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Show PAGE FOUR PROVO (UTAH) -r EVENING HERALD- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1939 ANNUAL COUNCIL MEET SATURDAY Mayor Mark Anderson and Pres. F. S. Harris of B. Y. U. will give welcoming addresses at the third annual fellowship dinner din-ner of the Utah National Parks council Saturday evening. More than 250 scouters and their wives representing nearly every dsitrict of the council are expected to attend. The annual meeting will follow the dinner which starts at 6 p. m. Highlighting the annual meeting meet-ing will bea dramatization entitled en-titled "Scouting Marches On" presented by Troop 72 of Spanish ITork, scouts from Provo and members of the "Y" Eagles organization' or-ganization' of B. Y. U., greetings from President H. A. Gardner, Key awards by W. CJ. Barton, -council commissioner; and Silver Beaver awards for outstanding service. Committee members who pie-pared pie-pared the annual meeting include Dr. Li. D. Pfouts, general chairman; chair-man; M. W. Biid and C. J. Hart. arrangements; D. O. Wight, publicity pub-licity and tickets; Roy Passey, master of ceremonies; Wayne Li. Hales, annual report booklet, and H. A. Gardner, council president. Reservations for the dinner mustbe made at the Provo office of the Utah National Parks council coun-cil before noon Saturday. P. (J. Third Ward Plans Busy Week Dr. L. D. Pfouts of Payson SDeaks at the Pleasant Grove Third ward Sunday evening as scouts of that area open their anniversary an-niversary week program. Presentation of awards will be featured during the evening. Second Sec-ond ward scouts will be guests of honor. The program follows: flag ceremony, cere-mony, song "America", pledge of alegiance, investiture of new scouts under direction of Tom Walker, awarding of badges by troop committee, musical number from the ward, mother's response by Mrs. Mary Neves, musical num-bejrby num-bejrby Fred Hallidayand Paul Barney, talk by Dr. Pfouts, closing clos-ing song "Carry On." Awards will be made to Ben Walker. Reed Radmall and Paul Barney, Star badges; Wayne Bus-tian Bus-tian and J. H. Harvey. First class; Douglas Nielson, second class; Ben Walker, Stanley Walker, Bil-lie Bil-lie Bunnell. Lynn Atwood, Reed Radmall. Hoe Hilton. J. H. Harvey, Har-vey, Wayne Bustian. Norman Wright and Eldon Rasmusaen, badges. ST Pl I iii nil ni.m .1 Provo Join in ivati Ann iversary Wee onai Press Club Staff To Be Appointed Staff positions on the scout page will be assigned to Provo district press club members at a regular meeting Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. Members of the club and any other scouts interested are invited in-vited to attend the meeting Wednesday. ' i,. ' - a 2- 4 . T !:;:, i More than a mhlion and a quarter of scouts and scouters throughout, . the United States next week ., launch a seriej :.. of activities'; in celebration of tlie 129th anniversary week of the Boy .Scouts of America. utan National rarxs council troops observe the week beginning1 begin-ning1 'Monday. .Most other scout organizations throughout , the country celebrate the occasion beginning Wednesday and continuing con-tinuing to February J4. . Since the scout movement was i n corporated in the District of Columbia February 9, 1910, a total of 8,400000 boys and men have been members. Scouting ; has succeed ed, in "becoming a part of the American boy's world because it is a program of action plus idealism. ideal-ism. So it has a two-fold appeal, demonstrated by its growth in popularity each year, in many rogram TfOTES BY BUCK Although national anniversary week of the Boy Scouts of America does not open until Wednesday, Utah National Parks council scouts will begin celebrating the event Sunday evening by sponsoring programs in the various churches of the area. PKOVO IHSTKKT IRO(iKAJ FOR WEEK FOLLOWS: February 5 to. 1 1 .Sunday Sponsor church programs in the evening. Monday Senior scout day. Stress scouting for boys over 15. Tuesday Scout fund day in each troop. Wednesday Recommittal day. All scouts meet at the B. Y. high auditorium, arts building, at 7:30 p. m. Thursday Brotherhood and citizenship day with programs in the city's schools and at civic club luncheons. Friday Continuance of civic programs. Saturday Community good-turn day. Provo scouts will pass "sanitation" questionaires for Mayor Mark Anderson. oOo "Scouting Marches on" in 1938 the Boy Scouts of America had an increase in membership exceeding 13 per cent. There are now 39,750 different