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Show Id Weatfier Forecast UTAH Unsettled Sunday; little change In temperature. Maximum temp. Friday 80 Minimum temp. Friday 41 Maximum temp. Saturday ... 87 Minimum temp. Saturday .... 53 What They Say The drift in the United States is a drift to the right to fascism, fas-cism, in spite of the good intentions inten-tions of Sir. Roosevelt and Dr. Tugwell. Norman Thomas, socialist so-cialist leader. era VOL. 11, NO. 43 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 2 7, 1934 PRltE FIVE CENTS TUT line GO-ROUfJED A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By lyiEW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN WASHINGTONAlthough his trip through the Panama canal is still about a month -F-c 1 :j i. i uii, nie pieoiueiit lias every detail regarding it worked : out. He knows almost to the ; minute how long he will stop isianas, Manama, ana wnat ne will do in each place. . . . After stopping at Hawaii, he will end r at San Francisco, come home di- ; icu ujr uaui. ... x nc new sucaui : line train may have the honor of hauling him. . . . The marine corps is so- Dinched for funds that its attache to the American embassy em-bassy in Moscow has been recalled. re-called. . He is Captain David R. Nimer, who speaks Russian flu ently. . . . Henrv I... Stimsnn. ex. secretary of state, recently staged a grand garden party for the American Bar association. . . . Several Sev-eral hundred lawyers were present. pres-ent. Many were leaders of the profession, pro-fession, many were not leaders. - But there was one notable ab- sentee Attorney-General Homer Cummings, highest ranking legal-' legal-' : ist in Jne administration. Hp was not invited. . . . And the reason v" wus nut uivueu was oeoause Stimson feels verv stronlv about Cummin es' Drosecution of Andv Mellon on his income tax. He calls this persecution, not prosecution. L I COLLECTION DRIVE I The administration is passing up no bets in its far-flung drive to collect all taxes and other sums due Unile Sam. ... Its latest move is to put the department of justice on the trail of millions of dollars of unpaid fines and assessments as-sessments of old prohibition violation viola-tion cases. ... The bulk of these claims consist of taxes on illegally il-legally produced denatured alcohol. alco-hol. . . Some $7,500,000 is involved, in-volved, arid the" Justice' department believes the government has a good chance of collecting a large portion of it. The great dome which tops the capitol does not rest on the building build-ing proper, but on huge rollers. ... This is to allow for expansion and contraction during hot or cold weather. . . . The vast steel cone moves back and forth approximately approxi-mately a quarter of an inch, exr panding 'in summer, and contracting contract-ing in winter. Major George L. Berry, president presi-dent of the Pressmen's Union, and NRA division administrator, was runner-up to Charles W. Bryan in 1924 as Democratic vice-presidential candidate. . . . Berry always al-ways has a cigar in his mouth, but never smokes one. . . . Thomas W. Hardwick, counsel for the house Nazi investigating committee, commit-tee, which is soon to hold open hearings, is a Georgian who served serv-ed five terms in the house, and one, 1913-19, in the senate. . . . During the latter part of his senatorial sena-torial career he incurred the bitter hostility of President Wilson by resolutely opposing the espionage and sedition acts. In its unsuccessful tax drive on. Andy Mellon, the government charged that the one-time Republican Re-publican secretary of the treasury had attempted to evade payment of $716,144 on his 1931 income tax. ... The department of justice (Continued on Page Five) THE advertisements in The Herald from day to day point the way to both economy and efficiency in your shopping. If you watch them carefully you are likely to find almost anything you want to buy advertised adver-tised at a price which will mean a substantial saving to you. Arid by making up your shopping lists from them and knowing just where you are going, to get what you want to buy, you can make a considerable saving in time. It's a profitable habit to read and buy thru the ads in The Herald consistently. EMPLOYE OF WELLING TO BE ARRESTED State Board of Examiners Orders Reaudit For Entire Term SALT LAKE CITY, May 26 Julius C. Andersen, state auditor, was authorized Saturday Sat-urday by Governor Henry H. JSIood to make a re-audit of the financial records and transactions of the office of Secretary of State Milton H. Welling, prior to January 3, 1933. The action, requesting the audit aud-it for the full term, was taken following a meeting of the state board of examiners at which the report of the audit made by Preston Pres-ton Allen, directed by John A. Malia, state banking commissioner, commission-er, was