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Show - .V PAGE SIX PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1937 t Screen's Number-One Singing Stars J WAREHOUSE FOR CHURCH RELIEF ODD FELLOWS, TO SALT LAKE Elm Classic At leJJinta Tracy In Love Drama Of The Courts r r. V f. 1-1 .-xSka fcSSyi9fc v it'll: J .5CSy. . f& t Ax a "Naughty Marietta". "Rose Marie." and Now "Maytime"! The screen's most popular singing lovers are on the screen of the Paramount today, Monday and Tuesday. The unforgettable "Sweetheart, Will You Remember" ? is only one of the wide variety of songs sung by the romantic duo in the new season's musical smash, "Maytime," which also features John Barrymore. sy- UTAH BRIEFS SALT LAKE CITY, iL'.IH With seasonal work beginning to open up, the state department of public welfare today prepared to reduce by 20 per cent expenditures expendi-tures for caring for needy employables. em-ployables. A. C. Burton, assistant director, estimated that about 4000 persons would be affected. In some cases allowances will be entirely elminated. Others will be reduced. Burton said, however, that those who are unable to find workwill not be allowed to suffer. suf-fer. CEDAR CITY. (UP) More than '200 delegates were expected to attend the 15th annual convention of the Utah Business and Professional Pro-fessional Women's club here to-,day to-,day and tomorrow. Mrs. Annie F. Leidedeckei, Los Angeles." vice- president of the California state association of Business and Professional Pro-fessional Women, will be the keynote key-note speaker. Sunday's sessions will be held in Zion National Park. LOGAN (I'.!'' Building permits issued during April totalled more than" three times those of the same mfjnth last year, according to E. U. Most r, city building inspector in-spector and engineer. Last month's ' total was $26.3i3; April 1936. $1160. BEAVER r l'i B-aver L. D. S. West ward chapel will -be dedicated at services here tomorrow, tomor-row, it was announced today. The chapel was completed in January Janu-ary 1932 at a cost of $50,000. The debt has now been fully paid off. Superstition has it' that the finder of a horseshoe should hang it up with the ends pointing upward, up-ward, so that ' the coming good luck may be held within the curve of the shoe.'' The ,word "larva." the early stage of an insect's life, comes from the Latin word for "ghost." Plant Gladiolus Bulbs Now! Yellow. Pink and Red Shades 2 FOK White. Lavender and Blue Shades EACH 5c W. REED NLTTALL Phone 012R3 CAPITOL First Stage Play in GIGANTIC IN SETTING! POWERFUL IN ft Record Season in New York 2 Norman Bel Geddes Presents HE y Sidney A NEW YORK Mail Orders and Seat Sale Now! a. Evening: Balcony 85c & $1.12: Orchestra $1.68 & $2.24 (Inc. tax) Matinee: Balcony 56c & 85c; Orchestra $1.12 & $1.68 (Inc. tax) (Enclose remittance with stamped, addressed envelope) DAIRYMEN PLAN COOPERATIVE Within two weeks Utah and Wasatch county dairymen will meet in Provo to make final decisions de-cisions regarding the cooperative manner in which dairy products will be handled. Yesterday members of the Utah County Dairy association met here to discuss dairy problems and handling of dairy products in a cooperative movement. Representations Represen-tations from practicallv all parts of the county were present among the 50 who attended. David H. Jones, president of the countv Farm Bureau, an nounced 75 per cent of Utah county coun-ty dairymen have alreadv signer' in favor of the cooperative movement. move-ment. James Bues. manager of Weber Central dairy, expressed the Webber Web-ber Central views on the cooperative coopera-tive movement, their willingness to assist the movement and its advantages. "Success depends on proper management and in not yielding to prices of our competitors," he state.V Other points in his talk were financing of an institution, operation oper-ation expense, profits and dividends, divi-dends, efficient farm production, and planned location for a plant. A volume survey, which is be ing made of the county, will be finished next week, it is reported. Other speakers at the meeting were: Professor W. P. Thomas and Professor A. J. Morris of U.S.A.C., Tracy R. Welling, executive secretary sec-retary of the state farm bureau: Mr. Pierce, plant manager of Weber Central; Sylvan Clark, president of the Salt Lake Milk association. County Agent S. R. Boswell. and James Ritchie, prominent prom-inent dairyman from Wasatch county. Lawrence Bee Gets Cornell Scholarship Lawrence Bee, son of Mr. and Mrs. , Shirley Bee, of Provo, a graduate from Provo high school and Brigham Young university and at present a graduate student stu-dent at Iowa .State College, ha just been granted a scholarship to Cornell university. Mr. Bee ;jnd his wife, the former for-mer Hazel Robinson of Provo, will return to Provo soon for a .short