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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH THE READER'S DATE BOOK 1 Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls Observe Birthday Anniversaries During the month of March two organizations that have groups in many of the home towns of the nation will observe birthday an-niversaries. The organizations, the Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls, have been instrumental in building better citizenship in thousands of communities across the country. The Girl Scouts are observing their 40th anniversary throughout 1952, with March 12 as the focal point of the celebration. It was on this day in 1912 that the first troop was organized by Juliette Gor-don Low in Savannah, Ga. and develop to give her an opportunity for en-riching new experiences and to develop in her a sense of per-sonal responsibility. Easter Seal Campaign To Begin March 13 The National Society r Crippled Children will conduct its annual campaign for funds from March 13 to Easter Sunday, April 13. As a result of Easter Seal contrib-utions, direct services to more than The organization's membership on the eve of its 40th anniversary is at an all time high, totaUing 1.770.000 girls and adult leaders. Local coun-cils number 1,423 and exist in every state and U.S. territory. In addition, there are 216 Girl j' Scout troops in 26 : countries made up MAIN oi toe daughters of (TBffT families assigned or employed abroad. I FEATURE Under the annl- - -- " - versary slogan, "Girl Scouts a Growing Force for Freedom", spe-cial emphasis will be given to a series of nation-wid- e projects dur-ing the 40th anniversary year. They include recruiting 500 new profes-sional workers to till posts in Girl Scout councils throughout the coun-try; recruiting approximately 80,-0- 0 volunteer workers to serve as leaders so that new troops may be formed to absorb waiting lists of would-b- e members; training girls and their adult leaders in skills use-ful in civil defense; extending pro-gram for handicapped children; 'and expanding the program of interna-tional exchange of campers and adult personnel with Girl Scout and Girl Guide organizations of other countries. Mr. Roy F. Layton, national president, explains that the re-cruiting program has been made necessary by three factors: the rising birth . rate, population shifts, and Girl Scouting! his-tory of growth and expansion during all of Its 40 year history. The Camp Fire Girls have se-lected the slogan Design for Friend-ship tor celebration of their birth-day week, March 16-2- Camp Fire Girls was founded in 1910 by Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick and a group of educators. Empha-sizing the importance of home and family life, it has a membership of 365,000 girls in 2,900 communities through the United States and an alumnae of 3,000,000 representing all religious, racial and economic backgrounds. The slogan Design for Friend-ship is concerned with Camp Fire groups discovering them-selves. Its underlying theme Is taken from the amp Fire Handbook for Guardians: to give each girl assurance and dispel any feeling of isolation; to give her a feeling of being a neces-sary, wanted member of the group; to help her make friends a quarter of a million crippled chil-dren and adults were given in 1951 in the form of treatment and train-ing, convalescent care, special edu-cation, recreation, employment op-portunities and counseling. e e National Hobby Week To Begin March 17 National Hobby Weekwill be ob-served this year beginning March 17, marking the fifteenth annual ob-servance of the special hobby holi-day. The celebration will take the form of an extensive promotion campaign and offers numerous op-portunities for tie-in- s by local mer-chants. Local department stores, art and hobbycraft shops, camera stores, music shops, stamp deal-ers, book stores, sporting goods dealers, hardware store, and toy stores can secure promo-tional tie-In- s from the Hobby Guild of America, 34 West 33rd Street, New York, sponsors of the event. xii tA AIR FORCE ENGAGEMENT . . . Sue Rosaniuth Johnson and her fiance, LI. Hoyt