discussed. Mr. Allen found the original audit by Mr. Andersen's deputies to be sub-stanially sub-stanially correct. In fact, the discrepancy in the records was found to be somewhat larger than Mr. Andersen's audit. Two Employes Named-Mr. Named-Mr. Allen's report named two former employes, Clarence E. Smith, Spanish Fork postmaster, and Moroni C. Iverson, Salt Lake, as having personally benefitted, by other transactions, unless they can explain a way, better than they have as yet, the implications of the record. Differences in totals, the report sets forth, represents deliberate manipulations for the purpose of covering comparable missappro-priations missappro-priations Of cash. It is expected that demands will be made on the surety company com-pany carrying Mr. Welling'a bond for payment of missing funds totalling to-talling $9427.84. It was reported late Saturday from the stae capitol that a criminal crim-inal complaint will be asked Monday Mon-day against at least one of Mr. Wellkig's former employes as aJ result of the disclosures made in the reaudit. The announcement came from the office of Attorney General Joseph Chez. Mr. Anderson also announced late Saturday that the complete audit will begin within 10 days and that Alvin Keddington who supervised super-vised the former audit will again have charge. Records in Mr. Andersen's of fice disclosed that loose methods 1 in the state secretary's office were called to the attention of the state administration as early as 1929. DEATH CLAIMS BISHOP CLINGER Funeral services for Marion dinger, 60, bishop of the Lake View ward for many years, will be held in the Seventeenth ward chapel, Salt Lake City, at 1 p. m. today. Interment will be in the Wasatch Lawn cemetery. Friends may call prior to the services at the residence, 76 North West Temple street. Bishop Clinger died Friday at his home from infection and pneumonia. pneu-monia. The family had been living liv-ing in Salt Lake since 1926. He was born in Provo. the son of James Henry and Mary Williamson William-son Clinger, early settlers of Utah county. His early schooling was received in the dity schools and the' Brigham Young university. univers-ity. He married Rebecca Dorius of Ephraim in 1895 who with four sons and five daughters survive. As a church worker. Bishop Clinger had always been diligent. He filled a mission to the Southern states, served 14' years in the bishopric of the Lake View ward, (Continued on Page Seven) Dixon School Revue Ready The three departments of the Dixon junior high school will hold the annual spring display, climaxing climax-ing the yearjs work, Monday night at 7:30. The display will take the form of a fashion revue and a dance pageant on the south lawn of the school with more than one hundred girls taking part. The public is invited to attend. Plasterers to Hear Discussion On Code Plasterers, lathers and plaster helpers of Utah county are asked to attend a code meeting in the city court room of the city and county building at 7 p; m. Monday, May 28. A full attendance is requested. re-quested. . , - Guns, Bayonets, Gas Bombs Take Heavy Toll In Strike Riot Lieutenant Shot, Two Stabbed in Fighting Around Electric Auto-Lite Plant; Union Rejects First Proposal TOLEDO, O., May 26 U.R) Bullets, bayonets and exploding ex-ploding gas bombs took heavy toll today from ranks of Nar tional Guardsmen and rioting strikers at the Electric Auto-Lite Auto-Lite plant. A militia lieutenant, Verne Silbauch, was shot in the thigh by a sniper's bullet as he led a rush across the debris-littered debris-littered streets which surround the embattle plant. Mediators Undaunted Federal labor mediators, meanwhile, were undaunted by action of the union in rejecting their first peace proposal,j and worked for formation of as settlement satisfactory to both sides in the bloody controversy. Two men were stabbed by troopers' bayonets. They were Peter Brumes, who received a bayonet wound in the chest, and Walter Noland, sent to the hospital hos-pital with three stab wounds in the left thigh. Gas Shells Fall-Highly Fall-Highly explosive gas shells, hurled into the ranks of advancing advanc-ing rioters by the embattled troopers, felled three other men. Payton Cass, an automobile factory fac-tory Worker, was struck in the head by' ajshell which tore most of his chin away. Joseph Ackinger, 21, was hit in the head by a gas bomb, and Earl Burnett, 42, received leg injuries in-juries from the same source. Several persons were overcome by the fumes of the vicious "sickening" "sick-ening" gas and were carried from the "war zone" immediately surrounding sur-rounding the plant. Many Nurse Hurts John O. Quigley emerged from his home on Champlain street to reveal that he had received a slight gunshot wound almost 24 hours before, but had not reported re-ported it. A dozen National