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Show Petition Favors, Slating Rink Vith Restrictions Food Saving Wa ys Told n ltu A petition in favor of' a com rjncrcial roller skattaK rink in Jiorth park was filed with the city commission today, containing 187 signatures including 25 from the 'immediate .vicinity of the park and many of the city's leading authorities in child welfare and Juvenile recreation. ; The petition contained- seVen strict rules concerning operation of the proposed rink, which backers back-ers say would be enforced to the Jotter by incorporation in terms Tnica with 4 Via Vtlfi, fFH Wk 4.uw avii 5 rifles are: L The rink would be L closed every Sunday. 2. It would operate not later than 10:30 p.m. on any night. 3. Children under .16 will be required to comply .with' the city's existing curfew la?. 4. The building housing the rink will be a complete enclosure, enclos-ure, and "every effort will be made to reduce noise to a minimum." mini-mum." 5. The inside and outside the building will be properly lighted find policed, at all times. . There will be at least one re- X sponsible floor manager skating mtta the children at all times. 7. JJo smoking or drinking will be jpuowea on tne premises. f Prominent signatures on the pe Hition include: Dean E. Terry, Budge of the juvenile court; Ellis W. Mower, chief of police; Mrs. 'Joseph C. Kelson, president of the city P-T.A. council; Jessie Scho-field, Scho-field, city recreation supervisor: Charles Rowan Jr., president of Provo L. D. S. stake; Clayton Jenkins, secretary of the chamber M . T x f-i rii 1 Klwanis president: Mrs. A. C. , TiArwood,' prominent Girl Scout I leader, and Mrs. John Zenger, lo-Kral lo-Kral P-T.A. official and clubwo- ,oun. r:Also included in 25 signatures of the area surrounding the park are about 15 who previously signed a petition protesting the matter, backers assert. These people, they said, signed the sup porting petition after a full ex - planation of the rules under which the establishment would be conducted "bignersexpressed themselves as favoring the move to provide a close-in, wholesome recreation spot for Provo's children and young people, with the added benefits of direct city supervis- ion made possible by the controll- a idg lease of city property. several juvenile and recreational Readers,, has advocated the idea cpt making North park a center for "Wholesome commercial recrea-Vln, recrea-Vln, serving the city much the same as Liberty Dark does Salt k Lake. -3? SHRINE CLUB MEETING Between 40 and 50 members of lfiie Provo Shrine club will leave 'the Masonic temple at 1 p. m. . Saturday by bus to attend the 1946 spring ceremonial for all Shrlners and visitors at the Masonic Ma-sonic temple in Salt -Lake City, announces Fred E. Ray, president. Cancer Conference Scheduled Tuesday City Briefs There are nine ways in which housewives of Utah, county can help to save food to save starving Europeans, according to the county coun-ty manager of the emergency food program for the United States Department of Agriculture.- In suggesting concrete ways in which each household may assist in accumulating the huge food supplies needed in the current desnerate needs of the world. Manager s. Laveu sira maae n clear that the over-all needs of the war-torn world for food are so great there is no limit to the American food that can be used to save human life. Main emnhasis falls on the con versation of wheat fats, and oils, Mr. Bird indicated. These basic commodities are the roost essential essen-tial to a healthful minimum diet and represents the absolute minimum mini-mum needs. The following are the recom mendations made: 1. Cut don on the wastage of bread in every way possible. Pre sent estimates are to the effect that 5 per cent or one slice out of every loaf of bread baked every day goes into the grabage can. 2. Reduce the amount of bread used at each meal through substi- tues such as potatoes, and oat cereals. Use fruits, for example, instead of cakes and pastries for desserts. 3. By the use of alternate foods, use less wheat cereals for breakfast 4. Save cooking oils by making more extensive use of meat drip- Dings for cooking and seasoning food. 5. Hold down the number of fried foods that are served. 