OCR Text |
Show Buy War Bondj dims A fvery Pay Day c! r--;; IS OUR QUOTA Ut'i Doubt (or Our Quota - Eleventh Year - $1.50 A HOMK Ter Year FAI'KR FOR IIOMK IKOrLK lx)jjan, Utah, Friday, Octolicr 2, No. 115 CIVIC MUSIC XMAS PAGEANT BOARD LISTS LARGE CROUP DRIVE ENDS WILL AGAIN FROM COUNTY SATURDAY BE STAGED Cache County Men will Leave in Largest Call November Group will be Larger. Names of 89 Ca.lie county men who will leave for army Induction, provided they pass the physical requirements, Here released today by Mrs .Hazel S. Buist, secretary of the Logan Selective service . board No. 3. The men will leave in the Immediate future for the Fort Douglas reception center at Salt Lake City. John Cannon Miller, Logan r, John Dale Andrews, Leonard John Allen Schvaneveldt, Alvin David Whitmer Austin, Swenson, Ernest Wilson Moffett, Preston C. Affleck, Glen Reed Jackson, Ernest Waldron Tippetts, Edward Samuel Kropfli, Tillman Hayes Fonnesbeck, Leland Ray Olsen, Melvin Christofferson Smith, Carl Henrlcksen, Arthur Melvin Benson, Wendell Nelson, Grant E. Larson, Charles Marriner Bemtsen, ll Phillip Arthur Hansen, John Palmer, Douglas Fairbanks Sidney Melvin Reese, Joseph Elmer Meunler, George William Miller, Jesse Hutchinson, Charles M. Chambers, Wesley Bailey, Harold Roy Sadler, Allen Broberg, Ray Boyd Saltzgtver, Grant M. Pope, Nearl Howard Humphrey, Werner Albrecht, Melvin Edward Olsen, Osmond Orlando Jorgensen, Boyd Wayne Bum-sid- e, Alvin Thomas Williams, Archie Homer McNeil, Robert George Harris, Garl Earl Clifford, Mont (Continued on Page Eight) Bru-dere- Big-ne- Per-civ- al Cache American Boston Letter to By F. R. A, Mass., Dct. 1 BRAINTREE, we have stirred September During up many of our Utah memories. The first Sunday in the month came Prof, and Mrs. Edlefsen from once Carrie California, Davis, Brown and Ed Edlefsen of the Seventh ward. They with their are now living in two is Watertown as Prof. Edlefsen doing experimental work in physInstitute of ics at Massachusetts Technology for the duration. One daughter is engaged to a man in the air service and the younger expects to attend Simmons College. Prof. Edlefsen Is the same admirof hard work able combination and fun, and like a true son of the dear old A.C., asked to be led) immediately to a cranberry bog. He seemed to like our tiny farm and had real pleasure in picking and eating a tomato right off the vine, a Mackintosh from the tree, and wishing the wilS grapes were ripe. Even if he is a Ph.D. from California he has a most lovable bucolic background. Another Utah bit was the report beof a telephone conversation tween Franklin Moon In El Centro, California and Miss Thelma Fogelberg In Logan. Best of all was our visit to the new Mission Headquarters in Cambridge, where we were shown over the house by a most personable from Arizona young missionary He led me to named Standige. George Weston of Laketown who has been working in Nova Scotia and had hoped to return West with his Uncle and Aunt, Prof, and Mrs. N. W. Christiansen of Lothe gan, who had been spending summer In New York City working circles. We had with in. musical us a young Harvard graduate who had never even heard of "holding and who didnt the priesthood even know that there were LD.S. missionaries in Cambridge. He left the place with a much wider outlook and a gigantic respect for the mission headquarters. And well he might, for they are a clubhouse and office of which any church member may be proud. They are spacious, homelike and quietly elegant and should be visited by every Utah visitor to New England before coming to Braintree. The Edlefsens did. We have been spending a part of the month on Cape Cod and continued our Utah thrills there. Any Utahn would have genealogical been delighted with the names for each town on the Cape runs to (Continued on Page Three) The Cache Civic Music Association membership drive was reportwell" ed progressing unusually early Friday as officials prepared for an intensive climax to the campaign today and Saturday. More than 200 members have purchased season tickets for the ten or 12 attractions to be sponsored Jointly by the association and the Utah State Agricultural college lyceum bureau, reported D. L. Cornetet of Chicago, vice president of the national Civic M!c Association, who is directing the campaign. Less than half of our workers have reported, Mr. Cornetet said, "and we expect the usual rush for membesrhlp on the last two days of the campaign. We hope to obtain about S00 members, but we can obtain some fine attractions if we fail to reach that figure." Dr. N. A. Pedersen, president of the association, said 42 per cent of the memberships so far have been taken out by new members. Because the loss of old members Is not expected to approach this percentage, he predicted an unusually good membership total. Thursdays results were by far the best of any single day so far and approached the record for all previous days this week, Mr. Cornetet said. Deadline for memberships will be Saturday at 9 p.m., Dr. Pedersen said. Headquarters for the drive is the City Drug store in Logan. Memberships probably will be totalled late Saturday night, Mr. Cornetet said, and the artists to be selected for the season will be announced immediately after officials