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Show PAGE THREE P.-T.A. Activities HOLD EVERYTHING! By Clyde Lewis Biggest News Story LAKE VIEW PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1938 School News m v - ' v n in ait. winners . Officers, Provo City Council of Parents and Teachers President, Mrs. C A. Larsen; First Vice President, Mrs. Katie Mitchell; Second Vice President, Superintendent J. C. Moffitt; Third Vice President, Mrs. Frank J. Earl; Secretary, Sec-retary, Mrs. Henry East; Treasurer, Mrs. William Green; Historian, Mrs. La Von Menlove; Committee Chairman, Program, Pro-gram, Mrs. Milton Marshall; Membership Mrs. G. R. Willett; Publicity. Mrs. Fred Strate; Publications, Mrs. Anson Hatch; Magazine, Mrs. Clifton Thatcher; Hospitality, Mrs. Ralph Hoover; Hoov-er; Finance and Budget, Nello Westover; School lunches, Priscilla Jensen; Visual education, Mrs. H. B. Mensel, Thomas Peterson; Health. Mrs. Carol Raile; Fathers Council, Jacob Coleman: Recreation, Mrs. Jena V. Holland; Room mothers. Mrs. LaVar Christensen; Chairman Summer Roundup, Round-up, Mrs. Arvil Watts; chairman. Safety, Mrs. David Reese; chairman. Study Groups, Mrs. Milton Marshall; Kindergarten, Mrs. Kenneth Weight. 'If we are tempted to make Avar upon another nation, we shall remember that we are steking to destroy an element of our own culture, cul-ture, and possibly its most imixrtant element. As long as war is re garded as wicked it will always looked upon a vulgar, it will reae Parent - Teacher Benefits Trv I'm rent Teacher' Association Associa-tion was organized as such .n the l':.it-il States February IT. 197, and in Ttah eleven yeais ago. In l'.rOi the tit'.-t P. T. A m Piovo va- oig.ir.ized. K. K. Corf man wa.-p! wa.-p! e.-uient . Susa Pouiton. f i rst -vice-president. L. K. Kgg-ru-n.- then sujierintender.t of schools, second vice-president, ar.d Mrs. Gertrude i'ae. now li !ni r i.m and instructor instruc-tor at the Maeser school, secretary .r.d tieasiirei. Fmn years ago Provo joined the national oratii-y.at oratii-y.at I".'. Chllil Welfare Airn The primary purport' ot" this organization is 'Child Weltaic.-" Specifically 'he aims arc to ;.i-ni'ite ;.i-ni'ite chiKl welfare in noine, .-,ch, 4 i hui'ch. and i oinmunity ; to iai-e the standards ol home life; 1" secure se-cure adequate laws tor the earv and protection of children; and youth to bring into closer illation tin- h'-ii,'- and the S( hool. that parent- and teachers may cooperate intelligently in the training of the ihild. and to develop between edu-i edu-i ators and the general public such urate! efforts as wil lsecure for every child the highest advantages advan-tages in physical, mental moral m ! spiritual education. 193.") National Ry Liws, Article II i Health Activities In ''in own community, there has been an effort to maintain oo.i physical health in the stu-i'.er.t--. In cases of contagious diseases, dis-eases, where the parents have -worked with the school nurses r.:;d teachers, the spread has been -ft ijowi oz fzoms dscotaHnq beautiful, useful colors in EVERY type of PAINT Charming, exclusive new shades and tints to help you carrv out your deired color scheme ... to inspire a refreshing re-freshing tone in decoratie effects. The largest assortment ever offered in fine paint for use on ALL surfaces 9 Buffs 5 Velio 9 Greens ( Blues 4 Creams and Ivories 3 Peach Colors ( Hose Colors &sk for FREE, large color chips of any of these colors for matching with draperies, carpeLs, upholstery, etc. BENNETT'S IN PROVO 272 W. Center Street, Phone 160 have its fascination. When it i& to bo jwpular. Oscar Wilde checked or minimized. Nurses and parents have visited homes to ; help where they could. ; T be P. T. A. has been most helpful help-ful where school projects were to he put over. Notable among examples, ex-amples, of this were the efforts to 1 raise funds for a flagpole at the Maeser School. The money was (obtained by dinner sold to child- ten. parents, teachers, and patrons of the school. When school plays, operettas, programs, and the like have been presented, the mothers have most efficiently and graciously grac-iously arranged for costumes, and other- things. They have willingly i devoted their time and effortH to help carry these things out. Assist In Campaigns At different times competitive cultural projects in art and music have included out-of-town en-, en-, Hants. The parents have turned their homes over to the use of j these competitors at times furn-lishing furn-lishing both food and rooms free jot" charge. j The 1. T. A. has been responsible respon-sible for many campaigns such as I the safety campaigns, clean up campaigns, etc.. that has resulted : in a mor e civically minded community. com-munity. The home-room mothers who ; contact par ents for the teachers plan informal get-acquainted meetings for the parents of the room, keep parents