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Show t WASHINGTON NWS (Emmtg tI An Independent Newspaper Devoted To The Interests Of The People Ot Rich County and Lower Bear River Valley Volume FROM OUR CONGRESSMAN W. K. GRANGER 14 Number 25 Raodolph Utah. Friday July 4, 1941 MORE OPENINGS New Industry For Utah INTHECCC Speed Up Desired By Knudsen William S. Knudsen, director of the Office of Production Management, warned of possible danger to the United States if Germany should win a quick victory over Russia, and called for enormous speed in defense production. In regard to measures designed to speed defense production, Mr. Knudsen explained that establishment of the industry and .'Commodity sections serves to create a direct contact between the government and industry and will bring about greater centralization of defense activties, eliminating overlapping agen- Senator Harrison Honored The public and members of the House and Senate paid respects to the late Senator Pat Harrison as the body of the Senator lay in state in tie flower decked Senate chamber. The Senate adjourned within five minutes after meeting, out of respect to their former colleague. The only business transacted was the adoption of a resolution authorizing appointment' of a committee for the funeral. Vice President Wallace and a Senators and delegation of twenty-nin- e twenty-on- e Representatives accompanied the remains of the Senator to Gulfport, Mississippi. NYA To Train Boys For Defense In- dustries The National Youth Administration has been designated by the Office of Production Management as an official training agency for arms workers and on July 1st will begin to educate thousands of young persons for defense industries. The work defense program will be' in addition to the regular SUMMER HOME PROJECTS work experience program. Unset-uwill p work new the der youths On July 7 will begin a summer home 120 hours a month in certain shops of the NYA work experience centers, project program for all Rich County instead of 60 hours a month as former- girls. This plan is being tried out for in desired to make ly, and they will have to take 40 hours the first time, and it to girls. Suguseful and it montn. cf related training courses each interesting Their $22 a month pay will be increased gestions from the girls and their ' 1 mothers as to ways to best suit it to to $25. be welcomed. All girls will need Each boy will be trained no one mach- your to this work from the take are eligible in he actual until it ine Can operate and including high ninth through grade not he been has if and then industry, school graduates. Any type of work placed in a private job will be rotated in regular winter projects may taken up to machthe learn other shops through ines. NYA officials believe a youth can be carried out, or the girls may choose be trained to operate a machine m projects of special interest to them. three months. A field worker will be Projects will be carried out on a larger time may be devoted assigned to every work experience cen- scale since more an hour of credit since to and them, ter to place the boys where they are will be given when the work is comneeded. Former Rich County School Supt. Receives Doctor Degree Dr. Reuben D. Law, associate professor of elementary education and supervisor of the training schools, and former superintendent of the Rich County school district, was included in the second edition of "Leaders in Education which has just been issued by the Science Press. Dr. Frainlin S. Harris, president of the university and eight deans head the the list of nineteen B. Y. U. educators included in the volume. Based on a study of brit'hplaces of Leadpersons listed in "Whos Who, ers in Education," and American Men of Science, Professor Edward L. Thorndike, of the department of psychology at Columbia University rates Utah first in producing, in proportion, men and women of great ability. His report is filed with the American of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Law is at present in Los Angeles, California, where he will be awarded the degree of doctor of education by University of Southern California in commencement exercises Sunday. Who Will Be Princess Of Covered Wagon Days Salt Lake City Somewhere in Utah there is a beautiful and talented youngster, who will be not less than 12 years of age nor more than 14 on July 1, for whom there are great honors in store. She is the girl who will be chosen Princess of the Utah Covered Wagon Days celebration, July 21 to 26 at Salt Lake City. The girl must be Utah born, and the descendant through either parent of picneers who reached Utah before the coming of the railroad. What section or the