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Show ftjfflYai hj-i- PAGE EIGHT. THE LOGAN. UTAH, 5ajp Prisoners T.aste Defeat ABOUT and American Cigarettes Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Harrison Slater of Heber City are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter, born today in the Budge hospital. Mrs. Slater is the former IVrgima at Utah Budge. He, State, is a teacher in Heber City. The couple also have a son. The Primary children of the First ward will be entertained Saturday nfternoon at 2 oclock in the gymnasium. A dancing party will be featured with a dinner served them at Providence Hus-Man- m. kov. Frederick P. Champ, president of the Cache Banking Valley company of this city, returned from Chicago yesterday, where, for the past two weeks, he has been with Mrs. Champ, who again from is making slow recovery illness which has detained her in Mr. October. east since the Champ, who report recent a lte following improvement returns relapse at the year-enconsiderably encouraged after consultation with the attending ' physicians. He is expecting to return to the east later in the month and hapes that it may be possible to move Mrs. Champ to California in March. Still wearing their flying suits, captive Japanese airmen, taken prisoner in the Solomon Islands campaign, disembark from a U. S. Army transport plane, top, at an American base in the South Pacific. At bottom, the d by American troops. Japs smoke American cigarets and get the once-ovAll members of the Logan unit, HERES MORE ABOUT Utah State guard, are urged to 8 at o'clock, attend drill tonight since battalion officers will be (Continued From Page One) present for inspection of the company. Captain Don Wilson made break of war more than 112,000 this announcement today. people of Japanese heritage were moved from their homes on the Hundreds sf citizens of Cache Pacific coast to safeguard them county both young and old are from annoyances as well as to procon'ice ideal skating enjoying tect America against sabotage by ditions each evening and after- those among them hostile to this noon at the Central park ice nation. About 10,000 of them were street maintained by city rink, taken to a relocation center near and recreational departments. Di- Delta, Utah. Most of the people invites rector Glen Worthington moved there, he said, were economall ice skaters to take advantage productive, although now ically recreation. of thie wholesome most of them have been forced into d, DR. CARLISLE Deputy Sheriffs Julian Bair and Tom Rowley escorted Earl Hyman to the state prison today. Charged more than a year ago with second degree burglary of a Logan service station, Hyman was resentenced to from one to 20 years in the penitentiary by Judge Marriner M. Morrison. A native of Ogden, Hyman was clnvicted of the charge in First district court, then appealed to the state supreme court, which affirmed the district court verdict He then a filed in the district court netiHon for rehearing, which was , denied, the unproductivity. Refuting charges that those inwill be conducted Satur- terned at the camp are living in day at 1:30 In the Cache county extravagance and are being fed library. Mrs. Reuben L. Hill will better than other American citizens tell stories to the older children Dr. Carlisle said that the food for and Miss Hilma Jonsson the the camp is procured through the younger ones. army and that the rations are cut down. For instance, he said, only Music for the Boy Scout Council one cup of coffee per day can be 8 served to each person. Food stuffs meeting to be held tonight at o'clock in the Fifth ward chapel that are rationed are cut into smalwill be furnished by the newly ler portions at he camp than in organized Boy Scout chorus of the civilian life. Most employees at the camp are Logan Junior high school. The chorus Will sing two numbers. Japanese. In addition to their board and room at the camp, the doctors Mrs. Herman Theurer of Wclls-vill- e are paid $19 a month, skilled artiand Olsen and Mrs. Clyde sans are paid $16 and common lauos borer 8$12. u) 1110001 a Suujsiy ojb Smith California with Mrs Carl According to Dr. Carlisle, about at Lafayette, Cal.; Mrs. Clifford 66 per cent of those interned at tho Jennings of Oakland and Mrs. camp are native born American Hulda Lewis of San Francisco, citizens, and apparently are as loyal They will also visit with Mrs. to this nation as any other AmerLunie Demarest at Hollywood and icans. The feeling towards the t San Japanese-American- s is gradually Clyde Olsen, stationed Diego. changing in their favor, said Dr. Carlisle, and most of the native The rrovidmee PTA meeting born will soon be permitted to Join will be held Friday at 8 p. m. the American fighting service. in the school house. Miss ElizaOGDEN LIVESTOCK beth Burgess will talk on child Mu.sicul numbers have welfare. of the been planned. Patrons .OGDEN. Feb. 4 il'It- - Livestock: CATTLE: 290. Very few cattle school