Vendenberg, Jr., son of air chief of staff General Hoyt Vandenberg, face the camera at Fort Myer, Va., after their en-gagement was announced In Lon-don by her parents. I ' BROOM KEEPS SUSPECT IN LINE . . . Picked up by New York police after a shot was fired on 75th street, this fellow Is firmly entrenched In a seat at the East 67th St. police station. Officers used the station house broom to keep prisoner pinned. Police say he was chased and captured after the shot. Two knives were taken from him. The prisoner was tentatively Identified as John Buckmaster. But whether he fired the shots or what he was doing with the knives wasn't found out. Summer Playtime Dress In Sizes From 1 to 6 fiSjfl 8991 A darling little dress that's all she needs for Bummer play-time. The lower part forms panties and ties in front. Crisp wing sleeves are so cool. Pattern No. 8991 is a eew-rlt- e perfo-rated pattern In eliea 1, 2, 3. 4, S. 6 years. Sire 2, 2 yards of BE WIN O CIRCLE FATTEBM DEPT. M7 Weet Adam St., Chlaage . 111. Encloae 30c In coin for each pat-tern. Add 6c for let Claaa Mall If deilred. Pattern No Six Mame (Pleaaa Print) Street Addreu or P. O. Box Mo. City 8Kfr Kidney Slow-Dow- n Hay Bring Restless Nights Whan kidney fanetfon atom down, nan folk, eomplaia of nagginc backache, haad-acha- e, dinineaa and loaa of pep and energy. Don't auffer ratine nigbta with tbaae Ua- - tt u .. U l.i .J u . t - ting you down due to .ucb eommoa eanaat a. atraa. and at rain, or -- poeure to eold. Minor bladder irritations due to eold, dampnaa or wrong diet may eauae getUng up nigbta or frequent paaaagaa. Don't neglect your kidney, if then, eoodl-don- a bother you. Try Doan'e Pilla mild iiuretie. Uaed .ucceaafully by million, for jver 60 year.. While often otherwise eaueed, t'a amazing bow many time. Doan'e give lappy relief from thaae discomfort. Kelp in 16 mile, of kidney tubee and filteas 1uah out waste. Ost Doan'e Pilla today! DoMS Pills (?G6a0G0 See how SCOTT'S helps 1. build you up! If yoi fill run down SjSsfjS and eolda hang on T18S?f $M mayb. yon don't get . iki' enough natural AAD Vitamin food. Then try good-Uitl- Scott'. Emulaion the HIGH ENERGY , TONIC I See bow you to get your .trength I How you can fight off I Scott'i la a "gold mine" AAD ViUmina and fFOOD natural oil. take. Economical. Buy at your drug .tore. than ust nourishmvttl a tonic Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads 08Y hoi effidal CM Defana . J MIS BAIDiastrmcJioma wmMWUMR wasWMMI 1 Dree to tour. Get 6 to irtptrel TTT , aider bed Of heny sMtar. TantSal I wfa"cet I I Drop b floor. Git OblfWirdHt. ander desk m arark G to MsigMt benca. aheftsr. 1 Drop to floor Ml Obey joar lesdwr. ST7f7k ef tM of ewdoei Go to astifned yl'l'ae- - Buy bet a wn. shettor queli. i v Crop to pound or Ober Warders. Go WVJ nt for oovot. Surf to aoireit OK'f f' .tictBwn. bjldini or avTar, I I rL.ki i Gel out. Go re FREE SCHOOLS Public School Aid in U.S. Rising. Report ST. LOUIS, Mo. To a great ex-tent, "dishonest" attacks on the pub-lic schools that have Increased re-cently are responsible for the phe-nomenal "grass roots" Interest In American education. This was the general belief oi about 7S0 delegates to the citizens assembly on education, called re-cently in St. Louis by the National Citizens Commission for the Public Schools., The delegates Included community leaders, board of education mem-bers and civic-minde- d citizens. The commission, headed by Roy E. Lar-se-was formed three years ago to Improve public schools. Since then it has grown until today there are an estimated 10,000 citizens' school groups throughout the country. These groups have done much to strengthen and gain support for their home town schools. Watch Drastlo Steps Larsen told the delegates to watch for the tendency in some commu-nities to be "stampeded" by minor-ity, critics of the schools. And he cautioned that the home towners should not allow one or two ex-tremists to stampede either the school administrators or the com-munity into any drastic steps that will harm the free public schools. He also warned the home towns not to let their schools deteriorate as a