informed of all parent-teacher activities, investigate inves-tigate and report special talent in i each room and see that opportuni- ty is given to use talent thus de-i de-i veloping interest and initiative, make visits to school, develop a spirit of social unity between par- command, 3 Blue-Greens 6 Grays 3 Orchids COPR. 13fl BY NEA SERVICE. INC. "Be quiet, Junior can't you see your father has a big problem on his mind?" ents and teachers and develop a closer relation of parents, teachers and students. Parent's Help Needed The P. T. A. is handicapped thru parent failure to respond to the needs of specific children. This is unavoidable many times because of illness, work, or other reasons that may keep the parent away. Often indifference or refusal of the parent to lend support to the problem of dealing with their child has caused much trouble. Parents who come to the meetings meet-ings and are interested in the welfare of their children instill into them superior attitudes in regard re-gard to their- school situations. It aas also been found that problem children many times have problem parents. Hence, the purpose of the Parent Par-ent Teacher association is not to raise children easier, but to raise them better, not to make money, but make lives; not to criticize the home, but to raise its standards; not to igrtor poor schools, but to secure good ones; not to operate in schools. . but to cooperate with them; not to find fault, but to find facts; not to make every child a prodigy, but to give him a chance. LILY MELDRUM Publicity Committee. P. T. A. National Convention To Be In Salt Lake City Utah, the hostess state for the 42nd annual convention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers in May. offers a very unique program for the convention. conven-tion. Among the nationally known sneakers will be Dr. Paul Popenoe. director of Institute of Family Relations. Re-lations. Los Angeles. His subject will be "Personality." Dr. Pop-enoe's Pop-enoe's talk will be Tuesday morning. morn-ing. Miss Josephine Roche, chairman chair-man of President Roosevelt's Interdepartmental In-terdepartmental committee for coordination co-ordination of health activities of federal government, is scheduled o make the main address Monday. Hoalth Day " During her term as assistant Secretary of the United States treasury. Miss Roche was in charge of the U. S. Health Service. On Thursday, Rabbi Edgar Mag-nin Mag-nin of Los Angeles will deliver the address on " Home and School Cooperation Co-operation in Educating the Child to Be a Good Citizen." Rabbi Mag-nin Mag-nin is a well known writer and lecturer, is active in the National Council of Jews and Christians. Universal Religious Conference, and the advisory board of the Los Angeles board of education. Many social events, banquets, informal in-formal gatherings of delegates, are also being arranged for. New and Used Furniture Used 3-Piece Overstuffed fHF AP LEATHER SUITE IrUEiftl Used $1 g(fcup MATTRESSES ilo3W Used 5-Tube $-(T p g(Rj TABLE MODEL RADIOS ilfiooW Used $? CONGOLEUM RUG JJoW Used $? g CHEST OF DRAWERS OJoV Used $5 WASH STAND (Oak) JoV Used CA (B)g up DRESSERS . OoV E5SCSIKI A(SE WHERE YOU SAVE 310-316 West Center St. Phone 25 i Wee Big Chief Donald Flowerbird's the youngest actor to participate in the community com-munity pageant, "Ramona." at Hemet, Calif. But his acting is as tmpressive as are his tine feathers. Salt Lake Starts Auto Driver School SALT LAKE CITY. April 6 lr As a part of the 1938 drive against traffic deathsi the Salt Lake City police department has opened a weekly drivers' school. The class, under the direction of Sgt. Harvey C. Pierce, is open to the driving public. It meets on Thursday nights. According to practice in the court of City Judge Reva Beck Bosone. those passing a test following fol-lowing .attendance at the school will have $5.00 deducted from fines attached for reckless driv ing, speeding, running stop signs or driving through a red light. A two-inch pipe can handle four- times as much water as a one-inch pipe. 3 L 4. Students Ready To Put On Operetta TIMPANOGOS SCHOOL Gay robin redbreast is always up early in the morning. There he sits in a cherry tree near a garden getting get-ting insects out of your gardens-Put gardens-Put up a bird house somewhere in your garden. Probably a pretty bird like a blue bird would come and build its nest in it. R.