Guardsmen nursed less serious injuries cuts from flyingjglass, head cut by paving bricks, eyes swollen shut from ball bearings fired from sling-shots in the hands of sniping snip-ing strikers. LABOR PEACE BIIIRUSHED By H. O. THOMPSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, May 26 (U.E Early passage of the industrial adjustment bill which encourages friendly settlement of labor disputes, dis-putes, was predicted today by Chairman David I. Walsh of the senate committee on education and labor. The committee has hurriedly gotten the bill into shape in the face of widespread industrial disorder dis-order . "I think this bill will be enacted into law at the present session of congress," Walsh said. The bill outlaws company-dominated company-dominated unions and sets up a board empowered to force employers employ-ers to deal with representatives of the majority of their employes. PASSEYNAMED COURT OFFICER Roy Passey, district scout commissioner, com-missioner, was appointed chief juvenile probation officer to the Fourth district Saturday by Judee George S. Ballif, subject to con'1 firmation by the juvenile court commission. Mr. Passey succeeds Wren Wilkins who died on May 15. He assumes his new duties on June 1. Mr. Passey is considered to toe unusually well qualified for the position by training and personality. personal-ity. He has been a" boy scout worker for 25 years and at the present time is one of the district dis-trict commissioners in Provo. He has had particular success in his work with boys, a fact which should go far in solving his problems prob-lems as a probation officer. Hobble Creek Camp Captain Visitor Captain Milton P. Morgan, commanding com-manding officer of the 'Hobble Creek civilian conservation corps camp was a visitor in Provo, Saturday, paying a call at the Herald office to get a collection of magazines contributed by Provo residents for use . of the men in the camp. The captain reported that the camp is beginning to take shape, slowly, The mess hall was occupied occu-pied for the first time, Saturday and other buildings will be completed com-pleted soon. Latest Strike Developments By UNITED PRESS - Some little hope for peace; emerged from America's seething seeth-ing strike fronts today. Developments in the major sectors sec-tors were: $ TOLEDO Rioting around plant; of Electric Auto-Lite company halter, but more fighting threatened. threat-ened. Strikers rejected first peace proposal; will consider second today. to-day. MINNEAPOLIS Truck drivers strike which caused violent rioting riot-ing resulting in one death, settled; fleet owners agreed to all labor demands. SAN FRANCISCO Forebodings Forebod-ings of fighting and hopes for peace intermingled in tense dock workers strike which has tied up all Pacific coast shipping. Strikers Strik-ers agreed to load food ships for Alaska where famine feared unless un-less ships resume service soon. OPPORTUNITY "Say Bill, what's this I hear about two big sale days Monday and Tuesday," inquired the customer cus-tomer of Bill the Barber. "Two big days are right," answered an-swered Bill. "They say that opportunity op-portunity knocks only once but this sale proves that that old idea is all wrong. Why say, feller, with all the preparation the merchants have made, and all the fine merchandise mer-chandise they have on sale, and at such remarkably low prices, any one would be foolish not to say that old man opportunity himself is right here again. Also any one would be 'nutty' to go outside of Utah county to buy." "Listens good,' said the customer. cus-tomer. "But how the deuce do I knowthat this is a 'hot' sale?", "Go visit the stores and see for yourself," advised Bill. "You know a good bargain when you see it. Scatter yourself around and circulate cir-culate your money while, it brings you good dividends. Buy Utah county merchandise, Utah county gas and drive a car sold in Utah county and I'm tellin' you it will come back many fold." "I believe it," said the customer. "So let's go." "O. K. by me," answered Bill. Mellon Asks Refund WASHINGTON, May 26 (U.R) A refund of $139,045 in 1931 income in-come taxes and re-determination of a $1,319,000 deficiency assessment assess-ment were sought today by former for-mer Secretary of Treasury Andrew W. Mellon in a petition filed with the United States board of tax appeals. Springville To Entertain Daughters Of Utah Pioneers SPRINGVILLE Plans underway to entertain Utah county D. U. P. are the or- ganization members here, June 14. A program in the Third ward hall and a picnic luncheon on the city park .are outlined now for the occasion. It is hoped that an appropriate marker for the old cotton- QUARTERLY CONFERENCE HELD TODAY Seminary Students Obtain Diplomas At Final Exercises Here Stake quarterly conference will be held in the Utah stake tabernacle today, with sessions ses-sions