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Show !.i 'wnmk Kimmel's Son Lost ABOUT TOWN Louis Korm.tr returned to Camp Livingston fter visiting tlu- Ml hi3 parents. Mr. and Mrs Uu I ornoU. Harold Ncwswriter Describes Balkan City MU organizations Snuthfnld Muti d will tie dame laid this eemng in the Southfield stoke house. Muse 01 -- ' sponsored ti.e stoke. b ,1 hi hv the Bluebir i orchesti t. floor shove has been planned, uid oil shine MIA nitnbeis are ui'..'td. Admission will be bv budg. Uiket.s d A tins i.ty IVdersen surprised but Hippy 'v hen her s .11 Serge ml ujt nitht .ailed In 1,1,1 rMon red el.sen, ilial he hoi I ollim a leave staling Francisco, spent in S" oriived there by plane hum I.og.in. ing -. on. in First Class Paul I. 'irion has returned to his and will be at post 11 Brigham C.ty lot aiioud tile aircraft carrier, U S 2. fll liospit-Mrs. ut Jins at vtrv d will nmt ispin Artists Group t the torrul' nf Center. Second East and LOEan Firs ward MIA officials nnounced today that the opening .tual social of the season will beheld Thursday night instead of as previously sehedu- - evening, In Logan Twelfth ward .Mutual tonight at 8 o'clock, there will be a program of music and mgs, followed by selling of refresliments. Olof Hanson of Provi- has been promoted to first mnant in the ordnance depau- to word received ment, according "ver the teletype today from Wa,i.-ingtoWalter dull Jones and John Larsen Jr. of Newton received treatment at D. C. the Cache Valley hospital for cuts tmd bruises received in a traffic for cashier Johnson, His Mary is observing mishap which occurred late Fri-- 1 the Herald Journal, day in Newton. They were re-- 1 week. her vacation this leased to their homes following treatment. It is reported that the Caused by careless burning of automobile driven by Mr. Jones ties along the railroad righthtruck the bridge abutment and 0ld Junction Cache in a fire overturned. Other occupants of the 1 t ,Vam today was extingushe , ar. w5,e Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Larsen, e fire departthe Logan-Cachand Mr- and Mrs. Merlin Nelson, mentThefire caught on grass was no adjoining the ties, there F.letendi ward Mutual will hold damage. appreciable its opening social tonight at 7:30 of in Central Park, at the fireplace. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Olsen All the ward of son a yesterday Mutualmembersare of Weston greeted invited. age at the Cache Valley hospital. n Minimum temperature last bomb-scarre- Guadalcanal Paul, a non of Mrs Lucy Ever! on. 39 E ist Fourth Sninh. hi .ten much of tne world His ship has been on patrol duty in the Pacific and the Atlantic. He wears ribbons for four major battles, and action in the Atlantic and Pacific thenters of war Paul has been in the navy since April 4, 1913 Thursday, 6 P 11 All motorists should keep their tire inspection records until they apply for their new basic A" eveni- while yester-jay- s hottest reading was SC, according to the U.S. weather bureau ng was 52 degrees, H. Azbill, gasoline rations, E. Ol A mileage representative announced. Tire inspection records will not be used in rationing after current "A" gasoline books Mr. Azbill said. "Each xpnre motorist will rereive a new mile age rationing record which will thereafter serve as the record of gasoline rations issued. As soon a ld tire ls doae' section record w,ll not be sary. Announcement concerning the disposition of the old tire inspection records will be made as plans materialize. here. Norris Nielsen Mr. a.id announce the arrival of a daugh- tr born Friday at the Cache Valley hospital.' Mrs. Sixth ward Mutual at 7:30, Miss Autumn Liar will be present to introduce and teachers for the coming year. A short program will be presented, followed by a social evening in the amusement hall with refreshments. In Logan and Heating cooking stoves using coal or wood for fuel will be removed from rationing October 15, King Hendricks, community service member of the Logan war (nice and rationing board, stated today. thrilling sight, and a hint of air strength." Thus did a Newton resident today descrioe a flight of more than 60 Fly. mi Fortresses which winged over that community Sunday morning. A our Pfr, and