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Show SECTION TWO PRQVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1938 PAGE ONE: OLD BUILDING TO BE RAZED Springville is to have a new gymnasium, according to announcement an-nouncement by Principal W. W. Brockbank of the high school. The assurance of the new building came with the recent approval, of a VVPA project granting expenditure expen-diture of $100,200 In federal funds and $98,784 in school dis-' trict funds for buildings , and remodeling improvements thni-out thni-out the district. Besides the gymnasium building:, build-ing:, considerable improvement will also be made on the old high school building for a junior high school. Included in the building plans also is the razing of the Washington Wash-ington school building on the corner of Second East and Third South street, the material from which wherever possfble, to be used in construction of the gymnasium. gym-nasium. The school erected in 1892, as one of the most up to date buildings build-ings in the district, was condemned con-demned in 1936, because of fire hazards. Following a survey by the state of school, buildings, it was estimated to cost more to remodel the building to comply with state requirements than it was worth. It was therefore, closed permanently for school purposes. During the past few months however, a portion of the building has been used by Kolob stake as church security program headquarters. A definite date for razing of the building and beginning of the new gym., has not been set. but in the opinion of school officials will get underway in the very neat future. Street Project Gains Approval longest of eleven WPA projects proj-ects for which presidential, approval ap-proval was received recently ;uul calls for the improving of streets throughout Springville by j-ubgrading, oiling, filling and r. j . t rat or, announced. The Springville project provides lot an expenditure of $40,044 in federal funds and $30,596 in city funds. The entire list of projects announced an-nounced with that of Springville tot.ils '5205,629 and includes im-p: im-p: ovments throughout the stae. Sjiringville's . project including the initial work on the subgrad-(:ig subgrad-(:ig and gTaveling- of the streets preparatory to oiling began sever, sev-er, il weeks ago. Married Folks DANCE Tuesday - Utahna s C ARTER'S ORCHESTRA 1 w A New Designs IP A IP Low Prices IB Gessford's, Inc. 17 North University Ave. Paint - Hardware J r 0 RMAfeES "WHERE STYLE BEGINS" PiROVO, LIT AM miss marion searle Will Be in HOMAGE'S CORSET DEPT. ALL DAY SATURDAY, MAY 14th Miss Searle is an Expert in Corsetiere Fitting, and Will Be Glad To Help You With Your Corset Needs. We Feature BON-TON Foundations! OUR BOARDING HOUSE VOL) DESERVE A ' A Wf BFEAK.' MOWS ABOUT 7HAK1KS, V?IIIIIPv' f A "TOUR TO A FLICKER ff MR. AjSTAIREv J f i TONkSHT AKJt? A 3IT BUT THIS IS J ' BOS "V H OF CHERRY HQPPIKJCj THE EVEKJIMO ( &Z J OVER TH' WAX E IP gf 1 HAVE A PATE Wv 5 "V" FLOOR? 1 HATE f WITH MY BIG A J ( 1 V ) j TO BR ACS, BUT . I0 MOMENT STICK IJ ' ( OOT I I'M A REAL. KJIFTY vgp: AROUWD AKJU JJMm ZA7 S ,( ME TO MUSIC, '' MEET THE. r - ( A A s S NUMBER OKJE. If, J 7 AtUXWf CQPR. 19M BY WE A SERVICE, INC. T. M. BEG. U. S. PAT. OFFt ll LIKE A BOMAKI "THUMB . . 1 ) f LIN DON SIRS. LAWRENCE WALKER I Reporter j Mrs. Dell Pregmore and daughter daugh-ter Ruth, Jimmy Burns, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Harker of Bingham. Mr. grid Mrs. Leo Aston of Salt Lake were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Len Harris and family. Minor Aldredge of Magna, visited Tuesday with his niece, Mrs. Robert Walker. Mr. and Mrs. Liston Bray of Murray, Mr. and Mrs Guy Walker of Provo, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Bone of Lehi, Mr. and Mrs. La- Mar Green and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bezzant were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Hattie Bezzant Miss Phyllis West and Gena V. Allred were Provo visitors Monday. Mon-day. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Naylor of Midvale, were week end visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Wright and family. Springville Girl In Music Festival Selected from 4,900 students to be drum major of a band which took first place in the recent southern California annual band and orchestra festival in Los Angeles, An-geles, Calif., is the honor which has come to Miss Jettie Jacobs, a former student of the Spring-vflle Spring-vflle high school and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Jacobs of Springville. Led by Miss Jacobs, the band marched down Broadway and was judged for first place among 100 other bands participating in the contest. Miss Jacobs was personally per-sonally congratulated by the mayor of Los Angeles, and her picture with many fine compliments compli-ments came out in the southern California papers, as band drum major. RENEWING FLOOR WAX To keep your waxed floors their original tone and always clean and shining, before renewing renew-ing the wax finish remove the old wax coating with a clean cloth moistened with turpentine. Allow Al-low floor to dry thoroughly, then apply a thin coating of wax and polish vigorously. Several thin coatings of wax added separately and each polished will usually wear better and have a higher gloss than one thick coat. An electric polisher does the job quickly and easily. Waxed floors should be dusted with a dry mop or soft cloth and rubbed occasionally occa-sionally with a wax polisher. A Canadian artist is credited with making the world's smallest portrait. It is painted on a bloodstone blood-stone one-eighth of an inch in length, and was done with a brush made of a single camel hair. I Radio Programs FRIDAY, MAY 13 4:45 CBS Hollace Shaw, soprano with concert orcheatra.-5:00 orcheatra.-5:00 KSL International News. 5:15 KSL Adventures of Jimmy Allen. 5:45 CBS Boake Carter. 6:00 CBS Hollywood Hotel with Raymond Paige and his orchestra and Frank Parker. 7:00 CBSSong Shop. 7:45 KSL Pinto Pete. 8:00 CBS Just Entertainment with the Andrew Sisters Sis-ters and Jack Fulton. 8:15 CBS Lum and Abner. 8:30 CBS Paul Whiteman and his orchestra. 9:00 KSL Musical Moments. 9:45 Ozzie Nelsen. 10:00 CBS Orchestra to be announced. an-nounced. 10:15 KSL International News. 10:30 KSL International News. 11:00 KSL Death Watch, mystery series of dramas. Midnight 12:00 CBS Pasadena Civic Auditorium Audit-orium orchestra. MWRDAY, MAY 14 A. M. 6:00 KSL Sunrise Serenade. 7:00 KSL International News. 7:15 CBS Lew White at the console. con-sole. 8:00 KSL International News. 8:15 CBS Cincinnati Conservatory Conserva-tory of Music. 9:30 CBS George Hall and his orchestra 10:00 CBS Golden Melodies. 10:45 CBS Buffalo Presents. 11:30 KSL Utah Congress of P. T. A. 11:45 KSL International News. P. M. 12:00 KSL International News. 12:30 CBS Waltzes of the World. 2:00 KSL American League baseball. 3:00 KSL International News. 3:15 KSL International News. 3.30 KSL Deseret News Amateur Ama-teur Program Search for Talent. 5:00 CBS Saturday Swl-np club. 5:30 KSL International News. 6:30 CBS Saturday Night -Serenade. 7:00 CBS Your Hit Parade. 8:00 CBS Will Ocsborne and his orchestra. 8:30 CBS Johnny Presents: Russ Morgan's Music. 9:00 CBS Professor Quiz. 9:45 CBS Nat Brand wynne and his orchestra. 10:15 KSL International News. DANCE Every WED. and SAT. Rainbow Gardens with DOB ORTON and His Popular SWING BAND! Special Feature! RUTH WARD, Famous Radio Girl Baritone, Soloist GENTS 25c Ladies Free to 9 p. m. Wed. WITH MAJOR HOOPOE PLEASANT GROVE ! MISS VIOLA WEST ; j Correspondent Phone 28-W ' PLEASANT GROVE! Graduation Gradua-tion exercise ror tne TimpanogQg stake seminary students will be held in the stake tabernacle at Pleasant, Grove Sunday, May 22, at 7:30 'p. m. according to Instructor In-structor H. P. Jones The program pro-gram will be in the form of a pageant "Honoring the courage of the women of Zion." AH the members of the class will take part. Miss Florence Jense wiil be the reader. The graduates are: Nathan Adams, Reed Beck, Howard Green, Don Gamette, Gene Harvey. Har-vey. Keith Jense, Dale Johnson, Gerald Meeks, Russell Neilson, Gordon Olsen, Richard Swenson, Clifton Wadley, Rex Walker, William Wil-liam West, Virgil Walker, Henaon Walker, Virgil Cook. Mariana Adamao Erraa Atwpod, Vrna Day, Rose liarper, Frances wl ton, Rhea Hooley, Zola Hooley, Florence Jense, Jean Loader, Reva Marrott. Mary Mills, La Verl Neves, Delia Radmall, Elizabeth Told, Cleo Thome, Annis Harper, La Rue Wright, Phyllis West. A Cornell professor states that fish do not hear. Oh, to be a fish, now that swing is here. 10:30 KSL International News. 10:45 CBS Orchestra to be an nounced. 