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Show Jav. October 9, 1941 THE MURRAY EAGLE News From j Murray Schools School Jlaine ..Af Success results of the girls I Z- mas-- 1 very interesting. There a great success. ur nf nnaint and I tarate costumes among teachwere j- P U and PuPils- - L and dancing, followed by tshments. A number of the 1 wore their hair in braids, a new style the '.jch created 'Mine day. It was reported everyone had a nice time, we hope to nave anomer one I :jt Hawkins. L-Shirley 9-- F. nmw giaue direction of Miss their art teacher, U making clever dook ends, kv all made designs on a piece t paper and copied it on the Cmd and carved it out. Then will shellac it and put pum-- L Fairciuugns under the Williams, on it. are all stone They very eager to try ' project, and we are they will all turn out 3 new ,ile sure tautifully. Ruth Iwata, 0-- 0. 9-- Blaine Cleanup Day Blaine's cleanup day was a great success. Our yard locks much better than it ever has, and every junior high student did his share. After the cleaning up we had a watermelon bust. Everyone had his share and enjoyed the bust. Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at the Blaine auditorium there was presented an assembly program by Mr. Glen L. Morris. He is a "man of science." The students in the lower grades had to pay admission, but the junior high students, who have student body cards', got in free. Eva Matsuda, Pep Club Organized The ninth grade girls of Blaine junior high are organizing a Pep club. The purpose of this club is to put more pep and vigor in the students and make them more active in all activities, such as dances, parties, basket ball and football games. A meeting will be held Monday at four o'clock to vote on the president, vice president, secretary and treasurer. Cheer leaders are to be nominated out of a committee to lead a team. Their uniforms will be red and white, which are the school colors. Shirley Spath, 9-- F. Bonnyview School Flower and Pet Show Success The flower and pet show was a great success. There were also a number of the girls who brought their doll collections. We had four long tables covered with dolls of all kinds and sizes. There was an unusually large turnout ' of parents. 9-- F. . . " Present Demonstration Clinton Larson, president of the visual education department of the U.E.A. is presenting a demonstration on "Visual Method of Presenting U. S. History." The project will be presented by a group of Blaine seventh grade boys and girls. the . . Courfeous Wait! . . . Don't throw that old clock away! Iking it in Prompt and we'll make it run like new! Efficient Eldridge Service Buy Ride Jewelers Our Weetly Pass Cards! Guaranteed 5 Watch Repairing L MAINSPRINGS REPLACED For as Low as $1.00 5 4900 South State 2 "A SAVINGS TO YOU" The Happy Meeting Point for Fine Fellows HEIDELBERG Beer Parlor 1 A A A Lincoln School Pupils Join Red Cross The sixth grade of room 1 has 100 per cent membership in the Junior Red Cross. We have our Red Cross club meeting every Friday. Mrs. Ogden is teaching us to knit. We are also going to make towels and handkerchiefs. In our English class, we composed a Red Cross club song to sing at our meetings. We sing it to the tune of "Springtime in the Rockies," Red Cross Song We're the busy knights of Cross, And we're trying to improve our work, By our little acts of service. We will help our U.S.A. When we have our Red Cross meetings, We'll have play when work is done, Then we'll act like grown up people, While we knit for homeless ones. In our nature class we ha"? been studying about trees. We have studied about the pnnlar, Cottonwood, birch, aspen, willow, and maple. We have gathered and pressed leaves and then made spatter paintings of them in our art class. We have some very fine paintings. Richard Anderson, reporter 6-- 1. Liberty School Children in First Grade There are 33 children in the first grade this year. They are now learning their colors and how to write names. They are also learning how to read. They are having fun with clay, too. They have a good teacher, and I think they surely like her. They are a fine first grade Sherline Jones and Bonita Kay Freeman from the 6th grade. School Interesting School is more interesting than ever for the fourth graders this year. We have several books to study that we haven't had before. They are: geography, arithmetic, language, and spelling. We als have new library books and a library notebook in which to write book reports. We like our teacher, Mrs. and our new classroom, very much. We have finished our Indian project. Lois Spencer. Fifth Grade News Liberty's fifth grade is doing very well in these first six weeks of school. We have been advancing in the studies that we have. We enjoy our play period, because we learn things while we play. Dorothy Wilson. Sixth Grade News The sixth graders are trying to make a rating of ten in arithmetic so that they may invite the fifth grade to go swimming with them later on in the year. aves and We are now putting pumpkins in our windows at school. The children of Liberty school are glad that the hot Barbara lunches have started. Lcsslry. 