Mrs. Lyman C. Gabriel- - Miss Autumn," Jr. are visiting in Logan furiugh during Lymans from he University of Chicago me Jica1 school. Inan w a gradu- ate of US AC, and had completed his sophomore year at Chicago. Ho sod will be 'j atinn , ha) Manning Kimmel, above, son of Rear Adml. Husband E. Kimmel, who headed Navy forces at Pearl Harbor when the Japs attacked, is presumed dead. He was commander of the 1325-to- n suomarine Robaio, long overdue froru patrol and marked 'lost" by the Navy Department Utah Water Users Set Annual Meet The first annual meeting of the Utah Water Users Association is to be held Tuesday, September 19, in the 1944, at ten oclock a.m Governor's Board Room, Statu Capitol Building, Salt Lake City, , Utah. Preliminary to this meeting th six districts into which the stato has been divided for election purposes are to hold meetings within said district for the purpose of electing eleven directors of said association. The six districts are composed of the counties, water associations and individuals of the state. The eleven directors thus elected in turn elect four directors at large. The fifteen directors thus elected constitute the board of directors who. in addition to managing the affairs of the association. appoint the officers and executive committee for the ensuing year. All persons interested in the Utah Water Users association and the development, improvement and protection of water rights in this state desiring to take part in this association should contact their county commissioners for information as to the holding of the meeting in their district for the election of directors. General in- formation as to the association can be obtained from Mr. Gus P. Backman. manager, or A. W. .nterestin sta-lon- be-- Opening social of Logan ThiiJ Eighth ward MIA opening sociul S Sgt, William Richards, gun-wa- rd MIA will be held Wednesday ner on a bomber and stationed in will be held at 7:30. A good proevening at 8:30 in the ward re- - j England has been awarded the gram, dancing and refreshments creation hail. There will be a ajr medal for completion of ten will be features of the evening. Mutual age are invited. fljor show and a dance, with Gm flights over enemy territory. He All of Thorpes orchestra furnishing the is stationed in and is the England music. Second ward MIA opening social be son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Richwill Refreshments served. will be tonight at 7:30. Gurney ards of Mendon. Lieut Dean C. Baugh, son of and Mrs. W. F. Baugh, is now stationed at Rosweii, N. M., witli a Flying Fortress training unit. He recently spent a leave in kigan. He received his commission at Marfa Meld, Texas. North Mr. Logan M.I.A. will hold the opening social this evening at 8 p.m. A good program has been prepared and will be followed by will be dancing. Refreshments served and everyone is invited to be present. First Lt. William A. Wennergren, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Wennergren of 666 E. Center St, Logan, was recently awarded toe Air Medal at the Ontario army eir field, a Fourth Air force base, Ontario, California. The presentation was made by Lt. Colonel John O. Zuhn, command-ro- g officer of the field where Lt. Wennergren is a flying Instructor, after a colorful full dress retreat eeremony. Lt Wennergren attended Utah State Agricultural college end was commissioned a second lieutenant in Sept. 1942, at Luke Field, Arizona. He served with toe army air forces in Africa, oicily and Italy from April 1943 through January 1914 and is the "older of the Distinguished Flying Gross and eleven Oak Leaf Clust-ei"- s for meritorious achiever" n ,e in action Participating egainst the enemy. Jr, A- - 'wet - - the theme. Lxcrutives state that a short in- - wife, the former Miss Ruth Cannell Deduction to departments will f Smithfield, and Son, Lynn, are o'loiv. The residing in Smithfield. Ninth ward autumn eocial will be held Sep- were is- tomber 19 Two marriage license sued at the county clerks office to DeVarr Balls, Benson, CCr,pd to Logan police an today, 18' Lo8an' t0 lj alld Zona Cache county office the thcft o eefYriffs Harry Walton Rhcad, Provo 18'19, i e bicycW aB eydd Mae Earl F,t,ldlng' Of) and 0ra