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Show PROVO (UTAH) SUAYHERALPi, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1941 PAGE FOUR This irim clapboard house is compfcie monthly payments, under FHA, only $14 Artist's Conception Of New Scera Theater Building At Orem TRAVEL RECORD SET If LUES A monument to the progress and ac'ilevemenls or Uie Scera organization, recreation and educational cooperative organizaton, of Sharon stake, is the splendid new cemmunity theater buildng now under construction. - - Liooolo High School, Youngcsl in DIslriof, flow tfi3 Largest illpin BY DALLAS GREENER OREM Outstanding in the development de-velopment of citizenship and social so-cial and academic education in this region is the growth of the Lincoln high school from the one-teacher one-teacher school begun in 1912 in the upstairs of the Spencer elementary ele-mentary school to the largest school in the Alpine district, second sec-ond largest in Utah county and among the 15 largest in the state. The school had, during its first year of existence, only the ninth grade, with George V. Worthen, now a Provo attorney, as the teacher. Students of the other three grades went to Pleasant Grove high school, traveling by truck Irom Vineyard south through Lake View, up Center street in Provo, then north on the main highway to Pleasant Grove. In 1913 the tenth grade was added to the school. Hayracr.d Partridge replaced Mr. Worthen as principal and Mrs. Ora Cun-nigham Cun-nigham wa.i added as a teacher. Two years later, through the efforts ef-forts of Mr. Partridge the use of the basement of the Timpan-ogo3 Timpan-ogo3 ward amusement hail as- secured and Lincoln " students1 began be-gan their first shop classes. The students brought tneir own tools and what they constructed in order or-der to finance the shop project. Mr. Partridge remained principal princi-pal of the two-year school until 1918 and during that time he worked untiringly in leading a drive to procure a four-year high fchool on Provo bench. From 1918 to 1919 he attended the Utah State Agricultural college in Logan Lo-gan and then returned to the Lincoln Lin-coln school to take a position as teacher under Mrs. Cunningham, who had taken over the principal-ship. principal-ship. Efforts Continued Upon his return Mr. Tartridge, with the help of other loyal supporters, sup-porters, continued the drive for the four-year school and in the fall of 1921 their ambitions were xealized and the new four-year Lincoln high school opened its doors to students. In the spring of 1922 the first graduating class, consisting of six girls and two boys, held commencement exercises. exer-cises. This was in the first Lincoln Lin-coln building where the school now stands but many new additions addi-tions have been made since that time to take care of the rapidly increasing student body. In 1923 Mrs. Cunningham resigned re-signed the prtncipalship to become a teacher and Karl Banks held this position until 1937 when he was made principal of the Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove high school and A. P. Warnick, present principal, came to Lincoln from Pleasant Grove. Enrollment of SK)0 At present the Lincoln high school has an enrollment of about 900 students and a faculty of 30 teachers. The Lincoln district is one of the largest in the state. Students are transported from as far east as V.ildwood in Provo canyon, north to the Canyon road, west to Utah lake and south to Provo city limits. Seven large school buses arc used to transport the students. About 85 per cent jt the student body rides on the bUSI5. m ..rj.n ,v ' J, The school has made the ro-aaiKable ro-aaiKable growth from a graduating gradu-ating class of eight 'students in 19 to an expected graduating viass ci 125 in 1911. She Makes Mercy Her Mission Washington Woman Risks Life Giving Blood Transfusions Hobo Awarded "Degree" In Migratory Literature ANN ARBOR, Mien, to. University of Michigan sociology students nave received definitions of a horxy a tramp, and a bum and from someone who ought to know. J. Leon Lazarowitz, new president presi-dent of the Rambling Hobo Fellowship Fel-lowship of America, told the students stu-dents a hobo is a migratory worker, work-er, a tramp a migratory nonJ worker, and a bum a non-migratory non-worker. The class considered this fair enough and so awarded Lazarowitz an honorary degree: "doctor of migratory uteraiura." Mrs. Rose McMuIUn . . . with a black-and-white cat for good lurk By NEA Service Has Saved Hundreds -Of Lives by Her Free Sacrifices Washington; Feb. 23 to hundreds of people