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Show jfain 5 - , Rng Hih 235'. . i 2. 1'1 3!- 9 Close Low 2.30' s 2.32 2.34 2 33'. 2.39 2.34 . 11 2.41"- - 2.41 4' 2.42 M FINAL E mAEffi) - JJ TONAL ME VOL. 42, NO. 172 LOGAN, UTAH. MONDAY, JULY 23. 1951 leg of historic job Tiruman N Is Dr. E. I. Slill Be Raised Logan City will play host to fatal Cache citizens Tuesday, during a Istael Ernest Saturday to Pioneer celebration that inStewart, 69, prominent Logan cludes a Day paiade, pioneer meeting, dentist, civic worker and horse- children's sports, baseball games, man. fneworks pageant and dance He died suddenly, 9:30 p. m., festival. at his home, 52 South Second C. L. Pocock, general chairman, West. today declared that all is in readiness for (he observance of Utah's In First Ward birthday. "Wi ll have interesting Funeral services will be con- events for al membeis of the ducted Wednesday, 1 p. m., in family, ne declared. Logan LDS First ward chapel, by A Big Parade Bishop Harold S. Nelson. Friends may call at the W. Loyal Hall The parade, expected to be mortuary cfcapel Tuesday from 3 about one mile in length, w ill to 5 p. m., and at the fanydy home begin march promptly at 10 a.m., Tuesday, 7 to 9 p. m., and Wed- from First South to Seventh of 10 a. time m. until nesday from North along Main Street. Cars services. park on both sides of Main Burial will be in Logan City may from First to Seventh Noith. cemetery. Dr. Stewart was born in Logan June 8, 1882, a son of James Z. and Julia Ann Fitzgerald Stewart. His father was the first president of Brigham Young College In Logan. He married Sarah Walters Sept. 28, 1910, in the Salt Lake LDS temple. She died January 18, 1948, and he married Eva Mayne August 11, 1950, in Logan temple. Dr. Stewart received his education in Logan city schools, the B Y C, Utah State Agricultural college, and was graduated from the Chicago College of Dental Surgery in 1909. The pioneer proshown after many are here, edition cess and arrangemarduous hours of inserting ent. Extra copies of the edition may be purchased all day Tuesday (Pioneer Day) at The office. Also, they may be bought Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 12 nobn, during tacks of Herald-Journal- 's the parade, from a booth in front of, the local J. C. Penny store. Copied will be mailed to any place in the country. Cost is 50 each. Members of a circulation crew, shown above, are, left to right: Jim Cole, Ken Hagen, a circulation manager; H. G. Linford, Pat Smith, Nina Corbridge, Gisele Nelson, Jeanine Gittins and Paul Matson. TO SERVE IN 1951-5- 2 Tells Congress Sighls May attack proved Dr. Large ram - Fatal For A heart D1MR1BUT10N! during afternoon. A few thunder showers over mountains Tuesday afternoon. High both days 91, Logan Celebration Stewart Ready For Tuesday Heart Attack IOK Clear today and Tuesday except some clouds over mountains for FIVE CENTS Arms- ready The Weather Floats assemble on South Main at 9 a.m. The pioneer meeting is at 11 a.m., in Logan tabernacle, with Piesident L. Tom Perry conducting. Principal speaker is Elder Mathew F. Cow ley, member of the Council of Twelve, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. There will be violin music by SCHEDULE OF EVENTS OUTLINED 10 A.M. Mischa Poznanski, member of the music faculty at Utah State Agricultural college. Children's spoits are scheduled for 12 noon, at the east tabernacle grounds. There will be contests for all kiddies, with prizes, concessions, a miniature train and other concessions. Baseball Game The baseball game is at 2 p.m. at Crimson Field. It matches Fred's Flowers team, currently a leader in the Valley League, against Heitz Cleaning of Ogden. The fireworks pageant and (thnee festival begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Aggie stadium. Final event is the MIA celebration dance, 10 p.m., in the Dansante. P onee 1 paiade along Main Street, from First South to Seventh North. 11 A.M. Public meeting in Logan tabernacle, with Elder Mathew F. Cowley as principal speaker. 1 Noon Childrens sports and concessions on east tabernacle grounds. i P.M. Baseball game at Crimson Memorial field: Freds Flowers of Logan vs. Heitz Cleaners of Ogden. ,,7:30. P.M. Fireworks pageant and dance festival, Aggie stadium. 