11:00 CBS Hollywood Barn Dance 11:45 CBS Nat Brand wynne and his orchestra. Midnight 12:00 CBS Pasadena Civic Audit orium orchestra. Provo's Lowest Priced Theater! 15c ANYTIME! Open Saturday and Sunday! Two Big Pictures! Loaded With Adventure, Romance and Action ! "Captain Blood" I i i' 4 WITH ERROLFLYNN OUVIA De HAVMAND And a Cast of Thousands! A First Run Action Hit! lb PLUS Short Treat and LEW LEHR in 'Movietone News1 Washington , Werry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) treaty violation was called to the attention of the state department one week before publication of our arms charges. (Mr. Hull announced an-nounced publicly that' we had taken tak-en him by surprise.) However, his associates had ample advance notice, and ther rather involved and hastily prepared legal explanation explan-ation was submitted by us to lawyers law-yers in other branches of the government gov-ernment and to international experts ex-perts on the outside, who remain convinced that the law is being violated. b. Inside word now is that because be-cause of present embarrassment there will be a shake-up in the State Department's legal staff. c. Mr. Hull himself got a little mixed up in his explanations as to why it was legal for the United States to ship arms to Germany. CROSSED REASONS In all he gave three different reasons at different times. 1st, Mr. Hull used the explanation explana-tion supplied him by his legalists, namely that although the Treaty of 1921 with Germany provided that Germany should import no arms, there was no obligation obliga-tion to prevent the United States from selling her the prohibited goods. Thus although Germany was violating the Treaty of 1921, the legalists argued, the United States was not. In citing this, Mr. Hull's experts apparently ignored the fact that the Neutrality Act is quite clear that export licenses shall not be Issued toy the State Department in any case "where exporation of arms, amniunition, or implements of war would be in violation of a treaty to which the United States is a party." In other words. Congress did not specify that either ne country coun-try or the other might violate a treaty, but only that the treaty should not be violated at all. When this was called to Mr. Hull's attention, plus a statement made by him in 1934 that he would look upon the sale of arms to Germany with "grave disapproval," disap-proval," he shifted his position. (2nd) At this point Mr. Hull maintained that Germany had scrapped the arms provisions of the Versailles Treaty, and since these were the same provisions embodied in our separate treaty with Germany, the United States was justified in ignoring them. (3rd) On the day following, Mr. Hull brought out a new excuse, namely that the arms shipments to Germany were infinitesimal in amount (a total Ot $1,689,095.11 In. about, two. years) -kd that this was not worth worrying, about. If this logic were followed through, Germany's ability to buy arms in the United States would be limited only by her capacity t pay for and take delivery of them. AMERICAN GRAVES Real fact is that Mr. Hull in all past public statements has been one of the greatest champions cham-pions of the sanctity of treaties. He has maintained that they are the basic foundation for trade and peace, has sent many notes of pro NEW TODAY FOUR BIG UNITS! FAST ACTION ENTERTAINMENT At Prices Pleasing to the Pocketbook! ...BREATHLESS ROMANCE FROM iW THE START TO fkf THE FINISH V DICK PURCELL U BEVERLY ROBERTS H Knudsen Urges Curb on Unions - jt - SS- t.-.-, . """:::... .: s .-. jt Declaring that the Wagner labor act is the greatest drawback to good industrial relations, William ' S. Knudsen, above, President of the General Motors Corporation, declared at the annual meeting of the United States Chamber of Commerce that eventually the federal government must take a stand against industrial unionism because it exists on "force in defiance of law." Legion Men Plan Memorial Rites Plans for the Memorial Day exercises will be outlined in detail de-tail at a meeting of the American Legion next Wednesday night, at whjch time also the Legionnaires will entertain at their annual fathers' and sons' night program. The program is under direction of Commander V. O. Hafen. The last meeting of the post featured