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Show Range cloi grain uien o 233. 239', r:s1 ft ol? I j;f TTihiis IHIiBiiaMJiD' n.,.i ?44h 47. 245 ' 244 23S' 216 O 246; 240 Partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow with a lew light afternoon showers or thunderstorms mostly over and near the mouit tains. Slightly warmer. High to. day 79, low tonight 49. High to morrow 81. FIVE CENTS LOGAN. UTAH. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 1951 VOL. 42. NO. 205 Wellsville Invites All To President Signs New Defense funders' Day Celebration Housing Issue nai ' ' L, 1 5SU. of cele- - an excellent funding aiea- " icil othei ' WASHINGTON. Spent. 6 UB President Truman signed into law a catch-a- ll defense housing the past four years, continues to today bill whicr. stiarpiy reduces the declared. grow," they dawn payment required for purWe have revived the sham batcelebration. houses costing $12,000 or Our parades are gaining more tle between settlers and Indians, chasing less. and are conducting races for the The new law is aimed chiefly at youngsters. spurring a housing boom near Schedule of Events new and expanding defense plants Speaker for the public meeting, and military installations. For 11:30 a.m. In Wellsville tabernacle, that purpose, it authorizes a fedwill be Joseph B. Gunnell. There eral commitment of $l,835,0u0,000 will be musical numbeis and an including $1.500, 000, 000 worth of address of welcome by Mayor Lea- "liberal" mortgage insurance, tham. Down Iteyment is the softball A sports "special Effective immediately, the meagame between Wellsville, sure also lowers the down paychampions, and Montpelier. ment and lengthens the pay-oThat comes at 8 p.m. period that can be negotiated on Following is the complete schedpurchase of any house costing ule of events: $12,000 or less regardless of its 12:05 a n. Midnight dance in location. junior high gym. For example, a $12,000 house 10 a.m. Parade, with more than henceforth can be bought for a 34 floats. down payment of $2,400. That 11 a.m. Traditional sham battle compares with the $3,096 that has between Indians and pioneeis. been requiied since last fall under 11:30 Public meeting in tabercredit curbs nacle. imposed by fedeial authorities. 12 noon Dairy show opens; 0 A veteian buying the same There will be dances, a parade, Mayor William P. Leatham and sham battle, public meeting, dany Seth P. Leishman, general chairshow, picture shows and soft bad man joined today in inviting famiDay-f- urCache Valley games. Rides for the childien and lies of this sector to attend the Day wU1 be foundeis concessions, pro of faie- prominence every year, and the dairy show, a new feature during Unidentified Plane Drops Flares On Base UN Cease-Fir- e Allies Denounce Red Protest As Pure Fraud eh TOKYO, Sunday, Sept. 2 (UP An unidentified plane dropped flares over the United Nations e base In Korea advance cease-firlast night a few hours after the Allies denounced as a "fraud the latest Communist allegation that a UN plane bombed Kaesong. , The plane apparently flew In from the noitheast, from North Korea. It disappeared in the same direction. Hard To Identify Because of darkness It was Impossible to determine the type of the plane. In any event, even If It was a Communist craft the Allies were not expected to protest because the advance base is not a neutral one like Kaesong, lf V1 Henri Moser Is is the nglETO WELLS VI RLE Labor Day, and by city councilman pfcttOB extended rates Day executives. Front, left, is Seth general chairman; right, Melvin H. irishman, m, left to right; Standing, Archibald, secretary Mayor William P. Leatham, Ollie S. Elwood, Oliver S. Bailey, and Cl arles P. Stuart, council memb-- n, and Stanley S. Taken By Death; Jones, city recorder. best-know- ures, died Logan Moser, 74, one of Cache n public fignoon a. hospital of pleurisy-pneumoni- Meets PTA regional conference for Logan City and Cache County He ,t'hd been ill for about three will be 'conducted Wednesday, Sept." 5; at Logan Junior'higft weeks. Prof. Moser was born in Born, school, beginning at 2 p.m. Switzerland, Sept. 22, 1876. He Up and H rum LDS stakes to L. Mrs. A. of Theme the conference, Ripplinge. according induct quarteily conference