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Show mm waom MSI VOLUME XX -- TRE.MONTOX CITY, UTAH, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1915- - missikg fON STEFFEN STATE'S TO RECEIVE HON- Club boys and girls inivided by Swift ti Company. In this state who contribute to the addition, $200 college scholarships war effort by raising poultry for will be presented to ten selected meat and eggs will receive special jfrom the state champions. The this year for outstand- - tivity is conducted under the di cing achievements. 1 his is dis- - rection at the extension service closed in the announcement of the of the State Agricultural college National Poultry Achieve- and USDA cooperating. ment Activity, in which numerous Among the new activity's obmerit awards are offered on coun- jectives are to encourage to study scientific developments in ty, state and national levels. Awards comprise sterling silver poultry production and to apply medals to five top ranking entrants new findings to their own flock. in each participating county, and Also, to acquire a knowledge of National club congress hon- poultry grading, marketing and ors to the state champion as well as merchandising methods. $25 war bonds to the four next County extension agents w ill ro-! all highest scoring members, supply full information. p Four-- K ACTION mi O FILIPINOS was tne mes- and received Saturday by Mr. Conrad Steffen, concerning Conrad son, Flight officer, .., r.irmanv. ., ? 1 4-- officer Steffen, who was as "Buddy" en- Wliarly known in November in the air corps n to called begin train-H,i,,42 and was his won He 1943 May Texas in at Eagle Pass d 1 1944 and on his twenty-fron- d :t 1 birthday, 4 year he flew Ljc for overseas ujter pilot of a 1 J February 23rd the At- was a He duty. across letter j 1 jMcsserschmitt a graduate of Bear River li?h school and was a student at for a year tie University of Utah He is enlisting. The family and friends are hopi- better news soon. for ng Canners Home To Mail Applica-- , tions Anifl Stamp and rationing boards requesting home canners to mail their applications with spare 13 samp pinned to it, to the board this year, instead of appearing in chairman of person, Ed Deakin, the local war price and rationing hoard announced this week. War price are canners may begin "Home Temple Worker To Speak At Badges Awarded Second Ward At Penrose Two Eagle P 47 Thunder- - written on April 3rd told of having com-- I phis pnts in the first missions fad eight his ek after getting plane, ana successful in getting been jaiing I 4-- maili- Services For Mrs. Zina H. Warleigh At Deweyville Funeral services were held on Thursday at 3 o'clock in the Deweyville ward chapel for Mrs. Zina Hansen Wardleigh, with Bishop Clarence Fryer in charge. Musical numbers were a duet, "'Say Not I Journey Alone," by Mrs. Etta and Mrs. Lydia Norr; Vocal solos "A Perfect Day," and "Will Not Be Long" by Moroni Ward. Speakers were Milton Marble and C. J. Dewey and Bishop Fryer. Prayers were offered by N. Peter Marble and M. G. Perry. The many beautiful flowers and the relatives and friends attending the service showed the esteem in which Mrs. Wardleigh was held in the communities. Interment was in the Ogden City cemetery. Three daughters and two sons of Mrs. Wardleigh were at the ser- their vice. sugar certi- ng their applications to al boards at once, but loc- not be issued until chairman stated. Application blanks may be had either by writing to the local board for copies or through the grocery stores. Housewives are requested will ficates 7, the May answer to all questions asked on applications or their application sheets will be returned to the must be attmember of the family. The stamp must be pinned or clipped to the application, not pasted on the form." All boards in the state will begin the issuance of the certificates on after May 7, and the issuing Nod will last until May 19. After that date, no more sugar certificates will be handled until June them. Spare stamp 13 ached one for each or 15. Housewives these lications 15 are asked to remem-dates and get their appto the board, by mail, - "v ' Plans Underway School Operetta Pleases Coming VE Day With the expected defeat of Germany growing closer day by day, plans are being made for the proper and fitting observance of the VE day in Tremonton. According to Mayor R. B. Waldron, committees will meet within the week, to formulate a uniform closing period, depending upon the time the news of victory on the European front is announced. Representatives of the various organizations will also outline suitable programs to be held, following the POULTRY FIELD MAN VISITS COUNTY Dr. R. W. Mclntyre, deputy