6. Save and re-use fats and oils for all cooking purposes. 7. Hold on to bacon grease for cooking and render excess fats on meats. 8. All fats that cannot be e used should be salvaged and turned in to the butcher or erocer. 9. Take it easy on oils and salad dressings. "If every housewife in Utah county would take these recom mendations to heart and practice them, the United States could come a lot closer to meeting the expectations of the starving nations." na-tions." Mr. Bird declared. "Here are ways in which each of us can take a direct part in one of the greatest and most humanitarian lif-saving crusades ever launch ed" A four-fold service conference for Utah county featured by a course in home nursing for people who have cancer patients in their home will be held Tuesday in Provo, it was announced today by Edwin R. Kimball, chairman, Utah County American Cancer society. The course in home nursing will be held 7-9 p m. at the- out patient ward of the Utah Valley hospital, and will be conducted by the director of the State Nurses' association. The purpose of this course will be to educate the public pub-lic to cancer's danger signals and the necessity oz early diagnosis and methods or treatment. The second feature of the con ference will be a detection clinic, to which are invited all those who feel they may have cancer, but have not consulted a doctor. This clinic, sponsored by the doctors of the State Medical So ciety, will be open Tuesday after noon, 2-5. at the out-patient ward, Utah Valley hospital. An educational institute to be attended by field army workers of the various communities of the Utah County American Can cer Society will be conducted, ac cording to Mrs. v. J. Bird, county captain. Those desiring examinations should call Miss Ann Hatch, Utah county health nurse, 439, and interviews in-terviews preliminary to the exam ination will be made by appoint ment. Pamphlets and leaflets on cancer can-cer control are being distributed on an overall coverage basis, reports Mrs. L. E. McKell, who is in charge of this part of the educational program. The fourth feature of the serv ice program will be a round table conference of all doctors of Utah, Wasatch. Duchesne and Uintah counties, conducted by visiting doctors of the State Medical So ciety. "Today's new knowledge in sures a more vital fight against mankind's most dreaded disease. said Chairman Kimball. "Lives can be saved by education, re search and service." The mouth of the Hudson river is more than a hundred miles out in the Atlantic ocean. t-J Provoan Faces Loss of Probation William Overly of Provo was in the Utah county jail today, fac ina- an order to appear before the district court April 19 and show cause why his probation on a previous charge should not be terminated. His latest brush with the law came recently when he was ar rested bv Provo officers and charged with stealing and pawn-i$1.000, business addition at 115 ing a $40 watch from the Brig-jwesi e mn &ouin Building Permits Total $12,000 More than $12,000 in building permits have been issued within the past few days at the city engineer's en-gineer's office. In addition to those previously announced, the following have obtained permits: Alfred W. Ridge Sr.. $3,000. business ex pansion; Lewis D. Wilkins, $2,000, to move in an already-construct ed home at 375 East Fourth South: Orvell Jackson, $200, re modeling home at 306 North Seventh East; Don R. Grange, $1,000, to move in an already-con structed home at 11 North Riverside River-side Drive; Shriver's $5,000, remodeling re-modeling store at 16 West Center; Morcold Manufacturing company.! Dr. J. E. Harrison, of Provo, motored to Portland. Oregon, this week for graduate work. Dr. Harrison is accompanied on the trip by his wife. Pres. Henry D. Taylor of Shar on stake was removed to the LDS hospital in Salt Lake City,, from the Utah Valley hospital, Wednes day, where he baa been confined for a week suffering from stom ach trouble. Andrew Alger of Enterprise is in Provo on business today. T-5 Qninn. A. Hatch was re cently discharged, from 32 months in the military service; 27 of which were-spent overseas. He waa associated with the first base