a discussion of means by which motorists might be stopped from speeding on Main street. It was suggested that a stop sign be placed on the comer of Fourth South and Main street, and a delegation composed of V.O. Hafen, F. C. Packard and W. J. Phillips was appointed' to meet with the city council and make the Strggestlon. tests to various countries against treaty violation. There is everv iutif ication for fthis. And were it not for the fact tftnt the Secretary of State now hashis Tennessee mountaineer dandetvup, he would be the first to admitNthat there is good reason rea-son to keepinviolate the treaty of peace with Germany. For that treaty contains v many beautiful things beneficial to the American people. " . (Copyright. 1938, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) 2 10P DARING DEEDS twrsemansaa i tf Z yttW THRILLS THE 3 STOOGES In Their Latest Comedy Riot "TERMITES OF 1938" LATEST NEWS "I t nri Junior Graduates Listed At Payson a PAYSON Payson junior high school graduation exercises will be held Thursday. May 19, when Dr. L. D. Stewart of the Nebo district board of education will award certificates to the follow-inJ follow-inJ graduates: Estella Adams. Gordon Amos, Lamar Ash by, Margaret Ballard, Pearl Ballard, Nina Barnett, Edna Bissell, Lewis Bjamsen. Fern Black, Wanda Black. Kathleen Branagan, Curtis Brandon, Donald Don-ald Burdick. Verla Butler, Naomi Cannon, Russell Cannon, Grove Carter, Phyllis Carter, Grant Carlisle, Car-lisle, T. J. Cloward, Darh.-ne Cowan, Cow-an, Mauri ne Cowan, Keith Cox, Barbara Curtis, Arthurella Daley, Jean Davis, Bonnie Edwards. June Erickson, Douglas Erlandson. Nellie Pearl Francom. Fern Gas-ser, Gas-ser, Eileen Hardy, Francis Haskell, Has-kell, Darrell Heath. Barbara Hill-man. Hill-man. June Hinze, Junior Huish. Myrtle Hunt, Rex Hurst. Thomas Jeppson, Tressa Jones. Thomas Law, Aleene Loveless, Nyla Mayer, Ruth Ann Menlove. Mildred Montague, Grant Moore, Lee More, Bonnie McBeth. Dave McMullin, Dorothy Noon. Louise Page, Lloyd Palmer, Keith Patten. Thelma Pearl, Clara Jean Perkins, Per-kins, "L. C. Provstgaard, Jean Pul-ver, Pul-ver, Margaret Rees. Lynn Schaer-rer, Schaer-rer, Orin hirts, Elaine Shuler. Wayne Smith, Riby Snelson. Glenn Tanner, Glade Taylor, Gordon Gor-don Tervort, Robert Waters, Cornell Cor-nell Wilson. Erma Wilson. Jean Wilson, Ruth Wilson, Wayne Wilson, Wil-son, Mary Worthen, Fay Young. South America Is Theme at Meeting Lee B. Valentine, student at Brigham Young university who recently returned from the S6uth American L. D. S. mission, discussed dis-cussed the social and poliical problems of Argentina at a meeting meet-ing of the International Relations club recently. Mr. Valentine related some uf the early history of Argentina, and told of their present government govern-ment which is similar to ours In many respects. The country of Argentina ia about one third as large a the United States am! has about one tenth as much population, pop-ulation, half of whom live in the northern part of the country. "The other half of the Americas Ameri-cas will become increasingly important im-portant to the United States?, and more interest should be shown toward to-ward these people and their language lan-guage and customs." was the conclusion con-clusion of Mr. Valentine. Reed Clegg of Roosevelt, recently recent-ly elected president of the club for the coming year, was in charge of the meeting. Brought a Day Early Especially For Band Contestant Visitors! YOUR MONEY BACK If You Don't Agree That This is Among the Ten Best Pictures You've Ever Seen ! L I) FirstShow itB Strawberry Day Set For June 8 PLEASANT GROVE Pleasant Grove's annual Strawberry festival festi-val will be observed this year on June 8. That is the date tentatively tenta-tively set by the chamber of commerce, com-merce, Lee Peterson, president, announced. The aim of the various var-ious committees will be to make this seventeenth celebration an outstanding one from every angle. Special Midnight Pre view I For Our Visitors Saturday at 11:45 We Are Proud to Present Such Hit Pictures On a Single Program! TERROR Thunders From the "Bijr House" in the Year's Most Scorching Blast of JAMES OUVER CURWOOD'S "CALL OF THE YUKON" with RICHARD ARLEN and BEVERLY ROBERTS NOVELTY and NEWS Final Big Day ' A Great Story of a Woman's Devotion! WALTER HUSTON Also W -Jft |