State Veterinarian under the Dept. of Agriculture at the state capitol, Under the able direction of Miss recently visited poultry flocks here J Stoller, music director of the in the county. Dr. Mclntyre is the first poulUinlcy school, the students of tth and sixth has emgrades presen- try field man the state time. some for quite tee operetta "The Magic Bean ployed before a large crowd on Any flock owner in the state Large Audience J, "Wnesday evening. The children gave a i . very pleas- - romance and the entire who desires his service can make a request through the County Arrint'a" riff ire 1 " Attainment SEVENTY QUORUM finished manner. Principal SETS MEETING were lateen by Tack u nson, Georee fihsr. CWnn., v,, vim on if Members of the 153rd Quorum Moore' LarrV Moore. Pi .In,jnL are requested to be Johnson, Jaleen A1- - of Seventy on Sunday, at a Sten- - present at meeting JDuane Kerr and Jh Wayne the First Ward Chpcl at noon. 12 o'clock RATION TIMETABLE Last Date wtTS, ...April 2S Red June 2 D2 stamps Y5, Z5, and A2 through 30 Red Stamps E2 June through J2 31 Red July K2 P2 stamps through 28 MESSED FOODS-B- lue stamps C2 through G2 April 2 Junc Jlue stamps H2 through M2 J"nc JJIue stamps N2 through S2 J Blue stamPS T2 July 31 X2 through 5LGAR STAMP June 2 35 1 ncw 8tamP will tic validated until May Stamps Nos 1, 2, 3, in Book three con tinue valid indefinitely. FATS and to Jed Stanfill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry L. Stanfill. Executive Dilworth Young and Scouter Harrison represented the Ogden Area council and President Wallace Bjorn and Commissioner Clifton Grover represented the Bear River Stake. These are the first Eagle badges ever to be awarded in Penrose. Hansen, genealogist and recorder at the Logan temple will be the principal speaker. Special musical numbers, a string quartet and appropriate musical selections by the ward choir will well-know- n also be given. Everyone is invited to attend. Immunization Paper Collection Now Under Way Clinic Saturday Boy Scouts of this district are endeavoring to call at the home of the people to collect old papers. During the next week, the drive for paper collection will be Between 10 and 11 a. m. on Saturday, a free immunization clinic will be held at the McKinley school. Parents are urged to bring in children who should be immunized against whooping cough, Mrs. Joe Burgess will be glad to diphtheria, small pox, or need accept any paper, which hasn't booster shots for typhoid fever. been called tor, and will see that it reaches the proper destination. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Dalton The help of everyone is needed to and daughter, Vel Gene of Idaho supply the paper for the war ef-- . Falls, visited Sunday with Mr. and fort. Mrs. Frank Dalton. For Observance of early as possible. McKinley Two Eagle badges were awardA Special Genealogical meeting ed Sunday April 15 in the Penwill be held at the Second ward rose ward to Scouthmaster Ersol Sunday evening at 8 p. m. Hyrum Berchtold TIMS. Red stamps T5 through X5 -- home-steade- d EXPECTED HOME n Air base. Sgt. Bjorn, who has completed 50 missions as gunner on a entered service November 12, 1943 and went overseas in August 1944. DEAN V. ORWIN NOW FIRST LIEUTENANT ARMY SPEED UP Senators studying the military picture have learned that the army ground forces command has been quietly cutting down on the training given to infantrymen before going into s. Last Call Made LABOR MANAGEMENT The scene is the lobby of Washington's fashionable Mayflower hotel. A modest, businesslike, man walks over to gray-haire- d the house phone, picks it up. "Room 633," he says, and then after a brief pause. "Eric, this is Bill, shall I come upT" The conversation is between the representatives of two onetime bitter foes, AFL Bill Green and the U. S. Chamber of Com- This week will finish the collection of clothing for our allies, according to members of the Legion and Auxiliary who are in charge. Anyone having used clothing of any kind (except evening dresses, suits and hats), are requested to bring it to the Peterson Tractor Company, where it will be sorted, packed and sent on it's way, to aid the suffering people of war-torreas in Europe, who are so badly in need. merce Erie Johnston, preparing to spend an evening together discussing the mutual problems of labor and management. When Johnston first became president of the U. 8. chamber, he immediately called on Green and Phil Murray, suggesting closer cooperation in the public interest. They have been good friends ever since. n FRANCE AND THE BIG TIIREE Those who sat at Roosevelt's elbow during the Yalta conference give a new slant to the reasons why