postofflce in Burmingham, England, Eng-land, and with the machine unit in London. Later, be was with the 29th machine record unit in Paris, and then the 37th machine record unit in Reimes. France. While overseas he visited also in Scotland; Belgium and Switzer land.. He and his wife, Dorothy Goates- Hatch, will make their home in Provo. Oov'lM Mr. andl Mrs. Hugh deNagy (Mae Belle Coleman -of Provo) enroute from the west coast to New York, where they will make their home, and Miss Bea Cole' man of Carson City, Nev., have been visiting Miss Rhea Jean Madsen. Ted Twitcheli of Enterprise, Utah, was a visitor in Provo today. Aaron E. Moss of Bountiful spent today with Provo friends. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Maddock of Las Vegas, Nev., were among the visitors in Provo today. Eugene L. Davis is here from Price. ham Young university. He was already on probation for conviction convic-tion on a fictitious check charge several months ago. The world's oldest lighthouses were built in Libya and lower Egypt. Financial Condition of Provo City Not As -Dark As It Might Appea r Says Mayor Anderson -'-' Provo City at the close of 1946 wftl owe two and three quarter exact, and has "borrowed far enough." in the opinion of Mayor ;Mark Anderson, but the picture is not as dark for the taxpayers as it might appear. " Of the total amount owed, only -jA $185,000 must be repaid entirely from taxes. Most of the balance will be repaid entirely from revenues and not taxes, with $600,000 as our share of Deer Creek expected to be paid at least partially from revenues. The breakdown on the city's r debt was offered by the mayor at Kiwanis club Thursday. H fit SOFT WATER IN YOUR HOME As a SERVICE 100 SOFT WATER At a Turn of the Faucet Without Buying a Softner! PHONE 385 SPRINGVILLE CULLIGAN SOFT WATER SERVICE The largest single item, one million dollars, is the recently recent-ly voted bond issue to improve im-prove and develop the city's water system. This amount, by stipulation of the issue, is to be repaid from water revenues and not taxation.. Similar repayment is being'' made on $150,000 remaining as a bond debt on Provo's existing water system. Next largest is the $821,000 which will still be owing at the close of 1946 on the city's electric utility plant This amount, however, how-ever, will be. met from utility revenues entirely, and the plant is expected to contribute to other city expenses also, "within about five years." the mayor said. An item of $600,000 for the Deer Creek project, on which re payment will start on completion of the project, is technically against the Provo Metropolitain Water district To all intents and purposes, however, it is against Provo City, or rather against its citizens, because the confines of the district coincide with the city. This debt allows taxation, and a one mill levy has been in ef fect for several years building a reserve for the fund. It believed, however, that when sale of water gets fully underway, revenues will defer part of the cost. This debt is repayable over 40 years, and will amount to $15,000 or $20,000 per year plus maintenance and operation costs. The last item of Provo's debt is the amount in general-obliga- S 1 s r 17 2 .1 f f n r t t ELECTRIC HEATERS ELECTRIC liSTEAM RADIATOR i t ELECTRIC CIRCULATING HEATERS 3295 26.95 INFRA-RED INSTANT HEAT COILS CONSOLIDATED HARDWARE CO. 55 West Center Provo, Utah tarn tion bonds, all of which must be paid from taxes. "This is the hardest item of any to meet." Mayor Anderson said. "We will pay $25,000 on these bonds this year, leaving a balance of $185,000." "Since most of our debt can be met through revenues, and our electric utility is the best kind of revenue-producing source, I think we will have no trouble meeting all principal and interest payments pay-ments on schedule if ordinary business judgement is exercised," the mayor stated. The mayor made the prediction that within "about five years," the city will be able to divert $100,000 to the general fund from the utility util-ity department. "We hesitate to open this juicy spigot now before our plant is paid for." he said. Discussing general taxation and finances, he said: Your city government gets only 7 per cent of the total taxes collected from Provo taxpayers. 