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Show SCHOOL CHILDREN TO GET PINT MILK DAILY LIONS VOTE AT MEET The welfare of the school children and advantageous legislation at the " present session of the State legislature legisla-ture were the consideration of the Lions at their meeting held Wednesday Wednes-day noon at the Union Pacific Dining room. M. J. Andrews, principal of the Mil-ford Mil-ford High School, proposed that the Lions Club sponsor a movement to supply the Milford school children-with children-with a pint of milk a day, as some of them show indication of being undernourished. under-nourished. The Lions approved his proposal and voted to support the project. pro-ject. Practical arrangements were discussed and it was decided that each student would be asked to contribute twenty-five cents a month toward the milk fund and that the Lions would raise the remainder of the money needed to purchase twenty gallons of milk a day. Nelson Makes Offer R. H. Nelson, manager of the local creamery, said that pasturizing equipment equip-ment would be installed in the creamery cream-ery and that pasturized milk would be furnished to the school at the lowest possible cost if the mlilk was gotten through the Milford creamery. Details of the project were turned over to the education committee consisting con-sisting of M. J. Andrews, Dr. C. R. Parrish and Harold Cline. To encourage scholarship in the schools and to create goodfellowship between the students and the business men of the town, it was proposed by Harold Cline that each month the high school boy having the highest scholarship record should be a guest of the Lions Club at the meetings of the club during the following month. This proposal was also voted favorably favor-ably by the members. Letters Proposed School business disposed of, Dr. C. R. Parrish suggested that a series of letters be sent out to the preidents of . civic clubs throughout the dairying sections of the state asking them to write to their representatives in Salt Lake urging them to propose a bill taxing substitutes for butter, thus creating protection for the dairying industry of the state. The proposal received a favorable vote from the members. After the disposal of some minor-business, minor-business, the meeting was adjourned until next week. R. E. Ellingsworth, vice president, presided in the absence of the president, L. A. Wynaught. |