learn what funds are The central committee for the production of Logan's annual Xmas pageant Is now organized with Warren Schow of the Logan stake Board as Young Mens Mutual chairman and Joseph Morgan Jr., of the Cache Stake Young Mens Mutual Board as Tlie coining Christmas pagi . will be the fourth annual Clirlst-ma- s pageant produced by the mutual organizations of the two Director and mittees Named. stakes. Frank Baugh Jr., has been appointed as the director. He with Professor N. W. Christiansen, Hattie Morrell. Pearl Spencer and Ann Neddo will select the Christmas play to be presented. Other members of the general committee from both stakes are Naoma Nelson, Dr. Lorln Blood, Prof. J. W. Floyd, Myrtle Jacques, Lyman Rich, Mrs. Lyman Rich, Clarice Nelson, Joseph Coulam, Evalyn Vernon, Milicent Anderson, Mrs. Henry Salisbury, Edith Rich, Idell Larsen, J. H. Wilson, J. P. Smith, Esther Olsen, Ruth SimpAaron son, Dorothy McClellan, Amacher and Ruth Swenson. As soon as tire play Is selected the other committees will be appointed and the cast chosen. The tabernacle building is central so that most of the people in the city may walk to see the pageant and save tires. The pageants in the past have been excellent Christmas programs. The pageants have proven to be one of the best activities the mutual organizations sponsor. LOGAN MAN AWARDED COMMISSION A Members Hear National P-- T Leonard C. Kearl, son'of Mr. and Mrs. Lester C. Kearl, 154 North Third West street, Logan, left on Thursday for his post at Camp Methods of strengthening schools Davis, N. C., where he will begin and students to meet war demands duties as a second lieutenant in were emphasized Tuesday in Lo-- 1 the U. S. army. Lieutenant Kearl recently comgan as more than 200 parents and teachers from Logan and Cache pleted work at an officers candiFarents-Teacheassociations met date school and received his comA conference mission at Camp Davis. He has in the largest T been assigned to an antiaircraft yet held this year in Utah. Mrs. Charles E. Roe of Chicago, division there for special training. Returning with him after his 111., national T A field worker, declared in a public meeting that week's visit in Logan was his wife, parents and teachers must in the former Dorothy Cowley, daughwartime do the kind of work you ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cowley of Logan. have been doing only better. Lieutenant Kearl was inducted "The finest uniform for a woman is a house dress, Mrs. Roe into the Army on April 3 and was and most women will stationed at Camp Callan, Calif., declared, find their most important work on until July 4 when he was selected for officers training. the home front. He was graduated in 1933 from A groups to She advised P-- T in Logan senior high school and In education parent emphasize home nursing, first aid and pre- 1938 from Utah State Agricultural ventative health work; strengthen college where he majored in ecohome ties; introduce legislation to nomics. He was a member of Sigoperating; conduct ma Nu fraternity at USAC and was keep schools emergency registration of children, active in campus affairs. and promote establishment of nurseries for children whose parents are engaged in war work. Americas juvenile delinquency has increased greatly in recent months because both parents of many children are employed fulltime in war work and inadequate Logans part in, Utahs salvage available facilities are for the campaign was praised Tuesday by childrens training, Mrs. Roe said. B. L. (Brick) Wood of Salt Lake Dr. E. Allen Bateman, superinof the City, executive secretary tendent of Logan City schools and general state salvage division, who chairman of a special committe estimated the citys contributions appointed by the Utah Congress of at 175 tons of scrap metal. Field Worker j rs P-- P-- Wood Praises Logan Salvage Drive Parents and Teachers and the Original quota for Logan was less Utah Education association, out100 tons, and Rulon Gardner, lined the program his group in- than drive city chairman, estimated the to next tends submit to the state contributions Monday at 100 tons. legislature to save our schools. the two main salvage that teachers Inspecting Emphasizing in Logan, Tuesday with local piles are Utah leaving throughout school positions because of drive officials and metal experts, Mr. Wood made the 175-testirising living costs and attraction mate. of high salaries, Dr. Bateman deThis means that each Logan clared that the state must provide financial aid to help meet the sit- family has donated 150 pounds of scrap," Mr. Wood said, "as comuation. His committee will propose to pared with a national quota of the state legislature, he said, a 100 pounds per family. Residents plan whereby teacher salaries will of Logan have done a real job, be increased and equalized and they deserve commendation. He praised the work of Preston throughout the state. Dr. Bateman recently returned W. Pond, county drive chairman; from a tour of the nation during Mr. Gardner, Dr. King Hendricks, which he studied problems of assistant city chairman, and Mrs. v Clark E. Haskins, chairman of the teacher salaries. "Unless we do something soon, city womens division. low-pa- id FIRST STUDENT LABOR TRAIN LEAVES SATURDAY