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Show - 11 ,k, INTRODUCING OUR STAKE PRESIDENTS FOR CONTRIBUTORS' FILES , Select Most Effective Form Stake Leader Recalls To 'Play lip' Element Incidents of Healing Having selected the elements to be emphasized In the Salt Lake Federated Milk Producers and is president and has been for eight years of the Salt Lake Federated Milk Produeers, largest of grade A milk producers in Utah. He was married to Edna A PROMINENT DAIRYMAN President Holdaway also has Knudsen Marsh 8,1911 in the and farmer living within the seen the power of healing mani- Salt Lake Temple. They have shadow of the Geneva Steel fest on more than one occasion. four sons and a daughter and 14 'grandchildren. Company plant in Vineyard A boy, desperIle enjoys fishing and y ately ill of a brain malady and Ward is Pres. Walter IL no of Orem Stake. hope by doctors to given He has been engaged in live, recovered quickly followfarming most of his life, in- ing administration by President BIRTHDAY terrupting this work oily to Holdavray and another. lead, the correspondent should then decide which form of sentenée will be most effective in "playing up" the element selected. They Include: THE DIRECT STATEMENT. tl'his,is,the- - most common form of newspaper lead, atcd usually the most effective. It preservés terseness and summarizes the salient features hi a straightforward statement of fact For example: Elder John B. Matheson, former president of the Riverside Stake was named head of the East Central States Mission, according to an announcement by the First Presidency. THE CLAUSE LEAD. Clause or phrase leads are effective in giving emphasis to a feature which may be of equal importance with the "who" or "what." The most common form is illustrated in these examples: If the new chapel is to meet the needs of the community definite changes must he made to accommodate more classes Bishop Blank informed Church Because he took the wrong turn at the crossroads, Elder Smith found himself involved with the county law enforcement officials. THE SUBSTANTIVE CLAUSE LEAD is also effective In playing up the feature. For example: That the nen,- - M program will serve the hest interests of the youth of the Church is the opinion of the joint MIA committee now at work on ' plans for the new department. Although arrangements had already been made for the Boy Scout encampment In Aspen Grove, weather forecasts and poor condition of the reads made an indefinite postponement advisable. -- three-year:o- AITODiTMENT of two Important committees of the Deseret Sunday School Union is announced by the general superintendency. Carl-- J. it a - ,,,--- - STORIES OF THE BOOK OF MORMON , . MITI - , 1 NINE BY P MAUD PPR 5-1- 3 , 1 41k 1 , v- u.. ' Pksrit:K i '' ,, li and-Arizo- 2 111 i 1 I '' t, - 4 CIAJCI04. AM3 - , . ( elt 5.- , , 0. ir ar w, :- - S- I r- , ;:, rjr... 4,, t( C- -- , ..Ap , 47. " .. - .,'',--,- - - ,; - -- 1 . Tir4 (- iiA-4- 1 1 , k r 11 iwir - ailLA --- - I ,....--- - DA. . T.:-- i' )1 I - ) -, sunN us k, , ,, - .,..., -- ... d DESERET- - NEWS Week et Aril 2. 1950 ell 1 , , NOT )11g114:1T4 1 1 f L Jr,. i ba, - S004 - )4iir uS ALSO? 0.411-:5- ji t til "'KEY Ili; N .... l 4,- 131AINI It4IP SIKAWEOUS OtE miME I'LL, MANet rlyn:Nau0 - 1 - 1, - I: el 7S Ai frig- Ili. 4 - . , 41i ,. - MI6 -., ,,- - I 4 71 fi-.,- - : - MT 14, ' I -- Z SIANSI Wr AS A vormiESS Atao UST 1Sit . litVa. 4..t A3)Ttulnrk,,,..... 7 ,,,filv -- AtmA . "rocZtONTORS. II4E Pril14:liditi ; 1.7 4,.hre. - . , -- '$11'4 ,.. ,, ' d AvuLoc AN ,.7k,,,-----:.:--- VA-k- g -I- ! C41) - illiAil lill goo T. al P14 .,,,,,,. al -- 7' k,,,,, "A - 4X,,,s,- 4 fk. Vir-7--7-7,- 1 ' , ----- - i - ,), t- ,,, - .A rt.sq, Rilt,ttLA atm f 3 1v rdklfido0 :..4 Tilik 411111ig 7-- BEHoLD THE glESuLTS . OF Noun tAi3OPt N4 At4MONI- HAH Buft.:T .... - -- . - I , , , -- --- -- polptizA -- t t , Lat iffS ' .'A. ,40AL Ati ' - .