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Show I Gram Range High Mar , 2.58 May 2.57 2.49 July Sept 2.51 Low 2.5? ' 2.55' 'i' 2.47 2.53 2.48 2 2.4S' n, 2.49', VOL. 43, NO. 10 LOGAN, UTAH, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1952 Master Street FIVE R Plan For Crewmen Logan Explained Yields No Result At the public hearing this week, held for the purpose of considering a naster ,lreet plan for Logan City, moie than 100 citizens heard a discussion of the proposed SEATTLE U.I! The Coast Guaid said Saturday there was no doubt" the freighter Pennsylvania had sunk in the stormy North Pacific as the search for Jier 46 new men was intensified iouthcast of her last reported position. Debris Sighted Debris, mostly from her deck caigo including a hatch cover, plates, lumber and other wreckage was sighted by planes and the z program. Gunnar Rasmuson. chairman of 100-fo- right-of-wa- y; . DOWN' THE NILE WITH THESE John M. Goddaid, second from right, shows three mem-bei- s of Logan Knite and Fork Club the oar d in an historic expedition down and Kvak - LOGAN KNIFE AND FORK CLUBBERS FOLLOW HARROWING NILE VOYAGE long-rang- perty. . and Fork Club California in anthropology, had a Logan membeis last evening were im- refreshing presentation. pressed, fi.sr, with the graphic Admitting that he is a "born adventurer. he contended, howdescription of a Nile River expediin tion, and second, with the meaty ever, that his major objectives life have changed a bit lately. bits of philosophy sprinkled Looking fondly at his charming by the fiancee, he declared that rearing through his description lecturer, John M. Goddard. five children is rapidly gaining No heavy stuff last nrght, like: priority, as an objective, over "Will Russia attack Western Eu- such things as climbing high rope? or, "Should we have gone mountains or exploring long Knife City Engineer Ray Hugie gave all an explanation concernrng property involved, and stated that any citizen may chetfk with the engineer at any time, seeing how the proposals would affect his property. A majority of citizens present concurred that the idea of a master street plan is good, and that future planning should be continued. intend to City commissioners continue study of the proposed master street plan. They do not expect, to adopt such a plan yet, but are anxious to work with all property owners involved, and with all citizens interested. Owens emphasized that .Mayor who has questions conanyone cerning the proposed master street plan should consult with commissioners and Engineer Hugie. into Korea? Rather, a picturesque trip from the headwaters of the Nile to the : Swit-berlan- This Evening mild Continued temperatures were in store lor most of Utah and the Intermountain region over the weekend as a warm air mass moved into the area on southerly winds. However, forecasters predicted scattered snow showers for Utah and Idaho later Saturday and Sunday but no major storms were in sight. High temperatures were expected to range between 20 and 46 in Utah with a low range of five to 35 Saturday night. High temperatures in southern Idaho were expected to be 28 to 38 with, a low Saturday night of 0 to 20. in the Nearly all highways mountain west were reported open and safe for travel as higher temperatures broke up icy spots and aided road crews in dealing drifted areas. The 1952 University of Scouting the Smithfield, Logan, and Hyrum Districts will begin Monday, January 14th at the Stake Office, 27 East First North, 7:30 man; 'Five courses in Scout and Explorer leadership will be offered. This variety of approaches to better Scouting will be led by the combined leadership committees of the three above mentioned districts. Sherman Hansen, Logan chairman, will be in charge of the first session. Others who are helping to promote the courses are Heber Whiting. Council chair- - Cracked wares by talking. Didn't know that the cheapest and quickest way to sell anything from a gun to a farm is thru a Herald Journal Want Ad: Call 50. Robert chairman; p.m. 1 e- Discouragement is like t the more you feed it, the faster it grows. Defeat is not bitter of you dont swallow it. Civilizing Influence The closer the tribes in Africa are to civilization, the more greedy, the more mercenary and more amoral they are. "There is great peace of mihd gained by living close to nature." Man attains (he summit of his bto-b- he contends development when with nature." "Countries