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Show The Cache American. Loean. Cache Countv. Utah Tape Four Tuesday. May 2, 19 II Rocket Gun Salvo THE CACHE AMERICAN and Friday by Newspaper, Published Tuesday the Cache American Publishing Comjny, at 62 West Onui Street, Logan, Utah. Sernt-Weekl- WILLIAM C. ENGLAND, JAMES W. ENGLAND DAVID W. ENGLAND Managing IlOOMS-I- O HOUSE KILLING one or 10 room apnrtmer.U. S.ram heat, clean. Pahioe Hotel 79 West Center. Manager Editor Mechanical Department Editor-Busi- n Entered aa Second Class Matter. November 2, 1931. at Post OtTlce at Logan, Utah, under the Act of March 8, x. the FURNACE CLEANING. Repairing, SlAer Repairing and Serflea Wangseaard Coal nd Stoker Oft 167 South Main. Phon 132. 18U7. 12 00; Inside Cache made known upon application. Ounty, one year Subscription ratea: Outside County, $1.60, Advertising rae LAND I OH RENT I'i acre with l'a shares of waier, plowed last share fall; also lure with water; two rix'in Tioii-coop, PS 'iK row barn and corrtlL I 'hone 1344W or (all at 333 N. 3 E. Mrs. England. - common iu:koj:s e; Ucn j3accl on the assertion So much that this war is hemp font lit fur the "common man," e are apt to overlook the fact that it is heinp foupht bv the common man fur all men. Honor headlines in American newspapers this week were shared by a bharecropper, a Civil; Indian, and the son of a black smith, all recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor. Johnnie Hutchins, the Texas sharecropper, while mortally wounded by a bomb explosion, steered his ship to safety out of the path of a torpedo. Second Lieutenant Krnest Childers, the American-Indiu- n mechanic, though sutlYringr a fractured instep, moved up the Salerno hillside, and in his own apologetic words: There were three machine-gu- n nests on that hill, but I Commando only got to take care of two of them." the blacksmith's from son Kelly, Iittsburgn's Dutch-town- " is credited, among other feats, with ac- section, cmjiha.-i-s Jut.-- ; THE CACHE AMERICAN- Scribe Diiscusses Local Politics N WANTED TO HUY: 8 m.m. Movie 1 ili X . 1 j t sy lilv.sywhi O.iUV 1 j i ,i : 210 j.ars Hi 4:. It is un n.to a bc.uk old. Joe M.llcr's two-thir- ar nt ar ar self-intere- st. ar Candor will lose you some friends, but not as many as deciet. Young Major Mr tali Mining Company pu-iiir- r .a o nv-ik- c In reasoning upon moral subjects, we have great occasion for candor. In order to compare circumstaces and weigh arguments with Impartiality. Emmons I 1 Al.hh un Al U l.ngljnJ luxe met with (abut of rocket Irani batlcricl of new accrct gun, hk are liie uull ol year vl rcicarcb by liritih scientists. They arc jutl od iiie lius m gun ,iii example if O'C I niicJ Nation' ingenuity in producing new weapon again! the toe. !( INI ar front. 1 LOGAN CANYON MAGNIFICENT AND RICH Planning DAN DUNN - Projector daytime Phone Kt FORUM n, V, ' t C it Is Jest an antUpm the original If these be common men, may we have more of D ;1A ,lllV i, a n print and them! And may our post-wa- r planners remember the only 4 ar.x old. it cot me lour 11 ls 12 tcnUs tax debt that we owe them and their counterparts on i:"ar worth it. Now, when some radio every battlefield. Charity cannot pay that debt. Jus- j'lkiMnith dL'hes lip a raucous and tice and opportunity can. Christian Science Monitor. version end concoction of a Joke. I just look in my and get the Joe M.lier book straight of it, and got the point, which, on the radio, you don't get, except mabe it is once in a full moon. Tills column Is open to anyone who wtJirs to prevent his views on But about this Joe Miller. He a subject. Articles must be signed and the Cache American docs was sonuhlng like AEsop. Everynot assume any responsibility for such articles. Opinions expressed are those of the contributor and are not necessarily those of body knows. I guess, that it was Babrius who wrote down the fabthis paper. les. about 200 years efter AEsop told 'em. That was in 600 B.C Post-W- ar And it was Mr. John Mottley who wrote down the Joe Miller Jests, in 1739. Joe Miller was English-liv- ed from 1648 to 1738. By RUTA TAYLOOR By ROBERT CROOKSTON All men are over You are around the know, folks who are fed up country Well, the politicians post-wMurder end and on of hands Horror, talking thinking again. streets the shaking books, might type It's funny bow these chaps as- planning. What will happen after sume an attitude of grave concern the war? What will be the situa- switch over to AEsop or Joe Miller, about the state of everyones tion when the war plants are shut and Improve the digestion. Yours with the low down, health just preceding an election, down and thousands upon thousmen forcwomen are of and JO SERRA ands vote and then after they get your in to ed drastic changes aims at concern anything their but the peoples freedom from their employment