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Show Pajrt I'iulit 1 Utah State Ski he i .j 'lie .uncru-an- , i.oan, Religious Round Table Discussion Club Organized Cache County, Utah uh. h bum in general , of iiiiiii is a Friday, December In the! luiij-iiiitai- in government for government must have religious guidance io be a good nation. Without have ligion. governments jxzr mcress in moral things, he said, Uwt B6" ih. Cl, mum charts S.J sol taken a stand on government Is- sues when it should have and thd churches must educate Its in people things religious and moral. He emphasized that religion Is something which should be a . e everyday life of peo- p,arl, a Sunday prac-voc- al ple tnstad ot Mug USAC Ready for Winter Quarter j M, I'd 15 One of the lead.r.g su.ial func lions of the year, the annual mili-- i tary ball will be held during the winter quarter. Other major stu- - Dl cusviig rel.giou and to anyone Dbtineuon tcuws growing interest had the racy, the Utah Council of Religious ski club forjl!0 claims to have winter (.ports, a. Agruunura, cum-Bdubhouse Utah State Agrnultuial fctudfnlbody dan college tirM in any thing and Thursday Groups presented a round table of instruction fud program and, th students was organized on the t1 urge (Doc) Nelson, trainer and disru&dun before students and r 1 mu-(or nudrtit coacti at Utah Kh )iate faculty at Utah State Agricultural p", campus Thursday under the di- wriviling . Kmdi, by Dr.a I Agricultural college, entered hu t0.lin the regular weekly rection of prof er sor H. H. .sd j Franklin Harris, college presi-iof owning tho first pair of , oinfc y Tuesday, carnival director of physical edudent. skis in Cache vail ay. cation. pr JTanklin S. Harris, college Registrar William It. Bell, exStudents enrolled at the college plained that the In Doc 1910, Nil on explained, president, presided a; thr program rise in Loyal Sceholer, of IzOgun, was fail quarter will meet with deans registration, cannotexpected named president of the new or- he pu; chased a pair of skis from a Inch in.luded a vocal solo by be estimated of their respective schools Friday in figures since there is ganization at the initial meeting un t astern firm. Living Just down Olga Dotson Gardner, a former nothing or Saturday to make preliminary to base th of the group. Elected to the sice the MU from the college, he USAC student, count on. although and community plans for winter quarter registrawould bring out Ms skis on cold j singing directed by Professor W'J several hundred prospective new president post was Alrus Bergtion, D. Harris said. and come to H. M inning, acting head of the students strom, of Brigham, and Kay Wil- winter mornincs have begun preliminary 1 To cut down on time, former reglsiru tlon. . music department son, of Midway, was listed as se- school. Hu skis caused a sensaSiding with the Rabbi Suchls, students will register at various cretary. Other ofTicera are Norda tion at USAC during 1918 and Acting as moderator for the re-- 1 winter several ligjous discussion, the Rev, Dr. Professor Barker stressed thut the hours January 2, according to letfollowing Fife, of Brigham city, t.easurer; the to Speak at students appeared on the cam- William F. Bulkley of the Eplsco-- ( baslc theories of Christianity make ters of the alphabet and newi Champ Max Adam, of Tremonton, pub001 Association with skis. will obtain registration licity manager, and Boh While, pus paleon church introduced the four fur democracy tad that it is the students Frederick P. Champ, Logan, dl of Ogden, manager. The first ski club was organ- church representatives: Rabble Al- - ' duty ol churches to express them forms at the registrar's office in Student managers are Vcrn Ey- ized at the college in 1921 and via Suchsi, Jewis community. Sait selves on political and morel Is- - the north wing of the main build- - rector United States chamber of re, of Rawlins, Wyo.; Alice Brack- reached its height in 1927 and Lake City; Moaslegnoir A. F, Gol-- ! sues of government, ing. Classroom instruction will b-- 1 comerce. ,wUJ speak at the an-g- in j nual of Idaho Wool en, of Logan; Sidney Johnson, of 19118. Interest died out in the fol- - vannini. Thursday. Lutheran meeting the Catholic that Contending of chaplain To meet the need of modern I Growers Association, January 8, Ogden, wtr.le honoiary advocates faculty Mwln-- j years and was revived j Wasatch college; The Rev. Thom-- , church separation of have been it was announced Wednesday. The members include H. B. Hunsaker, with the fo: motion of a ski club 'as W. Wesell, Lutheran church; church and state, the Rev. Wesel training, programs Ceorge (Doc) Nelson, Georje on the college campus Thursday. and Profess or James Barker, new sail that the church Is interested broadened in the various depart- - j meeting will be held in Boise, Kelker, and Jack Croft. president of the LDS French mis- - hi the state but does not actively ' n.ents of the schools of engineer- - j Idaho. mem Mr. Champ, who Is aLo a di- Addressing the charter slon. interfere with the governmnet. The ing. industries, and trades; arts bers, lrofessir Everett Thorpe, home rector of the Americun Forestry end silences, agriculture, moral teaches Monslegnoir Glovanmnl. opening church principles asserted that the club could prothc discussion, defined religion as which exert lnfiuir.ee in all j economics, forestry, commerce and AsociaUon, will give an address duce a capable ski team to repon public land policies. Die relationship between God and spheres of activity. i education. resent the college in both state and national ski meets. He explained that ski classes will be deOffered to students at USAC be tenms, the Logan Grizzlies Tj feated Madison Bobcats, 24 to 21 5k ginning the winter term, Janu2ft Thursday night. m ary 2. fcoreman for Logan was V. Top Preliminary plans for club par- Otte. right forward, with eight. ties. ski trips and other recrea2ft Burns. Madison right forward, & tional activities were discussed at got seven. the meeting. Logan will play Rigbys Red Devils Friday night, and will tackle the Idaho Falls Tigers, who represent the largest school rft in thc valley. Saturday night. A tip-i- n by Bill Choules. Indian guard in the second extra & & team-- , one after his of period, Crookston Robert By K. In our column December 11 of mates missed a shot, spelled de-- 1 vi to & feat the North Cache Bulldoks were we the Cache American, Wednesday night when Preston again calling attention to the way won. Two extra periods any many newspapers suppress 2ft Information concerning the earn- were required before th game was decided. w finally ings! profits is a better word) The Bulldogs jumped Into an of big business. 