result of the war mobilization program. By bringing school condi-tions out in the open, citizens gen-erally will rally to support their free public schools. Leo Perils, national director of the Community Services Committee of the Congress of Industrial Organiza-tions, told the delegates that this country still had not arrived at its democratic goal of equal education-al opportunities for all youths. Education Pnt First "The goal of education for all will not be attained unless all of us, lay-men and teachers, parents and tax-payers, labor and. .management, all citizens join forces to look at the problems, to face the questions, to try to find the answers," he said. "If we have to pay more to get the kind of education for all we want, then let us pay more. There isn't anything that is more impor-tant." About 100 citizens' school groups are being founded weekly in the home town of America, commission officials reported. And their work is beginning to reflect In the public school by better facilities and teach-ers. FACES SENTENCE . . . Former New York deputy fire commission-er James Moran was found guilty and sentenced on 24 counts of ex-tortion and conspiracy as the head of a $500,000-a-ye- ar fuel oil shake-down racket. He faces possible 348 years In prison. BRITAIN'S REIGNING FAMILY . . . Here is an informal picture of now Queen Elizabeth holding her ld daughter Princess Anne, who reaches a chubby hand out for the chin of her father, the Duke of Edinburgh, who holds Prince Charles. Little Prince Charles, three years old, now becomes heir to the throne. This picture was made In August, 1951, on the grounds of their residence, Clarence House, London, In happier times before the king died. Repairing Glass ?ane A cracked pane of glass can be temporarily weatherproofed with a coat of fresh, white shellac on the inside. Vision will not be ob-structed by the shellac coat. Breezes and rain will be kept out until the pane is replaced. Jpi met W' immumminiif ' tr i ' iaa REPORTER IN RED HANDS . . . This Is the first photo to appear of Philip Deane, representative of the London Observer and INS special correspondent, since he disap-peared behind the Red bamboo cur-tain In Korea. It is from Red sources. EXCHANGE PROGRAM Junior Farmers Visit Australia Under Farm Youth Exchange The first American junior farmers to visit Australia under the Interna-tional Farm ?outh Exchange proj-ct- , two girls and one boy, have arrived in Sydney, New South Wales. The three young farmers, mem-bers of the U.S. Club, will spend about six months in Australia more, 22, of Norfolk, Va.; Mary Sue Nichols, 20 of North Carolina; and Keith Duane Burt, 19, of Kansas. Burt, whose family operates a 920-acr- e Kansas farm, on which they graze sheep and grow wheat, corn and other crops, will study sheep raising and agriculture on a grazing property near Sydney Miss Nichols' family operates a 105-ac- farm. Their main products are tobacco, wheat, alfalfa, and chickens. She will study conditions on a farm in Western Australia. Miss Blackmore's family has a 73-- a ere farm in Virginia. She will visit a dairy farm north of Sydney. During their stay in Australia the Americans will be quartered on two different types of farm, so that they may gain a full appreciation of con-ditions in Australian rural districts. The Young Farmers Movement in Australia is patterned after the American Club. It has 20.000 members in six Australian states, including 10,000 in New South Wales. The constitution of the Young Farmers Movement in Australia is also patterned on the 4-- Club, and, in turn, the constitution of the Fed-eration of Young Farmers of Eng-land and Wales is fashioned on simi-lar lines. And like the 4-- Club, all young farmer members embrace a system of "learning by doing". Each boy and girl is required to undertake at least one of 23 projects which in-clude poultry farming, vegetable growing, dairying, agriculture, pig raising, wool growing, pasture Im-provement and farm tractor main-tenance. The first American Junior farmers to visit Australia under the International Farm Youth Exchange project, walking un-der the towering arch and car-riageway of the Sydney harbor bridge. (Left to right are Mary Sue Nichols, Keith Duane Burt and Cora Blackmore.) studying various phases of the pas-toral and agricultural industries. The visitors are: Cora Black-- I-.