cub packs, troops and sea scout ships in the United States and its possessions. oOo The scout troop is a most democratic organization. It teaches democracy ty living it. Scouts select their own leaders, stay in the "game of scouting" as long as they like, and progress at their own rate of speed. There is no regimentation. . oOo All presidents of the United States since Taft, 1910, have agreed on the value of scouting to America. Each has been an honorary president of the movement. sec&ons liiriited only tj'y the lack of leaders or adequate funds of extension. -vV. t Measured in termii of, boys who want to beTfccout3"there is still much room for growth. Measured Measur-ed in terms of results produced the . Boy Scouts of America -has already paid any debt due, the American , people for the operating operat-ing charter granted it by congress con-gress many years ago. Features of anniversary week will be church programs on Sunday Sun-day evening , throughout the country, coun-try, a recommital program led by President Roosevelt on Wednesday Wed-nesday evening and special group good turns Saturday. Prova District Plans Wednesday Recommittal Nite Provo scouts will join in a national na-tional recommittal ceremony Wednesday Wed-nesday at 7:30 p. m. in the B.Y-high B.Y-high school auditorium located in the Arts building on the "Y" campus. A radio hookup will bring President Presi-dent Roosevelt's message to the scouts and they will follow him in recommitting themselves to the movement. The recommittal is one of the featured activities of anniversary week which stars locally with church programs Sunday evening. There will be more than a million and a quarter scouts and scouters throughout the nation who will retake re-take the oath Wednesday. Anderson Speaks At P. G. Banquet Eence TEat Scouts Are Cheerful v 4. THE law A Scout, ia Cheerful meant just. that, for Sea Scouts too. .These lads (Scouts past their ;l5th birthday) see smooth sailing and fair weather ahead. Who wouldn't be happy when high adventure is the promise in the offing? SEA SCOUTING is one of the senior programs cf the Boy Scoots of America. More than 150 scouts and parents par-ents are expected to attend the banquet February 11 at the Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove Third ward. The banquet is being sponsored by the scouts of the ward in honor of their parents. A. A. Anderson, chief executive of the Utah National Na-tional Parka couneil, will be the guest speaker. Student Officers Hold County Meet PAYSON Student officers of six high schools in Utah county discussed stag dances, exchange programs and other schdol activities activi-ties at the monthly local meeting of the National Association of Student officers here Wednesdaq. Frank Gardner, president, Provo, was in charge. Representatives present were : Payson, Keith Johnson, Wanda Harper, Stanley White, Doramae Wightman, Noel Taylor, Nyle Morgan and Glade Hill; Spanish Fork, Clive Bingham, Ursula Do-mina, Do-mina, Ilia Thomas, Ray Johnson, Deon Ludlow. Springville, Earl Child, Delia Lee Thess, Virginia Brown; Provo, Pro-vo, Mr. Gardner, Gladys Dixon. UnaLoy Mason, Charlotte Hansen; Lincoln high, Orem. Myrtle Les ter Gene fountain, Darrel Stew art; B. Y. high, Provo, Ledger Free, Irene Christensen, Elaine Brown, Spencer Grant. A musical program was presented pre-sented by Ernadine Oleson, Nyle Morgan, Miss Wightman; and a reading by Doris Okelberry. Obituaries Arthur Ostler SPRINGVnXErFuneral services serv-ices for, Arthur .Ostler will be held Saturday p. in the First ward chapel. Friends may call at the family home prior to the services. Interment Inter-ment will be in the Evergreen cemetery. Mother of 5 Finds ' 3 Children Dead JAPAN SUBMARINE CRIPPLED IN CRASH TOKYO, Feb. 3 l'.P Japan's crack long-range Subarine 1-63, capable of a cruise Co the United States and return without refueling, re-fueling, lay at the bottom of the turbulent Bungo channel today, crippled in a collision with a sister submarine. Thirty hours had passed without with-out news from it, and hope for its crew of about 48 was almost given up. NEW YORK, Feb. 3 l.R) Mrs. Alice Flanagan found three of her five children dead today when she returned from taking her oldest to school. The house, a four-room bungalow, bunga-low, was filled with gas, and police said later one of the children chil-dren had probably been playing in the kitchen. Four jets of the cooking stove were open. Margaret, 4, and James, 3 were lying on the floor of the bathroom, next to the