at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m., in charge of President T. N. Taylor. The opening session Saturday night was given over to the graduating exer-cisces exer-cisces of the Provo L. D. S. Seminary, Sem-inary, in charge of Thornton Booth, one of the graduates. Talks were made by Wood row Washburn, Ruth Bourne, Myrna Thorsen, scripture reading -by-Margaret Johnson; invocation, Geniel Stevens, and benediction by Lynn Brown. The music was the boys' and girls' choruses of the Provo high school under the direction of Ernest Paxman. The diplomas were presented to the graduates by President Taylor, Tay-lor, following remarks by Principal Prin-cipal A. V. Washburn. A reception was given at the seminary building in honor of the graduates following the exercises. exer-cises. Special music for the two conference con-ference sessions today will be sung by the Brigham Young university uni-versity combined chorus, assisted by soloists under the direction of Prof. Franklin Madsen, with Mrs. Leon Van Wagener at the organ. m. i. aTplans PROGRAM HERE The Y. L. and Y. M. M. I. A. will have charge of this evening's session, of the Utah .ste. quarterly quarter-ly conference, ta convene at 7. S0 o'clock in the tabernacle. Miss Grace Cheever, stake Y. L. M. I. A. president will preside, pre-side, and Theodore Johnson has the music in charge. Winners of the various stake M. I. A. contests will be featured in the splendid program arranged. The numbers follow: Talk, Bern-ardine Bern-ardine Richins, Fifth ward, Gleaner Glean-er public speaking contest winner; win-ner; talk, Wendell Alldredge, Manavu, "M" Men's Public speaking; speak-ing; retold story, Helen Holbrook, Fifth -ward, junior girl; retold story, Luther Edwards, Fifth ward, Vanguard; retold story, Gloria Tanner, Fourth ward, Bee Hive; two numbers, Bonneville chorus; selections, Manavu chor- us; violin selections, Rowena Christensen, Fifth ward; violin vio-lin solo, Miss Helen De Graff. GRANTS VISIT UTAH COUNTY Heber J. Grant, president of the L. D. S. church, and his wife, Augusta Winter Grant, observed their golden wedding anniversary Saturday in Utah county.' Leaving Salt Lake early Saturday Sat-urday morning for a trip around the Afpine scenic loop, they were the guests of honor at a family dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Young) of American Amer-ican Fork, son-in-law and daughter daugh-ter of President Grant. Later in the day they visited the scene of Mrs. Grant's birth and early girlhood, Pleasant Grove. She is the daughter f the late Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Winters, Win-ters, early Utah county pioneers. SUGAR QUOTAS SET WASHINGTON, May 26 Quotas for the sugar companies in Utah were announced, Saturday as follows: Utah-Idaho Sugar company, Salt Lake City, 2,844,-031; 2,844,-031; Amalgamated Sugar company, com-pany, Ogden, 1,989,544; Gunnison Gunni-son Sugar company, Centerfield, 198,751; Layt'on Sugar company, Lay ton, 267,504. wood tree on North Main street will be secured by that time and the .placing of the marker made a part of the , day's exercises. Mrs. Blanch Hales and Mrs. Elizabeth Owens are in charge of the day's program. Mrs. Julia Packard is in charge of tajble and seating " arrangements. Memorial Day To Be Observed Here Wednesday Provo and All Other Towns in Utah County To Honor - Departed Dead. Tributes to the departed dear ones who sleep under the sod will be paid at Memorial Mem-orial day exercises to be carried car-ried out in practically all of the towns in Utah county Wednesday. Programs under the direction of the city fathers have been prepared at Provo, Springville, Spanish Fork, Payson, Santaquin, . Pleasant GroVeT American Fork and Lehi. Pardee To Speak T. Earl Pardoe, professor of speech at the Brigham Young university, will deliver the address ad-dress at the Memorial day exercises exer-cises to be held at the Provo city cemetery. Plans for the observance," observ-ance," sponsored by the Disabled Veterans' organization, assisted by the city commission and chamber of commerce, have now been completed, com-pleted, according to Lyle Bell, chairman, and T. E. Nesbitt, in charge. Mayor A. O. Smoot will be master mas-ter of ceremonies. Prior to the program the daylight, salute will be fired by the 145th f ieldartuM lery. Included in the program at the cemetery will be music by the Provo high school band and other musical selections. The invocation invoca-tion will be offered by Father P. Bochmer Anselm. The-boy scouts will take charge of special flag raising ceremonies and also assist in honors to the soldier dead in other ways. The public is asked to cooperate in carrying out the spirit of the day by displaying the flag. The rules require that on public buildings the flag be at half mast until noon, when the emblem is lowered and then raised to full