state she lives in will have no bearing on her selection, S. O. Bennion, chairman of the Princess committee announced. All that is necessary to enter the Princess contest is to submit a picture, preferably black and white, wifh the following info$tion : - name, date of birth, address, telephone, place of birth, (Continued on Last Page) i world-renowne- New Zinc plant under construction at Tooele, Utah. Very little, If any, of its metallic life, as It meant that the operator resources are lost to the state of was paid for both lead and zinc. Utah. Now comes another development Paced with the necessity of treat-- ' Tnior'nnr'fnnQ t0n-hThe staV and lower grade ores. company has worked out a process? smelters of Utah have advanced to treat the old slag dump in metallurgy to a point that onlv a which the lost zinc of former years o the metallic connegligible part tent of the ores now flow to the was stored, thereby creating industry, payrolls and taxes upon a retailings pond. source that was formerly worthPrior to the early twenties, much less. of the zinc in ores of Utah was lost Coming at this time the new pro- in the smelting, processes and flow- - Cess Is important, as it will ed through the nlant and into the help todoubly furnish a much needed tailings pond. Not only did miners metal for national defense, lose tne zinc content of their ores. The International, which already they were penalized for It. pours annually into the channels of Naturally, t .:s ment much loss industry throughout Utah approxi-tthe operators and to the state, mately $20,000,000 in the form of cornEarly in the twenties, the smelt- - payrolls, supply ers met this situation with the struction, railroad purchases, freight, taxes, development of selective flotation, etc., will add substantially to Its At that time the mining indu-tr- y Utah operations with this was threatened with virtual extinc- - The plant for the recovery ofplant, the tlcn, as much of the higher grade zinc will cost approximately $300,-or-e had been mined and ( ily the 000.00 and is expected to be ready low grade sulphide ores for operation in the fall of 1941. found on deeper levels of the mine After its completion, the plant will was available. Selective flotation furnish steady employment for gave the Industry a new laase on about 35 men. ing-low- er lead-zin- c .VN4JF1 j I i Mrs. Grace Jasperson and children of Goshen, Utah, have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Arlo Weston are here spending part of the '"summer after being at Brigham, Utah, where Arlo was teaching school the past term. Fred J. Price of Paris, Idaho, met with the church welfare committee Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Dale Hatch of Randolph and Vernos Taylor of Logan were Sunday visitors at the J. W. Taylor home. Friday evening Raymond Webb and Miss Elaine Woffinden of Garden City were married in the Logan Temple. Mr. and Mrs. George N. Weston drove to Salt Lake Cty Friday afternoon to witness the marriage of their daughter, Mildred, to Stanley Reeves Plummer of Salt Lake City on Friday evening in the Salt Lake City Temple. Mildred will be missed in the Laketown ward where she rendered willing services as organist for some time. She has been employed at the State Capitol for the past one and a half years. Charles L. Alley and "Tommy Kanippe of Belleville, Illinois, paid a visit to Salt Lake City Monday. Ellis Straw of Montpelier, Idaho, was a town visitor Sunday JACKSON REUNION HELD AT OGDEN d pioneers. Still rated the big feature of the five-da- y festival are the rodeo shows that will be held in the starlit municipal stadium. Professional Cowboys standing within several points of each other for ratings with the Rodeo Association of America prices will contest for a prize pufse of $4000, in addition to o Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jackson of Randolph celebrated Fathers day with a family reunion at the home of their daughter in Hooper, Utah. The daughters and sons of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson are Mrs. Viona Jean Shelby of Ogden, Mrs. Reay Kennedy, Mrs. Oscar Ken- nedy. Mrs. Wayne Kennedy of Randolpn, Mrs. Alex Easton of Alameda, California, Mrs. C. T. Wilson of Hooper, Velo B. Len,' ' Elmo, Alton and Jim Jack-so- n of Randolph and Melvin Jackson of Eden, Utah. There are also thirty-seve- n grandchildren and thirteen great grandchildren in this Jackson family. Other guests at the Home of Mr. and Mrs C.. T. Wilson ' of Hooper for the Fathers Day dinner and reunion were MALE HELP WANTED Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilson,' parents of Wilson and Mrs. Mary A. Smith of Mr. STEADY WORK - GOOD PAY, RERandolph. Call