10 P.M. Celebration dance at Dansante, sponsored by M. I. A. WASHINGTON, July 23 (CPI Prcxldcr.l Truman told congress today that we may have to raise our fights and undertake a defense program whether wai or peace In Korea. Mr. Truman said the world situation is being reviewed to determine whether the nations present "on Is are high enough. Whatever happens in Korea, he said,' the Vnit'-States must watch other trouble spots and Russia, whion he accused of trying to "blackmail the free world into to communism. Mid-YeReport Mr. Truman made a fresh p real fur driving ahead with the niobtl zntion program at his annual mid-yeeconomic report to congress. He had no major new but he again made proposals, requests which congress has denied so far, or has been willing t grant only In part. Mr. Truman said that despite the Korean war and the moblliza-t'n- n program, "our economy is stronger now than it was when the defense buildup started. "Where we go from here depends on the decisions made by the congress, he said. We can drive ahead on the course of th present defense program or we can retreat. The safety' and welfare cl our country require thN we go ahead. Still A Threat The president emphasized hi belief that peace in Korea would nut end the Communist threat to world peace. Mr,, Truman's report and an accompanying report of his economic council threatened with warnings that inflation still, is a serious danger to the nation. , To meet the threat of Infla--tio- n. Mr. Truman again asked for a $10,000,000,000 tax Increase and for stronger price control powers. On both counts, congress has shown Itself determined to give the president less than he has still-grea- ter ar ar , Mission In South Hero's Burial He served an LDS mission In the Southern States from 1902 to' 1904, and was active in church work, having been in Logan First ward Sunday School superintendency, in Logan stake Highpriest quorum, and in other auxiliary positions. Immediately following his graduation from dental college, he started practice in Logan. Dr. Stewart was appointed by the governor to the state board of dental examiners June 26, 1931, and held that position five years. He was named a director of the First Federal Building and Loan Co. of Ogden, was a member of the American Dental Assn, and of Utah State Dental Assn. He had served several terms as president of the First District Dental Society, and was on the Utah State Dental Council during 1937 and - tit' Vs 1938. F TK::HK FORK' Camp, Sons of .neers aie shown aboe. Back row, v, r'?t: r 3,,l F Ricks, director and a president, Jovenh 1! Watkins Jr., director; Hanson Gireetor and past piesident; , Sportsman Seated: Charles B. Rulon Steed, 1. rector Cazier, chairman, membership committee; Willis Tinqey, chairman, camping committee; Charles firsl ice president; Jesse P. Rich, J. president, and L. Roy Earl, second ice president. RING SLATE TONIGHT OPENS WESTON'S JULY 24TH CELEBRATION SRAGE Alssk. July 23 rrtChh.PlaneS dl,lped low WESTON A boxing show tonight featuring Garth Panter ' 8 rugg,d JI'. Eii as vs. Frankie Gimbel will formally open the Western Pioneers Iand of lost airplanes Day celebration. The fight card will be staged at 8 p.m. tonight, in the new sboard. West Side high school gym at Dayton. It will be in the form of anhcT of fltld'g the a welcome home battle for Garth, who is recognized as one of uth.n10 Allln',!, Plane the top fighters in his weight in Sfaicl1 craft the country. VmdlnR any trace of Panter recently won over Anton Raadik and Joey Arthur, and is n route from after a match this summer with BC A,uhol'age Rocky Graziano and Sugar Ray AboarJClerfe t0 Robinson, For the first time since the middleweight cham"r service- pion. advent of talking pictures in '"WtilmnS at,aclled to once Gimbel hails from Dayton, Ohio, Logan, ihe Lyric theatre will rew oCanadmn navy and holels victones over Frankie again leeome the scene of legitio'en. if .1 as stage pro-- d on Undenvay Ronkovich of Salt Lake City and mate, . the Srha rot ion tonight as the Showman that the Billy Sneddon of Ogden. nnin.ity players open their three-nfgThe Panter-Gimboc,an. hvJin the,lry fight tonight 16 where run of The Bat. kniedL several is slated for 10 rounds. time is 8:30 tonight, Tuesday :'I.N'oienhtJ,eared the and Wednesday. Other Matches dc-- 3 