mast position. posi-tion. The afternoon's celebration includes in-cludes a ball game at 2:30. Later in the afternoon the entertainment entertain-ment will be carried out at the Geneva resort with a water carnival car-nival in the pool under the direction direc-tion of Ferron Losee and a dance to follow in the pavilion. SPANISH FORK TO HONOR DEAD SPANISH FORK Plans for the observance of Memorial day here are complete and Dwight W. Hamilton, chairman of the parade committee, has announced the foWjtan State meet. ' The "Y" miio- lowing outline for tneparaae 1:V, ..rill r, ocnmMo of th Post- W 11 11 1-1 was. -w - office corner promptly at 9 a. m. sharp, and will marcn to tne cemetery in the following formation: forma-tion: Colors American Legion division under the direction of Dwight Hamilton; senior high school band, directed by Glenn Coffman; national guard, directed direct-ed by Capt. Rex O. Daniels; firemen, fire-men, directed by Ed Hughes; junior jun-ior high band; scouts under the direction of H. E. Hughes and Grant Rounds; city officials, directed di-rected by Marshal Ed. Clark; Memorial day committees directed by Mayor Rees W. James; Kiwanis club, directed by W. T. Brock-bank Brock-bank ; automobile division; American Legion Auxiliary division; divi-sion; Gold Star mothers and sis-sters, sis-sters, directed by Mrs. Icabinda Sorenson; sons and daughter of pioneers, directed by Ed m. Banks; United Indian War Veterans Veter-ans under the direction of Jesse Butler. Each chairman will be responsible for his own group. At the cemetery a short program will be given under the direction of A. T. Money after which each organization or-ganization will decorate its own "graves. Following the exercises at the local cemetery members of the American Legion will go to Goshen where the graves of departed buddies will be decorated. decorat-ed. The Legion members will likewise decorate graves of "buddies "bud-dies at Benjamin, Salem and Santaquin. Butler's Buyer Is Visiting Here Miss Elva Myers formerly in charge of Butler's ready to wear department and since August last representing Butler's and other firms in Utah, Arizona and New Mexico as Los Angeles resident buyer arrived in American-Fork Thursday in time to witness her sister LaDean graduate in the 1934 class.' Miss Myers will spend the month of June in Utah visiting her clients and her many friends and will return to Los Angeles in July to be ready for the fall market. Miss Myers states that the Los Angeles market is growing in importance each season and it would be surprising to know the volumeoforders that are placed by large houses on the Atlantic coast as well as- in the interior. "Y" Track Men Win Conference Meet With 66 1-2 Points Cougars Collect 7 First Places and JScore Heavily Ail-Around to Take Annual Meet Witlrtlidiculous Ease. DENVER, Colorado, May 26 (U.R) Brigham Young university uni-versity won the Rocky Mountain conference track and field meet this afternoon with ridiculous ease, dethroning the University of Utah as title holders in the conference widely wide-ly known for its great athletes. V The B. Y. U. Cougars of Coach ,Ott Romney utilized their alPaTomid strength to accumulate 66. points,! i2 points ahead of their nearest competitor, Colorado Aggies, which piled up 42 points. C. U. Comes Third The other schools placed as follows: fol-lows: Colorado University 38, University Uni-versity of Utah 36, Utah Aggies 21., Denver 21, Colorado College 8, Colorado Teachers 4, Montana State 3. But for the outstanding performance per-formance of Meredith Jamieson, of the University of Colorado, the western division might well have held the meet by themselves. Jamieson won four second places, becoming high-point man by scoring scor-ing 16 points. Verney Comes Second Brigham Young placed in all but four of the 16 events and sprang surprises to take several unexpected points. John Verney of the "Y" nosed out Eddie Peterson Peter-son of U. S. A. C. by taking second sec-ond in the shotput; Bohman-toolc third in the javelin, Schofield and Wilson came one-two in the high hurdles with Wilson coming .second, Schofield third and Lewis fifth in the low hurdles, and Brady captured the high jump with a .tremendous leap of 6 feet 2 inches. Ernest Barlow of Utah repeated his triumph of the Utah-B. Y. U. dual meet over LaMar Taylor of! B. Y. U. when he beat out the lithe Cougar in the fast time of 4:23.9: Dudley Wins Quarter George Ashby- of B. Y. U. cut the half-mile time down to near the conference record by winning the race in 1:57.2 and Lyndon Dudley Dud-ley beat his deadly rival Jeppson of Utah when he rah the quarter in 49 flat. George Gourley, Young's great pole vaulter, went 13 feet 3-8 inch to take his specialty and tied for fourth in the high jump. Cannon, as expected, won the discus throw but his throw was 145.3 feet, 15 feet less than