of the world need spiritual guidance and inspiration from the United States more than they need our material aid. Love is (he .lo.,Uie.jml-- 4 verse. When one is desperately ill, no matter what position the body is in, the soul is on its knees." R.N. two-wor- ( A. Egbert, M. Hyrum Jorgensen, Smithfield chairman; Clayton Clark, William Sigler, Merlend and Lowell Hansen, Anderson. Instructors Listed These men have recruited the more experienced boy and young men leaders in the area to be instructors. Willis McBride and Gwynn Barrett take the first session for Scoutmasters and assistants 'Wallace Parrish is instructor for the Explorer Adviser, Assistants, Committeemen and Junior Leaders. The Troop Committeemen will be led by Earl Hansen. Sterling Taylor will direct the study of the Commissioners. The leaders of the Smith-fiel- d District will supply- the direction for the Advanced Scoutmasters couise. This adds up to ttierfe being something for most every man or young man leader in Scouting. A fine method of recognizing those who complete any of the courses has been working out and l be presented a't the first meeting. - The practica' activity of leadership will be stressed in each course. Scoutmasters and Explorer Advisers, for example will have proven most successful in actual practice. These same men will be organized Into patrols and crews and thereby learn the Patrol Method c.f Democratic procedure through actual experiesce. j CAIRO (U.R Anglo-Egyptia- WASHINGTON (Ob Price officials said Saturday the renewed crackdown on meat packers may mean housewives will get more and better meat for their money this year. The Office of Price Stabilization announced Friday that court suits had been filed against eight packers, accusing them of paying more than $1,000,000 in g prices for live cattle. While the cases resulted from overcharges uncovered last fall, price officials hoped the court action fould nave the additional effect of keeping live cattle prices at or under ceiling levels during the coming months. In the past few weeks, cattle prices have generally been hovering near the ceilings this spring, as they did last year. When this happens, they said, wholesalers and retailers start upgrading meat, leaving fat and bones in when they are supposed to be trimmed out, and indulge thumb-on-th- e in other such scale practices to enable them to make profits on beef bought at prices. over-ceilin- fM Telephoto Betty Thomp- four-yea- over-ceili- Span- area. The convention will start at 1:30 p.m .on Friday. Feh. 15. Registration will commence at 11 a.m. Two meetings will be held on Saturday, starting tit 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. The morning meeting will be under the direction of the statewomens auxiliary with Mrs. Edna Ohlwiler in charge. P. Oliver Hansen of Spanish Fork, president, will preside at the other meetings A nationally prominent farm speaker will make the keynote address. General Manager Clyde C. Edmonds will make a complete report on 1951 activities In the ish ee Enterprise And An. Ac,t o f God 5th Air Force month. FALMOUTH, Unless your side Intends to delay and disrupt the negotiations, you should pay attention to the facts that the more you go down that track, the less able you will be able to return. Conflicting Yiev t Although the Reds from the start have refused to accept the UN demand for an armistice ban on airfield construction, they have made conflicting statements as to whether they actually intend to build any bases. The UN has spent the past two days trying to smoke out the Communist attitude. In another armistice subcommittee. the UN and Communist delegates spent 4, hours rehashing old arguments over the VN plan to let war pr isoners chtxise whether they shall be lepatriated. I thought they the Communists were stalling before, said the UN's Rear Admiral R. E. Libby, "but now I think they don't like it and won't accept it if they can get away with it. Disappointed In Truman Choice WASHINGTON (UR) Two Republican Senate investigators said Saturday President Truman Pocatello Death 1 j F-- U r. pick- ed the wrong housecleaner when he left It up to Attorney General J. Howard McGrath to sweep corruption out of the government. "This means there will be no Richard M. Nixon, a cleanup, member of the Senates permanent investigating committee, told a reporter. How can you ask McGrath to clean up McGrath? the Califor-n- it Republican asked. Sen. Karl