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Show 1 j t Sunday, February 9, County Horticultural Society ; Sets Mniial Meetind Saturday tUtehcoupty horticulturists will Eather . Saturday for the annual rneetngvof the Utah County Hon. ticultural . society, Clarence R. AshtonT assistant county agent, reports. ,- v r - - The executive committee of the county group, A. .C Page, Payson, Indians Feature onosVard Boy Scout Event UREM The -Boy Scouts , of Timpanogos ward. Troops 33 and 60f.33,; held j a Jamboree "Friday evetuna"in:the Timpanogos ward recreation halL Ray Hanks and Thomas Biggs, scoutmasters, were in charge. - " j - A group of 18 Indian Boy Scouts .from White Rock in the Uintah Basin came as guests They were accompanied by W. M. Showalter, principal of their high school and their Indian Boy Scout advisor, Henry Wootsack. The Indian boys delighted the large crowd with, Indian war nances, a bear dance, a solo turkey tur-key dance by Howard Arrats. sev eral Indian songs, and Indian war Chants played on war drums. The boys from all the troops joined in wrestline and boxing matches. They gave a history of the tribe and exhibited an old Ute dress decorated with elks teeth. This particular dress has traveled all over the states and into England with the" Buffalo Bill show.v " , ; After ..the Indian hoys had pre sented their, show Arnold Burn- ingham entertained, with an In dian squaw ' dance with his son, Kimball." The story of the Lewis and Clark expedition was given by the troop. ine inaian jaoy scouts were guests at breakfast Saturday morning in the various homes of the Timpanogos Boy , Scouts. A tour of Geneva Steel plant was made Saturday afternoon. Hew Adult Class Opens At Orem OREM The Lincoln high school announces the beginning of a new adult education class in supervisory personnel development develop-ment at the school each Tuesday night at 7:30. The instructor is Winston M. Crawford of the Utah state board for vocational education. educa-tion. This course will deal with the problems of- handling; people. fome of the topics for idiscussiori re , "Building Con f i dence" Training for Responsibility,' "Preventing Grievances,? sfn td "Getting Cooperation?' , The class is free and an Invitation Invi-tation is extended to any vone who ,is employing personnel or supervising individuals. TELEPHONE, ELECTRIC COMPANY TO MEET SPANISH FORK The annual meeting of the Palmyra and Lake Shore Telephone and Electric Light company, will be held at the Lake Shore meeting house Tuesday, Feb. 18, at 2 p.m. to elect , two directors for . a term ct three years and transact other business. Fred Nilson is president and Wm. H. Nielsen, secretary. A TAILOR MADE SUP COVERS COMPLETE SELECTIONS QUALITY MATERIALS t DAY SERVICE ZION Upholstering 955 So. Sprinrville Rd. Phone 1911W Timpan Wstnoun the opening of SWIFT & CO. TURKEY HATCHERY Broad-Breasted Bronze TURKEY POULTS- Write for prices - information P. O. Bbx ilS Springville, Utah Phone 320J 1947 SUNDAY HERALD I chairman, and A. Ray Ekins, Pro- vo and M.F. Crandall, Orem, met Friday .'night and decided on the time of the meeting. The place has not yet been set Special speakers at the county meeting1-- will I be Judge , J. A Howell," Ogdcn, president of the Utah State -Horticultural society; Earl Hutchins, Salt Lake , City, from the Estate department of ag rlculture and Perry Rockwood, Centerville, president of the Utah Cooperative associations. . Problems discussed at the meeting, to which all fruit grow ers and interested parties are in vited, will be the new spray program, pro-gram, featuring DDT; discussion of the state quarantine laws on diseased fruit; a disease eradication eradi-cation program for diseased .trees; and procedure on the importing and exporting of fruit in Utah and the place of the coop associations in the fruit growing picture. Weaver Heads Mount-a-Lakes OREM T. J. weaver was elected president of the Mount-A Lake association at a Saturday session of the board following the annual meeting of the associa tion held earlier in the week. C. M. Wentz was elected vice president and J. M. Bird secre tary-treasurer. - The new board elected an ex