-chard Sperry, 3rd grade. Last . Friday night our school building had a small fire. It burned the floor and part of the staircase in front of Miss Miller's room. Mrs. Bird across the street saw the fire and called the fire department. Then she called Mr. Staheli to have him come down. Mr. Staheli thought it was an April fool's joke because it was April 1. But later he came down to school to see about it. The damage wasn't very much. Saturday Satur-day the lumber men came to fix the damage. Today we had a surprise in our room. Shirley and I went after some oranges to bring back for the class. Miss Boyle kept the class a little over time so we could have them. Jeannie Hundley, Hund-ley, Miss Boyle's room. Our operetta. "Tom Sawyer." is ready for presentation April 7, which is Thursday The scenery is bei'ng painted by Mrs. Snow and the music is in charge of Miss Webb; the dramatics and staging is in charge of Mrs. Whit-aker. Whit-aker. We feel that this is nice clean entertainment and both children chil-dren and adults will enjoy it. Earl Slack, 5th grade. We are studying about Holland. They make .houses out of clay. The clay is found by the sea and they bake it into square blocks. There are two rooms in their houses; one for the people and the other for cattle. Louie Nelson, Nel-son, Miss Webb's room. We are going to have a new school building. They are working work-ing out here now. There is a tractor, which makes a lot of noise; shovels and picks There was a picture in the paper showing how it will look when it is finished. We think it will be very beautiful and we will be very proud of it. Ray Curtis, 4th grade. Spring is in the air. and the birds are here again. Don't you like the sun to shine? I like the warm sunshine The farmers are planting their gardens and they find it hard to keep the black birds out of their gardens. Eugene Barney, 3rd grade. Dear Mis. Boyer: I will tell a story as you told me to. Well, this is what I like best about spring.. I can go down to the barn and jump on the hay. The flowers will be in bloom. The trees will have leaves on them. The sky will be blue. Spring is the prettiest time of the year. I like to listen to the singing of the birds. I am happiest in the Springtime. -From Grace Mech-am. Mech-am. 3rd grade. FRANKLIN SCHOOL Queen Wilhelminia's father was king of the Netherlands. When she was ten years old, her father died. She was crowned queen when she was eighteen years old, at a church in .Amsterdam. The Dutch people were happy to have her as queen. She is now fifty-one fifty-one years old and is very wise. She is sometimes called "Lily Queen of the Land of Tulips." Queen Wilhelmia is a peaceful queen. She has kept her country peaceful and happy. She said her lovely country should not be used as a battlefield. Sh9 loves horseback riding, walking, skating, and likes to dig in her garden. She goes about alone without bodyguards because the people love her. GORDON KNUDSEN. Fourth Grade. INCUBATION OF EGGS In our room we are studying the principles of incubation of eggs. We have planned to have our incubator in our room. Those who wish may bring eggs and put them into the incubator. We hope all the eggs hatch. GLORIA CHRISTENSEN, PATSY EDMUNDS, LA JEAN STURGIS. Sixth Grade. THE IN DM ILL Oh, Holland, oh Holland, Where windmills go blowing , The people go dancing, And you draw my fancy. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE Wilbsul Calomel-Awl Tu'll Jobs Oil f M w the Msrainf BariV Is G$ The liver should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You' get constipated. Your whole system Is poisoned and you feel sour, unk and the world looks punk;. A mere bowel movement doesn't get at the cause. It takes those good, old Carter's LitUe Liver Pills tft get these two pounds af bile flowing freely and make yon feel "up and up." Harmless, gentle, yet amas-Ing amas-Ing in making- bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by bum. t&c Stubbornly refuse anything else. (Adv.) about will develop . "a' viitlHrz JTt l2rA2nX ) inclined Qrfajh-v. . Tii V? ' jJ to crew! n 'UtJJ m3k rtmW- InMiL i ' ' r Tin r-r-r-1 ijrr&, - mm . BY STUART WHITEHOrSE The artist, John Segesman, likes to draw pictures about important impor-tant happenings. He tries to keep abreast of the times with cartoons on Hitler, on Spain, on China and Japan. The other afternoon we sat down to map out a new cartoon. There was lots of news in the paper. Geographies and atlases were being made out of date by new political lineups which were changing the whole face of Europe. As we talked Segesman idly made a sketch. Probably from the "Snow White" influence, it was of a fawn He shoved it across the desk to me. "That," he said, "represents the most important news of the season." He was right. The fact that all nature is continuing its endless cycle of reproduction IS the important news right now. Politicians can cut up and partition the whole world, but it means little in the cycle of life compared to the fact that the grass comes up green again, that leaves and buds come on the trees, and that all nature stirs herself after her winter sleep. We take the spring rebirth of the world for granted, because we arc so used to it. But without it we would perish. T'ne Indians thought that each spring, forever, the buffalo would come back, because it had always been