r,.,s ,t0 ffovidence. The bicycle was left Six juveniles from Logan were rnt tbe Lyric theater Fris uy by the Logan City apprehended evening, and was gone a f. nimut-''police, charged with forgery, fradulater. informoe Any turn on Hs Whereabouts . will be Predated by the owners. Either CC r t10 she(dff my ho c ont' 55' having seen to ' 1 'w Chu' -- StJoseph Fk of apihin WORtlS URtEST SHURMIW Significance In Strike At Mindanao l'M J. I and j na- museum.) forces outside. I gained the impression from talking with residents of Sofia that they were holding their breath, waiting for their future to be decided at the Cairo parleys. There was considerable fear that extremist elements might cause dancing and social program will trouble before the Cairo results be the events features. All over became known. twelve arc invited. Meanwhile three Russian columns were moving across the northeast tip of BulLogan Fourth ward Primary will be Wednesday at 4. AU ward garia, disarming Bulgarian troopi. children arc invited to attend. . HERES MORE ABOUT William A. Richards, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Richards, Mendon, SMITHFIELD WOMAN has been promoted from sergeant (Continued from Page L) to staff sergeant, according to word received from an Eighth Air portant electric appliance on our Force bomber station in EnglanJ, farm is the electric pump," Mrs. Fly- Seamons wrote. "Installed on the where he operates on a 7 it furnishes the water ing Fortress as a tail gunner, rl s Bear isRiver the force on our bomber group holds a presidential that citation for Its assault on key farm. She points out that it enat ables the farm to raise sugar beets, ball nazi bearing plants and to treble its alfalfa crop which Schwcinfurt, Germany, lost Oc- feeds their 25 cows. of is a the third unit and tober, When the manpower shortage bombardment division, cited for made it appear that the Seamons its historic would have to get rid of half their on Messerchmitt cows shuttle attack purchased a milking mafactories at Regensburg, Germany, chine. they and the two tnen now milk last summer. the same number of cows in less than half the time it took three Charles R. Bingham, son of Mr. men before and the cows like it and Mrs. P. Y. Bingham of better than being milked by hand. Smithfield, is now serving as aa Mrs. Seamons that by aircraft mechanic in the repair burning lights allexplained until baby night shop of an air service command turkeys and chicks are eight to 10 depot in Britain. Prior to entering weeks old, the piling up and smoththe air forces lie was employed ar ering of from 20 to 30 poults or an oiler and operator for the chicks at a time is avoided. A Pacific Construction Co., in north- brooder on the farm permits baby ern California, and attended Boe- pigs to make their appearance safeing aircraft school in Oakland, ly in the dead of winter. In the Seamons home is an elec- California. Dob-rudj- a, Car furnished. Expenses paid. Salary $120.00 per month plus commission. Experience not necessary. We teach you. Splendid chance for advancement. Steady employment now and after the war. Apply ss$dtsm Visiting headquarters of Gen. Bernard L. Montgomery in France, Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, Supreme Allied Commander in Burma. East Asia, explains the war situation in far-ofl Freeman, 28 East Second North Logan, Utah l 12 Tin- super-comma- 1'' 0 any throat that nd all; d convoys' the iluciiiou of the C aro- HERE'S MORE ABOUT lines, where the Jupmese si ll have bases In the Philippine arclupi lago. Mindanao is believed most likely (Continued from Page 1.) " to feel the weight of a tacked oil plants in eastern and invaslon forte u is known ,hlll while approxiA large number of friends and central Germany, t,im. are uo,k. , JapaIM0 dof,ns n'ate!r ,50.Br' h heavy bombers d so relatives gathered in the Logun ' v the Ruhr similar struck in targets ullird strategy almost as m Eleventh ward chapel Monday conone of in the greatest valley Luzon noon to pay tribute to Dewey conquest of on Gerto date centrated attacks In this respect, observers pointson of Bishop Cook, oil supply. ed out, the sole allied purpose for ami Mrs. D. W. Cook, who die1 many's vanishing More Downed 