sensitive General De Gaulle was not invited to join the big three. They say that neither the President nor Prime Minister Churchill had .any objection to De Gaulle's presence, but felt rather neutral about it. Stalin was the man who opposed it. Stalin, according to those returning from Yalta, pointed out that this was to be primarily a military conference and France was only playing a minor role in the war. Since the Big Three were bearing the main brunt of the war, Stalin said he saw no point in having De Gaulle sit in on a conference concerned largely with military strategy. The Russian war chief was quite definite and repeated the point that If the Yalta conference were concerned primarily with political and economic lt postwar problems, would be different But when military matters were being discussed, he just didn't want De Gaulle j An-hig- h has re- turned from twelve months seas in the European theatre of over- operations on the U. S. Hospital Ship St. Mahcal. He is temporarily being treated at Stark General Hospital prior to being transferred to another Army hospital for definite treatment. He is the son of Mrs. Geo. Bronson of Brigham, formerly of Tremonton. Gordon has the Presidential Citation, Purple Heart, European theater operation ribbon. CPL. HANNI AND WIFE HOME Corporal and Mrs. Kenneth Hanni visited during the week with friends and relatives. They were guests Sunday of Mrs. Han-ni'- s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Udy of Riverside. Cpl. Hanni has been stationed at Clovis, New Mexico and Mrs. Hanni has been with him. Wildlife Federation Offers Bounty On Predatory Birds around. Then to clinch his views, Stalin In charge of the drive for eradication of predatory birds for the Bear River Wild Life Federation are Dcmont Dockstadcr and Jim Smith. They will pay 20c each for old crows, 15c for old magpies, 10c for young magpies and 5c each for recalled that France surrendered to Germany early in the war, and refused to turn over the French fleet to the British as per treaty. CAPITAL CHAFF MUSICIAN HOME Murray I. Jones, son of Mr. eggs. and Mrs. Irvin Jones arrived home last week for a 15 day leave. MurROY DAVIS VISITS ray is in the Coast Guard and is AT HOME stationed at Seattle, Washington, Ac Roy Davis who ais in train-of with the 13th Naval district milicouple ing in Colorado, spent tary and dance band. his with hime parents, Mr. days at (Continued on Page 8) and Mrs. Jess Davis of Riverside. action. well-seasone- d, FISK SINGERS WELL RECEIVED SSgt. Gordon Bronson e Lo-rra- He has been awarded the Air Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters and two battle stars for his An Alaskan Airbase Dean V. participation in the operations of Orwin has been promoted to the the European Theater with the rank of First Lieutenant according 15th Air Force. to orders just released by his headAt this redistribution . station, quarters. Lt. Orwin is the son of combat returnees of the AAF reMr .and Mrs. John J. Orwin now ceive complete medical examinaProclaimed by many who heard of Salt Lake City. tions, classification interviews and with them a as meteorologist Sunday afternoon, as the Serving reassignment to domestic stations finest a weather unit since his arrival in of the program yet heard on the Army Aar Forces. local concert series, the Fisk JubiAlaska in October 1943, Lt. Orwin lee Singers sang several groups of was stationed in the Aleution is- ROBERT ANDERSON lands for fourteen months before HOME negro spirituals in connection with his other very fine numbers in a manpresent assignment. receiving Pfc. Robert M. Andersen ar- ner which proved their ability and His duties involve weather forecasting for .aircraft and other in rived home from India last Friday. talent to all. He came to be at the bedside of A large audience heard them, terested agencies, his father and 1942 arrived in time and to were reluctant to let them go He was inducted in May and received basic training at be able to give cheer and aid. He after the program was finished. Sheppard Field Texas. Lt. Orwin was joined by his wife and they They gave a really beautiful performance, with great skill in emgraduated from the local high! are at his parents home. Pfc school and was employed in'derscn was not impressed with the otional expression; the musical Box Elder County as a teacher rlimatic condition or customs of quality and harmonious blending the people of India. He will re- of their voices were all that press prior to entering the service. port to a camp in California when comments have indicated. his furlough is over. GORDON BRONSON RETURNS TO STATES front-lin- Infantrymen are now sometimes being shipped overseas