to on WANTED LIABLE PERSON farmers in Rich County. No experience India First or capital required. Some making $100 The game of badminton was first in a week. Write MR. INMAN, 2423 played in India. Magnolia St., Oakland, California. . , outfit that played a star attraction at the 1940 Golden Gate exposition in California, four nights of rodeo, shows, street parades and a mammoth historical pageant, the Ogden Pioneer days celebraboasts the tion, to be held July greatest array of talent of any summer celebration this year in the intermountain country. The posse riders and their costly equipment will appear at the rodeo shows and in the street parades. The troupe is considered by many to equal the performances of the Royal Canadian mounted police when it comes to showy horses, brilliant maneuvering and general demonstration of the riding skills. The Trail Breakers, telling in pantomime and song the stirring story of conquering frontiers from the Atlantic to the Pacific seaboards, will be presented Sunday night, July 20, with a cast of thousands. This feature is to be presented as part of the Utah centennial celebraton in 1947 to acquaint visitors with the events leading up to the founding of the state by Mormon 20-2- 4, J There have been many requests for such a program and Rich County will be among the first to try it. The program is designed to meet such needs as helping girls with their problems in the summer, to help the girls find real interest in 'cooperating with their families in work and play, to create mo.'e interest in homemaking, and to carry out Home Economics work while the girls are at home where it can be put to practical use. During the period at least one big outing or trip will be arranged for, and social gatherings will also be encouraged. This work will not interfere with 4H club work; rather we will work n cooperation with the clubs. There will be no fees for taking the projects, except what is put out for working Group meetings will be arequipment. ranged if girls desire, but help will be given chiefly through vists to the homes which will be scheduled weekly and at convenience of each individual. Since I cannot arrange group meetings immediately, may I ask that each girl who would like to take a project, cr who would like to find out more about the work, send a post card to me in Randolph giving me directions for reaching her home, and suggesting the best time for a vist. Perhaps groups of girls in each town who are interested would like to meet at one home for the first time; if so, one Card could be sent for the group. Since time is so limited, please send replies promptly. I would like to meet the girls in Randolph who are interested Monday, July 7, from 1 p. m. to 3 p. m. at the high school. Girls may come any time dur- - OGDEN PIONEER Ogden, Utah Featuring the San Francisco sheriffs mounted posse, a $100,000 j pleted. Year In Advance DAYS CELEBRATION Again there are openings in the CCC From July I to July 20, local unmarried men between 17 and 23 years of age may enroll in the Civilian Conservation Corps. Men in Utah enrolling during this period will be assigned to Camps already established in Utah and will not be expected to leave the state. Young men who are interested may secure information from the- - Department of Public Welfare in your county, says James O. Stewart, Supervisor of the Cache National Forest at Logan. For the past eight' years the CCC has offered the way to get on in life to a number of young men who have tested and approved it. It offers a real opportunity for those who believe it themselves and are anxious to get but cannot get the necessary exThere are opporperience elsewhere. tunities fer experience and training in operation of tractors, trucks and many other types of large automotive equipment, also in the various projects being conducted by the camps, such as road building, carpentry, masonry, welding, landscaping or surveying. Many enroll-ee- s have received training in the CCC Camps which have assisted them in establishing themselves in jobs to their liking in private industry. In addtiion to the regular training Conducted in the camps there are additional classes being taught in radio, drafting and mechanics under the National Defense Program. cies. $ 1.50 Per commercial awards. Rodeos No. 1 announcer, Abe Lefton, and the funnymen of the business, Holmer Holcomb and Jasbo Flunkerson, are guarantees there will never be a duii moment. New specialty act' performers are Trixie McCormick, a leading feminine star of the sport, and William Jeffery and his traned cow horse "Chiquita. Other trick riders and ropers include Monte Montana and his riders, Dick Griffith, and Berenice Taylor. The celebration atmosphere will be kept going in the downtown district with two mammoth street parades, at least 35 floats, each depicting an outstanding event in the nations history between the arrival of Columbus and the early Nineteenth century, the period Covered by the pageantpro-ductio- n Carnival concessions and rides and special stunts sponsored by merchants are other attractions. top-fig- GARDEN CITY NEWS Royal Pope was a business visitor m Paris Monday afternoon. He visited in Fish Haven with his daughters, Mrs. Owen Stocks and Mrs. LaMont Pope. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lutz and Mrs Fred Lutz motored to Logan Monday to attend to business matters. Glen is moving to Logan where he will attend school. Mr. and Mrs. Boone Davis of Afton called for a brief visit at the home of Mr. Davis sister, Mrs. Sidney Lutz on Monday night. Del Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cook, left Tuesday for Ogden where he has obtained employment. Mrs. Mabel Wamsley and Mrs. Edna Wamsley visited in Paris Monday with Mrs. Charles Longhurst, Mrs. J. W. Cook and Mr. Bryson. Mr. and Mrs. Jerold Hansen and daughter, Veda, of Twin Falls, Idaho, visited with Mr. Hansens sister, Mr3. Byrna Dustin, last Wednesday. They were on their way home from a three weeks tour of California. The Primary organization held a parly ht Attend Graduation Exercises Of Dr. Lowell W. Kearl Dr. Kearl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kearl received, with honors, his degree of Doctor of Ostepathy from the Los Angeles college of Osteopatic Physician and Surgeons on June 12th. His graduation climaxed two years of pre-niedfi- ol tudy at the University of Utah and four years of medics at the Los Angeles college. The last twelve months he has been doing externe work at the Los Angeles County Hospital and immediately upon graduation, he entered upon a years interneship in the Monte Sano hospital, one of four candidates accepted among some sixty applicants. He expects to specialize in obstetrics. High spots in the commencement festivities were a breakfast at the historic Los Angeles Breakfast Club of radio fame honoring graduates and alumnae, and the awarding of the degrees under the stars in the Greek Theatre of Griffith Park. Guests of Dr. Kearl and his wife, in addition to his mother and sister, were Drs. V. B. and Maud P. Callison, parents of Mrs. Kearl and former raduates of the Osteopathic College, and Mrs. Cora Thorne Bird. Many in Laketown will remember Mrs. Bird as their school teacher when Lowell Kearl was a grade pupil. During their stay in Los Angeles, Mrs. Kearl and daughter visited many friends and relatives including Mr. and Mrs. George Wahlstrom and family of Downey. The Wahlstroms plan a reunion with their Rich County friends this summer. Wednesday afternoon. Outdoor games formed the entertainment and refreshments were served to the children. The 4H club girls'returned Wednesday from a short camping trip held in the St. Charles Canyon. Mrs .Gene Eastman and small daughter of Soda Springs are visiting for a short time with her mother, Mrs. Edith Whittington. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gibbons motored to Montpelier Wednesday on business. Mrs. Frank Jensen and Mrs. Ethel Cook shopped in Montpelier Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Woffinden announce the marriage of their daughter, Elaine, to Raymond Webb of The marriage was performed m the Logan Temple June 27. Both Mr. and Mrs. Webb are graduates of the North Rich High School. Mr. Webb has attended the U. S. A. C. for the past two years. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Pope made a business trip to Ogdon last Monday. Natalie Satterthwaite has moved :o Logan where she has obtained employment for the summer months. Mrs. Leah Dixon of Randolph and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dixon and daughters from the Budge hospital where she reof Gooding, Idaho,, visited recently at cently submitted to a major operation. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac WamsIvan Hildt, Robert Calder and Rusley. sell Hansen have returned to their Mrs. Hattie Findlay of Fish Haven homes after having spent the past severvisited Wedensday with her mother, al weeks working near Woodruff. Mrs. Maria Pope. Mrs. Jack Wallenzine and son, - Carl, Mrs. Augusta Bunderson and daugh- of Los Vegas, Nevada, are vsiting her ters of St.. Charles were Wednesday father, Mr. Theodore Hildt. Mrs. Russell Satterthwaite and Mrs. night guests of Mr. and Mrs. DeVerl Whittington. Jack Wallenzine were Sunday visitors Miss Edna Scofield returned Monday of Mrs. Lamont Pope at Fish Haven. Lake-tow- n. |