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Show THURSDAY.. OCT. Newspaper Returns After By Theoda Downs Chairman, Historical Heritage Society of Smilhfield The Citizen being published for the first time today in Smithfield, is the first newspaper to be published here since the closing of the old Smithfield Sentinel after more than 40 years service to the community. Henrichsen Printing where the last edition of the Sentinel was published 23 years ago, is the printing firm printing the Citizen today. The building has changed within the past two years. Henrichsens shop moved into new quarters built approximately four rods west of the original spot where the Sentinel had its beginning Dec. 13, 1907. Dennis Watkins has taken over the shop from Henrichsen, who is now retired, but who still comes to lend a hand when needed. John William Harry established the weekly newspaper "which was known as the Sentinel. He had worked for Years Twenty-Thre- e Presidency Changed In Ward Primary three years in a printing plant as an apprentice m his native land of Switzerland. Coming to Logan with his parents at the age of 18, Harry worked with his father on the railroad prior to securing employment in the shop of the newspaper known as me Logan Nation. A few years later Harry established a weekly newspaper in Rexburg, Ida. In 1903 he moved to Rigby where he established the Rigby Star. Back in Logan, Harry worked for sometime for the Logan Republican before moving to Smithfield where he established the Sentinel. Hv Judv Allen HYDK PARK FIRST was reorganized recently with Mary Lee Lowe sustained as president, Bobbie Thurgood as first assistant and Pat Chec-kett- s as second assistant. Hyde Park ward Mutual Marrieds met Oct. 13. A discussion was held under the direction of leaders, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Waite, on a man's and a woman's role in marriage and what they can do together to make their marriage a Lewiston News Couple Returns From Portland Hv Kinerett Wiser Mr. and Mrs. l.KWISTON' A. W. Hyde have returned to their home in Lewiston from spending two weeks in Portland Scottish Woman Visits Cache Valley Bothell, Wash., for the next few weeks. Miss FOURTH WARD Mr. and Mrs. Roger Swaner Jardine Cogbill of East Killride, recently attended the funeral of Sc .land, and former student of Mr. Swaners brother-in-laDavid Parkinson, who is now a Owen J. Bartoc of Orem. The member of our ward, visited for burial was in the Ogden city a few days with them last week. cemetery. She also visited other friends in Misses Marilyn Gutke and Utah and Idaho. The highlight Christie Lower, members of the of her visit was to be able to Sounds of Zions chorus at attend the last session of USU, sang for the authorities of general conference in the Tab- the LDS Church at a banquet ernacle. She will soon be and social evening a few nights returning to her home in following the general conferScotland. The Parkinson family ence in Salt Lake City. They say has been in Scotland for the past it was a three years where Mr. Parkinexperience. Marilyn is the son was supervisor of the Home daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Study Seminary and Institute Harold Gutke and Christie is the program. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Mrs. Anna Wickham is visit- Lower. Nancy Budge and Karen ing her son Reed and family in Manning of Third ward are also success. A pot luck dinner was served to those attending Elder Preston Ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Ward, returned home Oct. 15 from (treat Britain where he served for two years as a missionary. Hyde Park Lion's dinner meeting was held Oct. 19 at the Loft House cafe. The program was presented by Austin Fife, who represented the Sons of the Pioneers singers. David Lowe entered the Uigan LDS Hospital Oct. 17 for He an operation on his Wn - Hyde Park ward Primary presidency Just 50 days short of 65 years since the first newspaper presses rolled in Smithfield, the presses are rolling again, bringing another newspaper to its people. The Sentinels life span was 42 years. The Citizen of Smithfield begins its life today, and only time will permit the counting of its life span. Harriet Noble Pnrl First Wars! Hyd Smithfield Fourth Ward By members of this group. Julie Downs of the Second ward is their accompanist. Mr. and Mrs. John Merkley are happy over the arrival of another son, born on Oct. 13. He will be named Kenneth. He has one sister and two brothers. Mr. and Mrs. Kaye Burgess of Provo were here last week to attend the homecoming of their brother, Richard, from the mission field. Mrs. Burgesss parents are Mr. and Mrs. John Thornton. Cyril Leddingham is convalescing at home after spending several days in the hospital in Logan. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Johnson has as their house guests this week their son, L. Val Johnson and family of Dundee, Ore. The Johnsons dan to make their new home in Benson Ward. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hymas had as their guests last week their sister and brother, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hymas of Lomita, Calif. Delbert Hanson spent two weeks recently in Portland, Ore., at a Soil Conservation Service training session. Miss Diane Searle of Salt Lake City has spent the past week visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Vera Roskelley. Larry Grunig, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grunig, has returned from serving in the Manitoba-Minnesot- a mission. At the time of his release he was laboring in Winnipeg, Canada. During the past few months, Elder Frunig has been serving as assistant to the mission president. Mr. and Mrs. Grunig and children, Mike and Gayle, and Miss Janet Larkin were at the airport in Salt Lake to meet him. Randy Hanson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Hanson, was chosen from this area to represent Explorer Post 150, and the State of Utah, at the National Road Rally in Detroit on Oct. He and Randy Southard of River Heights were placed 20th in the two-da- y rally sponsored by Ford Mercury Co. 4-- 8. . inii,il';uill, I 26, 1972 On Oct. 15 at sacrament meeting, two missionaries were the speakers. They were Meri-din- e Hanson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Hanson, and Richard Thornton, son of Mr and Mrs. John Thornton. Miss Hanson has been called to serve in the French mission. She entered the mission home on Oct. 21 and left for Provo on Oct. 26 where she will spend three months in the Language School. Elder Thornton labored in the Kansas-Missoumission with headquarters in Independence, Mo. Meridine has a brother, DellLoy, who is serving in the Spanish mission. They plan to meet sometime before returning home. ri Out of town visitors for Meridine's farewell included her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Hebier McArthur, Mr. and Mrs. Dean McArthur, Jan Jensen of Lovell, Wyo., Mr. and Mrs. Theron Wiser and family and the Watts family of Salt Lake City. 11,1. PAUL HARVEY NEWS Party Of The Third Part visiting with their families, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hyde and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knowles. Stanley is a son and Mrs. Knowles is their daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Rogers of Lewiston and their daughter Mrs. Nola Cole of Roy attended the funeral of Loren Roberts, brother-in-lato Mrs. Rogers in Etna, Wyo., on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Day of Cove have purchased and moved into the home formerly owned by Bert Orchard in Lewiston. Mrs. Anona Talbot, accompanied by her grandidaughter Dixie Baird, a student at USU, spent the weekend in Boise visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Baird, parents of Dixie, and with a son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Talbot. Mrs. Emerett Wiser accompanied them and visited at the home of a brother and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Z. Reed Millar. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. W estover have returned to their home in Lewiston from Davis, Calif., where they were guests of their son and his wife, Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Westover. While there they attended the world series baseball games at Oakland. Mrs. Sherrie Cunningham and four children of Woods Cross, Ut., are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Merle Cunningham. Mr. and Mrs. H. Fay Bern-hisattended the wedding and reception in Salt Lake City on Monday of their granddaughter Suzanne Bernhisel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ted Bernhizel and Daniel Allred, both of Salt Lake City. The Jeanette Brinkerhoff Leavitt Camp of the DUP met on Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. LeRoy Jones in Lewiston with Marie Bernhisel, vice captain, conducting the meeting. Mrs. Bernhisel was elected to the position of captain to take the place of the late Mrs. Eva Pond. Mrs. Julia Rogers gave the history of Jesse Hobson and Mrs. Jones gave an was released Oct. 22. A baby boy was born Oct. 20 at Iigan LDS Hospital to Mark and Judy Daines. He is welcomed at home by a brother, Paul. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl Daines of Hyde Park and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Seamons of Logan. Mrs. Linda Lundberg and her daughter Crystal visited Sunday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Davis. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Dciuil Lamb met Sunday at the home of their parents for a dinner to honor their father on his birthday. Those attending were Donna and Lionel Benson and family of Bountiful, Rebecca and Joseph Koeven and family of Tooele, and Lois and Russel Reeder and family of Hyde Park. Home storage items for Hyde Park ward during November interesting review of the organ- are salt, baking powder, baking ization of Pioneer Sunday soda and yeast. were Schools. Refreshments Mr. and Mrs. Roger Douglas served by hostesses Loretta were guests Sunday at the home Blair and Mrs. LeRoy Jones to of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. 17 members. Raymond Douglas. w el By PAUL HARVEY RE-ELE- SENATOR REED BULLEN EXPERIENCE COUNTS I WANT SOMETHING DIFFERENT? There is a third party in this presidential race and presidential candidate John G. Schmitz protests that the news media has been ignoring him. My phone rang. A man of means whose name youd recognize said, "Weve got to dethrone Nixon. I said, Why? He said, Because hes sold out to the Commies. I said, How are you going to defeat him? With John He said, Schmitz. I confess I had almost forgot; there is a party of tne third part in this presidential race, on the ballot in at least 30 states. John Schmitz, nominee of whats left of Gov. George Wallace's American Party, is consistent in his convictions. If this is to his credit as a California congressman, it is to his disadvantage when it comes to capturing headlines. How many times can it be repeated that his platform opposes busing, favors a military draft, opposes trade with Communist countries. He wants to end the Vietnamese war by winning it militarily. Recently, in a brave try at capturing some spotlight, he insisted that the Wallace shooting was a conspiracy involving But the allegation died of malnutrition. Of all the recent generations who have rallied to the political extremes, left and right, today's appears less dangerous than did yesterdays. Yesterdays superpatriot the right demanded that kill all Commies." day's radical on the left wanted to smash the Establishment. Today there is so much less political paranoia that organizations and publications which have supported themselves on dissent, left and right, are floundering for issues. President Nixon, soliciting broad-bas- e support in Congress and in the hustings, has, as his party slogan says, brought us together. When John Schmitz challenges the White House to cut welfare, reduce taxes, restrict the prerogatives of the courts, he is reiterating the things President Nixon tried to do and could not do while the opposition was in control of the Congress. An observer has to see John Schmitz as a stand-i- n for George Wallace and can only imagine how different the campaign might have been others." YOUR NAPA on we Yester- otherwise. Would Wallace, campaigning now, arouse a significantly greater response? z THE RIGHT JOBBER PLACE TO IS GO GUNNELL AUTO PARTS 127 NORTH MAIN KIRK PHOTOGRAPHY "EVERY ALBUM A SURPRISE" SMITHFIELD, UTAH 563-314- 5 CREATIVE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY HEADQUARTERS FOR PARTS AND 563 - 5150 AUTOMOBILES, TRUCKS, ACCESSORIES -- TRACTORS - FARM EQUIPMENT Doubtless. But the inescapable plight of the far right is even more hopeless than the utopian quest of the far left. For where the latter wants heaven on earth, the former wants the status to remain quo. If either is desirable, neither is attainable. So the practicalities of modern politics lead us right back to the prescription of the Delphic oracle: Nothing too much. USU TOP DOG REED-O'- S Calendar SPECIAL CHEESEBURGERS g Nov. 2 National Players Co., As You Like It" - Shakespeare - USU Fine Arts Center, 8 p.m. Nov. 3: National Players Co., The Birds - Aristophanes - USU Fine Arts Center. 8 p.m. Nov. 4: Football, USU vs Idaho, USU Stadium, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 7: Smetana Quartet, 8 p.m. Nov. 9: Rhythm R h a USU Fine Arts Center, 8 p.m. Nov. 10: London Philharmonic Orchestra, USU Spectrum, 8 p.m. Nov. ll: Football, USU vs University of Utah, (homecoming) USU Stadium. 1:30 p.m. Nov. 18: Football. USU vs Southern Mississippi. USU Stadium, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 18: Concert, Stephen Stills, USU Spectrum, 8 p.m. Nov. 19 - Dec. 8: Alliance for Visual Arts Photography Show, USU Fine Arts Gallery. Nov. 21: Utah Symphony Orchestra, USU Fine Arts Center, 8 p.m. Nov. 23: Football, USU vs Weber State, (Thanksgiving) USU Stadium, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 24: Basketball, USU vs Colorado State, USU Spectrum, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 25: Basketball, USU vs Indiana State, USU Spectrum, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 29: Theatre ProducThe Brown Pelican," tion, I'SU Fine Arts Center. Nov. 30: Utah State University Orchestra with guest artist, USU Fine Arts Center, 8 p.m. USU Fine Arts Center, for 340 C0 co $ KNOWN FOR BETTER PRINTING KEITH W. WATKINS AND SONS, INC. CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST LUCK WITH YOUR NEW LOCATION PHONE 752-523- 5 |