vacation and then leave for Cornell Cor-nell university where he will pursue pur-sue work toward the Ph. D. degree in rural sociology. Houses Razed at Postoffice Site Workers Saturday were razing houses occupying the site of the new Provo city post office, construction con-struction of which is to begin within two weeks.. The structure will be erected at First West and First North. The contract for building the post office a $143,000 structure -has been iet to the L. F. Dow company of Los Angeles. Local men will be employed to do the bulk of the work. THEATRE CAT MflV ICMat. Salt Lake CityOH I , llH I 111 Eve. Salt Lake in 3 Months! TREMENDOUS IN CAST! ITS APPEAL! Kinsley with CAST of 70 t4 St rat ton Fruit corporation warehouses ware-houses in Orem have been purchased pur-chased by the Provo region council coun-cil of the L. D. S. church security securi-ty program announces President A. V. Watkins of the Sharon stake and regional council chairman. Three large warehouses, a six-room six-room brick house and more than two acres of land are included. The property is on the state highway high-way and Salt Lake and Utah railroad trackage. Surplus commodities will be stores for future use in the warehouses ware-houses from stake projects in the Provo area. These will also be ex-Changed ex-Changed for other products and manufactured articles obtained from other regions included in the security program Mr. Watkins explains. About $2000 will be used to recondition the property. An executive exe-cutive secretary, who will super vise the warehouses, will be named soon, Mr. Watkins, Christen Jensen Jen-sen of Utah and W. W. Warnick of Timpanogos stake making the selection. Alpine, Lehi, Timpanogos, Timpan-ogos, Sharon, Utah, Kolob, Palmyra, Pal-myra, Nebo. Carbon, Emery and San Juan are in the Provo region. SCOOTERS PLAN PROGRAM HERE Scouting program activities for the past year were reviewed and those for next year previewed by the directors of Utah National Parks Council of Boy Scouts in the last executive board meeting before fall, which was held Saturday Satur-day evening. That the Camporall will be held at the State Fair October 1 and 2 was reported. Patrols of A grade will be eligible to participate in this unusual event. Tentative plans call for a meeting meet-ing of all Utah scouts at Jenny Lake in the Jackson Hole region in August. This meeting will be in connection with the Explorall to be held in Yellowstone National Park during that month. Resumes of the comporee, council coun-cil camps, and Jamboree programs were given by the activities committee com-mittee chairman, Harrison R. Merrill, and camping chairman, Dr. L. D. Pfouts. Definite outlines for spring camporees with dates were presented. pre-sented. Reports of the past year's activities ac-tivities were made by council officers of-ficers and depirtment chairmen. Cockleburr Found Fatal To Sheep The common cockleburr is thought to be the deadly enemv that caused such damage to sheep, especially in the Lehi district dis-trict last year, and which may renew its attacks this year, re-Dort re-Dort District Agricultural Inspector Inspec-tor H. V. Swenson and Assistant County Agent Clarence D. Ash-ton. Ash-ton. Water hemlock was believed by stockmen to be the cause that left sheep dyin by the hundred? last spring on the lake shores. The agriculturalist's investigations bear out however that in the dic-otyledonus dic-otyledonus stage the cockleburr secretes a poison that finds sheep vulnerable. The carcasses generally have been found on sand bars near regions where the cockleburr abounds. Last spring groups of 15 to 20 sheep were found victim vic-tim of the burr. Saturday afternoon the two agricultural men investigated about Lehi for symptoms of return re-turn of the menace. Mr. Swenson announces that any sheep found dying of the malady will be dissected dis-sected and an examination effected. ef-fected. Burning of the plants is considered the most effective preventative. ADMITS THEFT CHARGE Samuel Goodman, transient, really doesn't bear out his name, it seems. Saturday Goodman was hailed into city court on a charge of petty larceny. M. C. Brown, assistant as-sistant manager at Sears, Roebuck Roe-buck and Company, complained that he had made off with two ste,el tape measures and two automatic au-tomatic fishing reels. Goodman pleaded guilty to the charge, and City Judge Don Ft. Ellertson ordered him to serve a sentence of 90 days in the city jail. Hear the Incomparable PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA and Eugene Ormandy SALTLAKE TABERNACLE Thursday, May 6 8:15 p. m. Auspices, The Deseret News 2nd RCA-Victor Tour) SEATS . $1.12, $1.68, $2.24, $2.80 ff I : f .. The finest performances you have ever seen on the screen are given by Paul Muni and Lulse Rainer, pictured above in a scene from "The Good