43 in a secluded spot in Wyoming gaining a foothold in the PhilipThe combat planes accompanyabout two and a half years ago pines ut this time would be to bombers shot the American have a The remains were found the latter ing for the China 45 down at least German fighters, invasion, springboard much as the Brilisn p.ut ol August. de227 the number bringing to Isles served as the basic annum Bishop W. Loyal Hall piesnled stroyed in the past 24 hours. The dump and jumping off place home ami the at the Prayers figures were still incomplete. for the battle of Europe. services were offered by President The Russians also fought on For this purpose, it will not be C. Dunn, Charles Jenkins, and Q(rman SO jn a patrol penetra-D- r. to capture the entire DaCosta Clark of Provo. tlun of Kast Prussia from Lithu- - necessary Philippine group. By seizing cerMrs. Donald E. Smith played ama, and drove towards the bor-th- e tain points, it was organ post lude and prelude, dera of that ptovmce from the said, large sections of the islands, Two solos were sung by Bishop east and south in an imminent cut off from all supplies by the George B. Evcrton, a duet by Mr. thieat of massed invasion, allied navies, could be left great ii reich from The entry into the and Mrs L. J. Bailey and an to rot on the Japanese vine." strunicntal trio by 1rof and Mrs. the west by the 1st army was in Naval circles here held no great N. W. Christiansen and Prof. R. force, and as such the first inhope that a Philippine invasion E. Clark. vasion of Germany in more than would bring out the Japanese The speakers were lodge Nop!vlil century, although French pa- fleet for a showdown fight. Indiacross the made stabs trols minor a relic Jcn.sen of Salt Lake City, cations arc that its ma!n anits infive of Dewey's wife, Genevieve border from the Maginot line late in the Japan sea and irtend to Monson Cook; J. F Livingston remain there for defense of the Counting the Canadian 1st for "sacred" home islands. Craig, Colo., an unde in the which still is engaged Once the allies move Into the Dewey worked for more!11)'than six years; Oison A. Garff vital task of clearing the channel Phihppim-hou- Rites Pay Respect Invasion of Germany Cook To Dewey full-flcd- w-l- l well-fortifi- j J well-place- d 1 m - and Gunn: fled Lord Louis Mount-froi- n southeast Asia command comprising Burma. Malaya ami Sumatra have had tough going but have succeeded driving the Japanese out of northern Burma. This will permit early reestablishment of a land supply route from India to China. 4 - in China Generalissimo Chiang troops have been waging a desperate but so far losing battle to prevent the Japanese from cutting the country in half. These commands have been operating under broad plans developed at last November's Roosovelt-Churchi- ll - Chiang conference in Cairo. But they have not had the benefit of the coordination such as General Dwight D. Eisenhower 3 . F01 ci s in pattens Indo-Chin- a, 's in western Europe. Already delicate questions have arisen involving the overlapping of some command areas. Unless a new command set up is achieved, these would multiply as the offensives progress. Capitol Theater IIAS OPENINGS PX)H SEVERAL PART-TIM- E EMPLOYES Roys Must Ro 16 Years or Over; Girls, 18 Years or Over! hono-'- comPi'hments Under the direction of Mrs. more than (the Swiss Alps over members of the H00 miles. H. Thompson, The contact between the ith Logan Eleventh ward Relief Son-- 1 3rd aimies at Sombernon was ety handled the beautiful floral and to a junction which preliminary William Pallbearers weie pieces. A. Stoi Haacke, G. Hale and William Perkins' The grave in the Monson family plot Escape t'ut 01 f and Americans of The French the Plea!(ant Grove city rent army were closing a big by Bishop the 7th around tery was dedicated the German escape pincers William D. Cook of Idaho Fulls route through the Belfort gap. The French, moving along the Swiss frontier, were 16 miles from Ogden livestock The Belfort at Americans drove 27 miles north of Besancon to Vesoul, 32 miles due fully west of Belfort, forming a Cattle: 400, all grades steady; few medium to good grass arc from Vesoul to fat steers $13.00 to 13.50, common 8.00 to 10.00; medium to good heifOn the Italian front the Gerers 10.50 to 10.75, common 7.50 to mans were forced back into their 4.50 cows cutter and canncr 8.50; fortified Gothic line at points ail to 6.75, few common 7.50 to 8.25; along the front across the Italian 9.50. to 8.00 bulls to medium good peninsula. In the center northeast 10.05 on Hogs: 600, steady; top of Florence, American and Britlb. 