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Show .Tuesday, February 13. 1915 The Cache American. Logan, Cache County, Ltaft Page Four to Irrigate 19.29 embraced aithln SW'SE1, Sec. 8. T12N, RlE. To Appropriate: 15782 MVj ill L Rav Rob.non. Logan, .05 sec, ft. for domestic use NcOcea, Guardianship and Probate well between 109 and Irom a Contalt County Clerk er Ue 150 It. deep at a point N. 2505 Farther Respective blgnera for ft. and E. 580 ft. from SW Cor. Infornutlon. 32. T12N, RlE. . S Melvin Summers. Avon, 15090 .015 sec. ft. for domestic use Utah, Notice to Creditors from a 4 in. well tvt, 50 and Bo the Flrst.lt. deep at a point S. 2494 685' Jl of Court i nuirirt it., ,rm cot' . -i- of the for County and S. n;lk(,ri Mt.n(lon cub, In lS'Cii-Jr- -'-e t'ai he. Il'iah. .4 si c. ft. of wati-- from In the Matter of the Estate of j April 1 to October T1 for irrlga. A. Griffiths. also known tion nnil from Jun. 1 to Dec. 31 Griffiths, pur. as ll.nry Alh-ufor imiiiinu.l Dm-av-dThe water is diverted from po-claims iim'amed spring area, tributary , Ci editors will present an juver. situated N. 57 ft. w w.lh vouchers to the utu! rpignea of 335 ft from NE Cor. Sec. admin strati :x ut the office (inij Room 3J Tj2V imv n,e spring area Attorney Niwel C. Dm.s, as follows: beg. N. 57 211. Cji he Valley Rank Uuild.nff. Utah, on or before tne and g ju5 ft. from NE Cor. Mlti g,.Ci 3j tin nee on the LI. jin day of April. 1915. SHEIIER. ELTHKM1A low ng traverse. N. 123 ft. E. DO 3 ft kj ft. to beg. The Administratrix of the Fa- t s diverted and con-alsta:e of llenry A. Griffith, wn(t.r te AL known as of 2500 ft. by v(.v ,.j a distance E ton Griffiths. Deceased. diii'ti and uM'd to irrigate 10 acres winiin NL . NEWEL G DAJNES. of land imbiai-eW. R G. for F talc. T11N. 5c. Date of first f ublieat on: RiO.rtj - T. Earl All op, Stnilhfie.d. . 19 '5 Ut.ih. .50 sec. ft. for irrigation January from April 1 to October 15 Irom TO CRKDITIORS a well. 170 ft. deep at a NOTICK 1 2 ft. point S. 1503 ft. and W. Sec. 31, T13N. RlE. Cor. NE ifrom First the of Court In the DMrict water will be used to judicial District of the State of The 50 aero of l.ma embraced rntf the for Cpunty llah, In and N1 St.c 3K T13N R1E Cache. incidental and for viur-roun- d k w.ilciing jto ol f th.- In the M.itte16206 Jul.n L. Green. RFD No. DEE A. JOHNSON. Decc.ied. 1. i.cgan. Utah, .015 sec. ft. fur s d.nms domestic me from a 2 in. well bet. p:e-en- t wdl 100 anil 150 ft. deep at a point N. with oin hers, to the undesign2183 ft. and E. 110 It. from Si ed odmini.'t radix at her at 91 North 2nd West. Loj.ni. Utah Cor. Sec. 19. T11N. RlE, and for of year round incidental on or before the 17lh day purposes. April. 1945. Protests resisting the granting of HANSEN. P. THAIS of the foregoing applications any Administratrix of the Es- with reasons therefor, must be in A. Dee tate of Johnson, affidavit form with extra copy and Deceased. filed with the State Engineer. 403 GEORGE C. HEINRICH, State Capitol, Salt Lake City 1, Utah with a fee of $1 on or before Attorney for Administratric. Dates of Publication: March 29, 1945. and 13, 27, 20, ED. H. WATSON. February March 6 and 13, 1945. State Engineer. and RlE, S $a $'' LE GAL Sharing Polish Rations THE CACHE AMERICAN nd Friday! by Publmhed TueUy Company, at 82 Weit Cmtei Street, Logan, Utah. n. Publlhln it S WrCLIAM C. ENGLAND, JAMFS W. ENGLAND DAVID W, ENGLAND Managing Editor-Du&lne- Manager ea Mechanical ! Department aa Second-ClaaMatter, November 2, 1831, at Poet Office at Logun, Utah, under the Act of March S, Entered used land of H Newspapw, the Cacha American arrra P' V i the a t , 1E87. . i. Subscription rate: Outside County, one year 12 00; Inside Cache 1.50, Advertising rates made anown upon application. County, i A JU ,V J ft f fcl 1 -- ' A t a Ha. k N lli-i.r- J toik-waterin- WIILKK? is at There present quite a concern among the residents near the Cache county fair grounds over;-thproposed establishment there of a German prison , camp. '1 he German prisoners of war will supplant tliCi j Japanese workers who were housed at the mobile ob- - J no is There last in probably year. Amalga camp jeetion to the prisoners doing the work of the Japa-- l nese on the farms of the county, but why the camp-should he established in Logan, the people concerned do not understand. Logan, they say is not in the j; center of the districts needing the labor and create an additional problem of transporta- - j j tion to and from the fields. This transportation will necessarily require many gallons of gasoline for the daily trips of trucks necessary to carry some uUU men and the added trall'ic through the city streets will increase the dangers of accident to children. Another objection, and perhaps the main one, is the undesirability of