The fact that this is the first i,'Jk"'mSSenro"' The ring caid also includes; aetuc.l community theatrical enCoiion Chaney, Indianapolis, vs. deavor, outside of USAC produc''dmty. V in "O .PPeared for Jack trace was ever Fil Danberry, Denver, 6 rounds; tions, that Logan has seen Nixon, Salt Lake City vs. Eddie many ears is also newsworthy. The play chosen for the present-da- y Jacobs, Hill Field, 6 rounds; Kid debut is a mystery-comedBlair, Salt Lake vs. Buddy 123 nd according to Eastern reviews, Hill Field, 6 rounds; Don Ernsten, Salt Lake vs. Joe Garcia, it has proven to be one of the yiiOfh.h81 -- i rr, most popular on the American 4 rounds. Bingham, highway death sta'-.e- . tod T. 0r the Tuesday's program at Weston The Mary Roberts Rinehart Ka Tolnl? 3aarillly w5s includes a big parade at 10 a.m.; scri,) .piles incident upon incident patriotic meeting, 11 a.m. in Wes- with skill and plausibility, makiftg tons new LDS chapel; baseball it impossible to know just who STu, game, Fastside vs. West-sid- e I is. real culprit is until the lmal ':5iincra!hS,r'C','Uefl All Stars; all kinds of races curtain.. Thui-Shorse, wagon, childrns bike, The driller, also known as The J etc.; Smith's vaudeville and var- Spiral Staircase. revolves around vr'!'3- ".unly iety acts, afternoon and evening; Cornelia Van Gorder, a maiden square dancing and social dancing. l;idv of sixty who rents the sum- a Kur-missi- with 38 Dr. Stewart was recognized as an ardent horseman and sportsman. At the time of his death, he was president of the Cache Valley Peace Officers association, and was a charter member and first president of Logan Mounted Police. A member of the Cache chamber of commerce, Dr. Stewart had served as chairman of several important committees. Surviving are his widow, Logan; one son. Dr. E. I. Stewart Jr.. New York City; two grandchildren, Susan Kay and Sally Ann Stewart, New York City; two sisters and four brothers, Mrs. Carrie J. Humpheries, Mrs. Jessie S. Reese, Dr. Isaac Perry, Willie H.,v Royal A. and Eugene F. Stewart, Logan. Dr. RITES WEDNESDAY E. L Stewart, 69, who died . Saturday evening. Cache Youth Severely Hur Dennis Wilhelm, 1 8- -j ear-ol- d of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wilhelm, North Logan, was critieally injured just before noon today in a motorscooter-truc- k accident near Millville. Dpputy Sheriff Tom Rowley, who directed investigation, declared that a 1 truck, driven by Howard Euhriman, Providence, was pro ceeding slowly in a southward direction, when the Wilhelm youth ran his cycle into the rear of the truck. M-t- He suffered severe head injuries, a possible fracture of the hip, and possible internal hurts. His condition was desrribed as critical, although medical examination had not been completed at presstime. Dennis is an outstanding FTA student of the past year at South Cache high school. He is employed at the Hayes Welding and Machine Works in Logan. For Sherman NAPLES, Italy, July 23 U.P A special Navy'Skymaster will fly the body of Admiral Forrest P. Sherman, U. S. chief of naval operations, to Washington for a hero's burial. The big R5D will take off from Naples tomorrow following a simple memorial service aboard the Mt. Olympus, command ship of Admiral Robert B. Cerney, commander of the Atlantic Pact formes in southeast Europe. The Sk.vmaster will arrive In Henr! Pn lippO CNC E A IIERO Washington at mid-- a fternoon Retain died dishonored. Wednesday. A Marine honor guard will accompany the naval chief's body, led by Capt. Clifford D. Miller of Toledo, Ohio, and Maj. Sherman Smith of Salt Lake City, Shermans personal aide. Sherman, 54, died of coronary thrombosis in his wife's arms in their suite in the Excelsior hotel here yesterday. She had suffered ILE DYEU, France. July 23 two heart attacks during the day. Former Marshal Henri The flying admiral's body was (UP) taken immediately to the Mt. Philippe Petain, Hero of Verdun in World War I and Vichy collabOlympus and laid in state. orator with the Nazis in World War H, died dishonored today on this windswept Islet off the Atlantic coast. He will be buried on the island, MEXICO CITY, July 23 for The U. S. government and Mexico where he had lived a prisoner his last six years under a life will sign a treaty tomorrow or treason sentence. Wednesday