240 180 to good and choice ish troops penetrated two to three 14.55 to to good butchers, medium miles to high ground north of the 270 to 14.80, 241 to 270 lb. 11.30, Sirne river. Heavy fighting 300 lbs. 13.50 to 13.75, over 300 lbs. upper continued outside Rimini in tho 13.00 to 13.25, 160 to 180 lb. 13.00 sector. to 13.50; sows largely 12.75 to 13.25, Adriatic 13.50. weights light Sheep 21,(88) no early sales fat TWO KILLED spring lambs, asking steady to POCATELLO, Ida., Sept. 12 .Pi strong, late Monday all classes - Maj. William H. Clark, 47, St. steady, quality plainer; 5 doubles Lruis, Mo, operations officer at good and choice Utah spring lambs the Pocatello army air base, ani 13.25, around 5 cars Nevada's and Sgt. Tandy B. Belew, Jr, 23, 4 lots Idaho's 13.00, merely good Vernon, Tex, were Killed late yest12.75. to 12.60 Oregon and Idaho's erday when an army amphibious plane crushed into American Falls trie stove, refrigerator, sewing reservoir 10 miles above American cleaner, fan, Falls dam. machine, vacuum waffle toaster, iron, percolator, iron and electric clock. PAROLED In presenting the bonds lo Mri. Seamons at the fair last week OSSING, N. Y, Sept. 12 HMh President George M. Gudsby of the e Hin.n. Power company declared that James J. (Jimmy) Tammany district leader, was parAmerica's miracle of food producSing prison today tion is equally as ouLstanding as oled from Sing almost four years for her war production. Neither would after serving have been possible, he s.ud, had his piyt in protecting the policy electric power not been substituted racket of the New York for rapidly diminishing manpower. e. 31-nn- le e. one-tim- I: ' P. t! Lm C Louis liromiield s Rest Selling ? Novel of Human Emotions at rm- JfC--' , y- george MYRNA - TYRONE POWER LOY BRENT 20,h Cen,t SECOND FEATURE Evening K. ." island-hoppin- MAN Selling to Established Trade an inquiry about broader political aspects" of the conference, saying that political" was a word i.e did not understand and that the purpose of the meeting here was "primarily lend-leas- Rattle In Progress Enroute to Sofia from Rvillin-- 1 gra(j on the Turkey frontier, I was obliged to make a detour to avoid a battle between Bulgarian and German troops near the Greek frontier. I learned that a German detachment bad attempted to liberate a large number of interned Germans in a prison camp. Bulgarian troops overpowered the Germans. I saw wreckage of German . ransport all along the roads lead- ing into Sofia and in the capital I was reliably informed that no more organized German troops remained in Bulgaria proper, although there still were some in the occupied zone between Nis and Pirot in Serbia. It was believed also that there might be small groups still lurking in the countryside. trying to reach German SERVICE (Continued From Pago 1) unified allied for the whole war against V VMIIN'I rfi.v Sept Japan soon is expei ted to be howlM nt ir. oh: lv el ; Inu.'v billed til" ed by an Amei lean. of the proportions However, powiilu! I' S nival task force m the .mjuiIi- - American and British Forces to Iw Ml ike Ot Mmd.trnn to the Far transferred from I 'liilippincs .as the nal open- - East as soon as Europe defeat Germany's t must be determined is complete ing nun nf th alhnl viiniMign e drive lo the Chinese oasi by way here. And the amount of aid the U. S will give Britot (he Philippine an Inju lago. the Bluropenn war ends, The att.uk. can led out in he ain after considered. be must the. naval first action igonst There are now four commands Philippines, n.is regal led hcie u. the Japanese: fighting walking an end to the piehminnjy 1 (The U. S. Pacific forces phase where the1 aim was to pe lotrate the der Admiral Chester W. Nimitz across the outer Japanese defens rings old have struck sw.ftly C'ont ral Pacific and have pcnctrat-- ; gain launching positions tor full- - L'd Japan's inner defense circle. t cale offensive a. tun, here K hotel I ron) South Smm observers u mi'csl ihut Palau, an island 6.' 