ecutive committee comprising Mr. Weaver, Mr. Wentz, LeGrand Jar' man, Alfred J. Madsen and Lawrence Law-rence Palmer. C Rodney Kimball was elected alternate board mem ber and T. Earl Foote was named chairman of the education committee. com-mittee. Odd Fellows To See Movies Moving pictures, taken in all parts of the world by a globe trotting army major from Sugar house, will be shown Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Provo Odd Fellows meeting, at the IOOF hall, 78 North University avenue. All local lo-cal Odd Fellows and members of other lodges who are in Provo are invited to attend the meeting. Crash Fatal (NEA TeUphoto) WAVE Margaret Wallace, aviation specialist 3-c, of Pitcairn, Pa died at Oak Knoll Hospital, Calif, shortly after a Navy hospital ship in which she was a crew member, crashed while landing in dense fog at Oakland, Calif., airport. ctng at Park Ro-She I i ( Conduct Nutrition, W Three women who participated in a demonstration on preparing a low-cost nutritionally-balanced meal at Wymount Village are, left to right, Miss Dorothy Norberg, nutrition representative for the BYU Red Cross college unit; Mrs. Gertrude Wiseman, home service director for Provo city department de-partment of utilities; and Mrs. Catherine Harps, Red cross nutrition instructor. Cooking low cost foods with high nutritive value was demonstrated demon-strated to a "neighborhood group" of young housewives of Wymount Village at Brigham Young university this week, according ac-cording to Mrs. . Owen P. Hen-inger, Hen-inger, chairman of nutrition division divi-sion of the Utah county Red Cross. Red Cross nutrition experts cooked a balanced meal at an average cost of 23 cents a person per-son on the small range which is Kamas Road to Be Improved SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 8 WJ- The U. S. Forest Service an nounced today that the road from Kamas, Utah, to the Utah- Wyoming state line near Evan-ston Evan-ston has been declared a Class C forest highway and will be improved im-proved as soon as weather conditions condi-tions permit. Improvement of the road from Kamas to Mirror Lake will cost about $200,000 but is expected to open a. new recreational area for tourists. At the same time, the Utah road commission announced that a Springville contractor, the Pal-freyman Pal-freyman Construction Co., had submitted the low bid for grading grad-ing and draining of six miles of the proposed Brigham Young Memorial Highway in the Wasatch Wa-satch mountains. The bid. for $187,798, will be studied by engineers before an award is made. The project is part of a tourist .highway along the Mormon trail from Henefer, east of Ogden, to Salt Lake City. New Edict Stops School 'Kidnaping' SALT LAKE CITY. Feb. 8 (U.PJ President A. Ray Olpin of the University of Utah announced today that there s to be no more queen kidnaping at the school. Twice within the last few weeks, co-eds who had been selected se-lected as queens for various celebrations have been abducted by rival groups. In one case, the queen's sponsors gave chase for miles at high speeds. Olpin said that this practice caused the families of the queens a lot oi worry anfl inconvenience, and was dangerous besides. So from now on, any kidnapers will be suspended from the university. univer-sity. Jewelry Store Trickery Fails SALT LAKE CITY, Feb Salt Lake City police booked three persons for , 8 (U.R) today inves' tlgation of larceny by trickery after they allegedly switched diamond rings at a jewelry store. Clerk John S. Evans said he showed the trio a tray of diamond dia-mond rings all genuine. When the shoppers left, without making mak-ing a purchase. Evans found a phoney ring had been substituted for a $450 gem. The clerk and other store em ployees gave chase, collared theN two men and a woman and brought them back to the store to await arrival of police. The suspects were listed as Ann Braxton, Brax-ton, 24, Ogden: Leo C. Harris. 