kitchen. "Pal," their Collie dog, lay beside be-side them, dead. Alice, three months old, was dead in her crib in a room on the other side of the kitchen. A fourth child, two-year -old Arthur, was in a rear bedroom and was only slightly affected ty the fumes. Mrs. Flanagan had left the house because it was six-year-old Matthew Jr.'s first day in school, and it was a half-mile walk to the building. The earth travels 584.600.000 miles on its annual trip around the solar orb. Springville Locals QUILT ON DISPLAY The Daughters of Utah Pioneers Pio-neers of Provo invite the public to inspect their beautiful silk quilt in Firmage's window, which is to be given away at the board He meeting at the First ward church Saturday at 2 o'clock. W The annual M Men and Gleaner Glean-er Girl banquet, program and dance is scheduled for February 10, beginning at 7:30 p. m., in the Fourth ward hall. Approximately Approxi-mately 150 are expected to attend. at-tend. Grant Alleman, president of the Stake M Men and Miss Margaret Pierce, Gleaner Girl president, will be master of ceremonies cere-monies and toastmistress, respec-tivly. will construct 11.94 section of road from Rock Springs to Thayer Thay-er Junction, Wyo., being low bidder bid-der at $152,860 on the project, reports Mark Tuttle, manager of the Intermountain Branch, Associated As-sociated General Contractors. Dividend checks have arrived at the Utah Poultry Cooperative association local plant, representing repre-senting 5 per cent interest on all certificates issued prior to Jan. 1. 1938, according to Manager Arvil Bird. Members may receive them by calling at the plant. S. L. Mendenhall Jr., will be the principal speaker at the Sunday Sun-day night meeting under direction direc-tion of the M. I. A. A good musical musi-cal program is also arranged for the occasion. Fred Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Pace of Spanish Fork canyon, can-yon, underwent an operation for appendicitis at Dr. George A. Anderson's hospital, January 30. is recovering nicely. w. Clyde, local contractor. Human Compass Good Teaching Device ?4 r va m 0 th 'A Llt-Scottc: Icnow the 16 principal points of the compass backward, and Xl. forward. This SEA SCOUT mc makes eomnask bearings coma' 'to life. SEA SCOUTS are Scouts fifteen or more years old enrolled in' snore than 100,000 members of the Sea Scout alumni HAVE YOU TRIED OUR , W MOTHER'S BREAD YET? Why Not Try a Loaf Today from Your Grocer? iBUTTER BXAKE ROLLS .... 20c Doz. HUT FUDGE CAKES . 30c - 15c Each BAlEBOUrS BMEEll , :u 306 .WEST CENTER S; PHONE 65 The annual meeting of the Springville Livestock association will be held Thursday at 7:30 p. m., in the public library. New officers will be elected and other business discussed. West Hutch-ings Hutch-ings is president, with Spender Sumsion, .secretary. W. H. Anderson of the local high school agriculture department, depart-ment, announces another dairy meeting to be held Thursday at 7:30 p. m., in the high school. At the meeting, milk will be tested for butterfat and anyone desiring to have milk tested may bring a sample to the class. There will be no charge. A successful membership drive is being conducted in connection with a Springville chamber of commerce to be organized here soon. It is expected to have the drive completed early next week and plans will then go forward for-ward for the complete organization. Several hundred ward members and former ward members joined join-ed in a very successful social at the Second ward reunion Tuesday Tues-day night. Dr. T. Earl Pardoe of the B. Y. U.f furnished an exceptionally ex-ceptionally entertaining program consisting principally of musical numbers and a one-act- play. Dancing followed the program and refreshments were served. Two fine music groups from the Highland Park school in Salt Lake City, the glee ciub and the orchestra, under the direction di-rection of Miss Jane Alleman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Har-old Alleman of this city, who is director of the two groups, furnished fur-nished the entire program for the January 21 School News of the Air program, according to a report re-port in a Salt Lake paper. The two groups comprise about ,45 students. v-The various classes of the high school, Tuesday, selected their candidates to compete in the popularity contest, the winner win-ner of, which ; unveils the prize picture at the close of the art exnibit in the spring. Genevieve Bird was selected from the twelfth grade; - Edda Johnson, eleventh; Alice Riding, tenth; Veon