33 Opposite City Hall Murray, Utah Immediate Claims Settlement Mo-sie- Collision bills paid with sight draft from district office nearest you No waiting I J. k SniTTii . . . REX HAMILTON ct atp PHONE Ml'RRAY IBS r. 1 Tie C the Whiskey FLAVOR YEARS" of StriUVt Eeortoi fkiskrv W IW rJf &Vlcy DiMillen YEARS OLD Corp-- X. T. C. I 9-- 9-- like Book Ends JiSS i This will be presented in the Elks club auditorium. Blaine Ties in Football Blaine has played two games this year, one with Cyprus on Thursday, September 24. and the other with Plymouth Wednesday, October 1. In both games the scores were tied, Merilyn Fox, Lost Laws Found A copy of the lost laws has been found and the council is going to have a vote taken on them to see if the students want any of the laws changed or repealed. Two girls went to the different rooms in the junior high Monday and took a vote on the question of gum chewing. The students voted whether they thought they could handle the gum chewing, or if the teachers would have to handle it. The majority voted that they could take care of it themselves. The council also elected a committee to see how much it would cost to put a small fence around the lawn to keep the boys and girls from tramping on it. Lois Snider, IIMtalanccd Dirts Three - fourths of the world's 2.000.000.000 people depend f heavily on potatoes and corral crops for food that their bodies tire likely to suffer damage from the diet, according to Dr. Merrill K. Bennett of the Food Research Institute, Stanford University. He finds low income levels to blame for a great deal of the world's monotonous divt habits. HI Sfl 1 The Midnight Beat Hollywood's star feud is between Chas. Boyer and Jean Gabin. It's blazing higher than the Eiffel Tower over the fate of France. Boyer's sympathies have been with from the start Gov. Lehman, insiders hear, will come out for O'Dwyer against Mayor LaGuardia In appreciation of O'Dwyer's support when Lehman ran against Dewey. The British Gov't Is supposed to have requested the duke of Windsor not to "make a parade of the night clubs" while in New York en route to Canada. The legs featured In that hosiery advert on the back cover of Life belong to Evelyn Carmel. Motion Picture and Screen Life mags will marry with the January ... issue. The club will offer a dual selection In November: "Inside Latin America" by John and "Young Man of Caracas" by T. R. Ybarra (Ives Washburn). Overheard: "Be careful of that guy you're leading with your chin" He never . . . "Don't worry. punches that high." "My Little Sunshine" couldn't be an oldie called "My Little Rainbow," could it? Lieut. Comdr. Arthur Godfrey reports seeing this sign on a small town highway: Every Car Going Through This Town at Sixty Miles an Hour on Saturday Night Must Have a Driver! A major who was dropped by the g army not long ago for with local Nazzys is now connected in some way with the state dep'L Next thing on the market will be bottled soda pop with a straw already inside and ready for use when the bottle is opened. . S. Attorney General Jackson was the gov't official who arranged the swap of newspaper men Allen and Hottelet for Nazi agents Zapp and Tonn. The Herald Trib's revelations of activities here by the Vichy agents probably will get them expelled . . . How true is the buzz that New Brunswick (Nova Scotia) has an unlimited supply of gas which is not even being used? Don't miss the newsreels of that salvo (by night) during the U. S. S. North Carolina tests at sea. One witness describes the flames as the kind "you see only in a tortured Gunther (Harper's) dilly-dallyin- MORTAL BELIEFS DECLARED FALSE State Volunteer "Are Sin, Disease, and Death Real?" is the subject of the Chrisn for tian Science 12. October Sunday, Among the Scriptural references are: "And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness." (Gen. 1: 3, 4). "Art thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God, my holy one? we shall not die. Thou art (if purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity." (Hab. 1: 12, 13). The following excernts are from Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy: "Immortal and divine Mind presents the idea of God: first, in light; second, in reflection; third, in spiritual and immortal forms of beauty and goodness. But this Mind creates no element of discord or decay. God creates neither erring thought, mortal life, mutable truth, nor variable love. God, Spirit, dwelling in light and harmony from which emanates the true idea, is never reflected in aught but the good." (p. 501: When we wake to the truth of being, all disease, pain, weakness, weariness, sorrow, sin, and death, will be unknown, and the mortal dream will forever cease." (p. 218: Registration lesson-sermo- Exceeds All Hopes State volunteer registration for civilian home defense exceeded all expectations by nearly 50 per cent. Governor Herbert B. Maw. chairman