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Show r, Is Army 76 Years Old U.S. Fight Is g army near Boston, to be there of the employed as light infantry, under oldest the command of the chief officer States Army, the of the arm." services. 'our armed date in First Regulars this niemoiable These were the fust ContinContinental the Second or first regulais, the meeting in Phila- - entals Authorized the enlistment United States Army. On June 23, Washington set of riflemen to companies one forth from Philadelphia with a for Colonies United the staff. Riding horseback on the following day, June small f;., mfanti y was established steadily, he entered the American Army, and lines around Boston on July 2 and the American Washington was elected formally took command of the SmouslV by the Congress to little aimy on July 3. When General Washington arGeneral of the Armies. rived at Cambiidge, MassachuSecond Congress the Second Continental setts, and took command on the 1775, 3rd, he found several thousand Zss met on May 10 down men composing the AmBritish army was pinned erican lines. There was no unifBoston by a loosely organized composed of troops of four form. Homespun stood next to Massachu-Connecticu- t. leather britches; coonskin caps England Colonies: d ied with Rhode Island, hats. A !d ew Hampshire. These were few Stockbridge Indians in war supplied, and paint formed a small company. trained, pootly These men were patriots but listed for shurt teims of service. clear could haidly be called soldieis. made it Boston fiom es take They were arn.ed for the most congress that it must Itrol of this and other forces part with firelocks and muzzle for the common de-Iloading fowling pieces, powder collecting horn and pouches of lead balls. The Confess was convinc-thFirst Recruiting Order a single, national army From his headquarters in Camfirts needed, so it took the initial the United bridge, General Washington issum establishing 14 by auth-tfain- g ed his first recruiting order for sates Army on June the organization of the ten the United States Army. This was of riflemen six from on July 10, just seven davs after mmpanies Vir- - he took command Men were to tennsyhama, two each from tne be enlisted to sene for one jear to Mat land, "join pa and Irv il Blockade Fears (!EA Teh photo) JET DISASTER One of the eight Thunderjets that crashed near Moreland. Ind., during a thunder storm lies shattered by the impact and explosion. Air Force and FBI agents aie Investigating whether sabotage or the storm caused the biggest multiple airplane disaster in peacetime history. Three pilots were killed and two injured in the craslies. three-coinere- 1 , f- at Programs ST K V N U I Cnday Evening ' If I (! stars on Parade Time , and Sway VII jj'The tommy Dorsey Show Guest Star 7 00 Treasury Arnold bhow 7 7 30 Proudly We Hail 6 00 6 10 6 15 6 .10 ddy In Pops Evening 'ogn Oft May Morning our 7 A 7 7 7 Serenade 00 10 I" 6 b for America I ooestern 7 g fv 35 30 g 45 9 00 Vlusic 9 30 tips-KeHomeimkers Tune Time Meet the Band Symphonic Swing Thursday Morning Melodies 9 45 00 B 30 B 00 10 12 15 12 25-- 15 12 30 7 7 min w ith Mr Music John Deere Farm News 7 7 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 9 9 Agriculture Agent Jamboree 1 Salon Serenade 00 Melody Magic 30 1 2 2 45 3 00 4 S i Piano Interlude Tropicana 30 2 M 45 live Roundup Platter Party Isle of Paradise Spotlight On a Star Every farm, Wonderful of Step Aeway Ruin 'MICAHM-m- ' . mm . s-- i - Vll I iKkAwt .i Ljilteir Mi i ni JJ) P. Rhythm Roundup kavonte Rhythm Roundup Oil Hurleigh News 15 Morning Special TO Bvb-Reporter 35 V "at her Report 40 Farm Flashes 45- - Zoom Treats in Tune 50 Trio Time (XJ Breakfast News i 15 25 30 25 30 10 00 30 15 