without any advanced training. Some now find themselves in the front line only six months after having donned uniform. It is still longer than the average in the last war, however. Meanwhile, men are being yanked out of the air corps and services of supply and transferred to the infantry. Already supposed to be they get an additional seven weeks' training and are then moved outside the country as replacements. One new departure from practice in the last war is that few divisions have been withdrawn from action in their entirety for a thorough rest. Instead, once a division grandchildren. is in the line, it receives replaceFuneral services were conduct- ments, but no real vacation, for ed Thursday at 2 p. m. in the El months. Congressmen returning wood ward chapel. from the war front have criticized this policy to army higher-upGeneral Bradley has tried to L. C. Christofferson of Garland move hosgreen divisions into relativethe was operated on at Valley sectors for seasoning, but ly quiet for appendicitis. his pital on Tuesday been hasn't intelligence His condition is reported as good. able to gauge what the always conenemy siders a quiet sector. Collection Santa Ana, Calif TSgt. Mel-viK. Bjorn, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Bjorn is currently assigned to the AAF Redistribution Station No. 4, at Santa Ana Army Mrs. Marie Fonnesbeck has received word from her son Lt. Stanford Fonnesbeck that he is leaving for home. He has completed his missions over Germany and for the past three months he has been flying cargo planes. The residents of Howell are very anxious to see him again. Halsey all the Japs." For Clothing MELVIN K. BJORN HAS REASSIGNMENT Bull" "Just before we went into Luzon, I called all the Filipino stewards and messboys on my flagship together. I showed them a map of Luzon and pointed out the Japanese positions that MacArthur had told me not to shell for fear of hurting some Filipino civilians. "I told them that the only way to get the Japs out would be to shell these key points. "One of the messboys stepped forward and said that the marked-ou- t positions included his home. I asked him if he thought we should shell it. " 'Is that the only way to get the Japs out?" he asked me. I replied that it was. " 'Then if you don't mind, sir,' the messboy told me, 'shoot the out to hell. "We shelled those defenses, we killed a few Filipinos, but we got Another of EKvood's pioneers has gone to join his many friends. Ira Andersen passed away early Tuesday morning after a tour months illness. He has spent most of that time in Logan first at the Budge hospital and later at the home of his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Newman Harris. His wife has Wen constantly at his side, eivintr tender and loving care. He was brought home the last of March. Mr. Andersen's father a tract of land on the bank of the Bear River and this homestead became the home of Ira and his brother Elias. These men have assisted in the development of the community and have advanced many worthwhile projects. His passing is mourned by young and old because he was a friend to all. Ira Andersen was born November 7. 1S78 at Bear River City, a son of Anders P. Andersen and Kirsten Rasmussen. He married Damar Christenscn and they are the parents of six living children. Mrs. Maunne A. hams ot Leslie I. Andersen of Brig- ham City; Mrs. Verian A. Andersen of Vacaville, California; Mrs. Wanda Frost of Sacramento, and Mrs. Anna A. Williams of Los Ancreles. California. Pfc. Rob ert M. Andersen with the U. S. army recently returned from India to be with his father. A grandson, Dale Andersen of Elwood has been raised as a son. There are also five flews from the Service Men LT. FONNESBECK F. tells this dramatic story about the invasion of Luzon. ' action since April i I t Adm. William OF ELWOOD BURIED DREW PEARSON nOW HALSEY BOMBED IRA ANDERSON ORS FOR POULTRY PRODUCTION MISSING iff RTED NUMBER THIRTY-TW- 9 Anyone having heads or eggs to turn in should bring them to Jim Smith's garage on Tuesdays or Fridays between 5 and 6 o'clock. The state, county and local wildlife federation arc cooperating in an effort to rid the county of these animals. I C Inflation hit the elections last year. to senatorial camContributions paigns in 1940 were only $787,000, compared with $1,495,000 in 1944. Expenditures were $1,139,000 in 1940 compared with $1,702,000 in 1944. C. Lt. Will Rogers Jr., former congressman, and son of the late great humorist, is writing to friends with a German typewriter. His unit captured a typewriter factory in St. Vith which was turning out machines for the Germans. With his own portable lost, Rogers adopted a German machine. |