was 11 years old when his family The be will PTA council, am this evening and Sunday. North Logan, president of the county came to America, settling first in Citizen Child His Needs in a Free World. :t Delbert Staplev, member Payson, Utah. He attended Utah e $e Council of Twelve, and Dr. John T. Wahilquist, UniverSlate Agricultural college, iJ C. Childs, cdiurch welfare Young college, and studied sity of Utah, will deliver a short ran. will attend Hyrum address on the subject, World art in Paris, France, for two will all at meetings, which work Citizenship. yrars. Department ela m Wellsv ille tabernacle, He taught at USAC and Branch will follow the brief general sesitfop LeGrand Pochards of the sion. college, then went Agricu'tural ah presiding bishopric is to Mated, Idaho, where he purAll county and city PTA presiat Logan stale sessions, chased a farm. After eight years, dents are asked to have represenanous meel- mowing are the he returned to Logan. tatives attend the following deHe married Aldina Wursten in partments: Hjruin Stake September 13, 1905. l.ngan health Presidents' department, wit: She survives, along with two and and secretary i : safety, progiam, ST. CHARLES presidency and Two deaths sens ana six daughters: Maicetl treasurer, publicity, magazine and from e councilmcn meet. occurred last night in Moser, Quincey, Calif; Truman polio ' room state bulletin, representaHa Welfare woikcrs con- St. Charles, a community of about Moser, Susanville, Calif.; Mrs. tives and publications, internation400 population, situated on the Maurine Hauck, Holtville, Calif.; i w. Priestliood leadership al relations. west shore of Bear Lake, between Mrs. Louise Benson, Pomona, PTA workers aie uiged to atEC Fish Haven and Paris. Calif.; Mrs. Ruth Walker, Port-lrntend this important conference, An A Jean Hirschi, gill, Ore.; Mrs. Delores Bostrom, lX ira. said. Mrs. P.ipplinger Stake piestdency, of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Turlock. Calif.; Mrs. Aldus Reeve, daughter direcEimalmen, bishoprics, heads Arrangements are under Hirschi, died at the Pocatello hosRiverside, Calif., and Mrs. Kathstarve auxiliaries, stake mis- - tion of Mrs. Lloyd N. Davis, Brig22 pital. Survivors include her parham City, legiona! director, as- ents, and five brothers and sisters. erine Myers, Turlock, Calif.; president, state missionaiies grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Mary sisted by Mis. Serge L. Bodroro, tgtadents of Seventy quartsParaljsis was in the throat. Gilen. Logan; and a brother, - fcsenible. Logan City Council president, The second death was that of a Et nest Moser, St. John, Ida. Lu and 2 p m. General Mrs. Ripplmger, Superintendents young wife and mother, Joleen Funeral services will be TuesLloyd M. Theuier and H. Grant Roberts Pugmire, 17, wife of 12 noon, in Logan Ninth day, iiiogtam, Vest. Vaughan Pugmire. Pai aly sis waid chapel, under direction of lJor(d by MIA in groups. struck her the spinal column. Lisbon Elvie W. Heaton. Friends Logan Stake She leaves her husband, an may call at the family home, 261 Nit: SEVEN daughter, her parents, East Fourth North, Monday evein council meets Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Roberts ning and Tuesday prior to funeral house REINSTATED of Fish Haven, one sister, and one sr vices. The family requests no Piicsthood leadeiship brother. flowe. s. X was It reported that epidemic Hat: Burial in Logan City cemetery conditions exist in Bear Lake will be under direction qf the NEW YORK,. Sept. 1 (U.PtA w. and 2 p in. General There have been nine Kenneth Lindquist mortuary. 3i list of seven cadets said to have county. rases of polio recently registered Prof Moser was recognized as Condudin g program, been reinstated at West Point was in the county, but the St. Charles Cache Valleys "pioneer artist. Erd by Mutual.' produced today at, a hearing on deaths have been the first During hir career, he signed a the ouster of 90 other men. One tote! of 1197 paintings, and also of the dismissed students said the has done innumerable minor seven were just as guilty of cheatsuch as water colors and pieces, ing as the rest. Miller sketches. Robert Daru, attorney who is He loved to paint pioneer unofficial the hearing, conducting