10 25 10 30 11 30 45 11 05 11 15 11 30 W PST Roundup Rod & Gun Club on the Air Mutual Reports the News l lub 610 Mutual Reports the News A Symphony of Melody Sign Off 6 00 6 6 40 Noon Time Novelties The Stars Sing 00 12 Reporter s Friday Morning Afternoon May t avallaro Show Intermountain News Carmen tullon Lewis Jr News Gabriel Heater News 45 Sam Haves 55 Bill Henry 00 True or False 30 Mutual Newsreel 45 Paul Sullivan News 1X1 Behind the Storv a Love 151 Mvstery 30 KVNU Showcase of Melody ' 8 8 9 00 9 TO 9 55 In oo 3 0 55 11 00 12 00 I Report courtesy Preston Lumber Co. Breakfast Melodies According to the Record tor Happiness. Uecipe 7 - 610 Thursday Evening I j3u-T- ops -- - what is now West Yiigmia; Cre- sap's and Prut's companies, both laixed in and atound Fiedenck, iMaivlnnd, and eight companies iaised iir diffeient paits of Penn-- 5 s Kama, by then oigamed into a battalion under Colonel William Thompson. these At once experienced fighters bet ame the backbone of the Ameiuan Aimy and their rifles a teirot to the Bntish. Newspaper Account Newspapeis of the peiiod are full of accounts of the match of these men to Boston, of their rough frontier diess and their amazing demonstrations of skill with the rifle, of their imitations of Indian War dances given gaud-il- v painted and stripped to the waist, and of the scoui ge they weie to Tones found along the road. Many of the riflemen had painted LIBERTY OR DEATH" across their chests: others earned the inrattlesnake signia of the coiled with the legand DONT TREAD I Bng.-Ge- n. ICELAND BOSS Eaward J. McGaw commands the detachment of U. S. Army troops recently airlifted from Newfoundland to Reykjavik, Iceland, as part of the North Atlantic treaty defenses. in the newly founded United States Army. In this older, he recommended that active and vigilent officers be sent upon this and that fiecruiting) service, they mut be officers who are held most in esteem with the people in the district they are sent Gordon Owen The Bab-- o Reporter Records with Rvan The Reporter Queen for a Dav Kate Smith Speaks Gordon Owen The Bab-Reporter Melody Time Bab-- o to recruit in. For the next eight months General Washington and his offiNews Navv Band cers struggled ceaselessly to foice Morning Melodies the motley regiments he found Cecil Brown N'ews Time Out there into a competent military force. When at last he had the Friday Afternoon satisfaction of standing on the 12 00 Cedric Poster 12 15 Paul Sullivan earthw orks on St. Patricks Day of 12 TO Coolerator Show 1776, and watching the British 12 35 The Old Chuckwagon battalions march down to their 12 45 Stan Lomax Sports 12 50 Bab-Reporter transports in Boston harber, he 12 55 Gllette Warm Up A1 Heifer knew that behind him stood, as 1 00 Game of the Dav 3 25 Camel Scoreboard he had written, the new Army, 3 30 Swap Shop which in every point of view is 3 35 Music for You 4 00 Homemaker s club entirely Continental. 4 15 Hemmlngwav News Rifl Company 4 30 IMN Theaters Show Tune Time to the rifle What happened 4 45 Sam Haves News 5 OO Mark Trail companies that had been estab5 30 The Cl'de Beatty Show lished? The first of these compan5 55 Victor Borge ies to reach Boston arrived in the Ameiican lines at dusk on a day late in July. WATCH FOR According to the story, Wash"THE GREAT CARUSO" ington watched the dusty column march up and called out to its color byTECHN I COLOR tall captain to ask whence they r0k came. Daniel Morgans answer was music to General WashingJjCapitalStar tons ears; From the right bank of the Potomac, General. The frontiersmen from Virginia had marched 600 miles in twenty-on- e PLAYING NOW days. Washington flung himself from his horse and clasped each mans hand as teais filled his ON ME. Lite in