are invited. here for market. Few early sales PTA A short Logan Junior high about steady within weeks range business meeting, combined with of prices, late Wednesday few lots a play, will be held in the Junior good 947 to 1(815 lb. local slaughter high auditorium Friday night nt steers $13.7.1, odd medium to good kinds $11 2ft to $12. ll). Medium to 8 oiloek. Mrs. It Burns Crook-storegional vice president of good heifers $11 no to $12 2.1, comthe stale, will give n four minute mon steers and heifers down to talk on the history of founders $9 50 and below, few good cows day The play, entitled, Sunshine $10 50 to $1125, cutter to medium is dueeted by Thayne cows $s fto to $.0 2.1, ranners $8.25 Twins. Patket and cast by student of down. Odd hulls $1150 down, few the Junior high school. All par- choice veulers $15 50 to $16 00, meents and pillions of the school are dium to gootl vcnlors $13 00 to $15., lower grades $1250 clown to $11(81 cordially invited. and below. Story children Marriage licenses have been Issued at the Cache county clerk's office to Dale LeRoy Fisher, . 22, of Layton, and Edna Beutlcr, 21, of North Logan; Russell Jay Maughan, 19, of North Logan, and Irene James, 18, of Paradise; to Ivan Carl Anderson, and 19, NaDine Johnson, 18, both of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Harris of this city announce the arrival of a son their second born today at the Budge hospital. Mr. Harris is local range examiner. Russell E. secretary, is business. Berntson, college in California on Scouters of Cache Valley council will meet this evening at 8 oclock In Logan Fifth ward chapel for the annual meeting. Principal address will be presented to Bishop Legiand Richards, church presiding bishop, and two silver beavers will be awarded to outstanding youth welfare leaders in tho council. A dance will be held in Benson ward hnll this evening ns a concluding feature of the ward old folks reunion. Also, two youths leaving for army service. Kthan Ricks and Virgil Hobbs, will be honored at the event. The class in farm machinery repair scheduled to be held Saturday at North Cache high school shop will be held this evening at 8 oclock instead. All farmers of Richmond and vicinity are invited to attend. Theda Bair of Richmond underwent a major operation in a Logan hospital today. Cache county civilian defense workers will assemble this evening at 8 oclock in Logan junior high auditorium where warden's maps and reports will be discussed by Blaine Pitts, control center explained by E. CL Earl, bomb reconnaisstace treated by officials of the army, and first aid by Dr. W. B. Preston. All defense workers are urged to attend. . telling hour for n, Bagwell School of Dance, now open for eniollinent of new classes. 370 N. Main or Phone 539-Y(Adv.) Several delegates from as many Sections of Cache county yesterday visited the county commission requesting special road repairs. Commissioners assured them that repairs are being made as rapidly as possible, but that not all requests can be met Immediately. Recent floods and storms have damaged roads at various places throughout the county. er long-haire- HERES MORE ABOUT JAPS ARE (Continued From Page One) ' 1941. HOGS: 1330. Slow on very small early supply, weak to 10 cents lower Wednesday's extreme close, top $14 7ft on bulk 180 to 2.10 lb. weights, few lots to $1 tvft; weights above 250 up to 340 lbs. $13 75 to $14 00, averages below Iso lbs. $13 75 to $14 25; sows $12.50 to $13.50. 1 when the Jars mnde their sneak attack on Hawaii. He then went south to the Fiji Islands and from there to Australia. where he assisted in assembling airplanes. He was then with a group that spent a month and a half on Java, where they remained for ten days after that island fell into the hands of the Japs. During those ten duys 36 stranded Yanks worked feverishly to repair their damaged and then flew to Austr. lia. There he served on coastal patrol in western Australia for two months and a half. Operating out of Port Moresby. New Guinea, for eight or nine months, he participated in many encounters with Jap planes. His crew had about 30 Jap Zeros to its credit during that time. Sergeant Johansen has thus far in the enjoyed his experiences army although he acknowledges there is a lot of anxiety and fright that fills the hearts of the fliers until they are in real combat when fear leaves Pleasure Driving Ban May Cover Nation WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 C.E Petroleum Administrator Harold L. Ickes today said he favored extension of the pleasure driving ban to the entire country, but with some modifications for residents of areas. Ickes was asked in a press conference if he favored relaxing the present eastern states pleasure driving ban in the spring when the immediate fuel oil crisis will be over. He replied he was not, saying I want to see more into the future to make sure we can keep people warm next winter. Asked for his views on extending the pleasure