2ft A ease to illustrate our point early lead which was overcome Hi Is a recent report of the Securi- when the teams were tied at the t N! At the end of the ties and Exchange commission, half, 2ft and wherein is explained the finan- game the score stood in the second extra period with cial status of American corporaonly seconds left,. Choules made 2ft tions. The Indians have error In our his tip-i- n. A typographical billion, other preseason wins over South reads: $9 last article 2ft when it should have been $97 Cache and Franklin. billion. This is the total current assets of American corporations $200,000 FIRE AT 2ft as compared with $4 billion of 1939. The net working capital MALAD, IDAHO has of American corporations 2ft A fire which broke out in two doubled, sky rocketed from $2414 milling concerns Monday at Ma-labillion to $48 billion this year. Idaho caused $200,000 dam-ag- t, We will not enumerate all the jk according to investigations report here. Its too long and anyway this Is enough to show which were made of the cause. what President Truman meant It was the most disatrous fire when he said that General Moin the history of Malad, one of tors could afford to raise workthe oldest cities in the west. ers pay and not raise the price Flames swept through the four-stor- y of cars. mill and elevator of the excess tax has Because profits . Grain Growers been abolished. The reading pub- Oneida county lic must always bear in mind and the nearby Hustler grain elethat our free press newspapers vator, and damage to the Thorpe tell us only what they think is Brothers Coal company office and good for us to know. yard. An entirely different subject is The grain growers plant sufthe local housing situation, sev- fered damage estimated at alreeral times recently we read most in$200,000, covered by ports of the chamber of commerce's special housing committee surance, according to Doyle Jel-le- r, manager. and their appeal for the citizens The nearhy Husler plant, owned to provide more housing for reby the Salt Lake Flour mills, was turning veterans. This same thing has been go- damaged to the extent of about ing on for 40 years. Appeals for $12,000. The fire started on the citizens to provide housing for second floor of the grain growers students and this of course was mill and quickly spread to other to keep the college open and the of structure. the parts is teachers, (their new name Doctor) on the job. The only change in this Is the. Ilogan, Welfare word veteran, is used in place Head, Resigns -- of students, as in days of yore. The veterans did their job of G. A. Hogan, - well, and Resignation they deserve a lot more than an attic or basement Lewiston, as chairman and member of the Cache county 'board of apartment at exhorbitant rent. If these veterans had gone welfare, was made Tuesday night about their work with no more to the county commission ot a determination has been I special meeting of the welfare than shown by the Logan people in board held at Mr. Hogans Lewis-- e way of suitable housing, we on home. Reason for the resigwould be the slaves of Hitler. was given as ill health by As the trials of war criminals nation Mr. Hogan. Mr. Hogans resignagoes on, and discloses the horrors the Nazis resorted to, we tion was accepted and it is not feel i'guilty of gross neglect In expected that a successor will be more effort for named until after January 1. 'making municipal owned, low rent homes for these men who destroyed the Germans Had Gas enemy's war machines, at less I. G. Farbenindustrie, the Gerthan laborers pay, and now that trust, developed survivors want a home for wife man chemical and baby our housing committee the deadliest poison gas in the for basement or attic apart-- - world by testing it on concent asks ments at pirate prices. The thing tration camp inmates, Colonel group should do is adopt Bernard Bernstein, director of a Golden Rule policy and cartel little for the the investigations ' in the veterans U. S. t put themselves military government, Tues. place. One of the first things to solve day told a senate war mobilization I must not impose subcommittee. The Germans were wodld be : upon mother any more; it was i very nervous for fear the of her to give wife sians would discover the secret and baby a home for three years I of their gas,, which reputedly while I was away. Now lets j would penetrate any mask in the figure how to pay $40 rent. $40 world, when the red armies in- 45 for food. vaded eastern' from $85, leaves Germany, medicine, clothes. Say, its going to be tough. If only Logan had low-rehousing for people on years. So there you have forty eardollars low Income we could get along. thousand ($40,000) Yes. indeed, if that housing com- marked for pipe., Use it for this ?en mittee would stay on the trail housing project we have of the city commission, and with- talking about." This appeal of 'the out expense of an architect, write housing to the Denver chamber of corn- - committee for citizens to share merce for a copy of that citys a spare room or two to make a for veterans should not be municipal low rent housing, and I home their final effort; it, they should duplicate coming j consider what the mayor of Salt Where is the money from? Why, the same source as million money for three-fourdollars for Diesel engines. This proposal to replace part of the canyon watermain is premature. That pipe has been leaking since it was Installed, and it is good for another 20 InduV.-.n- the Hun-sake- m J c , u-.s- ... . lorS Lh Li. , oa-J.n- a heaye Jt I j ! ; , Logan Wins North Cache Loses ilVtl5tCr ; ' : j akSf AT NEEDHAM'S it Discussed Housing Shortage 0 . 31-2- 9. 0 0 , 14-a- ll. 29-2- 9. This Christmas will long be remembered d, by those you love best if you choose for them Gifts of . ' ! ( nt th . . g g g g g g g g g g g g g g k |