, all professional men are included as wage Serving her community by taking care of babies at Ray Sukeries l( earners or salaried people. Evas pleasure rather than work by the Girl Scout. TSie gtrh regarded ery one receiving money as time alter school to amuse and tend the ctilkWa left a ages, salary or income are volunteer their nurseries. included. Retired citizens who by working mothers at the are able to assist are also urand the necessity for contin age whereas only 924 Germans, ged to help. of 941 Englishmen and 850 Swedes Monday 24 other men on the uance, as Izvestla says, reach that age. survey list were started on the battling against poitical on College hill. Four,trality among the intelligen-block- s - - The college of agriculture at of streets in the Tenttv zia. ward have now been graveled of Unlversity Kentucky API and a good grade is being made iste? 221 herds of 4.017 cow, for the new approach to the ofp7bhc herith More that 1,371 Frenchmen out ofi'n dairy herd improvement in cemetery and stadium. ' than 100 yards of gravel were every 10,000 pass 60 years of September. moved yesterday. Three of the mn on the survey list are working with the Light department euttlng trees The group of men now working will be relieved Thursday and another crew started. At present morg than ninety families are on the survey list The council cannot agree to give work for all out of employment therefore only those who are- - reported by fee survey committee will be considThe survey committee ered. has been Instructed to report Formerly United Cash and Carry Stores only the most needy cases Logan: 24 West 1st North and 382 South Main The Finance committee urges fee business houses and other Lewiston, Smithfield, Wellsville and Hyrum employers of labor who have not already reported to make haste and suomlt the plan to SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY their employes so that the projects can continue. The payday DECEMBER 10- for the next group comes on Thursday of this week. ' Jb .. ... Bananas, Firm, Ripe neu-roje- I v. V fssooatfd Prist Photo THE ct ELECTRIC -- FUBA Ht&SUE RADIO GENERAL ' Low be FOOD STORES In c. Special Holiday Fares on Oregon Short Line 1''' Richard L. Hargreaves, Beverly Hills, Cal., banker aid former husband of Grace Bryan Hargreaves, daughter of William Jennings Bryan, and Helen Ferguson, stage and sere an star, have announced their engagement. They met in court while the estate of William Russell, first . . husband of the actress, was being administered. Rested d Fare and for round LOGAN SEVENTH from all O. S. L. stations to trip WARD CHOIR TO destinations fee GIVE MUSIC TREAT nest, and to throughout many eastern points. For details on sale dales, (Continued from page one) and return limits, consult your local agent. Union Pacific SysTwilight chorus, by choir. tem. (Adv.) ACT II Oleo Vaudeville- - Cabaret RUSSIANS APPROVE Bailey and Mortensen. SENTENCES GIVEN McCracken and company SOVIET PLOTTERS Eddy Lundquist and company Quinney and Quinney. (Continued from Page One) Di. Wilson. Magic". ACT III tion after sentence Clos.ng Cabaret The trial itself, besides beChorus, Old Folks at Home, ing considered as most valuable choir. propaganda to Incite the pubMixed quartet, Kentucky lic to renewed enthusiasm for Kpme, Mrs. Claude Quinney, fulfillment of the five year plan also, communist circles The Preacher and the pear. hope has dealt a severe blow Win. Correl Johnson, Grand fen to fee right wing opposition of: melee. the communist parly see numerous Closing chorus, by choir Newspapers I am t- a Goin Grieve My Lord "lessons in fee trial, suth us Mc no.ths danger of foreign m uyen Super- - ' Heterodyne Beautiful Cabinet Design 5 per Oranges, Sunkist, 2 dozen :. 29 Eggs, Poultry Farm, dozen . . 23 Butter, Fresh Creamery lb 32 ., lb....-. Beans, Red Mexican, per Oats, Mothers China, each 33 can Soup, Campbells, per f. 9 1 3 & lb. cans 25? Pork Beans, Powdered Sugaf, I pound pkg.. 9 i Complete 5, 6 Sanitary Markets 6 SALMON, wholroT half, lb PORK CI10P&, 2 pounds i.. 13d Backed by the G-Certified E Inspection Plan CALL US TODAY Cache Valley Electric Co. J 22 South Main (Across from Hotel Kccles) Logan YV c gbe S & H (Iieen Discount Stamps lhone 53 1 -- Or s of Brazil, pose . , , BUSINESS BRINGS ROMANCE TO STAR one-thir- SURE by coming in for a MAKE immediately. Hear the Golden Voice the worlds standard of tone quality. See for yourself that there isnt abetter radio at any price. Choose the leader. Pay as Alining go is - -- Tuesday, December THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY. UTAH. EIDER THORVAL HICKMAN FINDS I rtty yTTyyyfTTftfyfTytfyfyyyytyyyMf f AAAS i H |