ban to the whole country, Ickes said: I do favor extending the ban to the whole country, with some modifications, of course. For people living right in the oil producing areas, for instance, I think there should be some relaxations. I am not in favor of rationing for rationing's sake. But where rationing will result in accumulations of important supplies for essential purposes, I am in favor of it. Problems Of Farm Labor Are Discussed From a panef discussion of the Cache county farm labor problem came the opinion last evening that farmers will have a tough time securing workers to plant, cultivate and harvest crops this coming season. The program developed from the third seasonal meeting of Log-education council. Prominent Cache civic, agricultural and educational haders were included on the panel. One thing was admitted food must be produced this year, and nil years while wartime demands are so acute. This being the case, farmers must have laborers to produce the food. R. L. Wrigley, county agricultural agent, declared that farmers and farm agencies still arc not optimistic about the chances of farmers securing needed labor because g competition from other industries is so great. It was asserted by the group that if strict employment controls are necessary to provide farm labor, such steps will be taken to solve present problems. Included on the panel were Harold M. Peterson, H. B. Hunsakcr, Mr. Wrigley. Mrs. S. R. Stock, Roma Berntson, Earle Wright and Golden Kilburn. Presiding at the council meeting was Miss Leah Brunk, president. high-payir- They are closing in on this German stronghold from north and south, having taken the railroad junction of Kupyansk, 65 miles southeast of Kharkov. Military considerations should impel the Germans to fall back toward Kiev before the Russian trap closes. However, just as Hitler sacri ficed hundreds of thousands of men in a suicidal stand at Stalingrad, it is possible he may order his generals to fight to the last man. In that case, a situation similar to that at Stalingrad may be in the making In the Kharkov-Kurs- k area. There is evidence of panic in Berlin over the plight of the German armies. Stalingrad was a cruel blow and called for national mourning, but the German people are being prepared by radio for further bad news. , There is a note of desperation in the latest utterances of Paul Josef Goebbels, propaganda minister. Goebbels undoubtedly realizes that peace overtures, no matter how attractive the Ger- mans offer, are useless. The unconditional surrender confer-enc- r at Casablanca put the seal on that. Instead, Goebbels appears to be trying to divide British opinion by flaunting the old nazi bogey of a communist conquest of Europe, including even Britain. Germany, he intimates, is fighting Britains battle as well as her own. Churchill must 'be amused. HERES MORE ABOUT House Speaker (Continued From Page One year out of our 1942 Incomes are taxes assessed on our incomes received in 1941. "We can best solve the problem by recognizing these 1942 payments to be taxes on 1941 as they really are; and by beginning 1943 by paying on 1943, thereby dropping out the year 1942 as a year of assessments from the tax calendar forever. He contended that the windfall" collection program which he advanced would keep the treasury from losing any sizable amounts. It would be a matter of waiting until death under his proposal, but the treasury, he said, would still collect. Members of the committee urged Ruml to make it clear that regal dless of the tax program finally adopted, taxpayers must file their regular March 15 returns. I have stressed in every statement that the taxpayer would go right on paying, Rumi said. now n Gr iit: Becana t 'T v idad . , r, for j , :i He , h N Utah state lax , re, 'P punishment for sentences and ona,,,mr?7 upon prison guild Sentence will w c Norman Sum,.', Nemier were in , , 71)01 Qg!t7 attacking gum x i turnkey, and 1 backstop, with m nr Pat McLaughlin m, I a it M L , , killed in the i h,. which ended to, hour after the nu , 'It is not wi uu ne the jury to g, mt I, provmc ency. Under th. lnL, 1 that is solely ,,e ,, ,pons the board of p i dm-- inH o,. nor of the state Allan Cockett tM ,le Nemier and St mu .id had that McLaughlin h id ,,rrar h, with escape the g ,llU and ? had given them , , , is Twisted beyond recognition is this wreckage of the big Navy transport plane which crashed near Ukiah, Calif last January 21 on flight from Honolulu to San Francisco. Nineteen occupants of the plane, including Rear Adm. Robert H. English, were killed. Rescue party is in the background. Official U. S. Navy photo. HERES MORE ABOUT SEA LOOMS (Continued From Page One) American and British forces sought to consolidate gains . at strategic points along the Tunisian front. African War British troops still were fighting fiercely to hold Djebel Maosour, an important height seven miles south of Bou Arada, which they captured from the Germans