38. Taskas, Tex., and Jack Hall, 38, Los Angeles. MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks higher in active trading. Bonds irregularly higher; U. S. Governments did not trade. Curb stocks higher. Cotton higher. Wheat, corn, oats and barley futures steady. WE NEED four steady women, 18 to 40, hours 8 to 4:30. Free Transportation Trans-portation front . Springville, Spanish Fork and Payson. Good . wages. Come ready to work Troy Laundry Company, 375 West Center, Prove, Utah. Demonstration "At furnished in the apartments. A housewife from each of the village's vil-lage's apartments was asked to give further demonstrations to others in their respective buildings. build-ings. Conducting the demonstration was Mrs. Gertrude Wiseman, representative rep-resentative of Provo city utilities office, Mrs. Katherine Harps, Red Cross nutrition instructor, and Dorothy Norberg, Lehi. It was given in the apartment of Mrs. Robert B. Hellewell, wife of the project manager. American Fork Zoning Hearing Slated Monday AMERICAN FORK. A pro posal to extend the commercial area westward from First West will be aired at a hearing Monday. Mon-day. The proposal would be the first change in the recently-passed recently-passed American Fork, zoning ordinance. or-dinance. A petition from property own ers between First and Second West was filed last month with the city, and since Main street has been a controversial subject since zoning has been considered here, city officials have included the whole area in the hearing discussion. dis-cussion. Officials indicated that if the necessary majority of prop erty owners on the street desire the change from residential to commercial status the change will be effected.. Lincoln, Ogden Debaters Clash 'UREM "TlieLtncoln hieh school will play host to the Ogden debating teams on Monday to participate in a two-round series of debates. Ogden is bringing nine teams and Frank Newman, coach at the Lincoln high school, antici pates that at least 30 students from Lincoln will have the opportunity op-portunity to participate in the activity. This is the first inter-school debate for this year. Some of the students who will participate are Jeanne Watkins, Bill Walker, Hattie Hall, Lorna Brake, Clarence Moon, Joe Adams, Maurine Williams, Jackie Faulkner, Lyle DeLange, Jesse Assay, Gayle Gammon, Sallie Hawkins, Jean Loghry, Harold Muhlestein, Lyla DeLange, Mary-iln Mary-iln Christensen, Dick Westwood, Grant Holdaway, Carol Larson, and Joan Stewart. A film of oil a hundred-mil lionth of an inch thick is suf ficient to- calm a rough sea. Chiang Prepares For Changes Here's the most recent photo of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, as the Chinese leader signs the order for promulgation of China's new all-party Constitution, passed by the National Assembly at Nanking. It Is designed to substitute constitutional government for the arbitrary rule of the Kuomintang party, which Gen? George C. Marshall blasted in hi recent report. " For the Finest lit ; GAS APPUANGE CHECK WITH D T R PARAMOUNT ESTATE ; ROPER MAGIC CHEF ELECTROLUX PERMA-GLAS ' Wymount Village The exhibition included cooking cook-ing of, carrots, potatoes, brown batter bread, grilled beef and other low cost foods. Further demonstrations on this subject may be continued in Provo, said Mrs. Heninger. For other veterans' wives living off the campus similar meetings may be arranged and they may obtain ob-tain help and information by contacting Mrs. Loren C. Bryner of the county Red Cross committee. commit-tee. La r sen Heads Beverage Men SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 8 (U.R) James J. Larsen of Logan, was elected president of the Tri-State Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages, Bever-ages, Inc., Saturday as the delegates dele-gates from Utah, Idaho and Wyoming Wy-oming rounded out 'their two-day annual convention. Larsen succeeds H. J. Parker cf Salt Lake City. Other new officers include: Byron W. Denhalter of Provo, vice president; G. T. Colvin, Salt Lake City, secretary-treasurer; W. S. Silverthorn of Ogden, Andy Caroles Jr., of Ogden, J, P. Hudson Hud-son of Evanston, Wyo., and Arthur Ar-thur Mahood of Idaho Falls, directors. di-rectors. The convention approved a suggestion by Idaho bottlers that they be allowed to form an Idaho state group within the tri-state organization, and Larsen named