srones, and mountain landscapes, did not disclose the seven names Of but was versatile with the brusn. it to on the list, but showed France, and r. dded his artistry to numerJfRAXCISCO, Sept. 1 UB George M. McCullough, 24, Siloam Ark., one of the dismissed Sept. 1 U.Pi Police charged a ous situations. Andrei CromyU ar-- . Springs, miller today with mantestified that cadets. McCullough fr a showdown battle Lm!i States over the he knew all seven and that all slaughter in the deaths of four were involved in the exchange of pet sons from ergot poinsoned peace treaty. bread. information on examinations. MEXICO CITY, Sept. 1 U.B his faand The miller, Maurice Maillet, alHe said he knows definitely that eie ,0 leave their Troops and police guarded the one of the seven is back at the legedly supplied flour for the fatal route President Miguel Aleman mal ain horlly be. loaves which also drove dozens of will take wted Slat-w- , today to deliver his fifth Austialia academy. Daru has said he has reliable other victims into violent hallu- state of the union message, on nd a defense ''sn information that all seven have cinations. Some 25 sufferers still watch for any new Communist r5sci1t,nlw a2grossion in been restored. are hospitalized. terrorism. VaL83''- mst. jtndud u Brig-ham- 2 Polio Deaths Reported In St. Charles d, 5 CADETS eight-month-o- ld igh AT WEST POINT Accused Bread Deaths Message tight-lippe- d vvast- Plepai mg a bulwark .stoning bat Me. It called V nfn thi C Sy ton,rence for ,h Palace hotel. Stale Ache-s- e f"r 'he UTAH MUNICIPAL LEAGUE TO ELECT OFFICERS AT ANNUAL SESSIONS CEDAR CITY, Utah, Sept. 1 Is the responsibility of public offilast dUB Speeches by Gov. J. Brackcials on the city level to bolster 'a 'hat the en Lee. Mayor Earl J. Glade of i a nationwide breakdown in gov- ri'v demon-ru,1 "11 vy Sait Lake City and election of hna!op' ,,,!,ly "ant office, will highlight the final ei mneiii imuoiii. na,lons m,rely of the three day Utah During one of the days meeta 1,rig in ways Municipal League convention here ings. a resolution was diafted nt asking the state legislature to tonight. u, Minn.. The 600 municipal officeis spent the authority of city offi hil ,fte most of yesterday studying in- - cialsover traffic control on state :Z hLVChrSP dividual problems before gather- - highways within city limits, s tii',8 n"t want to ing in general session to hear The matter was brought to a he can continue Executive Director Carl H. Chat- - head recently when the state road f,n hall "bile the ters of the American Municipal commission filed a court action to in another, Judd Association. j stop Murray City olticials from Chatters tpld the group that it opeiating a traffic semaphore impend-- K h hei se.-si- j loan guar- r where the interrupted talks have been held. , The plane flew in over the advance base and the nearby press train provided for correspondents at 10:30 P.M. (5:30 A.M. MST Saturday). From an altitude of about 2,000 feet the plane dropped about 12 flares which lighted the country- . Provisions Prof. Logan Ikes To a anteed by the veterans administration henceforth will be required to put only $960 down. VA has been requiring $1,896. Similarly, the pay-of- f period was generally llmrted to 20 years. It was the second time this summer that congtess has forced federal authorities to ease consumer credit. In extending price controls two months ago, congress relaxed installment buying terms on TV and radio sets and other items. Service Tuesday REGIONAL CONFERENCE veteran Henri artist and FOR P T A FOLKS Valleys at today in LDS IS SLATED WEDNESDAY Logan house under J W. 'm $12,-00- judging of open classes at 1:30 p.m. 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Movies at Wellsville theater. 6:30 p.m. Girls softball game, Wellsville First vs. Wellsville Second. 8 p.m. Mens softball game, Wellsville vs. Montpelier. 