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Show PAGE TWO $25,000 Offered South Cache State Fair HEXRICHSEX & McDOWELL Publishers Published at Hyrum, Utah Weekly Establish'd 1910 PNAU DtTO R I Al ASSOCIATION National Advertising Representatives, Newspaper Advertising Service, 188 West Randolph St., 111. Subscription price: One year, $2.00. Legal paper entered at the In Hyrum, Utah as Second Class matter under the Act of March 3, 1879. post-offi- GILBERT Editor ce V. McDOWELL and Business Manager NORMA BAXTER Hyrum News Editor p r ETHEL JONES Wellsville News Editor Telephone 142R2 ' Cash Premiums and awards amounting to better than await exhibitors and contestants at the 1946 Utah State Fair, which will be held at the 1946 Utah State Fair, which will be held at the State Fair Grounds, Salt Lake City, September 16 to 22 inclusive. With all buildings and ground space available for the exposition for the first time in four years, premiums are again being offered in every division. Information as to detailed is contained in the Premium Book, which is available upon request to Sheldon R. Brewster, Manager, Utah State Building, Fair, Administration State Fair Grounds, Salt Lake City 3. Utah. The Premium Book contains all rules and regulations, and complete infor, mation for all exhibitors. Fair State the at Competing Classificais open to everyone. tions cover almost everything grown and produced in Utah. The Utah State Fair wants to encourage the production of poultry, quality in livestock, homecraft, flowers, art, talent, or anything produced In jur state. For this reaosn, premiums amounting to $25,000.00 are being offered exhibitors. A special invitation to new exhibitors is being made this With complete facilities year. and space available there will be room and equal opportunity for he An award at everyone. State Fair carries with it much more than the cash premiums that may be won. Place your exhibit and find out how a qualified judge will rate your product. Send for your copy of the Premium Book. It contains all necessary information. $25,-000.- MEMBER UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION Chicago, emit In Premiums At Courier r AUGUST SOUTH CACHE COURIER EMILY PEARCE Paradise News Editor Radar Equipment radar equipment employs the same principle; it sends out radio waves which are reflected back to All the sender if they encounter a dense object, just as the light of a searchlight beam on encountering an aircraft may be reflected back to an observer. The term "radar, however, covers a wide variety of gear designed for different tasks and differing strikingly in details. Only the microwave types, introduced since 1942, are of interest to the meteorologist. suf-flcint-ly 00 Oil of Wintergreen Oil of wintergreen is not only found in the shrub called wintergreen but is contained in strawberries, blackberries, raspberries, currants, plums, apples, peaches and some other common fruit. Should All Education Be in the Hands of the State Government? Moderated by G. CLARK Chairman American Economic Foundation FRED Henry Noble Hall Internationally Known Authority on Foreign Affaire, Author, Lecturer MR. HALL OPENS: Victor Hugo once likened the ideal system of public education to a Jacobs Ladder set down by the government among the teeming masses and up which everyone could climb according to his or her ability. The Third Republic did that for the people of France. It not only created the greatest system of public education ever devised by any government, but it gave to every boy and girl a full and equal opportunity to go as far as the gifts he or she had received from God would permit It fitted every French man and woman for a useful place in the community and created an elite at the Ecole Polytechnique, the Ecole Normale Superieure, the Ecole des Hautes Etudes Politiques which provided France with statesmen, scientists, economists, financiers, industrialists, business leaders, artists and men of letters that kept her well In the forefront of European culture. Only by such a coherent system of education can a state give Its citizens that full equality of opportunity to which they are entitled and Insure that their Intellectual formation be not hampered by intolerant sectarianism or the narrow views of private schools serving a would-b- e privileged class. This In no way detracts from the magnificent work done by great private universites like Harvard and Yale which would render even greater service if coordinated Into a state system of education. MR. CROFT CHALLENGES: The distinguished Mr. Hall must realize France fell apart at the seams because the majority of her people were not sufficiently educated to the realities (economic, political, sociological) of life. I believe in the Jacobs Ladder" theory, But I want the tndi-- ; vidual to choose his own ladder and be prepared 'ey Education to climb it without the muscles of a politician. It is highly improbable any nation can long survive that suffers the dictates of a man, or a small group of men, in education or any other form of life. This can only mean big men versus small minds . . . the better to exploit you with, my dear. That does not breed freedom only serfdom. MR. HALL REFLIES: France did not fall apart at the seams. She Was crushed by German might and by reactionaries who hated democracy. How can an Individual a child choose his own leader and what confusion must result from such a multiplicity of leaders. Only by a state system of public education approved of by the representatives of the majority of the people can we be sure that those who have the ability will rise to the top and that there will be no mute Inglorious Miltons" buried in country churchyards. ed LONG DISTANCE li CALLING UUjp) Jf I A. debated by Arthur C. Croft President, National Foremen Institute, Inc. Authority on International Problems Labor-Manageme- nt MR. CROFT OPENS: Education is the essence living. That anyone should dare suggest this extremely vital organism of our society be state turned over to an is a mockery of democracy. Parents, not nations, should control the education of children. Let us try to understand that, first, education begins in the home. So, the state, through propaganda, the complete control of all textbooks, the selection (politically) of all teachers and supervisors of education, would be able to really educate" the youths of this nation or any nation to its own peculiar will. Let us assume stailn, or Hitler, or Mussolini was in power In this nation: communism, national socialism or fascism would be inevitable whoever the rulerl This is a tragic fact! Equally tragic (and 1 assume I