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Show PAGE TWO PRQVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1941 Provo High School Is Ranking Educational Institution V ,. - I :: v : ::- " ' r- i f ' .-. v : -" ? s.i ... - , , ! : I It fx J- . - A front view of the Provo high school building. Lar gost high school in Utah county, Frovo i3 one of the important educational institutions of the va lley. -0 State Hood ants an-ts Song Writer Three popular songs composed j Dy Fred O. Storrs of Provo, district dis-trict clerk for the Utah road commission and orstwViile musician, musici-an, are being published by a Portland Port-land music publisher and soon - will be ready f frirculKHT.-'". j Publication of the songs, j uream uaoy urcam, a waltz; "Purple Canyon Love Song," a tvaltz; and "March of the CCC's," climaxes 10 years of song writing writ-ing by Mr. Storrs, who formerly was prominent in music circles as a trap drum player. "March of the CCC's." has been acclaimed by several music crit-tics, crit-tics, and efforts to have it adopted adopt-ed as the national CCC theme song have teen made by such men as Abe Murdock, U. S. senator sena-tor from Utah. Robert Fertiner, national CCC director, stated that "I find the composition and the words very attractive," but pointed out there are no funds available with which to purchase it and make it a national na-tional theme song, i Leopold A. Yost, leader of the SSth infantry band at Fort Douglas, Doug-las, rehearsed "March of the CCC's" and wrote the composer: "I wisTi to congratulate you on this wonderful composition. I deem it one of the best marching songs I have heard in a long time . . . " Mr. Storrs' first composition, "Dream Baby Dream." was dedicated dedi-cated to his son, Arthur. Inspiration Inspira-tion for "Iurple Canyon Love Song" centers largely around U.S.S.R. Nome , '"0 .41 . rjj. . i-airDanKS Existing U. S. and Canadian AIrl!?t . .yhitchW CANADA !. I Juneau I Xv....y'r. Resolution. Ketchikan Present U. S. line to Alaska follows route alon? coat Seattle Pacific Ocean It San Francisco- r m : - Ik I i , 1 Edmonton c f ..v.T.,.. ...... i Goldfields Hudson 1 Bay Proposed airway would take inland route to Alaska z innipeg JUNITEDiMinneapouv A second airway to Alaska, to be operated by Northwest Airlines from Minneapolis to Fairbanks, may soon link the midwest with the U. S. possession that is rapidly assuming strategic military importance. im-portance. Map shows recently opened Pan American route from Seattle to Alaska, along with principal U. S. and Canadian airlines. Zion and Bryce canyon national 1 eared in Provo, graduating from parks. the Parker school and P.. Y. Mr. Storrs was born in Spring- academy. He was with the road vilie, the son of the former Utah commission 14 years at Price be- county sheriff and state prison fore being transferred here . Sep- warden, George A. Storrs. He was tember 1, 1D40. . . CSCAi This Company specializes in Stock and Poultry Feeds. We carry the complete stock of Draper Quality Feeds. We Are Here to Help You Solve Your FEED PROBLEMS! Do Your Trading Where the Results Will De the Determining Factor of Membership Itather Than the Rinding Contract For the top prices, market your eggs through the Draper Egg Producers' Association, Inc. A top market from coast to coast. We represent them in this territory. $ We are equipped with all the latest mill machinery. Our new cleaning and hammer mill docs custom grinding grind-ing while you wait. C. STERLING CLUFF DEALER FOR DRAPER QUALITY FEEDS liijg in UTAH COUNTY When considering mining in the state of Utah most people are inclined to think of the great copper mines at Bingham, the lead-silver properties at Park City or the coal fields in Carbon county. The U. S. Bureau of Mines have published figures for 1939 that show Utah county as an important producer of metals. The bureau lists 20 producing mines in Utah county; 13 in the Tintic district and seven in American Amer-ican Fork canyon. Production in 1939 was as follows: fol-lows: Copper, 1,737,856 pounds valued at $180,737.00. Lead 11,-789.405 11,-789.405 pounds valued at $554,-525.00. $554,-525.00. ' Zinc 1,30(3,000 pounds, value $07,912.00. Gold 19,534 fine ounces worth $683,690.00. Silver, 2,209,876 fine ounces worth $1,-500,037.00. $1,-500,037.00. One mine, alone, the Tintic Standard employs a mine force with a daily average of 498 men. Up to 1939 this mine had paid $1,609,763.49 in taxes and $17,-52,501.29 $17,-52,501.29 in dividends. Most all of the men employed live in Utah county. Farmers Urged to Use Leaves as Fertilizer CLEMSON, S. C. u.n Clemson college agronomists are urging; serve for fertilizer uses leaves ; which usually are destroyed in the late fall each year. Not only leaves but other litter and crop residues contain organic matter, nitrogen, phosphoric acid, potash and other plant food