Earth," the superb picture filmed from Pearl Buck's famous best selling novel. This picture is being brought to Provo in a special road-show engagement, at the Uinta Wednesday and Thursday, giving showgoers of Utah county an opportunity to see this picture simultaneously with all the large cities in the nation. Two performances daily will be shown with all seats rserved, the only showing of the picture this season. School News Maeser Students Study Composers! Kditors: Mary Jean Hunter Mavis Ha fen MAESER SCHOOL In our social science class we are studying study-ing India. In our art work we are making booklets on India. Today To-day we started making the outline out-line on scrap paper. Then when the outline is complete, we will do it on art paper. Miss Lewis, our teacher, told us we could have our choice of either of these things: make a booklet of it or have it as a poster pos-ter to hang on the wall. The majority ma-jority will probably make booklets. book-lets. We hope all the children will enjoy making them.- Mack Facer Today in Mrs. Reeve's room we heard the story of "Papa" Haydn's life. Mozart gave him the name (that everyone knows him by) "Papa" Haydn. He was a choir boy at the age of seven or eight. And did work of a boy twice his age. He wrote his most famous music, mu-sic, when he was an old man. The Creation, an oratorio. While lying on the death-bed he wrote Austrian National Anthem. An-them. He died in Vienna (1809). Robert Nelson, sixth grade. In music we are being introduced intro-duced to another composer. His name is Franz Liszt, a Hungarian. He was born in Raiding, Raid-ing, Hungary. His date of birth was October 22, 1811. When he was still young, he took piano lessons under the direct di-rect ion of Carl Czcrny. At the age of eleven he gave his first concert. Several of his years were spent traveling and studying in France. Switzerland and England. Liszt died at Bayrenth, in 1886 Liszt wrote many beautiful piano pieces. Mrs. Reeve played for us one of his selections entitled "Dreams of Love."-- Helen Gardner. The lO.lo steel output of the world amounted to 123.460,000 tons, or an increase of 26.8 per cent over the 1935 total. A SUPERB HIT! PLENTY OF SEATS Still Available in ALL PRICES Only Showing This Season! TICKETS NOW ON SALE! . Roadshow Engagement ! . ON THE SCREEN 2 DAYS ONLY WED., THURS., MAY 5 and 6 "Dead End" Comes to S. L. Theater An unusual and starkly realistic realis-tic drama of life in a section of New York's East Side, where wealth brushes poverty and crime, will be unfolded with the presen- tation by Norman Bel Geddes of Sidney Kingsley's dramatic success, suc-cess, "Dead End," which comes to the Capitol theatre in Salt Lake City as part of its transcontinental transcontin-ental tour, for one day only, Saturday. Sat-urday. May 15, with a matinee and evening performance. Now in its second year on Broadway, where it is still playing, play-ing, "Dead End" is based on the author's keen observations of life in the dead end streets along New York's East River. The play offers a dramatic, frequently exciting and always interesting picture of the people, young and old. who struggle to maintain life and a suggestion of decency against overwhelmnig odds. Stunt Flight Ends In Death For Three PHOENIX. Ariz.. May 1 Mi: The crushed bodies of a 19-year-old girl and her two young companions com-panions on a plane ride were taken from the wreckage of the ship in the desert today. The dead were: Louise Stevens, 19, Manchester, Miss.: Boyer M;l-ler. M;l-ler. 24, Detroit and George Paul, Phoenix. Paul was pilot of the plane. Miss Stevens and Miller were guests at a resort. Witnesses sai dthe plane started falling at the end of a stunt loop. It crashed late yesterday on the desert 17 miles southeast of Phoenix. DON'T MISS Positively a tmbig pictures &y -frcy TUESDAY To Make Way For Other Hits to Come! rV v unit . j )Qf0 tour heart Vv ,hese Sinoino Sweetheart j Ji BARRYMORE I MERMAN IING l. -if. I At01IKLll0HttD4Mtte'ftff BlVs A R0BEIT X. LtONAlD r4tUf XEtov I utTUV wj nwi See -MAYTIME' 1:30 4:10 Celebration by members Of Utah Grand Lodge of the Independent Inde-pendent Order of Odd Fellows in commemoration of the order's founding was well attended by Provo representatives. The meeting meet-ing was held Friday in Salt Lake City. . Those going from Provo included: includ-ed: Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brerfeton, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bray, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chappel, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Baker, Walter Hier, Clyde Scott, Alton Peters, Jay Vincent, Guy T. Christens en, and B. H. Bowers. George E. Hershman, grand sire of the order, told members the order was founded on the truths of Jericho road an dthe teachings of the Good Samaritan were