2 n,,n MacArthur's 1)ou,.kls ca- -t of Mindanao, may a, tually be if()rcts hav swept up rom the south to place themselves in a to invade the southern uu i t ome to position the OPPORTUNITY FOR RETURNED niti-i- ; Sullen Soldiers Groups of sullen, disspiritcd solarms, diers, stripped of their march through the citv. For them the struggle is over. They hardly look up at civilians puttering through the ruins attempting to salvage something from the holocaust. About half of Sofia's 500,000 population has returned from the countryside, where it had sought refuge during the bombings. For them the struggle is just beginning. So far they have managed to restore water and electricity in the habitable .sections of the city but it will be years before Sofia heals the scars of war. The capital, drab and uninteresting at best, was an eerie city of the dead when I arrived at midnight. Despite the 8 p. m. curfew I was given every attention by Bulgarian authorities and permitted to make a tour of inspection through miles of burned- out buildings. (Kays dispatch bore evidence of sharp censorship and did not mention specific buildings destroyed. Persons familiar with Sofia believed, however, that 75 per cent destruction of the central area would almost certainly have included the cathedral erected by Czar Alexander II of Russia after the Russians had liberated Bulgaria from Turkey in 1878. Other buildings in the central area include Muslim Mosques, the public baths and hot springs PACIFIC WAR nnil-uiy- KKD M II 6, K1 IU Press Slait t'orrospoml'ot 1 central district and 25 per cent of the outlying sections lies in ruins as token of the effectiveness of allied bombardment which helped drive Bulgaria out of .he war. tional HERE'S MORE ABOUT - St j'fi mm un- ngland-to-Afri- Logan Ninth ward ihpiiiImts invited to the interesting opening program this evening of 0 Mutual Major Ian M. Teusc.her has Begin- organizations. nng at 7:30 in the ward chapelr recently been promoted from tae Program will include vocal os by Betty Lee Anderson, sections by the MIA Girls chorus, addrPss by Dr. Ira N. Hayward, solos by.Nelda Storkdale, .of and life-givi- AU Presentation buildings d B-1- re al Ki inn.;. -- d easy, fearful people. Seventy-fiv- e per cent floor lent check passing, and illegal poshow hHS anned and rP. session of whiskey. Crime in Lo.reshments wlI, be served. gan has been pretty quiet until is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyman this occurred, Police Sergeant R. Gabrielscn; his wife is the former The Captain and Mrs. Howard .Mo- C. Knowles reported today. Mr. of Dorothy Peterson, daughter rris are visiting at the home of only other charge we have is a ind Mrs. Charles O. Peterson. their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur drunk, and he's getting to be perJ. Morris. Captain Morris is petual, so no use mentioning him. Mel Manning and Harold Lap- . at Camp Erwin, California. rner, former Aggie athletes, have A hen he returns to his Wanted to borrow, rent or buy, a post, Mrs. n Tormw muT" Fhith typewriter. Call Peggy Hodges, 50, promoted to captain. Both Morris."' are in the south Pacific wnrSn,uh of Draper wi make her daytimes, or e09 E. 4 N. evenings. (Advertisement) home there with her parents. An been Ierald-.Journ- ! Tiu 'East1 Meets 'West BV LKON K.W United Press War Correspondent SOFIA, Bulgaria, Sept. 11 (Cor-- 4 reef d in Sofia is a city of bomb-blaste- d at the opening social of Logan Third Wiird MIA Wednesday at h;3y in lhe ward everi 14-d- :.ih 1 s- ' I Editor s Note: One ot the last allied iirrespondents to leave tlie Balkans ahead of the German armies in 1911, Leon Kay of the United Press, now is the fils! American to reach Sofia, capital of shaky Bulgaria Kay went to Sofia from Ankara, Tut key. Bu-h- treatment. Tlu in r HR-S- RUN! be met. In consequence, it will take some of the fighting machine now tn Europe, in addition to that already in the Pacific, to insure the complete defeat of the enemy. Schedules arranged to avoid interference with school studies. References required. Apply Mr. Taylor |