an organization committee of ex perienced officers to assist the Idaho group. Purpose of the Idaho Ida-ho group would be that of com batting a legislative move to tax carbonated beverages one cent per bottle. Thomas F; Mansfield, Newark, N. J., addressing the concluding general "session as president' of the American Bottlers- of Carbonated Car-bonated Beverages, - told .the delegates dele-gates that a nationwide campaign of publicity boosting the industry as a "dispenser of food drinks" already has been undertaken. "Forget talk about pushing milk out of the school cafeterias," said Mr. Mansfield. "We are sell ers of a food drink but we are also sellers of refreshment." He also urged bottlers to "sell free enterprise," combating the efforts of such minority groups as Communists. HORATIO ALGER FORGOTTEN NEW YORK (U.E The books of Horatio Alger, Jr., whose "rags to riches ' stories were read avidly by young people of past genera tions, are unknown to 32 per cent of the children interviewed by the Children's Aid Society, at whose Newsboys' Lodging House Alger lived for many years. The society interviewed members of seven boys' and girls' clubs which it sponsors. . i if tr 4 Orem Miscellany BY CLYDE E. WEEKS With no regrets but with appropriate ap-propriate .tende re ness 'and. feeling feel-ing we burned all the records and incidental accumntulated dirt in the old Orem ration office this week to make way for the renovating reno-vating of the soon to be opened Orem public' library. The place Is really getting Its face lifted. The wallpaper has been ; thoroughly-cleaned thoroughly-cleaned the books have been stacked In the middle of the floor for dusting, the shelves and wood' work have been scrubbed, and everything paintable is being painted some of it for the first time. When the work is completed and the books are properly ar ranged the library will have an open house to which everyone will be Invited to witness and inspect in-spect this much-needed contribution contribu-tion to the education and recreation recrea-tion of Orem citizens. A typewriter has been se- ! cured for permanent use by the library and the Orem city council has appropriated appropri-ated $50 to go toward the purchase of latest books to bring the library up to date. Now the only thing that can stand In the way or a modern, mod-ern, popular library in Orem is the lack 'of civic spirit and support. CORRESPONDENCE We received the following letter let-ter this week and think its substance sub-stance should be brought to the attention of readers: "Inasmuch as this is the Centennial year and everyone in Orem is interested in making the city cleaner and more beautiful, why don't the newsboys news-boys give their support by keeping keep-ing the areas along the highway where they sort their papers more tidy? Visitors passing through the city are beginning to remark unfavorably un-favorably on this. Also, the wires used to tie the papers are left to accumulate and tear the hose of passing women. We are sure this has been done thoughtlessly by the boys, but it is creating a very unattractive situation in our city. (Signed) Orem Beautifica-tion Beautifica-tion Committee." MEDALLION OF THE WEEK goes to Victor C. Anderson, Scera manager. One of the most civic spirited citizens of Orem is Mr. Anderson. A seminary teacher for many years, he now manages the recreational program of Sharon stake. Always willing and anxious to please, he is the very essence of geniality. On the job to bring outstanding entertainment to the people of Orem is Victor C. An derson, a citizen of whom Orem is proud. PERSONAL TRIBUTE goes to Mrs. Lexia Harris who celebrated her 82nd birthday this week. Active m "church work throughout her life, she was: one of the earliest, teachers in Utah. She has been a telegraph operator and a practicing lawyer, having passed the state bar examination. A native pioneer and a member of the DUP, she is still active and does her own work. AROUND AND ABOUT We received a lot of comment this week on a tennis court for Orem. It is too bad that the second sec-ond largest city in the county cannot can-not provide a tennis court for its youth instead