throughout the U. S., 42-year-old Mrs. Rose Mc- Mullin of Washington is a symbol of mercy. In the past 12 months she has traveled 29,000 miles, by plane and rail and car, to give 53,093 cubic centimeters of her life- blood 53 quarts in 256 transfu sions. All she has charged were expenses. In 1935 Mrs. McMullin's niece, then four, was dying of a staphylococcus infection resulting from a Fourth of July burn. Only chance for her recovery lay in discovering some one who had recovered re-covered from the same infection. No one could be found. So Mrs. McMullin herself sub-.r..tted sub-.r..tted to inoculation with the germs. She almost died. But ,nce recovered, she was immune and able to give her little niece .lie-saving UiUisiUsions. Appeals for aid have come to her by the thousands. They come Horn all over the country. As many as she could, she has heeded. Doctors seldom permit a blood donor to submit to more than a single transiusion every six vvcuks after all, the human body holds only about live or six quarts ox blooa. ut uuring 194o the remarkable Mrs. McMullin averaged aver-aged a transiusion every day and a half. Although physicians have often warned ner that death may end her work, Mrs. McMullin plans to keep on givin her bioou to siu-ferers siu-ferers Iroin stophrylococcus arius and streptococcus vinuans unui it does, bne likes to think of her unique career as an "assignmoul irom God." SANTA ANITA PAYS ARCADIA, Calif., Feb. 23 In six years, the Santa Anita i-r uuin ias paid $D,8S7,770 in taxes. LATUDA, Utah (U.P) Globetrotting Globe-trotting is nothing new, and they say there's nothing new under the sun. But this city has a mine boss who has established something some-thing unique in globe-trotting and also something new under the sun. George A. Schultz has traveled once around the earth underground under-ground certainly a new angle in elobe-trotting. And Schultz said it has all been from a few Tiun-dred Tiun-dred feet to a few thousand feet underground, which justifies his claim to something new under the sun, also. "It just came to me the other day," said the 53-odd years that I have been a coal mining engineer en-gineer and superintendent, I have walked about 25,000 miles underground. under-ground. "When T was doing engineering work exclusively, I covered an average of 10 miles a day in the mine. Lately, however," he added, "my daily trips have included only alout four miles, but I estimate esti-mate I've covered about 25,000 miles in the three mines where I have worked during the last 30 years. "And T think the best part of it is that my feet have never bothered me in the least." Schultz has been superintendent at the Latuda mine since 1917. Before that time he had worked six years as engineer at a mine in New Mexico and five years at Hiawatha, Utah. He was superintendent superin-tendent at the latter mine for one and one-half years. By coincidence, Schultz has traveled the same distance through the air as he has on foot underground. under-ground. In 1932 he purchased a plane, learned to fly, received his pilot's license and has flown 25,-000 25,-000 miles during the years following. fol-lowing. Schultz is proud of his record of "25 years a mine superintendent." superinten-dent." He is the oldest superintendent superin-tendent in point of service in Carbon county, one of the world's richest coal districts. RANKIN CRACK MI LEU LAFAYETTE, Ind., Reb. 23 . Dave Rankin, end and captain of la?jt season's Purdue football team, is a standout hurdler. He was ;imner-up in the 220-yard low event in the Big Ten meet last spring. Fire Department Operates Outside. Law 65 Years DES MOINES, la. (VT.) -The Es Moines fire department has been operating "illegally" for 56 years, but the city has taken steps to legalize it. This fact came to light when the city legal department checked through original copies of old ordinances. or-dinances. Tt learned, surprisingly, that the 1884 ordinance establishing estab-lishing the fire department had never been signed by the mayor. While rummaging, the legal experts ex-perts discovered several other unsigned un-signed ordinances. One was that of 1933, which set up precincts in Des Moines. However, this system was made safe from attack at-tack by the recent adoption of a new ordinance. In Colonial days, pumpkin beer waa a popular beverage. Mm M (0 dTi.P mm rXtt JJLnJo v.. i 'i ! 