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Show News of The Ralph Maughan Wounded Legislature By WiDiani T. Igleheart Utah State Press Association If the voters of Utah dont have new laws to guide them at the next election it wont be because the current twenty-sixt- h session of the state legislature isnt trying to frame legislation that will permit them to know just how to vote for whom. Half a dozen bills ranging to an extension of the county attorneys term to four years, to a headless ballot aire already in the hopper of both houses land as the third week of the session concluded Saturday asurances had been given that additional bills will be submitted to clarify the methods of both voting and counting the votes. There will be no more Maw-Le- e ballot difficulties or their like, slay the lawmakers. The legislature really got down to business this past week with all committees in both houses functioning smoothly and turning out the new ones fdr consideration. While the joint appropriations committees were subdividing their chore of meeting new demands with what money there may be, the demiands by no means ceased coming in. Among last weeks new requests for instance Senator Alonzo Hopkins would create a new centennial committee to plan for 947 and would give that committee $275,000 to work with. The agricultural committee of the house would create a new dairy department in the state department of agriculture, and so on with minor appeals to the exchequer. These and others are not contemplated in the Governors budget. Nor are the requests for increased salaries from everybody in public service from town board members to justice of the supreme court, including all state elective and appointive officials as well as all employees of the state. The Legislature promises to scrutinize those lists 'ather minutely. Other revenue taxing proposals include the provision for civil turn to page four f ' 1 ser-Plea- se FIRST WARD OLD FOLKS PARTY TODAY The annual Old Folks party in the First ward is being held today in the ward chapel. The program has been arranged by Melvin Liljen-qui- st and will begin at 12 oclock with dinner following. The enter- tainment will continue in the afternoon and evening. BOYD PETERSEN HOME Boyd Petersen is home short furlough visiting with his wife and parents. He has been training in the infantry at Camp Roberts for the past four months and expects an overseas assignment soon. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Petersen. His wife is the former Idella Parker. She resides Wellsville. ' DEAN SALVESEN HOME 'S 2c Dean' Salveseu is home on a furlough for 21 days, following action vin the South Pacific with the U. S. Navy. He has been in seven major battles and has been overseas seven months and in the service one year. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Salvesen. T5 Ralph Maughan,22, was wounded in Luxembourg on December 26, according to a message from the war department to his . family. Ralph is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Maughan of Soda Springs, and the husband of Byrnece Hansen Maughan of Logan. Ralph spent all his boyhood days in Hyrum and only moved to Soda Springs a few years ago. His father was the head of the Electric Light Department while living in Hyrum. He was a prominent athlete at South Cache and the Utah Agricultural College, where be was ence center on the football squad and a star in basketball and track. Ralph left for overseas duty last September with an engineers unit, and was scheduled for infantry service when Von Rundstedt made his Ardennes breakthrough. The latest report states that he is getting along all right. VOLUME XXXIV Hyrum, Utah South Cache Defeats Weber The South Cache-Webgame on Friday night was a great thriller and kept the crowd in doubt as to its outcome. VI hen the regular play-th- e time was nearly ended the Weber Warriors and the South Cache Spartans were tied 35 all. Just before the gun however South Cache finally jumped ahead and the game ended 39-3Coach Clifford Poole and his Spartans are doing a great job. er 8. HOME ON FURLOUGH Cyril Petersen has spent an enjoyable furlough here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allie Petersen. Cyril has been in combat duty in the South Pacific, and has spent some FIRST WARD time in a rest camp in California The Scouts of the First ward will recently. He expects to go back inpresent a play in commemoration to action following his furlough. of Scout week in the First ward MIA in the opening exercises. They H C CLUB ENTERTAINED have been preparing this play for Mrs. LaVon Larsen entertained the past month and it is well given. the H. C. Club at her home MonScoutmasters are Willis McBride day evening at a delightful party. and Charles McBride. Following a delicious luncheon, In the Special Interest class Mr. the entertainment was in