of making it neces sary for them to go to neighboring neighbor-ing towns where there are facilities. facili-ties. The Orem-Geneva Centennial Centen-nial Festival plana are progressing pro-gressing nicely. With the cooperation of civic groups and individuals of Orem this event should be a memorable one. LD3RARY SALUTE goes to the Orem O F club for pledging to donate a new book every month to the Orem public library. This is the spirit that will make the library a success. . Suggestions from readers are always invited from readers of this column and ideas will be aired herein.' , BEFORE YOU BUY Of times a sensible inspection discloses that it isn't a bargain after all. QUALITY is as always the determining factor in dollar value satisfaction. We, as vendors of CERTIFIED "electrical instal-lations instal-lations and repairs can rightly menntain .that:NEVEI has the GUARANTEE we extend to each' of our customers been broken. A UNION SHOP, 4 ; Doing a Truly Union Job: . r. tegs? Spanish Fork Water Outlook Above Normal SPANISH FORK Outlook for water on the Spanish Fork river system is above normal, according to J. Wayne Francis, water com missioner of the Strawberry water user's association. Although the -present storage in the Strawberry reservoir is 6,040 acre feet less than a year ago at this time, it is still 23,805 acre feet more than the average for the past 10 years.' However the inflow for January is the smallest for the past 10 years. Snow cover on the Strawberry watershed as shown by measure ments taken at East. Portal and the Strawberry ridge, show less water than a year ago, but about average for the past 10 years. Precipitation at Spanish Fork indicates that the Spanish Fork River watershed will be better off than any year' in the past 10 years. Precipitation figures at Spanish Fork show that the accumulated percent of normal water for the period of Oct. 1 to Feb. 1 was 159 percent. Last year's percent, was 99 and the highest in the past 10 years was in 1942 with an accumulation of 140 percent over that period. Fete Planned For Old Folks Of Pleasant Grove PLEASANT GROVE The old folks of Pleasant Grove and Manila Ma-nila will be entertained Friday according to the old folks committee. com-mittee. The day's festivities will begin with a picture show at the Grove theatre at 10 a. m. At 12:30, dinner din-ner will be served in the First ward recreation hall to be followed follow-ed by a program. A large attendance is expected at this fine outing and many thanks go to the various committees commit-tees in charge. VISIT THE NEW ADDITION TO OUR FOUNTAIN FROSTED MALTS 5c and 10c s?hT THRIFTWAY 0 wvrm to hear i the new Electric Hour jj II 1112 wf J "HOUR OF CHARM" j( fj AIL-GIRL ORCHESTRA In under the direction of II fj PTI2L C?TTAUJy jf GVGQV COnDW I U 2:30 P. M. - KSL ' U Brought to you by ' Ui UTAH POWES & UGHT CO. , Certified Industrial and Domestle Wiring; Contractors PHONE 761 Chamber Banquet Expected tqPraiv-, Record Attendance PLEASANT GROVE . - With Dr. Walter Matheslus president of the Geneva Steel company, as guest of honor, the annual chamber of commerce banquet will be held Wednesday. The program pro-gram will include a .turkey dinner, din-ner, election of six directors and the annual report of the secretary-treasurer. Dancing will complete the eve- ning's entertainment. A highlight will be the presen tation of a gavel to Dr. Matheslus Mathesl-us by T. B. Gibson, organization president, and a response made by the Geneva Steel president. The gavel has been made by Karl Banks, principal of the local high school and was made from wood from an apricot tree. From the ticket sale every in dication points to an attendance of over two hundred people. Among them will be a large number num-ber of Geneva Steel company employes em-ployes who are living in Pleasant' Grove. One London theater has the largest one-piece rug ever made in Eneland. It measures 100 feet by 43 feet and weighs a ton. Dr. Sanford M. Bingham, D.M.D. - anounces the opening of his office for the practice of ' General Dentistry Provo Medical Clinle 33 East 2 South Telephone (temporarily) 1759 Home Telephone 21S3NR AND SAVE i-angv8' -I |