9:30 dance in junior high gym. t 'L! they maintain is needed to protect the safety of residents. In other action, city officials discussed the question uf oul-Indoor door salesmen to and ing solicitors by city ordnance. Assistant C; ty Attorney A. Pratt Kesler for Salt Lake City told league members that a recent decision by the U. S. supreme court upholds the right of cities to declare door to door salesmen a public nuisance. The league took no offiica! action on the matter. v, The new measure will allow as low as four GI housing costing down-paymen- ts side. The plane appeared less than hours after a UN spokesman said he believed a Red allegation that an Allied plnn Kae song Saturday morning was a fraud. The Reds alleged that the plane dropped two bombs near the residence of the Communist chief truce negotiator. Red Allegations The strange d of Red allegations, most of them obviously manufactured, increased belief here that Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme UN commander, may suggest that when and if cease-fir- e negotiations are resumed the meetings be held at a new site. There was an alternative suggestion that teams of UN and Red military policemen patrol Ue Kaesong neutral zone together. Along Bloody The denunciation of the latest Far to the northwest, 15 Ameri- Red as a bombing can sabre jets , ripped into 40 fraud was thecomplaint second time In Russian-bui- lt Mig-1- 5 fighters and 10 days tha the UN command had the Reds staged probably destroyed one of them suggested that in a hot dogfight. All fake raids on their own positions and tried to blame the Allies. sabrejets returned safely. The Communists showed U N Twelve superforts dumped 120 half-to- n bombs on the important liaison officers two craters in a millet field which g i ail road bridge across the River at Sunchon in the they said was only 500 to 600 North to slow the flow o Red re- yards from the residence of North Gen. Nam 11, head of the inforcements and supplies to the Korean Communist truce delegation. . front. A UN plane dropped the two But Allied officers said a fresh bombs at 1:30 A.M. today (8:30 Commynist division had been A.M. Friday MST), the Reds said. thrown into the eastern battle zone, apparently being pulled out of the Kaesong area to replace the heavy Communist losses. Allied infantrymen jumped off at dawn to carry the second round Grip-- A limited off- By of their ensive on the eastern and fronts Into its second day. They charged into Communist bunkers and trenches with fixed BONHAM, Tex., Sept. 1 (I'.? bayonets and a shower of hand Virus experts made a ho grenades while massed UN arstudy today of a record paintillery hurled a shattering bar- epidemic of Devils Gtip, rage of flame and steel ahead of ful malady which has struck more them. than 5 000 Bon ham-are- a residents, U. f. Public Health Service Near the east coast. UN wordoctois teamed with slate and ships joined the furious bombardment. loial physicians in studying too Most of the front was aflame vnnecedented outbreak, Trteir ? scene study was expected from the Sea of Japan coast Inland to the southeast approaches to last at least two more weeks. to Kumsong, big Communist base Dr, Joe A. Risxer estimated that 5.000 to 8,000 cases of the n 29 miles north of the 38th virus disease struck this north Texas region during August. He said the laregst previous outbreak reported was 286 cases. , "Sj far as we can determine, , $ their has been no substantial letMrs. Howard. SIlE'l L RUN WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 fU.D up In the epidemic," Risser setd. N. Pamment showed up at Inci eases ranging from nine to Devil's Grip Ls extremely painDtarhorn, Mich., City Hall in 50 per cent in Western Union ful but it seldom ls fatal. It larnt girl garb to file petition Telegraph Co. rates sent into ef- strikes swiftly, causing tempera-tuie- s iri flection for mayor. She imifect today, as high as 105 degrees and tates present mayor, Orville L. The Federal Communications bringing on severe abdominal feminine commission Hubbard, by using granted the price and chest pains. tetex ff of his reboost after finding no fault with Tteie have been no fata!iiis turn k "Im just a farm boy new late schedules filed by the here rnr few victims have needi myself." ed l espilal care, Risser said. company earlier this week. per cent on AWAIT ATTACK Watching and vaitlng for Indications of a less than $7,000; possible Communist major attack has become an Important part W'ould need 10 per cent. GI purNations mmyJ routine as a hattle nf perve rg chasers of home costing $7,000 to in the United and Toffyo. Hero nn observation team keeps in Peiping, Kaesong, $10,000 would need six per cent; over a North Koiean-hel- d valley. lookout a sharp 0 others would need 15. In the to $12,000 range, Gla would have to pay down eight per cent 20 per cent. and The extent to which buyers actually get these easier terms will depend on willingness of ' rtroYtgagTertdetr'1.o grartt thcTftJ'f-Ol- d houses sold under convential financing have been free of credit restrictions all along. 