plaving E. N. Larsen of the South Cache 500. Prizes were won by Flora high school faculty will give an in- Andersen, high score, Mrs. Leda teresting discussion on Biology. Wilson, all cut, Mrs. Mabel Olsen, Special music will be given by Mrs. low score, and Mrs. Oda Allen, Mary Petersen and Mrs. Grace Pet- guest prize. ersen of the Second ward. They will Special guests were Mrs. Violet sing duets and will be accompanied Seamons and Mrs. Oda Allen. Members who attended were: by Alta Petersen. A gills trio from Virginia Jorgensen and Co. will Mrs. lone Sorensen, Eleanor Wright, also give numbers. Leda Wilson, Flora Andersen, Guel-d- a Fast meeting will be held in the Albretsen, Rhoda Clark, Flora ward chapel at 2 p. m. Special McBride, Maud Olsen, Mabel Olsen, music will be given by the choir. Eva NieLen, and Janita Jensen. Ii) the First ward Relief Society at 2 p. m. on Tuesday, Mrs. John GLDAYS JENSEN GIVES TALK W. Jorgensen will present the mesMrs. Gladys E. Jensen, merchant sage of the visiting teachers. Mrs. of Hyrum, delivered a thought proMJton Benson will give the Theol- voking address at the Logan Club dinner meeting which ogy lesson on Church History. SECOND WARD was held at the Bluebird Thursday Fast meting will be held in the evening. The meeting was devoted to imSecondjvard immediately after Sunchoir ward will renThe school day portant current issues of price conder the music. trol, rationing, inflation, and deSecond ward will hold Relief Socflation Mrs. Jensen used as her Fighting Inflation on the iety meeting at 2p. m. Mrs. Ruby theme Home Front. Christensen will present the TeachIn her speech she declared, Iners Topic and Mrs. Marvella Nielsen will give the Theology lesson. flation is a disease that develops In the Special Intorest class Mr. readily under war conditions and V. R. Carver will present four de- when raised to national proportions baters from the high school who wil1' can be almost as devastating as indebate the subject Resolved, that vasion, a famine, or a plague, for the voting age should be reduced It reaches everyone, destroys all j. values, breaks down all obligations, from 21 to 18 years of age. and ends in national catastrophe. THIRD WARD She exemplified her talk with The Third ward will observe Fast followin and pictures. Mrs. Jensen charts services immediately day ing Sunday school The waird choir is the General M irehant Member of will be in attendance. the Cache Valley Soroptomist C iub. While attending church last SunThe Third ward Relief Society will meet at 2:30 p. m. with Mrs. day, Mrs. Emily Savage took sudden Grover Christensen presenting the ly ill. She has been confined to her bed since. She is improving at the lesson on CFmch history. Mrs. Russell Allen will treat the Teachers present. topic. The Special Interest class will be Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sorensen and entnrtained by hearing Beethovens son of Bear Lake are living in the y Fifth Symphony in recordings. Ike Bradley home in the first ward. will the of Seminacy Hyrum welcomes these fine talentJorgensen the ed people to our town. program. present Church Notices ist -- Le-Ro- Mrs Willard Petersen was susMr. and M'. V. E. Petersen and Captain Durrell (Quig) Nielsen the of member Sunday Mrs. Garnell Larsen attended the has been released from the Walter tained a last Board Stake on MIA in Paradise Tuesday night. School Sunday. Reed hospital at Washington, D. C. following six weeks treatment for pneumonia. Quig is stationed with the special services branch of the ermy at the nations capitol. Before entering the service he was a prominent graduate of the USAC. He is the. son of Mrs. Nora Nielsen of this city. more 4 Gamp hollow reading the Courier data I noticed asked to that you were get the names of tall families who lived at Camp Hollow in 1860. I think I am the only one of the relatives who would be apt to see the article. I am sending the names of my husbands parents: Rasmus Jensen Louise Christena Nielsen Jensen Yours truly, Mrs. Heber Jensen Sheridan, Wyoming In Farm machinery repair clases wilL continue to be held every Saturday from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. at the So. Cache High school shops. F. J. Carlson and Ray Gannon are the structors. Ai-le- TDWARD NIELSEN SENDS SOUVENIRS Mr. and Morris NieLen have received some very interesting souvenirs from their son Edward who is serving in the army in Germany. In the box was a German officers sword, a dress bayonet, and two garrison caps. He also sent some unique scarfs to his three sisters from Holland. Edward has recently received the Expert Combat Badge which is very difficult to win. His special job is with the mortar guns in the infantry Another brother, Jared Nielsen, is in France serving with the I le has won a good RATION NEWS conduct medal, a medal for the inRed stamps Y5, Z5 A2, B2, C2, vasion of France and a star for the and D2 will become valid January battle of St. Lo. 28 and red stamps Q5 through X5 Darrell, another son of Mr. and are still valid, the O. P. A. ann- Mrs. Morris Nielsen, is in training ounces. Blue stamps H2, J2, K2, L2, in the infantry and is stationed at M2 will become val d February 1, Camp Roberts. and blue stamps X5 through G2 are still valid. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Butter will (remain at twenty-foMr. and Mrs. V. R. Carver anpoints a pound during Febr- nounce the marriage of their taluary, the OPA says, but margarine ented daughter Carol to Chairles will be raised to three points a M. Lindsay, son of Mrs. Mary Lindpound. Lard, shortening, salad and say of Ogden. cooking oils will be two points a The marriage took place in the pound. Sevefial new items have Logan temple on January 17 with been returned to the rationing list, President El Ray Christiansen persuch as bacon items and fat pork forming the ceremony. cuts which will call for one red The bride is a graduate of the point a pound hereafter. Scu'h Cache high school and the L. D. S. Seminary where she was a prominent musician and active in MARRIED Dewane Jensen and Miss Erma student affairs. During the past Lomax of Nephi W'ere united in year she has been employed as a at the Army Service marriage recently. The ceremony secretary took place at Nephi. Dewane is Forces in Ogden, and is now enmanager of the Taylor Grazing Ser- rolled as a student at the Utah vice, a government position, and is State Agricultural College, Private Lindsay is a graduate of located at Brigham City. He and his two children have been making Logan High School and a former their home with his parents, Mr. student of the Utah State Agriand Mrs. Wm. H. Jensen of th s cultural College. While in college city for the past few years, but he he W'as also an operator at the has now moved his family to Brig- Western Union telegraph company. ham. We wish the newly weds suc- He is stationed at present at Fort cess and prosperity in their married Monmouth, New Jersey with the Signal Coirps. life. On the evening of the wedding a reception honoring the newly Mr. and Mrs. E. Monris Gibbs of weds was given at the home of the this city were pleasantly surprized brides parents. to receive a telephone call from In the receiving line were the their son. Fireman 1st Class La biride and groom, their parents and Grande L. Gibbs on Sunday eventheir bridesmaids: Mrs. Maturing ing., His ship had just docked at Miss Jackie Wright, and Taylor, Seattle, Washington. LaGrande was Miss Gayle Crookston, all wearing well and happy to be in the U. S. formal gowns. after a six months trip through the Mrs. Carver wore a formal of South Pacific waters. LaGrande has blue and a gardenia corsage. been in the Navy since May, 1943. Mrs. jersey mother of the groom, Lindsay, He has spelt the past 18 months wore a black lace formal dress and in the Pacif'c and has made ten a gardenia corsage. Guests of honor tups across the equator. were grandmothers of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs have two Mrs. Marcus Taggart and Mrs. Robother sons in the service. Pvt. Marert Carver, each wearing corsages ine Eugene L. Gibbs is in the South of gardenias apd pink carnations. Pacific and has been in the service The bride was lovely in her wed-din- g eight months since his return from gown of heavy white satin a mission in the Southern States. with finger tip veil of brides illusMil-ton Electrician Mate First Class ion and carried a shower bouquet M. Gibbs entered the Navy on of roses and gardenias. June 1942 and after spending ten , The serving table was covered months in training at San Diego, with a Quaker lace cloth and cenand M:ami, Fla. he then spent 15 tered with a beautiful four tiered months in the South Pacific on a wedding cake topped with a minsubmarine chaser. Then in July of iature bride and groom. White tapthe past year he came back and ers in crystal candelabrum comwent to an Electric school at Syrpleted the table decorations. acuse, N. Y. He is now on the NavServing were Elizabeth Petersen, al Electric staff at Miami, Fla. Gladys J ensen, Wanda Shuldberg, Verna Hutchinson, Melva Van Moletta Roberts and Joyce Taylor. Miss Phyllis Van Orden was in charge of the guest book. In charge of the trousseau rooms were Bertie V Burton and Noreen Larsen. Ruth Hutchinson presided in the gift room. Two hundred and seventy friends called during the appointed hours. 