Tlie first student labor special to the Ogden quartermaster depot will leave Logan Saturday morning at 6 a.m. carrying more than 300 workers to help relieve freight congestion problems at tlie depot. Jack Croft, chairman of a special labor announced today. d committee, A central housing bureau, 'Personnel specialists from tlie by Uie federal homes registration office In cooperation with depot Thursday fingerprinted and the Logan chamber of commerce registered more than 225 student and the Utah State Agricultural who applied for the week end labor college housing bureau, opened at tlie college, and continued the at tlie Logan USO process today for at least 100 more Wednesday headquarters on West Center St. j applicants. Henry Otte, director of tlie bur- j Tlie college and the three Cache eau. said the office will seek to county high schools have been asklearn what housing accommoda- ed by Colonel L. O. Grice, head of tions are mast needed by new- the quartermaster division of the comers to Logan, set suggseted depot, to provide at least 300 stuprices for housing to guide land- dents to be carried by special Unlords in rising rents and attempt ion Pacific train Saturday and to find immediately more board Sunday and at least 400 workers have been requested for October and room facilities. Hie office will be open Mondays 10 and 11. blank Not enough application through Thursdays from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m., were available to fill all request Mr. Otte said. A daily checkup will from USAC students, Dean Croft be made if possible to remove declared, "and I can see the posfrom the vacancy lists housing ac- sibility of sending from 600 to 700 commodations which have been students each weekend from the college, the county high schools rented. and Junior high possibly from One of our chief problems Just schools. will be finding he said, now, The special train which will places for college and defense stuto Ogden workers the transport of board and dents in search In will leave the depot Logan room a I ommodations." promptly at 6 a.m. and will rediAppointment of Mr. Otte as turn to Logan about 8:30 p.m. rector of tlie bureau was announcCache county school busses will ed by G. F. Scofield, state supertransport students from North and visor of the federal homes regis- South Cache to Logan depot, tration agency. Mr. Otte has work- through the cooperation of Supered recently in similar bureaus at intendent J. W. Kirkbride. Some Ogden and Brigham City. problems must be solved, however, to provide Insurance protection for the county school district, Lloyd M. Theurer, district clerk, report- Regulations concerning rationing six types of rubber footwear which w.is frozen in the hands of all Tuesday midnight, O. were announced by today Guy Card n. Cache county ra. honing d rector. The six types consist only cf luavy rubber footwear worn by workmen, Mr. Cardon said, and rubber docs not Include light footwear worn by the average consumer. those who may Consequently, need light rubber footwear for not should the coming winter start a "buying spree" as there will be ample stocks if the public purchases the items only when needed. t The rubber footwear covered be by the rationing order w,ll frozen until October 3. During this period, no retailer may make any transfer or sale. Each store handling this type of footwear should contact their local board during this period and obtain forms and Instructions for making the required inventory and how to obtain certificate of s registration making them tp retail such footwear eligible purchasers. of estab-ladic- elig-ibl- e to On Monday, October 5, the lo. cal board will accept applications for mens and rubber boots work shoes. Any consumer wishing to make for such footwear application should secure an application form from their local boards. If the applicant is in the eligible group he will be issued a certificate the purchase of the authorizing particular type of footwear necessary for tlie applicant's work. In a statement accompanying the rationing Leon regulations, Henderson, OPA dirictor said, 'Remember, victory rides on rub- ber! Don't buy any rubber foot-- ! wear unless you cannot get along! without a new pair. Help save! every ounce of rubber you can. Anderson Named Morale Chairman Joe Anderson of Logan, three- -' year student councilman at Utah State Agricultural college became the first morale student chairman in tlie history of the college, Thursday when he was appointed to that position by Charles Kelley of Providence, student body president. In his new position Anderson will supervise pep rallies, appointment of cheer leaders and entertainment between halves of athletic contests, Kelley explained. Win or lose we must develop a school spirit that will make this year an outstanding one, and we must remember too that morale is all important In winning a war, Anderson stated. Alumni Quarterly Features AC Men in Service Dedicated to alumni members In the branches of military service, the Utah State Agricultural college Alumni Quarterly is ready for distribution reports Leonard W. McDonald, executive secretary of the former student organization. First issue of the 1942-4- 3 year, the Quarterly featured a welcome from David A. Skeen of