and in their Seasonal Increases want, and freedom from fear. The manner of living? The dread spec- In Poultry Prices tre of stands at the primaries are going on now in door unemployment of all workers homes. Consumers will pay an average before this several states and solwill What when the of a cent more a of happen exact comes oil why don't you some definite promises. From these diers are demobilized and return pound for poultry over a period to take up their jobs? Will those of one year under an OPA ruling aspirants to fame and fortune!?) still be there for them in providing for seasonal increases jobs some can make extravagant you of the promises mode? What in prices of chickens and other spite promises to them, call their at- will when the firms have fowl. The new prices wiU conhappen tention to some old people you dissolved, and what will happen to tinue through June of this year, have been who know discouraged those who have learned to take and from January through June from demanding their pension. the places of the men at the front. of next From July through year. Tell them you have got to see Those who remember the condit- December of this year the ceilsome action from them BEFORE ions after the List to the unrevert will ELECTION to prove their good in England where the civilian pop- ing prices as listed in base prices adjusted intention. You want them to ulation was more highly mobilized the A of Table regulation. Poultry to one old person take at least than here, are quite honestly Premiums to the producers, which that welfare office after assuring worried. It is for those reasons will on be at all levels of passed them there ls nothing to be that we have so many post-wfrom a low of distribution, range shatbolster ashamed of, committees functioning up their planning a half-cea pound in January tered nerves, tell then I'resident on ways and means to avoid' a to a high of 2.2 cents a pound in Roosevelt wants them to have the a post-wdepression. What the men at the front want May. pension. want a chance to will be room for dissent, for desGovernor Maw is scheduled to is simple-the- y be in Logan soon to bolster up work, an opportunity to live in pair, for the rousing of old prehis chances for perpetuation in peace. They want to resume their judices and new hatreds, for distheir homes, sension among the various groups office. Now is a golden opportun- lives, to to repair their enterprises, to find of our citizens. Each will be wantto do nice for you something ity for your soldiers when they come constructive jobs at work they like ing the same thing and unless we home. Tell Governor Maw that to do. We admit that there will be can plan so there will be enough in altering the pace of to go around, we will be faced with your soldiers ability to kill Japs difficulty is due to his marksmanship ac- their lives, that many will have a threat to unity. ' away from the lives they How can we handle this situaquired in the hunt for ducks, grown knew. They have seen new places, tion? By applying the same spirit geese, pheasants, deer, elk and met new people and their outlooks of cooperation to post-wprobmissed has that he sage hens; will have been broadened In some lems that we have to war problems. out on three open seasons of respects while their lives will have By realizing that since our aims hunting here, that the wild game remained static .in others. are the same, we can, if we will is near extinction, and you want those at home want, ls work out a method to further them. What Governor Maw to declare CLOSfirst peace, and then security-secu- rity We can, if we will, realize that all ED SEASON until the boys come from want and depression, men are brothers, that each had home. from unemployment and poverty. a part In this war wether at the If you still believe those tales Their hopes are the same as those front or behind the lines. That about the big herds of deer, take of the boys at the front and care each as an American, regardless of a day off and go up there and see must be taken to stress the unity class, creed or color, is entitled to for yourself. You will enjoy the of desire, rather than the differ- plan out ways to work together trip. Anything as big as deer ence of rather than to pull apart, but we and elk are not hard to see, The days that will come when must w'ork together and be ready when they are there. hostilities cease will be dangerous to see the other fellows point oi If you are timid and bashful ones, for unless our plans are well view. Post-wplanning must be about talking to Mr. Maw, then laid and carefully considered, there planning for and by all Americans write him a card, telling him you will help him with your vote if SECRET he will promise closed season on wild game until the boys come HERE IS THAT home. If this is too much exerZINGER CASE, DAM tion