the trenihes around Boston soon grew too tame for these frontiersmen and many of the companies marched off with Arnold on his daiing but attempt to take Quebec. Others expanded in size for those early they had no tiouble in days in finding suitable recruits and in time out of them grew such celebrated regiments as Hands 1st Continental Infantry and Morgan's Vngmia Riflemen. These first regulars were indeed the elite of the Revolutionary model army and they remain a for Ameiican soldiers to this day. Conte A Long Way Today, the soldiers of the Army have come a long way technically s from their first brothers-in-arm176 years of fuelocks their with ing construction. The uniforms are adapted to climate and geography, and thousands of advances over are the first United States Army evident. The Army of today is far different in size an In the amount and kind of equipment used from the we Army of 1775, whose birthday the But spirit celebrate today. and faith of todays soldier does not differ from that of the handful of men General Washington recruited 176 years ago. The stands as Army then and now s the ready protector of America freedom. New York state contains 442 of the 446 types of manufacturing industries listed by the federal census. CACHE DRIVE ees IN THEATRE Within a few weeks, too, the others had reached the army Hugh Stevenson's company from INDEPENDENT Starts Tonight 'Champion' NOW PLAYING Starring EDMCND O'BRIEN KIRK DOUGLAS DRU RUTH ROMAN "711 Ocean Grout Bvrymoro bko&t CHILL WILLS John archer DMlrtftMMIllUanMr-rnMbBOMIWU- iois butler kristine miller WK f ' Drive" PorfonMAC ! MAXWELL MARILYN in Also CO - HIT! TIM HOLT "CUBAN FIRE BALL" LOGAN DRIVE m IN THEATRE Evtelita Roderigiies Warren Douglas "Masked Raiders" Leon Belasco Independent Lyric Showman Tomorrow, June 15, Only! The Utah Opera Theatre Double Bill Presentation of "THE MEDIUM" by Giancarlo Menotti GIANNI SCHICCHI" by Giacomo Puccini shows done in English. Ticket on sale at s'ric Showman (Phone 129). Curtain :S0 p.m. Admission: $1.50 Reserved, 75c CJen- era! Admission. Selected Short Subject MU H n Starts Sunday ADMISSION lOe-SO- e TONIGHT i Double Bill In 'The Avengers' Shot Jesse TIDAL WAVE" James' TAKEN FROM ROBERT NATHANS PORTRAIT OF JENNIE With with . Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotton, Ethyl Barrymore i Jo, Office Opens 6:00 p. m. Admission 50c PRESTON FOSTER 7? BRITTON Mont-an- a he advanced rapidly to the position of District Ranger serving on the St. Joe and Kaniksu National Foiests in Northem Idaho for seven jeais. Later he was and transferred to the pio-mot- ed FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Msnv wearers of falae teeth havs suffered real embarrassment because their plate dnfpped. slipped or wobbled at Just the wrong '..ne Do not live In fear of this happening to Just sprinkle a little vmi ) powthe alkaline der on vour plates Holds false teeth more firmly, so they feel more comfortable Does not sour Chet ks plate Get rAS-odor (denture breathi kJvTH at any drug store. rAS-TFET- tnon-arld- 1 Issutlfwl, JuraMs whits PmNiIi it Her. THIS IS THE LIMIT rust aad rat Nats, taa CENTRAL AUTO PARTS & TIRE CO. in all its Glory ! man Schneider, 63, does not have to go 100 miles or moie to Schneider displays his fish. usual daily catch of more than 100 perch, taken from Lake dab in ChiMichigan, smack The- - veterans normal cago. fishing day starts at 5 a m. and ends at 6 p.m. (NEA) afalnst . . daiilln, bealtaal aavara,a sad lildla if Kentucky Bourbon 227 NORTH MAIN Youll like the low price! II Hllf. KIHTUCKT STUICIT 1181111 IIIUET. TIE SIAM IlSlIUlllt Cl.. MllfOll. KEHICKt Listen to the compliments when POP wears ARROW HANDKERCHIEFS Man-size- 1 d w'tth han Dad! - rchiefs! 