permitting 300,000 Christian Lobut, prefect of the Mexican farmhands to work for on the mainAmerican farmers and cannery Vendee department Is in charge for the the Mexican foreign ministry said land who government, said llmt the today. soldiers gravestone would be inscribed: 'Henry Philippe Petain, no pro- Marshal Petain locally-produc- ht el Cifl-la- in tV; Hhr-hiso- n. y, Labor Treaty 'lull'd All-Sta- rs - mer home of a banker who has been xeported killed in Colorado some months before, She is warned thet mysterious things are happening but refuses to move. About this time It is discovered that a large amount of money has been stolen from the dead banker's bank, and suspicion is aroused that it had been sto'n oy the banker himself and hil-de- n away in a secret chamber of nis summer house. Starving in the three-ac- t play is Dorothy Gillis as Cornelia, Morgan White as the detective; Bargara McGregor, as the skp-terimaid, Carole Warnke as Dale, Wendell Smith as the doctor, Vosco Call as Brooke, Rex Skanchy as Billy the Jap hilt-leJohn Palacios as Richard Fleming, Al Lethbridge as an ur liown man and Bob Hatch as Reginald Beresford. Vosco Call is of the play, with Stuart Hardman as technical director; Oral Ballam, business director; Dick Haslum and Ruth Burleigh as technical assistants. sh v IN' EMOTIONS Dorothy Gillis (Cornelia), left, registers doubt, Barbara McGregor (Lizzie) anguish, and Morgan White (Detective) shows utter disgust over the happenings of the summer home around which the plot of The Bat revolves. The play opens tonight at the Lyric-Showma- n :r it: 2 Youths Have Close Calls In Farm Mishaps On the eve of Nations! Farm Safety week, two Cache youths endured harrowing farmyard experiences which might have turned out much more serious than they actually were. Even then, one of the young men is in the Logan LDS hospital, receiving treatment for leg wounds received when the tine of a Jack-so- n fork pierced the upper part of both legs. Jackson Fork The other was examined by a physician, and treated for shock, exhaustion and scratches. Earl Linder, son of Mrs. Charlotte Linder, Millville, was the Jackson fork victim. Late Saturday afeernoon, in a neighbor's barn, the fork broke loose from its mooi ing, and dropped the youth to the ground. Impact caused the tine to impale both fession. legs, aboxe the knees. He was Membeis of Petain's family are pinned to the ground, and couldnt arranging a Roman Catholic fun- move. eral service for him in the little Earl was taken to the hospital Notre Dame church here before by a Logan-Cach- e ambulance he is buried In the walled island crew. His condition today was recemetpry. ported as good. His family will select his burial Kennard Schiess, 17. son of Mr. clothes and without doubt will and Mrs. John Schiess, Amalga, choose the uniform he disgraced was miraculously saved from that of a Marshal of France. On critical injury or possible death his chest will be Frances highest Friday evening while he was decoration, the Medale Militaire. operating a Between the time he defeated Clothing Caught the Germans at Verdun In 1916 HU 'clothing became caught In for which he was called the the chopper, and began pulling "Hero of Verdun and the days him into the Kennard he became the symbol of French braced himselfmachinery.the equipagainst defeat by collaborating with the ment, and managed to keep away Germans as head of Vichy, he was from the huge knives while every idolized by France. stitch of his clothing was chewed and ripped from his body.' When he was finally free of danger (after his clothing was all tom-off- .) he turned off the motor, and fell to the ground. Boyd Schiess and Fred Nelson, a brother and cousin, respectively, were trampHOLLYWOOD, July 23 (U.B ing hay in the silo, and when The film colonys biggest family is they heard the motor go off, they getting bigger. Investigated the reason, and saw Actress Maureen OSullivan Kennard .lying on the ground. gave birth to her seventh child, The attending physician reportan eight-poun- d daughter, at St. ed that no bones were broken Vincents hospital Saturday night during the mishap. Dies A Prisoner The Baf Opens HereTonight . i'4 actor-direct- or hay-chopp- FILM FAMILY NUMBERS SEVEN KIDDIES . ( I i h 't f J ! Ail V sir ; t |