of the State Council of Defense, declared after a preliminary survey of registration returns. Complete returns, however, will not be available for another week or 10 days. Cooperation of press and radio in emphasizing to the public the importance of home defense and the imminence of an emergency, made possible the splendid showing, he declared. Despite the fact that county defense councils have not all yet been organized, every county made a fine showing in registration. An estimated registration of 10,000 persons for home defense was exceeded by possibly 7.000 and in some instances, registrations exceeded the number of cards available. "Defense Week and Registration Day was a voluntary and splendid demonstration of the loyalty of Utahns to their national and state government," Governor Maw declared. "If they continue this spirit of generous service, and other states equal our own patriotism, then the state and nation have nothing to fear from any enemy in the world." 5: 28-2- ). 31-2- The milk equivalent of all dairy products consumed in the United States in 1939 was 97.9 gallons. Food for Britain The Department of Agriculture last week purchased more than 16,000,000 pounds of pork products, 9.000,000 pounds of lard, 2,000.000 pounds of dried eggs, nearly a million pounds of dry skim milk, and half a million cases of evaporated milk, for shipment to Britain. Wheat Crop Decreases Wheat production in the United States totaled 708,000,000 bushels in compared with 800,000,000 1929. The hay crop remained fairly constant between the two dates, being 82,000,000 tons in 1939 and 85,000,000 tons in 1929. A ORIGINAL & unnn r 3?37 $0 IrU rl STATE n PHONE FOR RESERVATIONS dream!" The Private Papers Of a Cub Reporter 426 of Lizzy Dilling's 'The Roosevelt Red Record and Its Background." published in 1936, she recites the "red" tainted record of Senator Wheeler. Testified Mrs. Dilling: "Wheeler, Sen. Burton K.: Montana, radical; 1931. 'Progressive' Conf.; ardent F.D.R. supporter; American Civil Liberties Union Bill; called 'Socialist, I.W.W. Pacifist'; Vice. Pres. candidate with 1924, on Socialist and Progressive tickets; resignation asked during war because of his refusal to prosecute radical slackers; . . Signer of application for pardon of Communist Party N. Y. District organizer, Chas. Krumbein (Dail . . ." Worker On Page 2 of her round table letter, dated March 21, 1941, she speaks of her Mothers' Crusade to Washington and her conferences with various Senators ai follows: "Defenses of me from the floor of Congress, by fiery, patriotic Senators Clark and Wheeler are in the Congressional Record. Thank God we have some fighters like these men representing real Americans in Con- w (I 1 gress!" The Story Tellers: By all means read Walter Davenport's pen portrait of Leun Henderson in the Sept. 6th Collier's. No man is doing more The crisp for this country Baldwin's Faith of piece in tempo the Oct. Cosmopolitan is paced by her opening line: "The Countess was shooting craps" . . . Time's report on the U. S. S. North Caromade the thrills lina's dance on your vertebrae . . . Bert-ran- d Russell pens his obituary In Coronet and Isn't at all harsh with nimsclf. Recalling, mebbe, that It Is customary to speak well of the dead . , . World Digest has a good dep't In "I Quote." the smarter excerpts from the films and plays. The current batch, however, contains more typewriter weeds than posies . . . Sen. Rob't Reynolds of No. Car. probably d csn't care for the way his neighbor, Jonathan Daniels, clears him (in The Nation) of hustling for a foreign power. "Bob," says Daniels, "has never yet been passionately Interested In any problem outside his own hide." ... bing-bingin- t Jtmes Melton tnd Fundi White, lettured lingers. THE TELEPHONE HOUR (Popular Bell System Radio Program) now can be heard EVERY MONDAY NIGHT at 10 P.M. instead of 5 P.M. 1 Irav NBC RED NETWORK For the convenience of thousands of listeners to this Monday Night program, it will now be broadcast at the more desirable hour of 10 p.m. MUSIC by the DELL SYMPHONIC ORCHESTRA and a CHORUS OF 14 VOICES The following it a complete list of the NBC Red Network stations over which "THE TELEPHONE HOUR" may be heard in thil area: ....rMtrvrx.. ARI2CKA. ... KVOA K YUM KCLU .... I0A .... rsro ... mn .,. Man About Toun pilots Raymond flram Suing' overshot Scotland and didn't discover it until they were over Norway when they fled back , . . If you start for Britain via Overseas Airways from Baltimore a regular service) and you dont make It your tribe collects Insurance. If you fy there In bnmbrr no insurance. FDR so fund of LaGuardia. don't be surprised bcn he comrs out for at Mad.S-- G.irden the his Satdee night before the pells i pen. I i Arrc;o COtCRACO tt!;vtft . IDAHO MONTANA. . .. r.rr UK .... kchi ... KRIM A sri KS'H KOI MEW MEXICO. TEXAS... VTAH ... f'CCATtUO. T"iN TALIS. Hi -- tt rAso LAKE .SAtT .) Milk Equivalent Ex-U- On Page 7 Page KTSM CITY. KCYL The Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Company |