1 'Hi ! I! Big, bcautifultorjjcdo-style . i rm r t rr rr n rrr rrn fft rr &rrn Highest quality car of lowest price! More miles per cation say -faineu owners j Lowest repair cost of any lowest price car! More money when you trade in! ONLY LOWEST PRICE CAR WITH ALL THESE FEATURES: Automatic chokT Multi-ratio steering - Economatic overdrive . Nine body colors . Bedford cord or canda cloth upholstery uphol-stery . Fresh-air Ciimatizer with windshield defroster . Planar independent inde-pendent suspension Glove compartment com-partment lock Non-slam rotary door latches Twin tail lights Bumper guards. A'ilble at extra coat. PRICES EEC'. AT "1 v. -J ( h r . . . . d fc. - &f . Use Mexican ware to serve Mexican foods. for ChamBion Imiu.. r CMmplon Club Sadan with trunk. . $730 Champion Cruising Sedan with trunk . 1 773 - w, . a . itrrm. S5 NORTH 3rd WEST B1AYC0CK MOTOR COMPANY ? PIIONK 11 l i PKOVO. UTAH Pan American Theme Will Vary Your Table Style BY MRS. CAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer A Pan American background for the next meeting of your local defense eroun would be in hari mony with the state department's policy of good neighborliness. There are many Mexican pottery cashes on the market which you might use and Mexican hamme'r- ed tin for plates and trays is ef fective and inexpensive. Try this Mexican Tea Ring: Mevican Tea. King Two and one-half cups milk, scalded; 1 cup sugar, 1 cake compressed com-pressed yeast, 6 or 7 cups sifted flour, 1. teaspoons salt, 1 egg, 3 tablespoons shortening, melted; 2 tablespoons butter. Cool ' i cup of scalded milk until un-til it is lukewarm. Then add a teaspoon of sugar and the crumbled crum-bled yeast cake. Sift flour into large ftiixing bowl. Make a depression de-pression in the center and pour yeast rhixture into cavity, stirring in enough flour make a soft dough. Then let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk. Add the remaining sugar, salt, egg, shortening and the remaining milk. (Milk should be lukewarm at this point.) Beat until smooth and well combined. Cover and let rise in warm place for about 12 hours. Divide dough in half and toss on lightly floured board. Then put into a greased angel food pan. Cover and let rise about 1 hour. Bake in moderate oven for 1 hour or until nicely browned. It should sound hollow when knocked with finger. Brush with melted butter. Make plain white frosting and decorate cake with all the citrus fruits and nuts that can be had. leljao Pre to (Black Beans) (Serves 6 to 8) Four cups (2 lbs.) black beans, 3 to 4 cups cold water, 1-3 cup fat, 1 ctip large onion, chopped; 1 clove garlic, chopped; IVi tea spoons salt, Vi teaspoon pepper. Pick over beans and wash well. Soak in water to cover overnight. Uso well covered pot. Put on beans in cold water and cook until un-til tender, 3 to 4 hours. The beans must be like a stew, not too soupy. If too dry add a little more water. Heat fat i nfrying pan, fry onion and garlic until brown. Drain 2 cups of cooked beans and allow the others to remain in the liquid. Fry half the drained beans in the onion fat, stir well, and add the other half. Allow them to absorb the fat, then return all into cooked moist beans in saucepan. Season with a little salt and pepper pep-per and simmer gently for 10 minutes and serve. This is also eaten with boiled rice. 1 ""arr Tl' " " 1 r ' M "l L0 ' This clapboard house presents pre-sents an attractive appearance and constitutes a compact family fam-ily unit. In spit of its low cost it is complete, even to garage and dining room. This property was financed with a mortgage of $2,500 insured in-sured by the Federal Housing Administration. Monthly payments pay-ments on a mortgage of this amount insured under Title II, exclusive of taxes and hasard insurance, total approximately BR i tT I llo"!" 1 -"iK il. iff" " Irx I I POHCM PLAN OUR 1940 LOAN RECORD SHOWS INCREASE Thousands of Persons and Firms Dsnsfit i i .Year 1939 9.011 Year 1910 131,114 No. of new and renewal loans . amount New and renewal loans. $20,487,873.31 $20,977,382.92 .Amount new loans 9,583,303.98 10,078,272.29 Since its beginning 75 years ago, it has been this bank's policy to aid in the upbuilding of Utah and its communities. Many thousands of persons and business busi-ness firms have been enabled to finance their various projects through the bank credit facilities we provide. o o o This progressive banking institution is prepared to supply funds to finance any sound personal or business requirement, be it large or small. We invite you to consult with our officers regarding any financial problem you may have. o First Security Bank Of Utah NATIONAL ASSOCIATION With Branches at OGDEN - LOGAN - PROVO - BINGHAM - MAGNA - RICHMOND - PARK CITY Member of federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I 1 |