'Federal, eounty state and schools get the balance. bal-ance. The city's general fund budget totals $350,000 for 1946 Nearly seventy per cent of our city, general fund revenue Is from the property tax, about thirty per cent, or about $100,000 eomes from licenses, li-censes, parking meters and other miscellaneous sources. "Our 1946 budget is almost ex actly $100,000 higer than the City budget of 1941. Yet our 1946 budget is $50,000 less than the 1945. This Increase over 1941 is all due to increased salaries. In fact the City's payroll has doubled since 1941. We have spent more and more on salaries and less and less on permanent improve-ments improve-ments in this inflationary period." 300 For Nationwide Moving Service! Agents for Bekins, Allied Van Lines. Local and Ions distance moving. Packing, moving, storage, crating and shipping. We can move , you to any city in the rworld. v Utah's . Finest Moving v . , Service YELLOW CAB & TRANSFER CO. CALL -300 ANYTIME Statistics BORN Boy, to Roy and Bonnie Smith Nichols, this morning. Girl, to Leland and Flora Des- pain Broadhead, this morning. Boy, to Afton and Verla Mc Clellan Isom, Thursday. Girl, to Kenneth and Iona Han sen Sperry. Nephi, Thursday. All Utah Valley hospital. Girl, to Don and Birdean Foth eringham Duke, Thurrday at the Maud Park home in Orem. Boy, to Coleman and Marian Hinson Madsen, of Provo, April 9. St. Luke s hospital in Jackson ville, Fla. Girl, to Wesley and Eliza Nel son Leshner of Salt Lake City. Thursday night, St. Mark s hos pital, in Salt Lake. DIVORCE ASKED Faye Pulham Johnson vs. Lawrence Law-rence Donald Johnson, mental cruelty. Married Jan. , 12, 1942. Plaintiff seeks custody of one child and $50 monthly. DIVORCE GRANTED Viola McPhie Green from Nyle Larson Green. Plaintiff granted $40 monthly. Wanda D. Redding from Ralph Redding, cruelty. Plaintiff grant ed $60 monthly. Plaintiff and defendant de-fendant each granted custody of two of their four minor children. DAILY HERALD FOVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH nUDAT, APRIL 11, 1046 PAGE 3 Spea !( Romney to Atfrovo Stake Conference Schedule of meetings for the Provo stake quarterly conference Saturday -and Sunday was an nounced today, by Charles E. Rowan, Ro-wan, Jr., stake president. Elder Marion G. Romney, assistant to the quorum or the twelve, will represent the general authorities. The stake- presidency will meet at the administration building at 4 p. m. Saturday, and at 6 p. m. will meet with the high council in the Fifth-Eighth ward chapel. A welfare meeting will be at 6:30 p. m. in the Fifth-Eighth chapel. All members of the stake and ward welfare committees are expected to attend. Priesthood leadership meeting will be at 8 p. m. in the Fifth-Eighth Fifth-Eighth chapel. In attendance will be the stake Melchizedek priest hood committee, all presidencies and secretaries of Melchizedek priesthood- quorums, group lead-era lead-era and group, secretaries, stake mission presidents, stake Aaronic priesthood committees, ward bish oprics, Aaronic priesthood advisers, advis-ers, and ward teaching committee. commit-tee. On Sunday, the mothers and daughters meeting will be at 9 a. m. in the First-Seventh chapel. All women and girls 12 years of age end over are invited to at tend. The 9 o'clock session for mothers and daughters will be under direction of the stake Relief Re-lief Society, YWMIA, and Primary. Pri-mary. The program will consist of dramatic presentation of epi sodes in the settling of America, in, which women played major roles. Girls taking part in the presentations pre-sentations will be Katherine Miller, Barbara Romney, Zelda Parry and Randa Bentwet Prom inent in the musical program will be solos by Lavon Brown. The general priesthood meeting for all members of the Melchize dek and Aaronic priesthoods will be at 9 a. m. at the tabernacle. General sessions will be at 10:30 a. m. and 2 p. m. at the tabcr nacle, with the entire membership urged to attend. A youth program under direction of the stake MIA at 6:30 p. m., at the tabernacle, will conclude the conference. Music will be furnished by combined choirs of the stake, un der supervision of