his conference record, made in the reIay team of Hotter, Walker ' "ttlftC'l (Continued on Page Six) Payson Men Pick Beautiful Site For Scout Camp PAYSON Dr. L. D. Pfouts, camping director of the Timp-anogos Timp-anogos council in company with LeRoy Bunnell, scout commissioner commission-er of Nebo district, Abner Baird, Nebo camp director, S. Roland Lindsay, chairman of Nebo district dis-trict council and George E. Wilson of the Payson Fourth ward troop committee, made a trip to the head of Payson canyon this week to select a site for the boy scout camp to be held during the week of June 11. Several very beautiful and inspirational in-spirational spots were considered and it was decided for this year to hold the camp at the Jennie Simmons spring. This location provides about all that a good camp requires woodv water, shade, play and parade grounds, a beautiful and inspiring view of the surrounding country. Plant ( Continued on Page Three Provo To Greet State Air Fleet Provo is making preparations prepar-ations to welcome the Salt Lake chamber of commerce "good, will air armada" consisting con-sisting of 26 planes which is due to -arrive here Tuesday afternoon. Preparations are in charge of the Provo chamber of commerce, the Utah Oil Refining company and other groups. The visit of the armada which brings to Provo Dean Brimhall, former Provo man, Ray L. Peck and others, has been made the center of a community celebration and a huge sales event sponsored by .the merchants of Provo. See the inside pages f today's to-day's paper for bargains to be offered! : v-- T SUMKWMISE WATER YIELD A A steady flow of water is seeping seep-ing into two of Provo city's sumps x which are still in the process of being dug in order to augmentj the city irrigation supply. . The sump at First East and Ninth North has; been trenched down to about 8 feet, approximately approxi-mately half the depth desired and the other sump at the headJf the Tanner Race is yielding a steady supply, although not completed yet. . " Start On Two Mre Work is expected to start Monday Mon-day on two more sumps, one at Fifth West and Third South, the other at Ninth West and Sixth South, accordingio--Walter P. Whitehead, citywater commissioner. commis-sioner. The water supply is steadily falling off, Mr. Whitehead says. It is imperative that Provo citizens citi-zens adhere to the water sprinkling sprink-ling rules and use the water only in their turns. Otherwise it wilt be necessary to adopt more stringent string-ent rules and bring violators into court. Flat rate notices are being sent out from theu.water department office in which are given the, schedules showing the time, limit for sprinkling. Some persons will be allowed only 20 minutes or half an hour for sprinkling, according to the size of their lawn. In the past many with such smaller lawns have been usinjf the full , two-hour period since the sprinkling sprink-ling regulations were put into effect. ef-fect. 12 DRUM CORPS TO SHOW HERE An all-day program of entertainment enter-tainment is being planned by the Provo American Legion for the Independence Day celebration for Provo on July Fourth, with . features fea-tures from sunset until midnight. Merchants of Provo have already al-ready received tiftkets wihch will be passed out to' patrons from now until Independence day. In the evening celebration at the B. Y. U. stadium a new automobile automo-bile will be given away to someone some-one in the stands, through the medium of the tickets. Plan Big Parade The festivities will begin with the sunrise salute, followed by band -troficerts from 8:30 to 9:30, the big parade being scheduled to begin at 9:30. In this parade will be 12 or more drum corps from eight different states, two junior drum corps and possibly two auxiliary drum corps, as well as numerous floats from business and service organizations and high school bands. A patriotic meeting is slated for the Utah stake tabernacle at 11 o'clock which will feature an unusual musical program and a speaker of wide recognition.- A ball game between the , Provo Timp3 and a team to be selected will take place in the afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The intermountain drum corps drill and contest will be held at the stadium in the evening, along with several vaudeville acts, daylight day-light fireworks -at sunset and the giving of the automobile. After the car is given away the 'night fireworks will follow. The display dis-play is expected to be one of the foremost ever seen here. Pastor Arrives At Provo Church Rev. Robert. R. Echols of the missionary district of Nevada, has arrived in Provo to take charge of St. Mary's Episcopal church J 50 West' Second .North street, forj the time being., . Rev. Echols -is originally from the east and his family will join him later should he decide to re main in Provo. |