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Show I ,ST.CMP oittse axis-mr(- S.WAH BOXDS STAMP Volume 33 ouma The V. NOW dumber 17o. LOGAN, UTAH, THURSDAY, JULY 23, P Grain Range Wheat: July Sept Dee. . Msv Open High Low Close 1 1 ...123' 1 lVfiS 1 17 'h 1.20', 1.19 1.20'x J07s 1.17 1.19 27 1M 1 1.23 1.28i r 1.22 Hi 1.27N 1 23 12s Price Five Centa. arv tt pro; the to fc. FLYING FO Friflj. sunit' Ws it Q, y "re AID S F 4- a US' arrirg. Seek 18 Political Jobs In Cache County German T roops Suburbs Reach Most Remunerative Of Rostov City Are Offices Sought, p Nazis Continue Attack On Rostov From Three Directions As Russians Make Others Go Begging Stubborn Defense Work Reflected In Meager Bosom Friends Now Wide Apart on Interest In Low Paying Political Publishers, bundance of Charged With Aiding Enemy Election Positions WASHINGTON, July 23 O offices in Cache county went more or less A politu nl feud between President year. When the time expired, yesterday at 5 p. m., Roosevelt and James A. Failey is the filing of candidacies, 39 candidates had filed for the blazing today with New York's Democratic gubernatorial nominaJ offices to be filled at the November election. office was that of county comrnis-jone- r tion a preliminary prize. The teal .The most sougnt-afte- r contest is for control of the state's from the central district, for which live Democrats delegates to the 1944 presidential most desirable The filed. next job, nominating convention. jd two Republicans tom the standpoint of number of candidates seeking the Farley Favors Bennett was that of assessor, for which two Democrats and two If Attorney General John J. BenPolitical rnjrri iinn MAW nett. Farley's candidate, is nomin. ate and elected, it may be assum- ed that Farley will expect to control the 1944 New York convention delegation and to have considerable influence in nomination of a Demo- lllJUllnilLL lflill cratic presidential ticket. Failey would oppose renomination for Mr. Roosevelt and also object loudly to giving top place on the ticket to Vice President Henry A. Wallace who generally is regarded as the New Deal Candidates listed I, Candidates for the foes are as follows, tabetic order: respective listed in Fir county commissioner, D e m oc ra t s Robert Y. kston, N. W. Merkley, L. Ray fr: ' and William Worley, all fraon and Parley A. Reese of Republicans Truman S. and A J. Fuhnman, both tm Logan. F r r oounty commissioner, Democrats Evan H. re Bank-o- f W e 1 s v i 1 1 e, Louis P. ILchan and Leo C. Nielsen, both ( Hvnim. Republican Parley G. la of Wellsville. JVJ clerk: Democrat of North Logan, ljblican Willard H. Chugg of county Crooas-.o- Em F:r sheriff: Democrat Former Bishop Would Become Commissioner If Sen. James M. Mead, an upstate Democrat from Buffalo, is nominated and elected, New York's nd one Republican are also 1944 convention delegates will be controlled by Mr. Roosevelt who candidates for the same post Louis Maughan and Leo C Neilsen. has endorsed Mead for the Demo- crane gubernatorial nomination. H.vrm Democrats and Parley G 'Mead is rated as a 100 per cent Hall, Wellsville Republican. Should Mr. Bankhead receive the . 'New Dealer Democratic nomination, the final Convention Month Off for the commissionership will New York state nominating WcU8V"e ca"' bebetween the 'convention will meet next month. Months ago, Farley, who has re- - dldatfs a"d wuId assure that com; a commissioner tained his job as chairman of the VVellsvi! of e residents have tried in New York state democratic com- To win support for the nnttee, decided to buck' the New .the past but have failed, Deal for control of the state 0r- - comrmss.onership, Bishop Bankhead is a leader m gamzation and to that end obl'Kous circles in Wells-'motamed commitments from well "He. a"d served as a city council He than a majority of the state's one term, He has been presi- county organizations for the gub-j- " .tbe L?n 8 clab for ,ona ernatorial nomination of Bennett. has always been active Gov. Herbert H. Lehman, after year. and four terms, had announced he religiously, would not run again. Wellsville 46 years ago and has Farley let it be known that he.j" engaged in farming &DQ for Bennett regardless 0f He is the a whom Mr. Roosevelt and Edward dairy, ng since fineyouth. owner of a Holstein dairy J. Flynn, chairman