Leland S. Perry. Child Custody Battle Renewed The district court custody bat tle over three and a half year old David Allen-King of Salem was continued yesterday afternoon until May 8, after the plaintiffs demurrer to the defendant's answer an-swer was overruled and denied. The plaintiff is the boy's mother, Elizabeth Demson King! Gore, who has filed a writ of; habeas corpus against the boy's! maternal grandmother, Nellie! May Demson of Salem, demand-' ing that the child be released by; the grandmother to the mother. In Mrs. Demson's answer she charged the mother had "abandoned" "aban-doned" the child with her and it was to the child's interest to re main. The grandmother sought a court judgment officially award ing her custody of the child. The child's mother, in the original or-iginal writ, charges she left the child with its grandmother while she taught school, and that she now wanted to take it back and give it a home. or the Maw Designates 21 For Parley SALT LAKE CITY, April 12 (U.R) Gov. Herbert B. Maw said today that he had invited 21 Utahns to represent the state at Pres. Truman's highway safety conference in Washington, D. C, May 8-10. The governor said he would be unable to attend himself. Fearing the flesh of so timid an animal might make him cowardly, cow-ardly, ancient man would not eat rabbit. Ex-Army Dentist To Locate Here Dr. Preston B. Hoopes has opened offices for the practice of general dentistry at 32 West Center Cen-ter street, just above Keeley's. Dr. Hoopes, 31, a native of Cache Valley, was released February Feb-ruary from the U. S. army, in which he served as a captain in the dental corps. He received his degree of doctor doc-tor of dental medicine at North Pacific college of Oregon in 1942. He served at Lowry Field, Denver, Den-ver, Colo, for six months, then in Kansas City, Mo., where he was dental surgeon in Wesley hospital and later at the general dispensary. dispens-ary. Dr. Hoopes has the most modern equipment in his new offices, and a second set of equipment on the way, which will give him a two-chair two-chair setup with complete X-ray service. His wife, whom he married 10 years ago, is the former Norma! Holman of Sugar City, Ida. They have three sons. Committees For Outdoor Group Appointed Here Organization of committees for the Central Utah Outdoor association associ-ation was effected at a -meeting Thursday night under direction of Dr. George H. Hansen, chairman. Purpose of the association is to secure and develop the recreation areas in Central Utah and to co ordinate activities of other ganizations along this line. Committees organized at meeting are as follows: 'Wild life management L . L. Bunnell, Lake view, chairman; L. C. Guyman and Alvin I. Daniels, Provo, and Henry Weight, Spring-ville. Spring-ville. Summer activities Glenn R. Kenner, Provo, chairman. Winter activities Reed Bid-dulph, Bid-dulph, Henry J. Heisch, David Beesley and Stanley Heal, all of Provo. Watershed protection Mayor J. W. Gillman of Orem, chairman, Leona Holbrook and Clark Newell, Provo. Roads and trails Clarence Knudsen, chairman, and LcRoy Johnson, Provo. Research and education C. Lynn Hayward, chairman, and Dr. Bertrand Harrison, Provo. Publicity, Dr. D. E. Beck, chairman, chair-man, and Reed Biddulph, Provo. Boating and fishing Thomas C. Gessford, chairman, and Isaac Evans, Provo. Land ownership, Dr. Vaaco M. Tanner, chairman, and Mayor Mark Anderson, Provo. Housing Chief May Visit SL SALT LAKE CITY. April 12 (U.R) Salt Lake City's Mayor Earl J. Glade intends to invite the national na-tional housing administrator, Wilson Wil-son Wyatt, to address the Utah State Municipal league convention conven-tion at Cedar City, Utah, beginning begin-ning Aug. 29. FOR RENT Good Warehouse or Storage Rooms in the heart of business busi-ness district. See VIV HARRISON Phone 1987-M DR. PRESTON B. HOOPES Announces the OPENING OF OFFICES for GENERAL DENTISTRY at 32 West Center - Phone 12S on Enjoy the whiskey that's Here's a catch end no mistake I Hook onto a bit of Old Sunny Brock and cock your ear to the tinkling music tumbling into your glass. Then raise and taste this glorious drink. You'll enjoy it! 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