8TII ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Sept. 1 (U.P.) As for defense production areas, More than 1,000 screaming Communists slammed into attackthe measure is calculated to enforces in Eastern Korea today hut failed United Nations courage private buildeis to pro- ing front. vide needed new housing. If they to blunt the Allied drive along a A fresh North Korean division was thrown into the Comfail to provide it, the government can build up to $50,000,000 worth munist line to fill gaps blasted by UN air strikes, artillery $10,-00- 12 COMMUNIST ATTACK FAILS TO STOP merry-go-roun- HUGE ALLIED OPFELfSIVE 30-mi- le of public housing. ; Trouble Lies Ahead for Japan-Bel- ief Tae-don- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Sept. 1 (URt A United Nations economic report revealed today that defeated Japan is prospering far better than its victor neighbors, but that serious trouble lies ahead. The report, issued just a few days before opening of the Japanese treaty conference, warns that a budding shortage of raw materials vital to Japan's Industry soon may cause the boom to peter out. e The statistics crammed survey of the Far Eastern economy disclosed that, while the whole region is showing improve- Texas Area Struck east-centr- al Painful Sickness ment, Japan is fast outdistancing the other nations. From a nation that, five years ago, lay stunned under the impact of allied air and naval might, is is fast regaining its pre-wplace as the economic giant of the Orient. The danger for Japan is doubleheaded. 1. The United Stales, which has been a key supplier for Japan, may have to cut these raw material exports severly in order to satisfy the needs of its enormous pearmament progiam. ar 2. Communist China, on-th- little-know- denied Japanese goods in the wake of the Korean War, may deny Japan the materials vital for its iron and steel industries. Diesel Collides With Tanker; Two Are Killed NORWALK. Cal., Sept.. 11 fU.P An inferno fed by 4500 gallons of exploding gasoline killed a Santa Fe railroad engineer and his firemen lay near death' today after a collision with a stalled tanker. Walter W, Baer, 56, engineer of the diesel locomotive, was the only one of a crew of five who did not jump to saefty after the work train hit the trailer of a gasoline tanker, causing an explosion heard for miles, Fleming gasoline damaged the engine and destroyed the caboose It was pulling. The truck, which had stalled, leaving Its trailer1 on the tracks, was undamaged. The driver, Ralph E. Bennett, 39, Burbank. leaped to safety before the collision, Devils ld 534-pag- , .1 Rate Boost -- Expects 390 Deaths The national safefy council tothat .300 persons traffic accidents during the Labor Day weekend a millions of Americans left their homes to take advantage of the last holiday weekend of the summer. Except for the south and southwest, invigorating weather prevailed or was expected for most day nrpflieted would cjie it off to a slow start. Only seven traffic dv-t- hr itc icpoiied in the hours between 3 p.m. (MST) Friday and 3 a.m. (MST) today. The mass exodus in both directions city folks heading for the land several added special to accommodate the overt! The airlines, providing the means to cover long dist during the three-da- y holidaj I a land office business. All solidly booked" and many ported they were sold out wn open country and arriving for a look at the bright chance for lights began late yesterday. Wednesday. Bumper-to-bumpThe safety traffic choked highways leading in and out of that 40,000,090 of the nation. all hnetropolitan areas. Most rail- on the move The accidental death - toll got roads handled capacity crowds j until --Monday small-towne- er rs reservations council estin vehicles wou from Friday |