of the National t to vote. l' Jeff . , , e hprH tuctiuis in uugau ivoy uttvia has filed as Republican candidate Pmar-mm-hlnHe sPent 33 months as a mis-fo- r inNew A sheriff at the coming primary petition was filed in beof the Bronx, might Yorks borough lt of Benjamin B. Stnngbam, a election. of Logan, but Mr. Mr. Davis is a native of Soda pUrUp'RooseVft Jfnocrat moved directly Sham failed to file his accep- Springs, Idaho He has been a yfsterday to stop the Farley e within the specified ti Tie, so of Logan for the past dldate with an endorsement of (Continued On Page 3) co""'1' war ho ..rood w, ,h, Uo.lod on bo .nunood States marine corps and after the prn,,rgmg from the president s year and a half. His wife is the former Miss Pearl did police work for t He f lt.e PROGRAM ' Brenchlcy. They are the parents government for several months in, of four children. New York City. 'PEN TO "Should I be elected county comHe is at present president of says Bishop Bankhead, missioner, the Cache Valley Underwriter's FARM LOANS MAY Til give it my best attention and and has been engaged Association Uf hnrsebuk riders who will in will strive to serve to the best adinsurance business m Logan to HERE vantage of the citizens of this Tony Grove lake Friday for the past .seventeen years. BE SECURED J conduct a bonfire program He is a resident of Logan county. Cache has always been my be lake Fri lay evening at 8 Tenth ward, is married and has home, and apparently always will Ut It is a good be. At least, I hope so. It shall be highway a family of six. He is a tax Funds for harvesting expenses my effort, if elected, always to Logan canyon to the payer in this county. He is an me vy Grove ranger station. From active church worker and is at we now available through 10,1 " carry on the business of this station to the lake so that it shall always be is present the first counselor of the emeigency crop and teed there - county food graveled road, a distance First Quorum of Elders of Cache section of the department of agrt- L g00d place in which to live and miles, with no steep stake. culture, J. Stewart Campbell, Jr, enjoy life." esThose who can field supervisor announced today. he His friends feel that arrange many oo so are muted to drive to is The government is desirous that well equipped by experivery Tony Grov no crops be left unharvested this lake tomorrow ence, education and personality because of the lack of funds Efiday ! year to par-24, and July v undertake the duties of the i ith the horseback rid- - sheriff available foods must be as all of Cache county. be bonfire 5 conserved. program. The 'ill be The department is now' making shining and it loans to farmers for summer faldr've r,' .P faant for the (o lowing and planting of fall grain. program, Nibley Boy hogback riders who hae Loans will also be made to those Logan was praised as a family sterd to Tanners w'ho wish to purchase city with excellent living con8" must be at the trai1 m gV een In Car Collision their winter feed for their live- ditions today by Preston Nibley, canyon stock at this time. LDS church historical writer and tomorrow morning, 2 J?' That means Mr.. Campbell will be inednes-da-they former president of .the Northmust they 7 court house in Logan on mwestern States mission, who deln 'the plan Blaine Olsen, nine - year-ol- d the clared that his father, the late Grove lake morning of each week. A good'0 Tny time for the Bishop C. W. Nibley, looked upon evening son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland fts. Logan as the best home city in Olson of Nililey, was Imdly the world. Mr. Nibley was the bruised about the right side of POLICE CATCH Pioneer Day speaker at the the body when he was struck by 3.EHENACCIDENT Rotary luncheon at the Bluebird an automobile about 2:43 p. today. He was introduced BLACKMAILER atby noon about half a mile south Asa Bullen. Dean Paul M. of the Nibley ward chapel. Dunn had churge of the program Blaine dodged from behind a while Ernest Earl, club president, and hayraek and a large truck 23 dD presided. HOLLYWOOD. July a of rune right into the path du'y 23 'dt-Guests at the luncheon were ()' Clawson George Henry Baker, 24, today T. Alhan ear driven by on Harold Felt, a Brigham City Ro of state indictment federal Ira 1 r;"!d niet under was of Ify ruin. K,ns