E. Mundt, said he was disappointed at Mr. Trumans decision to leave the job to McGrath. will be a disapnointment to millions of Americans that the president has ghen up the idea of a bipartisan and investigation simply turned it over to the Department has had the opportunity to do this job for years and shows no more indication now of prosecuting high government officials than it has in the oast. McGrath, whose ouster has teen demanded by Republican critics ever since the nationwide tax scandals spread into his departd about ment, still was his new role. His aides said McGrath would reveal his plans fop a "vigorous cicanup next week. ,lt anti-aircra- ft ur a of Gqd." Rested after a long nights sleep, the heroic skipper walked In the bright morning sunshine to a lawyer's office. Surrounded by a little group of insurance underwriters and agents for the Isbrandtsen Shipping Line, owners of the Enterprise, Carlsen swore that the sinking was an act of God for which neither he nor his company could be held responsible. This is a legal formality in preparation for any Investigations of the loss of the ship and payment of insurance on it and its cargo. It is estimated here that the total value of the ship up to $5,000,000. this obstacle, the longer you are delaying armistice negotiations. 8th ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, U.R The 5th Air Force disclosed Saturday that it suffered its heaviest losses cf the FOCATELLO, (UJ9 An inquest Korean war 16 planes during was expected Saturday in the the past week. death of Manuel Garcia, Pocatello Three American Sabrejets were Chief of Detectives Guy Nelson shot down by Communist MIG-1- 5 reported. Examining doctois. Nelson said, jet fighters in air battles during the seven days ended Friday. reported that Garcia, who was found dead here Wednesday night, Red guns accountdied from a brain hemmorrhage. ed for the other 13 downed AmeriAcute alcoholism, a blow on the can planes-foShooting head or a rail may have aggraSlors. four 1 Mustangs, three vated this hemmoithage and 4 Thunderjets, one 6 light bi ought on a piemature death, bomber and one Marine they said. Coisair fighter-bombe- England . Capt Henrik Kurt Carlsen swore out a formal affidavit Saturday that the Flying Enterprise he tried so hard to save was sunk by an act KOREAN NEGOTIATIONS COLLAPSE TODAY ON TWO PROBLEMS j tight-hppe- Never before in the war has the 5th Air Foiee lost so many planes in a seven-da- y period. W ASHINGTON, That Sabrejets partly offset the rec- of tomobile engine ord loss by shooting down 32 P'nK,nK MIGs in comba,, fjve of them,! J RAY POND in octane ratings of gasoline sold Friday, but the enemy aircraft of allied at service stations last summer. cooperative. The convention will stajed out of range The Bureau of Mines reported be concluded with the annual guns. Saturday that octane ratings fell dinner and program at the Hotel to their lowest paint since the Out for further revenge, SabreUtah, Saturday evening, Feb. 16. Comwinter of 1949-5chiefly because Assisting Mr. Pond on the con- jets spotted almost 2(A) munist jets over northwest Korea of government restrictions on vention committee are; Mr. Hansen of Spanish Fork; H. O. Ber-re- tt Saturday and clashed with three lead which is used in making lead, a component of of Draper, Leon Forsgren of separate groups in brief dogfights tetra-ethwithout scoring any hits. Allied gasoline, and increasing demands Preston and Mrs. Ohlwiler of for aviation gasoline. losses, if any, were not given. " anti-aircra- ft yl J i newly-create- son-ila- Maj-Ge- LOSES BATTLE son of Atlanta, Ga., the beauty whose high spirits won the hearts of the nation, died r after a battle against cancer. She was courageous to the end. area and the t (NEA Tetephoto) BrilJsh Prime Minister Winston Churchill (right) is greeted by his old friend, Bernard Baruch, upon arrival in New York from Washington. Churchill will spend two days as Baruch's guest. Between them is Churchills Christo- pher Soames, who arrived by air from London with a secret parcel for the prime minister. slightly. A company of paratroopers was sent to search the house from which the fire came. The mine exploded on a railway track at the' village of Tel El Kebir. In addition to one soldier PANMUNJOM, Korea (U.R reported killed, three were believ- Korean armistice negotiations boged to have been injured. ged down completely Saturday on the twin questions of