1 hems. Colored borders. Initials, some Every one worthy of the finest 35$ and up ARROW UNDERWEAR e cottons for softness, resiliency, finst absorption as well as long, comfortable year. Positive fit, ling pittern. Made of Jong-stapl- non-cia- Shirts & Shorts 1 .25 and up ROBES rayon brocades or soft woolers theyre all ideal gifts for Dad. Plain colors, figures and stripes in various weights. Lovely $15 fo $25 ARROW SPORT SHIRTS Rugged gabauii.ies or attfully tailored prints. You'll makw a hit with Pop if jou give hun one of these! up VINDON SPORT SHIRTS The Last Woid! All custom tailored, single needle stitched and finished vv!th incomparable neatness and care. Pur silks, Gaylord ginghams and Zephyr gabardines in a wealth of tasteful colors. 8.95 up LEATHER DOPP KITS Genuine grain leathers, ruggedly harness stitched, fitted wqth 100 watei proof stainless linings and hardware. One of these kits will keep his personal articles neat and handy. Lasts a lifetime! $5, $6.95, $7.25, $9.50 ARROW TIES Exclusive Arrow patterns tha; tie superbly without crushing or wrinkling. LOO to 5.00 ALL PURCHASES GIFT-WRAPPE- D IN BEAUTIFUL and BARBARA in Straight 2nd Big Hit LAST TIME TONIGHT Starting in the wood JOHN CARROLL AND ADELE MARA ce since 1929. ;edQ Years 3.95 CARTOON AND COLOR long-rang- of all pigment. Keep house looking "freshly painted" for yean. Try it on your house! Plus FEATURETTE with the army in France duilng Woild War I, temainlng for several months at the end of the war in Brest where he was an agricultural instructor in a section of the American university. His wife will join him in Price within a few weeks. Frykman", Olsen said, also is highly fitted for his new assignment at Logan. He giaduated from Montana State University and later received his masters degree in fotstry from Yale. He has woiked for the U.S. Forest Ser-vi- Du Pont "40" is rich in titanium dioxide, the whitest 30c SO, GEM JOANNE ice said. SToday, the Army is composed of operathighly skilled technicians, scientific weapons of intricate VI TK"Nw Profit" GivG Germany, June 14 Feats of a new blockade aiose in Berlin today as Commun ist police were reported to have halted seveial shipments of goods in and out of the city. West Geiman pome said Communist officials confiscated 523, (XX) worth of goods early today moving from the west over the superhighway to Beilin. Truckloads of butter, soap, canned meat and other pioducts were confisiated on.giounds of "insufficient documentation," west polBKRLIN, (O) 19515 Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee where he was assistant supervisor. For the last three years he has been staff officer on the Boise National Forest at Boise, Idaho, and recently was selected e to organze a special timber planning project Frjkman will move to Logan soon after July 1 and his wife and two children will accompany him, Marilyn, 14, and Garry, 12. (Continued from Page 1.) NEW YORK, June 14 (URt The heavyweight contenders battle between Joe Louis and Lee Savold was postponed again today until tomorrow night, when it will be held In Madison Square Garden. It originally was scheduled to be held at the Polo grounds last night but was postponed until tonight. When a second postponement was ordered today, It became neecssary to shift the fight Indoors because the New Yotk Yankees meet the Detroit Tigeis in a night game at the Yankee stadium tomorrow night. June 14, Thursday, HERALD-JOURNA- L New Supervisor Delayed Again the 176th I'of the June THE Louis-Savo- ld WICKEL'S BOXES ARROW WHITES Flattering Collar Styles. Buttons. Mitoga Tailored Easy-to-Iro- n. 9 Anchored 3.95 ARROW ZEPHYRS The cool Summer version of Arrow smartness! Let your body breathe without sacrificing the famous Arrow 3.95 I |