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Show Three See Service In Korean War A son, an adopted son and a son-in-law of Mrs. M. M. Ras-mussen Ras-mussen of Cedar are now stationed station-ed in Japan and Korea with the armed forces, according to word received from Mrs. Rasmussen. The son, Lt. Truit O. Morrell, Is now based in Japan flying longe-range Navy bombers. Lt. Morrell entered the Navy in 1941, and during World War II was awarded the Distinguished Fly-ing Fly-ing Cross and the Presidential Citation. He was sent to Japan in June. M. Sgt. Glen T. Geraghty, Mrs. Rasmussen's son-in-law, is a radar ra-dar man with the Army and is now stationed in Japan. Mr. Ger-aghty's Ger-aghty's wife and two small children child-ren are now living in Cedar City with her mother. Roldro Turner, an adopted son, is a Navy Radar man, and is now somewhere in Korea. Bishop Leo Larson of the Cedar Fourth ward announces that during dur-ing the past month the ward has had trouble protecting its flock of chickens from thieves. The chickens, grown as a part of the Ward welfare program, have been kept in coops near the stake welfare building, and on three different occasions the coops have been raided. Each time a limited number of chickens have been stolen, but the three sorties have made the loss rather heavy. |