of Ogden, of sending threatening tarian, and Glen Taggart, killed J, ' Mr. Clawson tried to prevent charges to singer Bing Crosby and law of Willard Paulsen. letters Ihe into Ross Anderson announced that At young r'd,nK wth five striking the boy by dodging Harold Lloyd. pe!,le b'ew a tire and the barrow pit, but the hoy was (,,jducer 2 at a next week's meeting of the club arrested was July Baker ju!" suth too close to the oar. Ills rlghi be a family outing nt the for collection of $1,000 will in Logan canyon, s"e ;rr,tllc arm and Ills right side were rendezvous tl. personali Bott camp of each from bruised. when the wives and families of "loe Qrr- - 1au'hler of Mrs. he said Federal agents ties. Fountain Green, The boy was taken to the Rotarians are invited. threatened violence of families of the kitiVi .Wallace Green, Budge Clinic for examination. When Brigham Y'oung entered both. Jri,e 12 years Bft He was able to walk. The accisiimlnr truck driver, the Salt Lake valley 95 years An unemployed the witnessed by was dent dnL nm'r'wh,,n a said he had hoped to get ago," said Mr. Nibley, "the piln8 overturned ii after a father of the boy who was just Baker money to live on. oneers were 1,300 mUes from a enough wont. from homo returning of Lewiston and Logan. Ig.blicai Roy N. Davis of Lo- ell e nt Mj HIRE PUBLIC ' - te girl n son-in-jo- ,rr rail-iiiih- rr Vie-ric- k, also. Object of the vast plot, according to the indictment, was to convey to members of the armed forces the belief that the united nations were ineffectual, that the United States was safe from attack, and that confidence in U. S. (Continued on Page Eight) STORES, OFFICES CLOSE ON FRIDAY Friday being Utah's Pioneer Day, the Logan post office will be closed the entire day, and the mail carriers will be given a vacation, according to Postmaster Eugene Yeates. The window will not bo open during Friday and there will be no delivery of mail with the exception of perishables. and county All banks and cit otuces as wcll as the stores will bt closed for the day. Pioneer Day celebrations in this secGon will be held in Weston and Hyrum. In Weston the celebration ''tarts at 10 a. m. with an interesting public meeting at which Pro fessor Royal Garff of the Univer HY JOE ALEX MORRIS United Ires Foreign Editor The red army fought with its back to the Caucasus today for Rostov and the Don river barrier to the Volga industrial center of Stalingrad. While the Dritish eighth army pressed the axis back in heavy fighting on the Egyptian desert, the Russians guarding the northern approaches to the Caucasus and the Near East were reported to have slowed down the enemy offensive on the lower Don and taken up new, more favorable positions for a showdown fight designed to prevent isolation of the supply routes for oil and American war material from the south. Air Fighters Help The ml army stand, backed by stronger aerial squadPARLEY A. REESE rons including American-bui- lt flying fortresses, was intended to halt the broad enemy advance toward the Caspian sea and the Caucasus oil fields but appeared unlikely to hold Rostov, where the nazis said they already had broln into the suburbs, against a long siege. The Rostov gateway is on the north bank of the Don, near the Sea of Azov, and under attack from three directions, as well as from the air. One axis report said that the Germans also had crossed the Don and cut Rostov off from the south, but the last Russian reports put the action Parley A. Reese, Behson ward about 30 miles northeast of the gdty on Wednesday. farmer and livestock raiser and Success Indefinite dealer, is a candidate on the There was little to indicate whether Soviet Marshal Democratic ticket for commissioner from the centra' district, which Semyon Timoshenko would be successful in stemming the is for the two year term. T wo main German push southeastward. The enemy claimed to years ago Mr. Reese made a have broken across the Don easWof Rostov and to be close creditable showing in the race for the commissionership when to the river bend, which twists to within 35 miles of he was a candidate from the north Stalingrad. Moscow acknowledged that the axis advances district. continued, but indcated that the time had come for a his stand south of the river. Having lived In Benson entire life thus far, he