crystallized cry-stallized in the ritual. He said it was for this reason the organization organiza-tion has grown as no other in the 118 years since it was founded found-ed in Baltimore by five men. The Utah lodge was organized July 29, 1863. Mexican Holiday To Be Observed The Fiesta of 5 de Maio, Mexican Mexi-can national holiday, will be celebrated cele-brated Monday evening at Brig-ham Brig-ham Young university. The festival festi-val is sponsored by the Spanish clubs of the university and every one who has either lived or visited in Mexico is invited to attend. Honored guests will be President Presi-dent F. S. Harris and Mexican consul Emilio C. Puig of Salt Lake City. A colorful program, beginning at 8:15 p. m. in the Arts building auditorium, will feature a trip to Spain and Mexico by music and dance. Ireta Pierce will read the narrative to accompany the music and dancing. Others appearing on the program include: Francelle Christensen, Tess Packard, Clark Tyler, Gertrude Page, Rhoda An-drus, An-drus, Carl Martineau, Thelma Bleak, Elois Romney, Lavon Cordon, Cor-don, Ben Taylor, Melba Hacking, and Virgil Peterson. Audrey Peterson, Pet-erson, assisted by Wanda Johnson and Irene Marsden, will be the accompanist. Following the program refreshments refresh-ments will be served and souvenirs procured from Mexico for the event will be pesented to everyone every-one present. Dancing to Scott Benson's orchestra will follow in the Indies' gymnasium. Orem Ladies Plan Home Improvement The Ladies auxiliary of the Orem chamber of commerce are sponsoring spon-soring a home beautiflcation program pro-gram for the . summer months. Prizes will be given to those making mak-ing .the greatest improvement in their homes and yards. All entries en-tries must be in by June 1st. Those who wish to enter from Sharon ward will contact Mr. W. S. Park or Mrs. Ruth Jolley, from Windsor, Mr. Amasa Wright, or Miss Thora or Norma Hales, and from Timpanogos, Mr. Ray Wentz or Mrs. Winnie Graff. THIS TREAT! MUST Leave T0H tOWN iWNMI h III . . . lftuf III a i - - ft- unirr nuira1 iff . in fl If From the Start at: 6:50 9:40 p. m. One woman wanted to marry him because she wanted to -be a governor's gover-nor's wife, another because she really loved him! Betty Iawford, left, Lee Tracy and Margot Grahame in a scene in Tracy's prosecuting attorney's at-torney's offices following a conviction -in RKO Radio's powerful drama of the modern courts, "Criminal Lawyer." which starts a three day engagement at the Uinta today on the same program with "Nobody's "No-body's Baby," a sparkling, fast-moving comedy riot. - ODDITIES IN THE NEWS AMITY VILLF, N. Y. l l Police Po-lice Chief John Schlosser paid two cents "postage due" on a letter today, opened it and found it was from a man he had been seeking on a warrant charging larceny. The writer promised to "drop up to Amityville sometime some-time and explain my innocence." oOo CLEVELAND l.I Mrs. Margaret Mar-garet Skeivis, 44-year-old widow, charged in common pleas court that the recent Fisher Body company com-pany sit-down bioke up her romance. ro-mance. She asked S10.000 damages dam-ages from Mike Chepla, charged he met a woman picket while he was on .strike duty at the manufactory. manu-factory. "The zeal of the joint economic struggle." she contended, con-tended, made h m iOrgtt his alleged al-leged promL-ei f mx: riage. Oo- CLEVELAND il l;. It wasn't A "JPP MATS. A DOUBLE FEATURE SHOW - - - with Drama - Suspense - Romance and Laughs! Could You Ask For More? i ' tk 4 tz ?C"7V077 f5 of a II Ul AND SECOND GOOD CLEAN FUN with A Little Music, A Little Danting, A Little Love and Romance - - - - and a Lot of Laughs! Iv W inis now Aione is , v. ,t - V. Worth More Than iCS t h e Admission t Q SB- U price! That's How J Good It Is! ; j 1 (fP V ' Added rv&r NOVEL Vkfl J$ j V - j SHORT TREATS Va if Sjf SOUND NEWS ITljS X entirely for morality reasons that revealing white bathing suits were banned from Cleveland beaches today. Mrs. Frank Sotak, member mem-ber of Parks Director Hugo Var-ga's Var-ga's "advisory committee on beach attire," said. "White suits whether wheth-er or not they are immodest, would look terrible coming out of our dirty lake." - oOo COLUMBUS. O. a.i' -The after af-ter dinner speaker, according to Prof. V. A. Ketcham. chairman of Ohio State University's speech department, is rapidly losing popularity. popu-larity. Ketcham said both the banquet speaker and the political orator are on their way out. A 200-pound human body contains con-tains about one-fourth ounce of iron, one-fifth ounce sugar, one and eight-tenths ounces salt, 24 pounds coal (in he form of carbon car-bon . 10 gallons water, one-tenth drop iodine, one and eight-tenths pounds phrosphorus. 112 cubic feet oxygen. 60 cubic feet nitrogen. nitro-gen. 561 cubic feet hydrogen, and seven pounds lime. IX 71 |