that way. But one spring the buffalo failed to return, and the redman's whole life was changed. There are smiles and chuckles in Segesman's baby birds, and colts, and piglets, pictured above. But, when you take them for what they represent, they are the moat important news in the world right now. tleber Man Heads Utah Cattle Men SALT LAKE CITY. April 6 H'.P -L. C. "Montgomery of Heber City was unanimously elected president of the Utah Cattle and Hor.se Growers association last night as the association closed a two-day conference. Plans were completed for a campaign against "rubber-tire" rustlers, and heads of the state highway patrol pledged support with rigid inspection of cattle shipments. SINCE THE 100 PRICE CUT ON THE PACKARD SIX EVERYBODY'S SAVING w i, yrr& same, A big difference CINCE the $100 Packard Six price cut, with no. change in the car itself, it-self, revealing figures at the right should bring the good news to many a motor car buyer that now he, too, can afford a Packard! Come in and let us show you how amazingly little, if any, extra you need pay per month on a beautiful new Packard Six! NOW you can buy A Packard Six 4-door Touring Sedan, delivered with standard equipment in this tXtor $31286 If your present car is of average value, it will probably cover the low down payment . of Monthly payments on the balance may be arranged on attractive terms. A. B. WORSLEY 120 NORTH UNIVERSITY BSf 25ta Lb-l 7licek2d- aood -t.L7 ... i 3r mors Grade A- 9 HLR Board Makes Important Ruling WASHINGTON. April 6 d'.E) The National Labor Relations board ruled today that an employer's employ-er's refusal to sign a contract with a union constituted a violation of the Wagner act. Holding that a written agree- i ment between employer and em ploye is an "integral element" of the collective bargaining process. ! the board ordered the Inland Steel company. Chicago. to bargain with the Steel Workers organizing committee, and, if agreement is "With prices now about the ,ur, innuldn't buy in value! A small difference in price! -DO0R BALL AND PUCE COMPARED TOURING ROLLER TO SEDAN WMEELBASE BEARINGS PACKARD SIX usually most (fodt"f CW ggt of (bieJ en fmctmry popular medtl of a (ar't gizt) a car's quality) dtltvrrtd pricti) PACKARD SIX 122' 48 S Car A 122' 24 $23 less Car B 119' 28 $&0 less CarC 1X9' 28 $100 less Car D 122' 30 $65 less CarE 122' 30 $10 more Car F 121' 28 $20 less CarG 117' 38 $75 less Car H 124' 38 $37 more Carl 117' 34 $128 less Car J 122' 34 $64 less CarK 116V 31 $30 less CarL 115' 30 $160 less - $429 AVENUE I MRS. SADIE SHAW j Reporter Phone 018-R-3 LAKE VIEW Mr. and Mrs. Scott A. Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Madsen, Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Spen-cer Madsen, Mr. and Mrs. Murray Loveless of Lake View, joined Bishop and Mrs. Golden Taylor of Payson to spend Sunday , in Spring-ville, Spring-ville, where they went to attend a birthday dinner in honor of Mrs. Pearl Sumsion. One of the outstanding events to enjoy was for a large number of people to attend the capping exercises of Miss Kathryn Sumsion Sum-sion of Lake View, who is taking the nurse course at the L. D. S. hospital, Monday evening. Later in the evening Mr. and Mrs. Max Blake of Salt Lake held open house for the visitors. Those to attend from Lake View were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sumsion, Mr. -and Mrs. Ray Gammon. Miss Nomi Holdaway, Billie Sumsion; the Misses Edna Scot!, Margaret Taylor, Virginia Taylor, Donna Scott, Glenda Taylor, Miss Ruth Johnson. They were joined by Mrs. Julia Hatton and Mr. and Mrs. Max Blake of Salt Lake. The exercises were held in the Ensign En-sign ward chapel. There were forty-one in the class. A very interesting program was enjoyed at Mutual Monday evening. eve-ning. Mr. Leslie L. Bunnell gave a talk. "Seeing Beauty Around;" Elvin Bunnell gave a talk on "Appreciation of Art." Herbert Johnson gave a biography of the "Life of Ottinger." Miss Clara Taylor told of her visit to the Art Exhibit. Catholicism To Be Discussion Theme "The Fundamental Truth of Catholicism'' will be Father Valerian Va-lerian Girardot's topic in the fifth of his series of Lenten course discussions dis-cussions at Church of the Immaculate Im-maculate Conception, Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. Non-Catholics are invited. The concluding talk on the series will be April 13. on "Religious Tolerance Toler-ance and Intolerance." The theme of the discussions is "Approaches to Catholicism." reached on wages, hours and other conditions of employment, to sign a contract with the union. The decision established a new and far-reaching precedent under the Wagner act and upheld the contentions of John L. -Lewis' Committee for Industrial Organization Organi-zation in the bitter "little Steel" strike last summer. ASK THE MAN WHO 0VNS ONE CO. INC. PHONE 686 1 V |