Bird, ninth; Beth Stebfcens, eighth, and Shirley Johnson, Troop 50 Tries Out Inter-Patrol Contests First aid was the subject for inter-patrol contests Tuesday night as Troop 50, Manavu, worked work-ed out a regular program. The following bandages were tied by each member: head, foot, knee and jaw. Stretchers, using three-men three-men teams, were made. The following troop committee .members were present: Dr. Eldon Clark. Bert Huish and Leland Parry. Assistant Scoutmaster Jesse Long along with Bob Buckley Buck-ley and Frank Jex took, charge of the contests. Floyd Huish. Court of Review Set for Feb. 16 Provo district scouts wishing to take out awarda in the tabernacle court of honor scheduled for February Feb-ruary 19 can pass badges through a court of reviews session February Febru-ary 16. 'This makes it possible, as far as time requirements are concerned, concern-ed, for every scout in the district to receive an award," said J. F. Mower, court chairman. A program for the court of honor is nearly completed and the largest crowd ever to attend a scout gathering in Provo is expected expect-ed to watch the presentation of awards. Fourth Ward Scouts Plan Wildlife Show A program featuring a "wildlife "wild-life show" is going to be presented pre-sented at the Fourth ward chapel by Troop 2046 Sunday. The explorer troop has been spending the past few Tuesday meetings with the junior girls of the M. I. A. in a dance program. Subway Stations Dombsd in London LONDON, Feb. 3 U.P Explosions Explos-ions in two subway stations sent Soctland Yard operatives on an urgent hunt for bombs in every subway and railroad station in Greater London today in fear that a widespread terroristic plot threatened the city. Parts of two subway stations in the heart of London's west end were wrecked, shop windows were shattered and at least 12 persons were injured by explosions at about 6 a. m. as early risers started to work. Strong police squads at once closed both stations. Scotlacd, JTarct men. rushed, la J close, empty and search all luggage lug-gage rocyns of the metropolitan subway system. Such a serious view was taken of the explosions that later it was decided to include all main railroad rail-road stations in the search. Police feared the explosions meant a new outbreak of terrorism terror-ism by the "Irish republican army," extremist organization which Irish authorities have outlawed, out-lawed, in pursuit of its demand that all British officials get out of northern Ireland. At least six persons were injured in-jured at the Tottenham Court road stationand six at the Leicester Leicest-er Square station. I -HOLD EVERYTHING! r i Auditor Reports On Reassessments County Auditor Marcellus Nielson Niel-son announced today that reassessments re-assessments totaling $72,164 in taxes and representing an assessed as-sessed valuation of $2,213,828 will be charged for collection to County Coun-ty Treasurer Andrew Jensen. The reassessments are on personal per-sonal property primarily and on property that failed to be reassessed. re-assessed. Principal amounts reported re-ported are: State and state schools, $12,179; Utah county, $1T,613; Provo, $10,802; Provo school district, $9,551; Nepp school district, $15,412; and Alpine Al-pine school district, $2,442. By Clyde Lewis "Annie, bring me the bicarbonate; quick! It's that gas 71 No. Fifth West - 71 East Center Wings of the Morning 1 lbs. . . .25c 2 lbs. . . . 49c BaE?sa5im ay, Feb. 4th ITBrcRoNMvAiK pA5n 1 a cans Potatoes Russet Sack 79c No. 2 Can . T Spinach Texas . . Lb.5c I LARGE . ! C i lll- LeilUUC Solid Heads .. Ea. 2 Vt Can, Solid Pack nil' " TOiyiATOESJ (hiVjj; Carrots S 3 lbs. 5c PABSTETT CHEESE Lemons Doz. 10c Xor Piment&r. 15c Grapefruit, lge Doz. 10c 288 S Size sDOZ'S2)2 Catsup heinz Ig. bot. 18c Eggs 24osz.stds:7 ...Doz. 22c Soup i!Sas -.7.2 for 25c BUTTED Solid Lb. 27c Sauce Elk Bottle 25c Pineapple . . Lg. can 14c HEINZ LIBERTY BELL Baby Food ... 3 cans 23c Soda Crax ... 2 lbs. 14c 2iks( ss&ssjd a I) m WHITE KING Large Family Size . . Giant Size r . 28c 50c WHITE KING Laundry Soap Bars 5 for lit WHITE KING or MISSION BELL TOILET SOAP 3 Bars U4c HAYWADB'S QUALITY MEATS BABY BEEF . ' ? irJ ' POT ROASTS ... Lb. 15c jfresh --' Ground Beef, 2 lbs. 25c ... - -.i . '" . i ... Taincy' Grain-fed A utton Chops, 2 lbs. ISc WiH LA0D.4lbs.3Sc SCENTER GUT PORK ROAST Lb. 17c -- . i fresh . .Lb. 15c Odtfaee Cheese, 2 lbs 15c BONELESS UEALDOASTS . . Lb. Igc THEVERYIBEST OF FRESH FISH? and TOULTY bCAUlKind seventh, on my stomach again." |