1 After a short honeymoon, Pvt. Lindsay will return to New Jersey and Mrs. Lindsay will resume her w studies at the U. S. A. C. I i. ur Or-de- n, if l Jean Sant Dean L. Ward Takes role of Gypsy Queen Takes role of Thaddeus USAC Presents The Bohemian Girl! On Monday evening, Feb. 5, the USAC will present the light opera n Larry Liljenquist and Claire were special guests of the USAC The Bohemian Girl" at the South student body at a basketball game Cache Hieh School at 8 p. m. on Saturday evening. All children Tickets will be on sale at the door for 50 emts to adults and 35 cents in the county who have been afflicted with polio were invited to the for t"dents. The cast of the opera and the orchea includes 75 peogame. The youngsters enjoyed ple, and 's under the diicction of immensely. NUMBER 34 SECOND WARD TO HOLD REUNION The Old Folks party of the Seed'd ward will be held on Thursday, February 9. The days festivities will include a program commencing at 12 oclock with dinner following. In the afternoon an enter-t- a ring program will be rendered and in the evening a program and dance will be enjoyed. All married people of the wrrd are invited. Special guests will be the old people of the Second ward as well as of thq, other two wards. Committee members of the First and Third ward are also invited. X Lornell Hansen Takes leading role as Arlen? February 2, 1945 Professors W. H. Manning and N. deus a handsome nobleman in exile ftrom Poland, but living with the Chr'tiansen. The Bohemian Girl is the story gypsy band in disguise. Later when of a young girl named Arhne. She her broken hearted fathetr discovers is th' daughter of a count in Hun-parher, she goes to live in his mansion, When only six years old she is but is unable to forget her lover. after stolen by a band of gvps'es. She Her reunion with Iv s vi'h these trib's for twelve he ireveals his true ide' ty receives ' year: md falls in love with Thad- - the blessings of her f W. SENIOR LITERARY CLUB ENTERTAINS The Senior Literary Club entertained their husbands and guests at the Bluebird on Wednesday evening at a delightful mid year social. A delicious dinner was served to 70. The table decorations were low crystal bowls of red American Beauty roses and fern. Following dinner a fine program of music, poetry and readings was enjoyed. Hosteses far the evening were Miss Bessie Brown, Mrs. Irma Nichols, Mrs. V. R. Carver, Mrs. J. B. Baxter, Mrs. J W bright, Mrs. Fired J. Carlson, and Mrs. Eva Gus-tavese- n. v. s Mr. and Mrs. Willard Petersen made a business trip to Salt Lake City on Monday. I Vf I I '! S Memorial For Luther Miller Honoring one of Hyrums boys who gave his life for his country, a memorial will be held in the First ard chapel on Sunday night at P. M. for Luther Miller, son of the late Albert Miller of this city. The services will be held under he direction of the American Legion Post No. 47. Pfc. Miller was killed in action in Germany on December 6. He had served in the American First Army and was connected with the 415th Infan'ry Timber Wolf Division. He had seen action in France, Belgium, and Holland. Luther Miller was born in Hyrum on February 21, 1907, a son of William Albert and Mina E. Miller who are both deceased. He received his education at the Lincoln school and the South Cache high school. On January 7, 1939 he married Afton Smith of Amalga. He was inducted into the army on December 10, 1942 and trained at Camp Adair. Oregon and Camp Carson, Colorado. He went overseas in September, 1944. Survivors are William S. Miller, and Mrs. Maud Olsen of Hyrum. Rayph C. Miller serving with the U. S. Army in Italy, Mrs. Sylvia Hart of Portland, Oregon, and Mrs. Selma Preece of Lewiston. INJURED Mrs. Frank Gulbransen suffered injuries when she had a fall recently at hetr home. She is improving at present. CARD OF THANKS To our many friends and relatives who have brought comfort to out hearts in this time of deep sorrow, we wish to express our sincere gratitude. For the many expressions of sympathy and kindly deeds extended us in parting with our beloved wife and daughter, for the lovely service and beautiful flowers, we express our thanks. May God likewise extend his comforting spirit to all who have assisted us in any way. Robert L. Hansen Earle Bishop and Mrs. Allen and family. SPECIAL MUSICAL PROGRAM of LeRoy Jorgensen, principal the South Cache seminary will premusical minute sent a forty-fiv- e program consisting of the recordings of Beethovens Fifth Symphony, at the Special Interest class in the Third ward next Tuesday evening. This symphony is quite familiar to many and will be quite enjoyable. Mr. Jorgensen will give the history of the symphony and will comment on the music. DRAFTEE PARTY SATURDAY A party honoring five of our boys who are leaving for military service will be held in the Third ward chapel on Saturday night at 8 p. m. The American Legion is. sponsoring the social with LeRoy Smith in charge. Honored guests will be Ruel Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Allen. Ivan Albretsen, son of Mrs. Leland Andersen, Jack Hall, son of Mrs. Annie Hall, Cloyd Christiansen, son of Bishop and Mrs. James G. Christiansen, land Shirley McBride, son of Mark McBride. Lets all come out and give these boys a good send off. |