yesterday. Although an allied communique described the British action as a small local engagement, it was considered important because it gave the allies a high vantage point from which to operate. Bout Arada is 19 miles south and 40 miles of Medjez-El-Ba- b southwest of Tunis, an area that may become one of the hottest spots in the north Tunisian battle. American troops which captured Sened, railway town 22 miles southwest of Maknassy on the main road to Sfax, were not engaged in any new drive at the moment but were believed to be feeling out axis strength in the narrow central Tunisian sector. American bombers and fighters of the 12th air force continued to dominate the air fighting in Tunisia. They bombed an airdrome at Gabes, troops, tanks, vehicles and artillery in the Maknassy and Ousseitia sectors and an enemy convoy between Tunisia and Sicily. Big American Liberators from the Middle East command bombed the Sicilian ports of Messina' and Palermo in daylight raids. Heavy damage to the harbor area, oil storage tanks, a power station and shipping were reported at Messina, but results of the Palermo attack could not be observed because of clouds. An Italian communique reported. however, that 16 persons were killed and 41 wounded in addition to damage to buildings at Palermo. Vessels Sunk The British admiralty announced in London that 12 enemy vessels most of them carrying supplies had been sunk, probably sunk or damaged in the central Mediterranean in the last few . days. Nine supply ships and an antisubmarine vessel were sunk by British submarines. A large supply vessel was attacked and considered sunk. A 12th, smaller ship, was damaged. Washington reports said the a sporadic engagements around the Solomons islands still were in progress, but there was no definite word as to which a ay the tide of battle was running. The navy said the situation did not permit publication of more details at this time, and stood on yesterday's statement that both sides had suffered losses. Fighting continued southwest of Salamaim In New Cuinea where Australian forces yesterday killed 83 Japanese. Allied bombers raided enemy bases from the Arloe islands to Bougainville. U. S. Bombers Raid -- ig.i marijuana ,r Coombs, p- nthere was no m.e, had been dnlun- , Areas Of The Reich .r United Feb. 4 Staees heavy bombers flown by American crews carried out their second major raid on the icich today, bombing targets in northwestern Germany. The raid was the second American attack upon Germany in eight days. United States planes raided the big German naval base at Wilhelmshaven and industrial targets at Emden end other places in northwest Germany on January 27 in their first assault on German soil in this war. The targets for todays raid and the type of bomber employed were not immediate'.v revealed. Flying fortresses and liberators participated in last week's bombing. The German radio was the first to report a daylight attack on western Germany today. The raid followed last night's smashing assault on Hamburg, Germanys largest port and great submarine manufacturing center, by the royal air force. (DNB, official German news agency, claimed in a radio broadcast that German fighter planes had challenged and turned back the raiders. DNB said the raid may be considered a failure.") The air ministry disclosed that the large force of RAF bombers which attacked Hamburg, the reichs second largest city, had started large fires. Thus, the allies were intensify-ir- g their day and night campaign against German submarine bases and manufacturing centers, seeking to cnple the axis in its warfare against Atlantic shipping. The submarine bases at Lonent, Wilhelmshaven and Hamburg have been blasted by heavy explosives. Submarines parts work at Cologne have been assaulted from the air repeatedly. LONDON, ,i,n ,, r, Hi. s II Capson was so . , to he rebel i double veid.-- i ler and St ii.o ed guards spiring with ,, ... I diately after ihe Th jurys , I, , , I bre,, M JG ver , .. Pr th,. hf , Mt .)lltles g ,rat banns , !,Mllr of Cl .ktm 4 1 s mum i I lead' ,,,liHrtfw, Win dfd for il " tM rauth. IN kmxe suing WASHINGTON, ptb 4 qji, The demand of 45n 000 bitunwd coal miners foi a increase may be a body blowrg the administration s already shin wage and price stabilization President John L Lewid the United Mine Uorkera t nounced the miners' demand for, raise that will amount to a uav last mgfct, g maxing strong attacks on these labor board's 'little steer wp formula and the inability of p. emment agencies to stem a stesci rise m the cost of living. tey if has be nties The Dr. G. presid of :er Bee Hunk aeetm J Cba Ir. nnu mi incil Logan A! cent 25 Eve. TODAY, FRL, SAT. Its Tops in Screen tae s incil 20 EVE. MAT. N Spencer Tracy John (tarfield lledy LaMarr 0 w TORTILLA FLAT BYSTOBiCAHHYSTEmCS ,'jona. ber Draculo f lead three ; rer annul tuttee nor ess acted i4mg Aik MOKEY" with ha ii i nd t Dan Dailey, Jr. Donna Kred Bobby Hlake tune re" as (X bis lenc. mat be So tting King 8 kee; idea habile JHOW flftCE Of Cf.Ct 30? Til li XOUlMj 40? Eves. (i peat eoun - TODAY' - TOMORROW! Two IliR Features! 