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Show "Joh A. lira tiisea 1 1 :1; SCHOOLS BELONG TO YOU TIE I Yes, Mr. and Mrs. America, the schools are yours, just as the children are yours.. What we do for the schools today! will deter--miwhat Americas children, ne ihibty-sevent- h year HYRUM, UTAH NOVEMBER 7, 1947 lias ;,ixed Ticket At 10c Per Copy Per Tear $3.50 ,V4 V . Services Monday 10 ducting. A firing squad from at Chaplain S. ?. 4', I TV' J Hyrum First ward MIA at the regular time, g p. m. next Tuesday evening All departments are fully organized, and a profitable evening is promised. ward MIA Armistice Pay program next Tuesday. The Special Interest Class will hear John Murch. Lb Commander The entire program will be given by service men, and the meeting begins promptly at 7:30. The Hyrum Third is planning a special j ! and gold pin to Roy Albiston for 16 years of safe driving; the same to Adrun Bright for 15 years of safe driving and Merrill Murray, for five years of safe driving. A safe driving and sterling silver pin went to Harold Chrlstofferson for three years of safe driving, to Horace Egan for three years, to Elvin J. Dennis for three years and to Orval Dobson for one year of safe driving. A safe driving certificate went to Gerald Andrus for six months and to Lee Christensen for six month of safe driving. The meeting was directed by W. C. Fagg of Salt Lake City. Safety precautions and Road Courtesy were points stressed by the following: Leon Ghetti from the Safety and Inspection Department of the Great American Indemnity Co., Warren C. Cann-oSales Manager of Linder and Wood White Truck Sales Co., of Salt Lake City; Ed. M. Pitcher of the Utah State Highway Patrol, Lorenzo J. Bullen, Chief of Police of Richmond and A. L. Kircher, Superintendent of Sego Milk Products Co. of Richmond. Safety meetings will be held at regular intervals in the future and additional awards given to employees yearly. certlfi-cateca- te PA EUGENE PETERSEN nj R. S. Conference November 9 Relief Society will be held at the Hyrum Second ward chapel at 7:30 on November 9. Mrs. Marzell Nielsen will give the greeting speech and reports A talk on the life and ministry of tfie Savior will be given by Clawson followed Mrq, Minnie by a talk by Mrs. Sara Ann Allen on tle Literature of the Doctrine and Covenants. All women of the ward are HE SEES REDS . . . Dapper actor Adolphe Menjou is shown as he told the house activities committee that Hollywood is a hotbed of invited to attend. Read en- Old Judge parlys Family Menjou said terprise activities. he was in favor' of shipping the Communists in America back to Russia. Court on pa?e four. CLIFFORD ' V4t Changes in Hyrum Stake officers at the last stake conference included the release of Mrs. Belva Hall as counselor in the YWMIA and the sustaining of Mrs. Marva Hansen to that post. Fred F. Garrett of Wellsville was voted on to become a Armistice Day STAUFFER -- 5 Crown Princess Juliana will act as regent. Princess Juliana is shown here with her mother. lands, (left) The election in Wellsville gave the position of Mayor to William P. Leatham of the Progressive Party. The councilmen are Oliver S. Bailey, four year councilman; Ollie Elwood, Melvin Archibald, Charles Stewart and Leland P. Maughan as two year men. Jessie H. Maughan was elected city treasurer and Stanley Jones, city recorder. ed, and., other nations because our citizens have been better prepared than those of other nations. It was the school that supplied the basic training, knowledge and technical skill for this march to power. It is the public school system that has proved to be our best investment. November 9 to 15 is American Education Week. In view of your pride in your nation and your schools, visit your school during this period to see what it is doing to meet the challenge of tomorrow. Submitted by W. S. Bailey of Hyrum. out-fed- ., Special Memoria Day November 16 out-foug- ht In keeping with the proclamation of the governor as printed elsewhere in this issue, the mayors of several of the towns of Cache Valley, as well as ward officers, are planning a public ceremony on November 16 to honor the war dead of their respective communities. At a ceremony in the State Capit'ol Building on that same day at 2:00 p. m. the following program will be carried out, and :t is suggested it be used as a guide for local programs. Master of Ceremonies, Secretary of State. BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE Band STATE OF UTAH Invocation A PROCLAMATION Massing of State Colors and WHEREAS, the Congress of Colors the United States enacted Veterans Organizations legiswith appropriate ceremonies. lation providing for the repat(10-15 Address, Governor riation of World War II dead; , min.) and rr Special music ' this repatriation WHEREAS, Ceremony by Gold Star Moth- program is now underway to er and Guard of, Honor placing continue until and completed; wreath at the Rostrum WHEREAS, it is altogether Cannon salute and proper that we pause fitting Solo, Sleep, Soldier, Sleep to pay tribute to the supreme Taps, with echo sacrifices made the men and The program in Smithfied will women of Utah by who died while be printed in detail in next in the service of their country. weeks paper, as will that of NOW, THEREFORE, I, HERobany other town plannig to BERT B. MAW, Governor of serve this day. the State of Utah, do hereby proclaim Sunday, November 16, 1947, as SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY and urge the state, counties, towns, cities, communities, churches, schools, the press, radio, and all other appropriate organizations to cooperate In providing memorial services in every community of our State honoring all those courageous representatives of our commonwealth who gave their lives in their devotion to the cause of liberty and democracy. May we all be mindful of the causes which make war and rededicate our action to the promotion of peace and fellowship of mankind in the hope that world conflicts may be abolished forever. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused to be affixed the Great Seal of the State of Utah. Done at the State Capitol this 16th day of October, 1917, Salt Lake City, Utah HERBERT B. MAW Governor J PROCLAMATION - . - November 11 . na P. LEATHAM Leatham Elected j At a safety meeting held at the Sego Milk Co. plant at Richmond the following awards were made: A safe driving certificate meet Have We Progressed? Pericles, an Athenian orator, spoke thus of Athenian dead on the armistice after the first Peloponnesian war 23 centuries ago: While, collectively they gave their lives, individually they received that renown which never grows old and the most distinguished tomb they could. have; not so much that in which they are laid, as that in which their glory is left behind them, to be everlastingly recorded on every occasion for doing so. For of illustrious men the whole world Is the sepulcher, and hot only does the inscription upon the columns in their own land point it out, but in that also which is not their own there dwells with every one an unwritten memorial of the heart, rather than a material monument. How far have we come, when we consider that the same words are being spoken about men who died in war as late as 1945? 'V1 At Yellsville Sego Gives The On Armistice Day Have We Progressed? 1 V f WILLIAM A. Dunn. Safety Awards NEW RULER . . .With the temporary resignation of Queen as ruler of the Nether- r the ? MIA NOTICES - Tf v V military department at. the US AC will be present. The pallbear ers will be six World War II veterans. The grave will be dedicated by - I- v,i the body of Luther Miller will be laid to rest with full military honors. v. The American Legion will be in charge of the services with Commander James Stoddard con- - Hyrum will have former bishop Larsen, darnel and past president of the Lions are- Eugene Club. Councilmen StauffPetersen, 4 year; Clifford Lowell and J. Olsen, Elton er, Andersen. The city treasurer is Estella Bradley and the recorder Is Carlyle Hutton. & t , mayor, e ' On Monday, November 11 a. m. in the Hyrum cemetery mixed ticket was elected in ' the Republicans jjyrum with of mayor and the posts ginning The Democrats city recorder. took all the council seats and the position of city treasurer. anti-fre- ":. ,U-- - A will 45 Lather Miller ysri llyrunt Election As NUMBER can do tomorrow. The kind of a world we have in the future does not rest entirely with the statesmen it depends chiefly with the parents and teachers, who are raising the children of today. Freedom, democracy, high living standards, more and newer gadgets, scientific progress, the use of atomic energy all will end in disillusionment and ruin unless we rear a generation that will cherish and employ these gifts to build a better world and a better society. Not by accident, nor through the possession of unsurpassed natural resources, nor through the free enterprise system alone, has the United States become the most powerful nation on earth. The schools of the nation have played a major role in guiding our nation to a position of eminence in world affairs. Long before any other nation had embarked upon a public school system, the people of the United States had endorsed the principle of compulsory education as a requisite of citizenship. Our people have been better educated. In turn thejf have used their knowledge and skill to develop agriculture, transportation, communications, manufacturing and mining. We have r "if . ttlltttf . 'll J. LOWELL ANDERSEN lili&SSSW tifSI181 ELTON OLSEN University of Scouting Planned A The tenth annual "University scout leaders training program of the Cache Valley Council Boy Scouts of America will begin Wednesday, November 19 with a council-wid- e meeting of scout leaders, council mem bers and stake and ward leaders to be held at the Smithfield Stake House, Henry Hurren, Council President announced of Scouting d today. Upon the brow of Arlington Hill, across the Potomac, in the shadows of the nations Capitol, stands The training school for scout shaft as white as the driven snow. Inscribed on that monument are the immortal words: leaders will be directed by Dr. to God. known but soldier American Here rests in honored glory au John C. Carlisle, leadership An army sentry guards him. training chairman. In addition to No one knows his name. the open session, courses in basic of a or of a that noble blood peasant. the flowed in his veins No one knows whether there and advanced scoutmastership, No one knows his race, color or creed. explorer leadership, health and No one knows from what home he came, whether from a hovel or mansion. No one knows whether he is Protestant, Catholic or Jew. safety, commisioners service, and camp equipment making will be But the whole world knows where he went to fadeless fame and undying glory. He is called the Unknown Soldier. conducted. All training sessions (By Harry H. Schlacht) will be held in the Logan Junior High School on November 21 and 26 and will continue Dec. 1 and 4. |