elements ele-ments which have come from the soil and should be returned to it, the agricultural specialists point out. They say that the leaves can be made into synthetic fertilizer merely by the treatment of the organic matter to hasten decay. DRAFT THREATENS DUKE DURHAM, Feb. 23 Six members mem-bers of Duke university's football team have low drait numbers. may be called for service before farmers of South Carolina to pre- the start of the 1941 season. New Breeding Process Speeds Trout's Growth SEATTLE, Wash. r.P Trout fishermen who recount their prowess prow-ess by rule-of -thumb (or arm-length) arm-length) soon may find themselves telling fact instead of fancy. Dr. Luren R. Donaldson or the University of Washington school of fisheries announced that he is breeding trout that grow to maturity ma-turity in just half the time of the ordinary species. The breeding process already has gone 12 generations, and in that time the scientifically-controlled trout is bigger in every respect. In 1897, a 34 -pound lobster was caught at Atlantic Highlands. Students at Penn Test A-Type Virus For Flu PHILADELPHIA U.D Medical school students at the University of Pennsylvania have enlisted in science's battle against influenza. Half of the 4S4 freshman and sophomore students nave been ln-noculated. ln-noculated. The other half remain unvaccinated. Those receiving a shot in the arm in the university's bacteriological bacterio-logical department got a dose of the Rockefeller Foundation's new influenza vaccine. It is a mixture of '-A" type of flu virus. Scientists will check the health records of both groups of students in an attempt to determine the effectiveness of the new vaccine. 22 n M ii 1 1 1 ti 11 ti M H ti M H II ri n H n n H 1 1 1 1 1 M M M I i t 1 fc I n 1 1 ! M M H (1 II " ti U II 1 1 1 1 t I) ( n n M ( t I 1 1 f J I ! t I t I w 1 1 n 1 1 M 1 1 11 H n 11 1 1 11 1 1 M 11 I I E I 1 1 II i ( 1 1 II II 1 1 II II II I I I I 1 1 I I II II I I II II II II II I I 1 1 I I II II II II M II II II It 1 1 I I I I 1 1 1 1 II II II i II 1 1 II II M II 1 1 II II II II 1 1 II ti II II II II II I I 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 II f I II M f I E I t I n 1 1 H II n u 1 1 1 1 H I J I 1 i I 1 1 I i I i I 1 t i i I 1 1 N 1 1 M f I I I I I t J f 1 i r 1 1 11 H I I I I I I I I t I 0 ! It I n n 1 1 11 ti 1 1 n 11 SI r i y 3 Lh l4n m 1 'A A A. ji iLj i inn :.; ti u 5 1 J f II , a v' j ft 1 1 - ' k - Iff ' In if I ry ,;-'x . j I fthKl iHc'iN'iv' J-y ,"V tcr;zPy A i The Becker Products Company hast just be gun its second half-century of operation in the brewing industry. For more than fifty years the plant has without interruption been a provider of labor, a market for home - grown and home - manufactured products and a maker of highest quality beverages. Every year has recorded notable progress at the great Ogden brewery. The plant has grown from a small frontier beginning to a business that ranks among the finest of its kind in all the West. The machinery and equipment, .the ingredients, the brewing skill the formula ... are all the very last word in the science of making a quality beer. Product The traditional Becker's policy of cooperating cooperat-ing with and supporting other home industries indus-tries is a guiding principle of growth and progress. Each year the Company pays upwards up-wards of $2,000,000 for farm products, labor, supplies, equipment and machinery. The bulk of this money is expended right here at home. The Becker Products Company is a major consumer of such utilities as water, electric power and coal. It is a large payer of taxes federal, state and local. It bears its full quota of the million dollars a day that beer has put into the coffers of the tax collector since the repeal of prohibition. 01 f A Product of ,'t U Western Farm 'Oil I m ,'..5 - U .-.-'Hi IvGiy Type of Coalaieer Enjoy Becker's quality Beer . . on draft at your favorite tavern . . in cans, bottles, bot-tles, steinies or jugs in your home. We accompany our invitation with the assurance as-surance that Becker's ranks among the highest quality brands of beer brewed in America! hi QnutartureA km Manufactured By si---- 'UlQ 1 I I V . v JJ V rV. '). OGDEN UTAH Distributed By Big Four Distributing Co. Provo (1 H M 1 1 M M H II II 1 1 11 II II M II II n 11 11 n n 11 ti H H U II II II M II Ii II II M II n 11 H II 11 M II If It 1 1 ri M M 1 1 u i 11 11 11 11 M M II II M III II 11 II II M II II II II II II II II 11 M 11 II II II 11 II II M II ri 11 1 1 M 11 ti 1 1 H 11 It II ri 11 ti 1 1 11 ii u 11 13 M 11 H II ti 11 M H ti . It I HI II M ti ' M II II I I 11 n H II I i ti n 11 M II II 11 II H II II II U H IJ M H ti H M fc N 1 1 H II a M IPS M M ri E .1 M M (i t ' M M II li It M i I M 1 1 i I M t 1 1 M ti ! i I I I C 6 i i I s I 1 I i I I I i I t I I i i I I I I I 1 ! I I i I I 1 1th North, 2nd East CANYON ROAD Provo, Utah |