is acquaintThe Soviet attacks apparently were similar to those the ed with the problems of the farmers. He operates a large dairy British employed in North Africa when they were forced herd and an irrigated farm, be- back to El Alamein, where favorable terrain and shorter sides being a cattle buyer. He lines enabled them to hold and launch the counterfighting prides himself on the fact that he now in progress on a growing scale. knows the residence of every British Gain In Egypt farmer within Cache county. For Late dispatches from the desert front said that severe that reason, he says, he is interested in good roads over which fighting as in progress on all sectors, where the British the farmer can haul his produce made limited With gains and repulsed axis counter-attackand get in and out from his farm. RAB and United States air squadrons,' they aid of the "I am entering this race for the commissionership at the urg- were apparently still holding the initiative in tank and ent appeals of many of my infantry battles of growing intensity. friends. says Mr. Reese. 1 beThe fighting was described as a battle of materiel," lieve I can save the taxpayers of this county a lot of money with the United States squadrons under Maj. Gen. Lewis II. Brereton inflicting heavy damage on axis rear lines by keeping roads In good dition and employing the right land supply bases. Successful Benson Man Seeks Post s. kind of men to work for the county. I am interested in the people of this county as a whole. I am in favor of no particular group. I am not now and never have been a politician or a hand' - Say Wage Increases Hinder Operation Of Price Control shaker. I amanxious to serve and believe I can serve for the benefit of all. I appreciate the fine showing I made at the electWASHINGTON, July 23 rP ion two years ago. thanks to my The administration policy of perOFFICER many friends who supported me mitting wage Increases by War Labor Board action was assailed in at that time. I would appreciate the senate today, as spokesmen for the support of still more people BECOMES MAJOR er. organized labor insisted at a White time, and assure them their will be pub- this The Herald-JournHouse conference that there be no vote shall not have been in vain. be will This usual. as lished Friday in the present wage conchange of this the first time in the history trol M. of system. member Eldon Stock, newspaper that it has bfen pubStale Agricultural college Senate criticism of administralished on a Utah Pioneer Day. FURNITURE NEEDED Utah military department staff since tion wage policies was led by Sen. 1940, has been promoted to the Walter F. George, D., Ga., chairWEATHER FORECASTS rank of major in the U. S. army, man of the powerful senate finance For Logan and vicinity: con' FOR WAR PURPOSES effective committee, who asserted that July 14. trnued hot today; little change in d from Stock wage increases Major graduated tonight. temperature make it "impossible for price conWith Mrs. Floyd T. Morgan in USAC in 1934 and received his trols to operate. charge, the Red Cross is making masters degree in civil engineer- He was supported by another a drive for discarded furniture ing in 1939. A licensed professionand other things which can be al engineer and land surveyor forDemocrat, Sen. Joseph C. O'Ma of Wyoming, who declared used at camp and hospital centers Utah, Msjor Stock hus been and reception centers all over the Hociated with the USAC engineer- - the people of the country want an ing faculty since the fall of 1935 end of this tomfoolery of dealing state. with the inflation problem with Articles desired are card games, and at present la on leave. Stock is stationed on a httle things here and little thinga bed lamps, floor lamps, Major monopoly, road. When my father in 1952 table lamps, card tables, and old temporary assignment at Fortitcrelabors views wera Organized visited Los Angeles there were musical instruments. Douglas post headquarters which Mrs. Morgan will be at the expires August 20, at which time presented fo President Roosevelt very few white families among 2000 Mexicans." office of the board of education he expects to return to the mili during a meeting of the combined AFL-CIlittle cabinet." The laMr. Nibley told of the early of the Logan city schools, corner tary department. bor spokesmen reiterated their settlement of Cache valley and! jejr3t West and Center streets. 