agree with my opponent) is the fact that our educational system has not represented the best in every degree. What we need do then is not destroy what we have Government control but Improve is certainly not the answer I The answer lies in the ability of the individual or the parents to understand what makes for a sound educational system, and to see that this system is carried out state-wid- e. Let the community, with its own peculiariprobties, its own economic-soci- al lems, devise its own means of education. An state cannot do that without bloated bureaucracy and bilious bombast t' a Civil Service Guernsey Cow Jobs Available Peterborough, N. H J. Chadwick, North Ogden, cf? has made a state champion cord on his registered GuerJ4' cow, Muriel of Thousand S7 Her production of 8954s ings. pounds of milk and 423 3 of butterfat is the highest recZ' in the state made in class GBr which means this cow made tv record at the age of tw0 yea in the Herd Improvement Divi sion. She was milked 730 tim' while on test. The sire of this cow, Green Meads Country Squire, has three daughters in the Performance Registered of The American Guernsey Cattle Club. State Record Mr. C. C. Coffey, manager of the Veterans Administration contact office at Room 29, Thatcher Bldg., Logan, today reminded veterans in this area that certain civil service jobs are available at the ipresent time and are expected more openings shortly. Without going into detail cn specific positions, Mr. Coffey reminded Utahns that veterans are granted preferences as far as government employment is conThese preferences range cerned. from 5 to 10 points in regular civil service examinations, depending upon whether or not the veteran is receiving a pendission for a ability. mentioned the Mr. Coffey Government service as a possibility for Utah veterans who might be unemployed in the near future owing to economic in our business fluctuations service-connect- ed Set5 Chill Bacon Slicing bacon by hsfnd, especial!? when the cut is largely fat, has al. ways been an unwieldy, difficult job, even with the sharpest knife. Meat specialists of the department of agriculture suggest hardening the slab before slicing, by storing it the freezing compartment of the j. frigerator. When chilled until firm, bacon is easily cut into thin, even slices. cycle. Employment of veterans is one of the biggest problems facMr. Cofing the nation today. fey pointed out that either his office or the veterans employ- - ment representative at an United States Employment 01 fice would be glad to advfi veterans on making application for Federal positions. it wo.mmf I am MR. HALL CHALLENGES: not advocating a state monopoly of education, only a state system democracy can be Just as efficient as any dictator. The people do not themselves perform the functions of government They govern through their elected representatives who are quite capable of framing a public education law giving equality of opportunity to all. It would represent the views of the majority and such a system would not interfere with the Individual desires of parents who might wish to send their children to sectarian or other private schools. But state education alone can do justice to the people as a whole. It is not education that begins at home it is character building. MR. CROFT REPLIES: Our free educational system seems to have produced an amazing number of competent economists, jurists, industrialists, scientists, artists, political leaders and men of letters. Ill admit we have developed better talent in the material field, fallen short in the arts. But the test of any society or educational system in this day and age is to fit its people for survival In a highly competitive world. I contend the Union Free School Districts have done a magnificent job without the political regimentation Mr. Hall thinks they need. I reiterate: lets Improve the system we have, not impair It by the devices of bureaucratic control. IT IS the leading firms of Cache County who are the consistent advertisers in this newspaper. They maintain their leadership and business success by giving greater values and better service and telling YOU about it. 1 They recognize the fact that readers of this paper are men and women of intelligence able to think for themselves and qualified to make their own decisions. m That is why advertisers bring you intelligent, truthful, factual information in their advertising informa tion that is always valuable to you. Line Trans-Continent- al Uncle Sam Says , 2, 1946 The first telephone line between New York and San Francisco was completed in 1915. m mo m sno m SffiGQ tffl SINCE LAST SUMMER MORE LONG DISTANCE calls are being ALL SPOTS REMOVED handled at our switchboards this summer than ever before in history. The great surges of traffic which seemed so abnormal on VE day and VJ day are being far exceeded every busi- ness day now. The greatest increases have occurred calls to neighboring towns Logan, Ogden, u Salt Lake City, and Brigham City. Some delays are inevitable. We are bending every effort to relieve ...not This years Independence Day is a wonderful contrast for you as against the Fourth of Julys of the past few years. Tonight you may be seeing peaceful fireworks blazing over your American home town. No more appropriate message could be burned against the July 4, 1946 sky than the one I am looking at in Los Angeles this moment. Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder has said the same thing in an equally impressive way: You are insuring your own Independence by investing regularly in these same bonds." just ordinary spots, but even perspiration stain and odor are removed with Sanitone dry cleaning! PRESS HOLDS LONGER ...so important to that look. Its amazing how the press stays in longer! well-groom- ed NO DRY CLEANING ODOR U. S. T reasury Department .need we say more? Discern- -' this situation as rapidly as possible, but serious ing men and women will shortages of facilities delay the needed circuit additions. appre- ciate this extra plus. Until we can provide adequate facilities LET we ask your cooperation in avoiding unnecessary long distance calls and in keeping necessary calls PROVE THESE CLAIMS! We ask only the chance to prove the difference our Sanitone dry cleaning can make. Its a difference you can see and f&el yourself, with the very first garment we Sanitone dry clean for you! as brief as possible. The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. US LOGAN LAUNDRY Wallboard Shavings A new process has been discovered that converts sawdust and shavings into a hard wallboard possessing many qualities of wood. r DRY CLEANING and jj |