-l-o 'p 4'.igk0 r " iii mi. it.i wiaaiam- - iiewrii it 'I i sUwsflamisrAiliii ml sssaaasssMsesl NEW LOOK . . . Army women model new uniforms. J Kentucky Town Hunts Adequate Water Supply HARRODSBURG, Ky. Like many small towns across the nation who have experienced unusual growth in the past several years, the com-munity of Harrodsburg is faced with the problem of providing adequate utilities for its new citizens. Located in a rich agricultural sec-tion of Kentucky, also an expanding Industrial section, the community Is without an adequate water supply. And like other small towns, the prob-lem of financing is a big one. The community's present pumping plant is located on the Salt river and was completed in 1922. Average daily use of water in the town has jumped to more than 300,000 gal-lons, double that of 1940. In the event of a dry season, like that of the summer of 1950, the town would face a dangerous water shortage, officials report. The Chamber of Commerce has proposed a new pumping station on Herrington Lake, but an estimated $350,000 to $397,000 would be needed to build the system. eaassMasasBMBsasiMW"' iijijuiiiiesaaaaiawsiaiaesjeisiBaiipirri ihttt'tw amrm-in- nr '" 5,;.?'! ,f 1 z! I ' I '"1 yv" s I J Ftp i s-r- x' ' ? STARTING NEW VOGUE FOR IKE ... In Philadelphia, Pa., pretty Ann Fiero, of that city, goes all out for her choice as president of the United States in the coming election General Dwlght D. Elsenhower. Ann is wearing on ber bead a new creation, an "I like Ike" beany and a bow tie to match. A smiling portrait of General Elsenhower Is a fit-ting backdrop. ' ' " ' ' 1 ' CLEANUP AIDE . . . Louis Ifav-ne- r, former New lork City com-missioner of Investigation, has been named by Newbold Morris as bis "chief of staff" in his probe of cor-ruption in government. He former-ly was on staff of Kefauver com-mittee. Ministers and Laymen Fight Village Gambling LINCOLNTOWN, Ga. The minis-ters and many laymen are taking an active part in a campaign against gambling in the village of Lincoln-ton- . As a group they have been attend-ing the regular meetings of the town council, and at a recent one, suc-ceeded in getting stricter laws enact-ed against gambling and vice. Be-sides stiff fines, the law provides that convicted parties are subject to 10 to 35 days in jail for the second offense, and a straight 12 months for the third. It is one of the strictest laws on the books of any small community In the country. r, ' If milMffliiiiiiW " W naniirae" (it 'i it L'NION-INDUSTR- Y . . . Benjamin Fairless, president of U.S. Steel (left), greets Philip Murray, presi-dent of United Steel Workers, dur-ing a wage stabilization board hearing in New York, Fairless Is opposing a wage raise. VVgte-'-v f I BEST bzr-- sWaaiiiiitaiiitffrrf f'- ' taamtnti. awn ir n iitl M..:::A.M jttniuM v'a,iii CARRIES DYING BABY EIGHT MILES ... A Norton, Va., physician denied that he refused to visit a dying baby because the Richard Hazelwood family, shown with their ld son, did not have the money to pay for the call. Mrs. Hazelwood walked part of the eight-mil- e distance to St. Mary's hospital in Norton from ber home In the Hopkins Chapel community, with the baby In her arms and leadiig ber son. The baby died of pneumonia after arrival. Annual Ice Cream Social Held in Wild Snowstorm STILLWATER, Minn. The third annual outdoor ice cream social was held In Stillwater recently during a howling snowstorm. And the home folks had fun. Bath-ing beauties, wearing long under-wear under their suits, paraded through the storm In weather 10 de-grees above zero as the band played "In the Good Old Summertime." Several businessmen donned straw hats and sport shirts and "putted" snowballs around until the snow became so deep they had trouble finding the "green". It was better than last yeai, how-ever, when blow torches were brought out to thaw the ice cream, which froze solid in below zero oold. ., ..j...... - |