'steadfast opposition to flat wage the families who broke the trails Monday and Tuesday, July 27 and control or freezing of wages and here for subsequent settlers. He 28, from 9 a. m. till noon, and New asked the president to prevent tho the from 1 to 5 p. m. of mentioned the work Office of Price Administration or Maughans, the Ricks, Thatchers, any other "interfering agency Gunnels, and several other famUtah corporated in the WLB. ilies. MAY BOOKS William Green, president of tho "The Mormon pioneers in BrigAmerican Federation of Labor, told ham Young had one of the greatnewspapermen the labor cabinet est leaders the world has ever BE OBTAINED NOW SALT LAKE CITY, July 23 (URIhad urged that "the wage policy known,' said Mr. Nibley. "He knew AH nine corps areas will be known agreed upon when the war labor how to get along with men, how to comin the future as "service set up be carried Caoh lead them and how to get the best county residents who mands," according to word receiv- board was without interruption. through from them. He was only 47 years have become eligible for sugar ed today at the headquarters of Green said that the AFL and when he arrived in the Salt ration books may secure thein at Maj.-GeKenyon A. Joyce, com- the congress of Industrial OrganLabe Valley. He knew a deal when 124 South Main street, according manding general of the fith Service izations whose president, Philip he saw it and had the ability to to Guy Car don, head of the Command, formerly the 9th Corps, Murray, also participated in tho board. The books should be seturn seeming defeat into victory. Fort Douglas. at Area, (Continued on Page Eight), President Nibley related how cured before Saturday to secure The term 9th corps area" will no the Mormon people, destitute of benefit from stamp No. 5 whk-be used. administraThe longer becomes void after Saturday. many things became the beneITEADS BANKERS tive organization is now 9th Serfactors of more than $200,000 Persons who registered at vice Command and the commandBOISE, Ida., July 23 L'J!) H. E. n through the coming to Utah of the Icwiston will obtain their books ing general has been redesignated Gundelfinger, cashier of the Johnston's army which had been there. All others in Cache counState bnnk, today headed commanding general, 9th service sent here to kill the Mormons. ty will get their books at the command, services of supply. The the Idaho State Bankers (Continued on Pago Eight). change became effective July 22. Logan office named above. .k tol. in rum n.lJtaittonwiU the afternoon for the kiddies ana in the evening for the grown-upElder Alma Sonne, assistant to the quorum of Twelve of the LDS chu-cwill be the featured speaks. AGGIE h, al WLB-npprove- Preston Nibley Gives Rotarians Insight Into Utah Pioneer Days Hurt kills young WASHINGTON, July 23 dpi Indictment of 2S persons on charga nation-wid- e es of conducting conspiracy to obstruct the war effort through dissemina.ion of seditious publications among members of the armed forces, was announced today by Attorney General Francis Biddle. g One woman Mrs. Elizabeth of Chicago, author of the Red Network" was named m the indictment Among the 27 men were William Dudley Pelley, already under indictment on sedition charges; Gerald B. Winrod, unsuccessful candidate for governor of Kansas in 1940 and George Sylvester recently convicted of violating the foreign agents registration act. The indictment charged that the defendants employed 30 different publications in furthering their conspiracy, and that they made use of the Congressional Record Dil-lin- of-Jc- e, jtpublicans filed. title interest was shown in the a- positions. With jobs N Imrat high wages, this least iterative office held little in- Client to the candidates. At p: half a dozen or more people candisolicited to become es for the state legislature and jtenably the same answer was 1 by the sought candidate: "I to go to the legislatI tafford e- The expenses entailed are ire than the remuneration, and fe not going to lay myself at so mercy of my employers I'll have to vote as tell 1 nther than as I knowthey that I Writers MiwriBPj wii u'aiyiijMi jyju j - O Designation For SUGAR War Area Haz-elto- mrs wii tyyy "SET , |