- ,- .str :'-- CAI131SrS Vfa, '4' d P4 71irm liv7D 71te 111111'mk4i V )1 -- NIL IL6a4.3y... iti ... MO ALSO 'mart ac A &prier ci,, AA0 -- 144 CcAsr . sac Am,. sicteatzts shi -- satcycns Num wstEci cmcorms 1,4 - 'ALMA - ,..:12 ALL As ectoulED Hittlallt0,1 AL M' A TH1- iac c,,,,, - IMEMI11111111111 . settlement - is .,Clariste,nsenbchak-lim1951 convention the , - -- HE LATER ESTABLISHED the town of Huntsville, named from him, in Ogden Valley and then moved to New Oxford, now Downey, Ida. Members of the Hunt family from Utah, and others are ho, expected to attend the monumeat ceremonies. Descendants of the Hist bishop of Kanab, Levi 'W. Stewart, are cooperating with the traps association In ailing the tablet at the site of old Ft. Kenai). The first major group of settlers rived at what is now Kanab in seven wagons June 14, 1870. Ft. Kanab already had been established by Jacob Hamblin with several homes within the fort. On 'Dec. 14, 1870 a destructive fire razed one of the homes tary-Treasur- al committee, succeeding David Lawrence McKay, chairman of the 1950 committee. Ralph B. Keeler, Miss Florence S. Allen, Mrs. Marie Fox Felt, and Asa-h- e! D. Woodruff are additional committee members. Heading the curriculum correlation committee is Elder McKay, second assistant general superintendent. Other members are Elder Keeler and William E. Berrett. within the fort killing Mrs. Stewareandlive children. Among the many persons expected to attend the tablet unveiling in April will be Levi Stewart Udall, a justice of the Arizona State Supreme Court and a former president of St. Johns Stake, who Ian descendant of the first Kanab bishop. -- It Deseret Sunday School Names Two Committees rmon GREETINGS THE EDITORS of the Church Section extend birthday greetings during the 'coming week to the following officers of the Church: MARCH 31 Velma Hill. General Seem1 of the Primary Association. MARCH 21 Paul C. Child of the General Church Welfare Committee. Pres. Ernest A. Strong of the Kolob Stake. Pres. Cecil Broadbent of the Carbon Stake. North Pres. Vern R. Peel of the San Bernardino Stake. Walker of the Pres. James Taylor Stake. APRIL 2 La Rue C. Longden, Second Counselor in the General Presidency of the TWIG& Miriam Y. Farnsworth of the TVMIA-GenerBoard. JO .N ,11 Pres. William P. Whitaker of the Pocatello Stake. APRIL 2 CarLJ Christensen of - ths Sunday School General Board. Pres. J. Robert Price of the Central Atlantic States Mission. Pres. Wilford H. Payne of the I Seattle Stake. APRIL 4 ; Pres. George Albert Smith. - Pres Hugh C. Smith of the San Fernando Stake. APRIL 5 Pres. Joel Richards of the MINIM Northwestern States Mission. rims. Pres. Reuel E. Christensen of WALTER K. ROLDAWAY et Ore m Stake the South Sanpete Stake. FAITH-PROMOTIN- Monument To Honor Officer Battalion PLANS for s monument and a tabletone of them commemorating achievements of a principal officer of the Mormon Battalionhave been approved by the Utah Pioneer Trails and Landmarks Association, John D. Giles, erIrcutive secretary, annotmces. A tablet to be placed on an already-existin- g monument at Ft Kanab, Kanab, Utah, is to be affixed shortly after the April general conference of the Church. A monument at the grave of Capt. Jefferson Hunt of the -Mormon Battalkin, at Downey, Ida., is to be dedicated about the time of the next October semi - annual Church general conference. Captain Hunt commanded Company A of the battalion and was the ranking officer from among Church members. He made the complete march. After corning to Utah he guided Elders Amasa M. Lyman and Charles C. Rich of the Council of the Twelve in the journey to what is now San Bernardino, Calif., where they established a PRIESTHOOD QUORUM and the Mutual Improvement Association work also are close to President Hcgdaway's heart. He was ward superintendent of YMMIA. for ten years before becoming bishop of Vineyard Ward. Ile has been stake president since April 17, 1947. Walter R. Holdaway was born Nov. 25, 1889 at Provo, a son of Amos D. and Lydia Thrower Holdaway. He attended Provo Schools and Brigham Young University. PRESIDENT HOLDAWAY now Is a member of the Utah County Planning and Zoning Commission and is president of the Vineyard Dairy unit of the attend Brigham Young University. After leaving the BYU he served asassistant superintendent of Provo City waterworks a year and then returned to farming. G "SOME OF MY MOST experiences,'" Pres. Holdaway says, t'have been in work among adult members of the Aaronic Priesthood. "Only recently a young unmarried man who had been around in the world a good deal told me he found activity in the Church was giving him the greatest satisfaction of life. Previously he had taken little interest in religion. Now he is sending for his mother and brother residing in another state because he wants them to live in this community." Men-Glean- er Of-Famed-Mo- ld Hold-awa- - "- - I wrcsav,i' rloilirx .......,',oa....;', - . . -,-,-;,,,-- CHURCH , 1 , . '- - , go. -, , 1 , .. 64-....-A...,- a --10114- , . ' - - ' , reeritskt ap -if ' |