military airfield construction and voluntary repatriation of war prisoners. The Army WASHINGTON, The Communists told United Naand Marine Corps have set their March draft calls at a total of tions delegates they woie just wastime in trying to gel the 28,600 men, nearly 50 per cent ting their below their February demands. Reds to say whether they intend The Marines also cut their Feb- to builda airfields in North Korea truce. ruary draft call from 14,000 to during 11,500 men. The reduction was I do not know what your side possible, the Corps said, because is going to do," said Chinese of increa ed volunteers and a Hsieh Fang, but I must tell shortage of housing for recruits. you that the longer you insist on In the March draft call, the Aimy will take 20.000 men and the Marines 8.600. The Army will take about 41,000 draftees next fhlEA er long-press- OLD FRIENDS MEET Draft Calls Provo-Heb- ur n " fighting erupted In the-- troubled Suez Canal 2kne Saturday and a mine explosion was reported to have killed one British soldier. United Press Staff Correspondent Peter Webb reported from that Egyptian guerrillas were fighting British soldiers of the Guards Brigade and a Scottish Highland regiment there. Other Egyptians were said to have fired on a Royal Air Force convoy forming at the village of Abu Seir. One driver was wounded Loses 16 Utah Poultry And Farmers Cracks Down On Cooperative Sets Annual Confab Planes In Week Meat Packers A. Gioss Trouble Flares We The 29th annual convention of the Utah Poultry and Farmers Cooperative will be held at the Hotel Utah, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 15 and 16, according to H. Ray Pond of Richmond, chairman for 1952., Farmers and poultrymen from all parts of Utah and southern Idaho will make the .jaunt to Salt Lake City for the annual New officers will be elected an dthree directors will be terms. The named for two-yedirectors will be chosen from the Payson area, the American fork- - United States Delegate Ernest piomptly told the comY. mittee that his country certainly ishinsky. He said that Russia now has would not sit up all night laughdropped its objects to continuing ing" at the new Soviet proposaL St udy Promised atomic inspection so long as the Gtoss said the United States inspection machinery dies not interfere in the internal affair of would study the proposal carefully to see if it represented an advance states. in the situation, and If it did, would welcome it. Vishinsky offered the proposal two-hoat tne end of a speech. The Soviet leader proposad a June 1, 1952, time limit for drafting of treaties embodying his new formula for banning the atom bomb when a continuing control sstem is declared fully operative. Up to now Russia has demanded an Immediate ban on the bomb. Russia has opposed the United. States plan for free inspection of atomic facilities before any in- - ' ternationai control is instituted. A Buildup Vishinsky built up his announcement by saying that the Soviet demand for an atom bomb ban had failed of adoption mainly because of the West's objection against any ban as long as a control system was not fully working. Gross suggested that the Russians should have made their prod posal before the United Nations disarmament commission, wliich will begin work here within the next four weeks. Earlier in the day the UN General Assembly overwhelmed Soviet opposition and approved veto-frmachinery to cope with any future "Koreas. The vote wia 51 . 5 to with three abstentions. The assembly also voted .7 to 0 with two abstentions in favor cf a high-levmeeting of the UN Security Council on cold wet issues when the time seems right. tiuns main political committee by Soviet Foreign Minister Andiei el Anglo-Egyptia- n were told that we would never make the trip alive. It was through the grace of God that we survived." Then, he told of such things as shooting rapids, and being spilled in the process; attacks of dysentery and malaria: losing of heavy weapons and valuable film and tAE4 Telephoto) cameras; running a "picket line COTTON QUEEN -- The eyes of of hippos, and seeing 6,000 eleTexas (and others) are on Patriphants; heat as intense as a fiery cia Ann Mullcrkey (above) of fog; attacks by Arab bandits, and so on. Southern Dallas. The Some of the hardships were so Methodist University student wa& intense that the telling of them selected as the 1952 Maid of Cotleft many listeners virtually exton in