Salt Lake City, new alumni president, and a listing of former students now in military service. Ray Nelson, of Logan, class of 1935, edited the sports page that the Aggies football previewed prospects for the coming year. In the faculty section, special notice was given to Dr. John C. Carlisle, assistant to the president and associate professor of education who is superintendent of education at the Japanese relocation center at Abraham, Paul M. Dunn, former dean of the school of forestry who resigned to accept a similar position at Oregon State college, Corvallis, and Dr. L. A. Stoddart, appointed acting dean of forestry. Student Workers Will Help Relieve Labor Shortage at Supply Depot Runs Sunday Also. Housing Bureau Now Open Six Types of Rubber Footwear Affected by Rationing Workers Get Preference Com- with U.S.WARBOm West Center 300 M I A Organizations will Sponsor Annual Produc- VICTORY Telephone 700 RUBBER WEAR Drive Reported ProgresD. L. sing Satisfactorily DirectCornetet of Chicago ing Campaign ' tion 02 1912 DRAFT TAKES Ninety-nin- e cj dji!cr Logan High Girls Prepare For War Service j ed. Returning from a meeting with state officials in Salt Lake City, Mr. Theurer said that the office Every senior girl at the Logan of defense transportation will perSenior high school is preparing mit use of school buses for transherself for service in this war- porting workers to the depot and time period according to Principal even to Ogden if necessary," proGeorge S. Bates. This training is vided the district complies with in keeping with both the aims of state regulations. the Logan school itself, and with State regulations, however, prothe nation-wid- e program of high hibit transporting of defense workschool war serveie. All senior girls ers under the regular district pubare enrolled In a service class and lic liability and property damage will work and study in each of insurance policies. We are Investigating legal asthe four divisions for nine weeks. Sixty bed Jackets for children pects of the situation to learn if have already been made by the we C3n obtain protection by transgirls in the Red Cross sewing di- porting students free or at cost, vision. Tlie girls are now making Mr. Theurer said. In any case, we childrens dresses. Tlie next pro- will find some solution and the ject they will undertake will be buses definitely will be used. that the unusual Emphasizing the making of soldier's kits. This division of the program is under work arrangement need not be the direction of Mrs. Effie Brown. limited to students, Dean Croft said other Cache Valley workers Besides Red Cross sewing, classes in nutrition, home nursing, and may obtain daily transportation service to the depot if they conphysical education are included in vince the army that the labor supthe program. In the nutrition clasis here and convince railroad ses, under the direction of Miss ply officials that enough workers will Priscilla Rowland, girls will have travel on the train to justify daily an opportunity to do canteen work service. under a national program, and Special troops called to the dewill also study the proper foods to help move the congested pot and the proper amounts for their probably will be on hand freight own welfare. In home nursing by th? time the first student crews classes, taught by Mrs. S. M. (Continued on Page Eight) Budge, girls learn to meet common emergencies in the home. As more and more trained muses leave for war service, this ability will become increasingly important. Correct posture, exercises and stunts to keep girls physically fit for the w'ar effort are directed by Miss officials Friday Cache county Oreta Hall in the fourth division began preparations for the Octoof the program. ber 6 runoff election, predicting that not more than 1500 to 1800 of the 13,956 registered voters In the county will cast ballots in the Cache Prepares For Runoff Election Tuesday Loganite is Author of Prominent Play test. N. J. Crooks ton, county clerk, distributed election materials to in the south end of the judges The play, Daisies on the Car county Thursday and will comTracks, which Won acclaim as a plete distribution today. Utah State Agricultural college He predicted a light vote, reLittle Theater production last winminding that only 2800 voters cast was Lowritten a ter, former by ballots in the primary election. gan resident, Miss Alladine Bell, it Only contests will be on the was announced at USAC Thursdemocratic ticket. Clarence E. Baday. ker and David W. Moffat, seeking Daughter of Mrs. Ruth M. Bell, nomination for justice of the sudramatics director at USAC, who preme court, will be the only state directed the production, Miss Bell candidates. Louis P. Maughan opwrote the play under the pen name poses Leo C. Nielsen for a Ann Cummings. Her true identity year county commission post, and was not revealed until the play Parley A. Resee and William Worwas published by the Samuel ley will compete for the two-yeFrench publishing house. commissioner nomination. With few exceptions, the same Miss Bell Is an instructor at Stanford university. She formerly Judges who handled the primary attended USAC, Northwestern uni- election will be on duty In the runoff, Mr. Crooks ton said. versity and Yale university. ar |