0 thi ' boys life o a POWERFUL aOMPKC boy tempti K to to di SfoiSlliTTjOHMSOHWM ,1 i issista it maai ud ch, nuttee. 12J I Entertainment! air-se- o! vn c of the snuttee Y. Bati xoutin, mol INDEPENDENT 20f Mat. bii c.ng ft (sisca J , them after arden John Lizards are an earlier type of primitive creature than are snakes, the latter1 having developed from the former. prxi j co me r '(ship, u and Til Cha h rtu a then 0n t ft cc 'Com M N POWER NEED MARKETS AT A GLANCE SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 4 (IRi An additional 27,637 workers for By United Press Stocks steady in moderately the Utah war industry will be needed by April, Joseph S. Mayer, active trading. Bonds irregularly lower; U. S. area war man power commission head today had told the closing governments higher in dull dealsession of the Salt Lake industrial ings. Curb stocks irregular. area man power conference here. Silver unchanged: Cotton steady. A tallow candle makes a clean to 74 cent; com Wheat up lubricant for automobile door hinup Vs to 4. ges and locks. ien ffi 'sfyio ALSO Sor ftdto "Wit LUSTS UP011 V Lo cding DRRRia TH RI LL- ftnt f Unci. Sam's 9rat i tor :baa b t of J.fsnsa bassl Uid I.VKGE PIPELINE VANCOUVER, B. C.. Feb. 4 01'' A giant oil pipeline, literally spanning the top of the world from the gieat Mackenzie river valley, m the Arctic 'orcle, to cither White- he- e or Mayo, in the Yukon, is beii.g built by the United States, it was revealed today by the Vancou- or Sun. air-pia- ; Youths SALT LAKE ' Death by th, the probable i Utah youths conviction of as, during a sho.t-l.i- , state prison here Kus-ohevk- Ernest W. Moffett, former member of the staff of the Logan radio station, has returned to Pasco, Washington, after visiting with his wife, the former Miss Betty Lou Smith, and their new son, Terry, who arrived on January 14. Mr. Moffett is now a second class petty officer in the navy reserve on duty out of Pasco. ; , Of Prison Offe, The German army in the Caucasus, which numbers around 100,000 men, is almost isolated and has little apparent chance of falling back on Rostov, now that the Russians have cut the last railroad line leading to the Don city. a, The Russian capture of rail center 45 miles south of Rostov, makes it possible for the Russians to drive to the arm of the Sea of Azov below Rostov and block progress by road, bottling up the Germans in the narrow comer of the northwestern Caucasus. The German position then would be desperate. The only hop a of escape would be across the Strait of Kerch into the Crimea. The Strait is narrower than the English channel, but presents a difficult problem. in overwater evacuation. It is extremely doubtful that the Germans have shipping facilities in the Crimea even remotely approaching what the British had at Dunkirk. The Russian Black sea fleet still is intact and is lying in wait. Then there is a considerable Russian air force based at Tuapse. The Germans may even find a successful Dunkirk impossible. North of Rostov, from above Kursk to the region of Voroshilovgrad, the German lines are cracking at vital (mints. Tho have cut the Moscow-Khar-ko- v railroad 30 miles above Khar- Dr. E. Allen Bateman, superintendent of the Logan city schools, addressed the members of the Twiggs club in the Logan Senior high school Tuesday night. The Twiggs is a service club for senior girls at the school. ; Face Death United Press War Analyst The situation has gotten out of hand for the Germans in Russia and defeats of grave proportions appear In prospect in the eastern Ukraine and northwestern Cauca- - Rev. Paul Hansen of Ogden will Preston on Tuesday evening, February 9, to conduct a community church service, according to Mrs. Frank Stevens, active in allied church service in the county. Members of all faiths are invited to attend the initial special sendee which will be conducted Tuesday evening, eight p. m., in the basement of the county courthouse. 1, Where 19 Died in Navy Transport Crash Two Utah BY LOUIS F. KEEMLE be in p. Todays War Moves TOWN 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY HERALD-JOURNA- L c Lwi; wifi) HwtMc Irani will Ar.jil-Jo- Iw EMwf-Vtl- XT - 'pose, tl bencl Eon N.il , 'the, dent tak 4ns a Wistn Here's an order from the city hall to clean off your.walk! SEARCH IXINTINTES BOISE. Ida., Feb. 4. (IT Searching parties were on duty all night in quest of an army bomber, missing in this area since Friday, and people have been requested to keep their eyes and cars open for signs of the fliers, Capt. E. I Davis, public relations officer at Gowen field, announced today. ofth PRODUCTION Directed by .CLAUDE CONRAD SYDNEY PETER MICHAEL CURTIZ COMING SUNDAY CAPITOL o Want a Profitable Thrill? ILAY DINGO Tomorrow Night $30.00 Cash Awards! a Lr- - v 8 ? thei Oil R me r :er Saturday Only SIN TOWN" t!4p 'toeth -ding nty |