Memphis, Tenn. hausted. Interspersing the narrative of his trip were such philosophical asides as: We lived each day of the trip fully optimistic; we lived each day as if it were out last. On Atomic Controls olive-colore- d Nile ers," Mr Goddard explained. J 0 had always defied penetration clear to its headwat- for he could sell all his j CENTS PARIS (U'.R Russia suddenly altered its atomic position Saturday by pioposir.g that a complete control system be pul into operation before the atom bomb is banned. The proposal, which at first was glance Stone-tow- n apptaied Canadian weather frigate Na- 24 miles southeast of wheie announced before the United the ship was thought to have sunk. LL Com.dr. F. II. Salmcla, the duty officer at Seattle Coast Guard headquarters, said the winds and current prevailing since (the Pennsylvania was last heard ft 4:40 p. m. Wednesday would liuve carried the debris to the new position. It is assumed from the circumstantial evidence we have had fiom the debris that the PennsylSalmela said. vania has sunken. ' We dont think there is any The debus doubt about that. sighted by the Stonetown is the some as might be carried on the decks of the Pennsylvania. Oil Sliijc The Coast Guard cutter Klamath reported that aircraft taking pint in the sen- h of the grey and st i my vvatcis sighted an oil slick and drums with yellow ends in approximately the same position. But there was no trace what-evQ of the four lifeboats in which the men of he stricken freighter wcie thought to have abandoned d radio ship after the message, leaving now," was sent Wednesday. Planes and .ships of the rescue team covered an area of 10,800 square miles Friday. ('lose Escapes "The SCOUTING UNIVERSITY WILL BEIGN MONDAY thought Quite an Experience n Expected Conversationist rivet s. some 8,000 Mediterranean sea Mr. Coddard has a colorful miles by foot and by kayak. in the. field, of adbackground Utah-borMr. Goddard, a young venture, mountain climbing and man who took his schooling in He has scaled Los.Vngeles, and, received a de- exploration.Matterhorn-- , MteriSvefest gree from University of Southern and other important peaks; he has explored the Yucatan, Guatemala and the Nicaraguan jungle. But his epochal undertaking was riding the Nile, from the very headwaters, to the Mediterranean. With two Frenchmen he made the hazardous, historic trip, completing it July 17, 1951. In charge of the Knife and Fork meeting was President M. C. Harris, while the speaker was introduced by Russell S. Hanson. Years ago as a boy, John was a friend of the Hanson family, and did a bit of "exploration" in the Logan Canyon area. Some Snow ; the Nile river. Left to right: Russell S. Hanson, who introduced the speaker Attorney M. C. Harris, club presioent, Mr. Goddard and Ernest R. Lee, secretaiy of Logan Knife and Fork elub. Cloudy Saturday night and Sun day with snow Sunday. Cooler Sunday. High Saturday 40. Low Saturday night 28 at Logan and 02 at Provo. High Sunday 35. Russians Suddenly Change Position Search For 46 Logan zoning commission, introduced the purpose of the meeting, held in Cache chamber of commerce. Mayor William W. Owens presided. Ernest Henderson, who has been zoning director, explained objects es of the street plan, and its need. He discussed major streets and collective streets. Major changes specify Tenth North Street, from Sixth West to Tenth East, as a Sixth East street, from lower Canyon Road to First South, widening of the road; Second North Stieet, from Eifth East to Cioekett Ave widening; Eighth North Street, from Main to Second East, necessity for widening. "Entire puipose of this program is to afford better access roads, and reduce traffic hazards," Mr. Henderson said. "There is considerable private property involved in each of the improvements." Commissioners asked responses from property holders involved, who wanted to know if there would he compensation for property released. Invited To Check Officials stated that this is a e program, and naturally owners would be compensated for any transfer of pro- The Weather Id Journal. Close 2.58' Stalin Ailing? AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands A Dutch newspaper said Fri- day that Soviet Premier Josef Stalin underwent a heait muscle operation last Dec. 19. The liberal Rotterdam newspaper N i e u w e Rotterdamsche Courant In a dispatch from its Berlin correspondent said Stalin was operated on two days before his 72nd birthday. (tR A |