for you, get the boys gun WE PICKED HIM UP WAS HIDING out of the moth-ball- s, HERE shine it up OUT OVER SOUTH OF like you have seen him fondle it MMMM- HE TOWN like a mother does a baby. This HAD A FRIEND HERE' wake you up to your may to him, remember he does duty not shirk like too many on the home ., V -s. s and Mrs. Bail Kairen re- Infant Shurtz turned home Sunday afkr sendiGraveside funeral reivues were ng ten days as gue-t- s of thi lr son conducted Monday afternoon m Lieutenant and Mrs. Clair K.,r- - l he Logan cemetery for the in M.nneapoLs. Mmn, They j jant daughter of Den C. and report having enjor, their trip Ruth Merrill Shurtz, 419 North' very much and that their ton and j Stt.ond Eost Mm.t died! who daughter-inlaare in the bst Sunday shortly after birth in & of lu altli, local hospital. Mrs. William Evans and three Survivors Include the parents, daughters of Salt Lake city were one sister, Mary Ann Shurtz, and the guests of Mrs. Anne Orchard grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Monday afternooa Shurtz, Escalante, and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Leavitt C. R. Johnson, Logan. Burial was recently returned from Los Ang- directed by the W. Loyal Hall l mortuary. eles, Calif., where they spent weeks visiting with their son Be yourself. Ape no grcauios Mr. and Mr and daughter-in-lawBe willing to pa-v- s for what you Lacell Leavitt. are. A good farthing Is better then Mr. and Mrs. Arden Pope and a bad sovereign. Samuel Coley family of Wyoming and Miss Mary Jane Harrison, who has been staying with Mrs. Pope for the A Csrhe County Enterprise Office. 10 West CetiUr. Logan Mr. FOR YOUR PLUMBING KKI'AIIi CALL in-rt- n . w BAUGH PLUMBING CO. STOKERS Quality and Service 115 S. Mala Phone 17 LINK-BEL- T Jo-sia- h PIIONE sev-era- , Today s Pattern 30 44 TAXI SOUTH MAIN 20th. Century Everbearing past month, spent Saturday and Sunday visiting with their moth- Strawberry Plants er, Mrs. Ray Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Goff and family of Ogden returned home Monday after spending a week as Mrs. Bert guests of Mr. and $5.00 per 100 plants PERRY ROBB 150 Ut No, 6th East. Brigham, Orchard. LEWISTON FIRST AND THIRD WARD CHOIRS PRESENT CANTATA On Sunday the Lewiston First and Third ward choirs presented the rendition of the Easter Cantata, Life Ever Lasting," under the able leadership of Mrs. Elva (MI1S Butters, chorister of the Third with M.rs Ethel ward choir, Leavitt at the piano and Mrs. Myrtha Westover at the organ; also of Third ward, in the First Furniture Autos Sunday School. After the cantata Richard A. Brown, chairman of the "Law Observance and Enforcement committee of the L D S church, and Ed. B. Jackson, a member of the committee, of Salt Lake city, each gave a talk on the necessity of law observance and the enforcement of law. On Wednesday evening the two choirs and their partners met in a social in the First ward recreation room. The program consisted of stunts, readings, music and singing. A delicious luncheon was served. Th$ party was under the direction of Erwin Wiser and Ar ward mos Livestock $10 to $30 STATE LOPJ COMPACT OF LOGAN 29 West First North PHONE 260 Butters. WELCOME HOME PARTY FOR MISSIONARIES Tuesday evening the Lewiston First ward entertained at a welcome home party for five returning missionaries. Elder and Mrs. S. R. Rogers, Elders Frank Uilson, Alton Haslam and Douglas Talks were given by each of the missionaries, two numbers from the male quartet under the leadership of E. H. Kemp; two Steph-ense- n. vocal duets by Wanda Shulberg and Phyllis Talbot, and two violin solos by A Raymond Haslam. large , crowd was in attendance. The party was sponsored by the MIA with Mrs. Vaudis Bom an in charge. OPERATIVE 4g e King in Pattern 9328 may be ordered only childrens sizes 2, 4, 6 and 8. Size dress, requires V2 yards .fabric: sunfrock, 1V4 yards fabric, 1 yards ruffling. This pattern, together with a needlework pattern of useful and decorative motifs for linens and garments. TWENTY CENTS. Send TWENTY CENTS in coins ,for these patterns to 170 Newspaper Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th 1st., New York 11. N. Y. Write 'plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. TEN CENTS more brings our 1944 Marian Martin Spring Pattern Book. New, styles. Free Pattern printed in book. ,6, h h easy-to-mak- e Features Syndicate Ail Bights .Reserved- - HOT QUINTUPLETS relieve coughing; of EiisT eoioe Whenever the Quintuplets catch cold their chests, throats and backs are rubbed with Musterole. So Musterole must be you can buy just about the best Musterole helps break up local congestion in upper bronchial tract, makes breathing easier, promptly relieves coughing and tight, sore, aching chest muscles due to colds. In 3 Strengths: Childrens Mild, Regular, and Extra Strong. cold-reli- ef 1 |