such a camp so near the play grounds of thousands of men, women and children ij who each year visit the Willow park for their out-ciaTHIS IOLlSll bULDILK, alter heavy fighting on the Tilburg froot in Holland Polish troops.helped tt entertainment. There is no doubt but what the park is happy to share bis rations with little Dutch girl.Gcrmani lincc Miy, 19tt the helJ of tin by to liberation country brintf pert is the most popular place of entertainment and refoodstuffs sufficient supplying laxation in our midst; it will possibly surpass the needs own meet Its 1945 to during beautiful Logan canyon due to its easy accessibility, of the a as well as part large for many Logan people can walk there and hundreds food consumed by the .American of others can reach it without taxing their meager forces In the southwest Pacific gasoline rations. Mothers, it is contended, will fear and some exports to the United to let their children frequent the grounds if the prist Kingdom, has suffered no serious 7 oners are there. Of course a guard will be maintained to date despite the but even under that situation we read of escapes A impairment of in some parts continuation NOTICE TO WATER Try This New Amazing f severone of the of know' exto that not does one such country and what from run places USERS the Its in est droughts history, urti tent an escaped prisoner may go in satisfying himself COUGH MIXTURE of Agricultural redepartment CONGRESSMAN The following applications have OUR FROM in his effort to evade being captured again. ports. been filed with the State Engineer Fast Working Triple Acting W. K. GRANGER As the popularity of the Fair grounds increase, to change or appropriate water in You Feel the Effect Instantly HEALTH SERVICE Th King of all couch medlclnei for Cache County, State of Utah, and when we say fair grounds we mean the entire ISSUES ANNUAL REPORT or bronchial Irritation reu!tlng AGRICULTURE the entire year, unless couch throughout cold In cold wintry Canada I from area including that portion used for the exhibits at Wartime trends of the agricul- Plans for Mixture CANADIOL Fat Workof otherwise all locations designated, expansion Mixture quickly ing, triple acting Buckley fair time as well as the rodeo grounds, the race track tural economy and problems it will medical care facilities and public being from SLB&M. looeni and raise phlecm lodced In the clear air passage soothe rasped tube and the Willow' park, we recognize the wisdom and face when It reconverts to peace! health activities throughout the To Change: raw tissues, on or two sip and worst bi! annual in the are a nation in given summarized couching sparo ease. You get result fast. been Logan City Corporation Compounded from rare Canadian foresight of the early city and county fathers in ob- have and Cache County, Logan, Utah, ennial report of the Bureau of report of the public health and other soothing healing IngreMixture I proposes to change the point of dient Buckley' "CANADIOL economics. The report vice. taining so fine an area for the benefit of the future Get diversion use .75 different from anything you ever tried.store. and of I of place out that a bottle today at any good drug generations; and we are happy that it, in late years, pomt, makes SLAUGHTER L.VESTOCK sec. of ft. water right acquired it probable that a COVERED BV SUBSIDY has been improved as much as it has been Improved. gres Claim No. by Underground-wate- r few years after the war farmers 10439 from April 15 to October 15 The rearranging of the horse and cattle barns, the will be producing more lood and In an effort to step up meat from FOR YOUR a 3'i in. well between GO PLUMBING REPAIR removal of the old board fence, the building of a fiber than the 1944 record quan procurement for the armed foras. and 160 ft. deep at a point S. 50 above was ft. and E. 1425 ft. from WU Cor. yar Food administrator CALL few exhibit buildings and the planting of trees to tity, which l nounced levels. Mechanization on Sec. 16, T12N, RlE. The water that slaughterings BAUGH provide a larger area of daily entertainment, and the credited with having aided farmers which no.Federally inspected was used to irrigate 3230 acres of s land. extension of the water mains throughout the park to produce three.fourths more per slaughterers will be paid PLUMBING CO. last year than in World in 1945 will be limited to is Hereafter, .75 sec. ft. of water has contributed to its popularity. We would dislike worker to be from 15 diverted STOKERS War I. certain percentages of the weights to October 15 from a April well would hinder see Service to much and that Quality happen anything very Other conclusions of the report on which they received subsidies between 60 and 160 ft. deep at a 57 115 Phone So. Main 1944. in can The the establishment market of use it the free indicate that farmers by people. point N. 72 deg. 54 min. W 1783 are of ft. volume NW from the Cor. Sec. goods they 16, would to T12N, do that a very large of the war prison camp and do it at to GKRMAN WORK CAM I . j . e. , 1 ' e i . j o Ih-nr- ; I 1 Att-rm- will.-therefor- 3-- n. I - Cie-l.tor.- j or stock-water-in- WASHINGTON NEWS fifl POST-WA- R Buck-le- y' post-wa- r m one-thir-d subsi-dib- LINK-BEL- T n. produce, likely a general average of prices close Now we are sure the people objecting to the latest to parity, but only if the Nation full em. maintains proposal are no different than the farmers in the ployment atsubstantially and wages adequate county who were so upset at the proposal of the mo- expands its 'international trade. bile Japanese camp. They recognize the need for farm Air transportation and frozen foods FURNACE CLEANING, Repairing, Stoker Repairing and Service likely to bring about signifilabor and they feel that the German prisoners will are cant changes in the marketing of Wangsgaard Coal and Stoker Co do as good work as the Japanese, but they do not want perishables. The report added that 167 South Main. Phone 132. them close to their homes. Why can it not be put in policies for land settlement, and especially for the disposal of surthe same place as the Japanese camp was last year plus military lands suitable for or at least nearer the farms where work is needed? agriculture, should be devised so it must be close to Logan, could it not be built at that veterans and others will have of opportunity withthe old Logan sugar factory site, the objegtors argue. aoutmaximum creating a new class of distressed farmers or a surplus Ora Thompson, assisted by Peg- farm population. gie Sparks, Oreta Godfrey, Nelda AUSTRALIA HIT BY Christensen, Colleen Buttars, Mar-dea- n SEVERE DROUGHT Godfrey, Marreen Buttars, February 11, ward Doris Sunday, Australias ability to continue Theo Griffiths Lue Godfrey, held in the was conference Jea?i Thompson and Annie GrifClarkston ward. President Hazen NOW -- IN OUR NEW fin. Hillyard, Noble Chamber, Harley LOCATION Miss Norma Onley of Smithfield Monson of Smithfield, and Benwith Miss spent the week-en- d nie J. Ravsten were visitors. BishElecta Thompson. op J. Byron Ravsten conducted TYPEWRITER Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Davis of the forenoon, the meetings. In SERVICE were visitors of Mr. and was Ogden meeting community singing Mrs. Joseph Burt over Sunday. FEDERAL AVENUE directed by Mrs. Eunice Ravsten, Mrs. David Archibald returned Phone 787-Ravstenaccompanist. home from a local hospital Tues Miss Leah for Typewriter and Adding Vivian Clark played a violin solo, day. OF LOGAN Machine Service. Ribbons, with Miss Sarah Higgis accomanMr. and Mrs. Grant Griffin 29 West First North panist; Lloyd Godfrey and Edward nounce the birth of a baby boy Supplies Buttars, membeors of the Aaronic born Service 9. Mimeograph Two sisters also PHONE 260 February Priesthood, gave talks; Bishop the new boy. greeted Jesse Harley Favsten, Godfrey, Monson and Noble Chambers of 8 Smithfield, gave short talks; the benediction was given by Roland FT THEY SO THEY ARE GOING THERE EVERYTHING IS Godfrey. have threatened that TO TRY TO GET IRWIN QUIET-N- OW if ME DOESN'T, THEY'LL MURDER I TO PROWL meetfor the Singing evening TO TESTIFY AGAINST HIM I'VE GOT TO GET TO IRWIN THIS OUGHT ing was by the Singing Mothers, A SWEET AS SOON AS THEY GO TO BED, TO BE A WIND0W-- 0R SOME and members of the Stake PresiBUNCH OF BOYS" , v WAY I CAN ENTE- RILL SEE IF THERE ISN'T SOME j I,; C WAV INTO THE dency were speakers. Reports were . BASEMENT given by the president of the Priesthood quorums. Saturday evening the M. I. A. sponsored the Green and Gold Miss lvalue ball. Godfrey was queen and was escorted by Stirling Godfrey. La Rae Thompson escorted by Terry Griffin, was . i the crown bearer. The M. I. A. dance, directed by Miss Arleen Loosle and Mrs. Byron Loosle, r 'I,. was presented by Electa Thomp,IM 'f'h son, Darleen Buttars, Myrle Burt, u c Thelma Thompson, Ranee Griffin, Reva Buttars, Arleen Loosle, Le extent. lepras PLflllILJUUCTgs REMEMBER WHEN the entire class lined up for spelling? When you missed a word, the first pupil to spell it correctly moved up ahead of you. The pupils staying near the top were considered the brightest, but at recess some boy from the foot of ' If Furniture Autos EVERTON Livestock SI to $300 STATE LOAH in COMPANY M j DAN DUNN 'J$eert 0prn i PLACE--THER-E ME-W- HAT - - if ''-- And in THE PITCH BLACK CELLAR IN THE COAL BIN IRWIN HlGGS WHAT A MESS THOSE HOODLUMS HAVE ME LOCKED UP IN THIS HOLE AND ARE THREATENING TO KILL ME IF DON'T SWEAR THAT MV PAL DAN DUNN COMMITTED R0BBERY-- HE NEVER I ROBBED ANYBODY-WH- AT DO??? WILL X J |