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Show 4 ' Sunday, "April 11, 1948 SUNDAY HERALD ii i , L.'... -. i in ' ... i ' i - i 1 r" '- r i - .... Recaptured Prisoner Faces Parole Loss Besides Train Burglary Count Clarence William Clark, 38, the ."model" prisoner who walked walk-ed away , from' the state prison Thursday and assertedly ; committed com-mitted " a burglary . within . 12 hours of his escape, Saturday faced two rather gloomy developments. devel-opments. Waren John E. Harris said Clark's parole, due in another five months, would automatically be revoked and Clark faces criminal prosecution inr .Utah county courts for the alleged 3-Mohth Fire Loss Totals $l760He : Provo's fire losses totaled $17,-607 $17,-607 during the first three months of 1948 a sharp reduction under un-der 'the same period a year ago, but an increase over' the' last three months of 1947. ;. This was revealed " ' Saturday by - Fire Chief Lloyd B. Dickson Dick-son in report for the first quarter quar-ter of this year. . In the. corresponding three months of last year, losses hit $43,118, of which one' fire the Anderson gravel plant blaze, contributed con-tributed $40,000 loss. -In the last three months of 1947, Provo fire losses: reached $8280. -i ...., -Provo losses still appeared low; however,, In. comparison ' to the total property -endangered. For the first three months of this year, while firemen had losses of $17,607 ehalked up on the records, they saved property valued at a total of beter than $900,000. Losses for January of this year in Provo were distributed over, 11 fires, with one residence blaze contributing about 70 per cent of the total $783 damages In that month. In February, with better than half a million dollars worth of property endangered, losses of $12,815 were sustained, most of which came from the $9370 damages dam-ages to the Mountainside riding academy. March losses were $4007, of which the $2750 damage to the Daily Herald was the greatest single item. The Provo fire department answered an-swered three calls in unincorporated unincorpor-ated county territory during the quarter, with losses totaling $815." Firemen also answered three resuscitator calls during the quarter. quar-ter. All patients, had expired when the equipment arrived and resuscitation efforts were futile. Chief Dickson's report said the department has at all times pushed a program of fire prevention and education with the public, and thanked the Daily Herald and local radio stations for their aid in' distributing the Information. Orem Man to Get Decoration Today For War Heroism Lieut. Harvey W. Sturdevant, P. O. Box 141, Orem will be presented pre-sented with a decoration for wartime war-time flying heroism in a special ceremony Sunday , at 2 p. m., at the naval air reserve headquarters, headquart-ers, Salt Lake airport, it was disclosed Saturday. Navy Capt. Joseph P. Thew, commanding office of the naval ROTC at the University of Utah made the announcement, also fttating presentations will be made by Navy, Capt. H. L. ; Hoerner, commanding officer of the Naval Air Reserve station, Buckley Field, Denver, Colo. Lieut. Sturdevant will receive a gold star in lieu of a fourth distinguished flying cross, also a gold star in lieu of a sixth air medal. Other Utah men receiving medals are Mr. Robert Lee Brown, Sandy; Lieut. (Jg) Kenneth Ken-neth W. Meyers. Laketown and Milton R. Nelson, Lieut, (jg), USNR, Logan. A. F. Democratic Women to Meet AMERICAN FORK An in vitation is extended to all Democratic Demo-cratic women of the community to attend a re-organization meeting meet-ing for the Women's Democratic Study club Monday at 2 p. m. in the city hall. Mrs. J. W. Phillips, president of the club will be in charge. Officers for the ensuing year will be elected and committees named. A short program has been arrainged. BIG BASIK SPRING SALE ApriMO to 20 Take advantage of nationwide nation-wide group buying plan. Save money hundreds of hard to get items. , 10 to 90 off Odd lots and damaged goods table , Utah Hardware & Implement Tfour friendly Hardware j Dealer in Orem 670 North State Street Orem, Utah burglary' of a railroad work train. . Clark was arraigned In city court Friday afternoon "following his capture earlier in the day by Utah county officers. He was charged with second degree burglary and accused of stealing $110 cash, two guns, two suitcases suit-cases with clothing and several traveling checks from the work train. He asked for a preliminary hearing, which was set for May 18, and ; then - was released to Warden Harris and returned. to the stae tprison. He ' escaped from the state prison' Thursday afternoon and was captured near the state highway just south of the Point of the Mountain about 11 a. m. Friday by Sheriff Theron S. Hall,, Deputies Walter Durrant and Merrill Smith, and Lehi Marshal Clem Turner. Although he made a threatening gesture toward the gun in his belt, stolen from the work -train, he submitted submit-ted to arrestwithout a fight. Frischlmecht To Head Extension in Utah LOGAN, Utah, April 10 U.R Utah State Agricultural college board of trustees today appointed Dr. Carl Frischknecht director of Utah state extension service. Frischknecht succeeds W. W. Owens who has been director since 1943. Frischknecht holds the position of professor of poultry husbandry, and during the past several months he has been actipg dean of agriculture. Owens will become a marketing market-ing specialist for the extension service and head of the state experiment ex-periment station, a position next in importance to president of the college. The director of the extension ex-tension service has charge of all county and home demonstration agents in Utah. Spaugy Heads Orem Demos OREM. A precinct reorganization: reorgan-ization: meeting was held by Orem Democrats at the Orem city hall Friday night. C. L. Spaugy was re-elected chairman with Mrs. Edna Durham Dur-ham vice - chairwoman; Mrs. Zora Hansen, secretary, and Mrs. Marjorie Mott, treasurer. One officer of-ficer was named from each of the four districts. Further business of the meeting meet-ing was to form a committee composed of the chairman and vice-chairwoman from each district dis-trict to organize and plan for the county nominating convention. conven-tion. The committee will welcome recommendations for candidates for the legislative district and county offices. The meeting of the erouD is set for April 21 in the Orem city hall. Public Invited to Evening of Music The public is invited to attend, tree of charge, an evening of song and music at Provo Sixth ward Monday at 8:15 p. m. Mrs. R. Garn Clark will ore sent the program on well known operas telling the stories and il lustrating with arias and songs to De sung Dy her students. A string quartette under the di rection of John Hilgendorff will also be featured. Soloists for the occasion will be Joy Tangren, LeNoir Asay, Kenneth Ken-neth Martin, Nola Nilsson, Kath-ryn Kath-ryn Christiansen, Theo Christen-sen Christen-sen and Gladys Tippets. Accompanists -will be Mrs. Grace Croft, Mariel Perkins, Martha Mar-tha Perry and Mrs. Melba Pyne. 100 MORE! JUST ARRIVED! . 1 Newport SILVERPLTATE 42 Piece Set HURRY! TUESDAY IS LAST DAY "YOURS TODAY - A YEAR TO PAY" "WVO- mAH JEWELERS raJA IDAHO ORDER BY MAIL OR PHONE 57 . Pleasant View Youth Gets Top Scouting Award .. x r& -. , ' '" i Vr4 - v' r"" llaroiU L. Nieison, uea .' r scout r ammiasicacr, q.n ; the ranger badge, highest award in senior scouting, scout-ing, on Rollo Jones as Sterling Muhlestein, senior scout adviser for Daniel Boon Post 2036, smiles his approval. The ceremony ook place at the posts honor banquet Friday night. Youth Receives Ranger Award at Court of Honor PLEASANT VIEW Highlighted by a court of honor and an ad dress by Chief Scout Executive Rulon Doman, the senior scouts of Pleasant View, Post 2036, held an honor banquet Friday night at which meny awards were made. - - - Honor scout of the evening was Rollo Jones, who received his ranger award, highest rank in senior scouting. A son of Mrs. Preal Jones, of Pleasant View, Rollow was the first scout in this district to receive the award. Other scouts received awards as follows: Apprentice, Sterling Muhlestein; woodsman, Donald Muhlestein. Evan Bean, Gerald Muhlestein, Kenneth A shton Horace Cowley, Haws Baum, and Richard Noren. Cleon Miller, who was to receive his frontiersman award, was unable to attend because be-cause of sickness. Donald Muhlestein,' post guide, was in charge of the evening's program, and Horace Cowley was master of ceremonies. The court of honor was in charge of George Muhlestein, post committee chairman. Harold K. Nielsen, district senior scout com missioner, presented the badges, which were pinned on the scouts by their partners. Mr. 'Doman gave an inspiring talk on thewalue of scouting'. Following the court of honor. dancing was enjoyed by those present. Lincoln FFA Picks Officers OREM With nearly 100 mem bers voting, the Lincoln chapter of the Future Farmers of Ameri ca this week named LaMar Kallas president for the coming year. He will replace Dean Larsen. Elected vice president was Rog er Hansen, with Lewis Gappmay- er, secretary; Leon Guyman, treasurer; Leslie Booth, athletic manager, and Lee Davis, sentinel. The election was conducted with two parties represented, the Commercial and Barnyard. Garth Wilkinson was the other candidate candi-date for "president. The tropical "89" butterfly is named for the 89 design on its wings. "titfc'WlAjtujkettt VI a q n a v o x lit IO J IHONOOIAM DUNKLET'R MUSIC MART 138 West Center Service for 1 Lee to Address North Sanpete Welfare Meeting Wednesday MT. PLEASANT Elder Harold Har-old B. Lee, member of the council coun-cil of twelve apostles of the LDS church, nd its executive welfare chairman, will be principal speak- Samuel Taylor To Speak at Writer Roundup Provo's own Samuel W. Taylor, Tay-lor, vho has a serial running now in Liberty and just finished one in Colliers, will be a featured fea-tured speaker at the Utah Writers' Writ-ers' Roundup July 31 and Aug. 1 at Brigham City, according to Willard Luce, Provo, president of the sponsoring League of Utah Writers. Taylor, nationally established in the fiction field for several years with stories in the Saturday Satur-day Evening Post, Colliers, Liberty, Lib-erty, Esquire and other magazines, maga-zines, now lives in Redwood City, Calif. Another nationally - known writer, Rutherford Montgomery of Saturday Evening Post fame, will also speak at the conference. A contest for Utah writers in poetry, short story, articles and radio script divisions, will precede pre-cede 'the state roundup by several sev-eral weeks. Winners in each division di-vision will be the subje'et of roundtable discussions at the conference. USED CAHS AT 110 SO. UNIV. AVE. PHONE PROVO 476 i947 CHEV. FLEETLINE Radio, heater, $70.00 rayon white sidewall tires, other extras, see this car now! 1946 FORI) CLUB COUPE 14,000 miles, like new 1946 FORD 2-DOOR One that your kiddies won't fall out of. Very clean. 1946 OLD'S "66" 5-PASSENGER , T1 1. --'il. 11 X '.i. A 1 .1 DiatK wiiii an eAira b . . "Reasonable." 1942 DODGE 4-DOOR Radio & heater, one car owner very clean A real buy. 1941 CHEV. 2-DOOR New taint and seat covers. Last 41 Chev. left. 1940 CHE V. 2-DOOR SEDAN New paint and seat covers, motor like new-Come new-Come in and try it! I 1940 DODGE 4-DOOR Very clean, good motor, a real dependable car, priced right, new paint! 1939 DODGE 4-DOOR New paint and seat covers, see this car, without delay. 1942 OLD'S CLUB COUPE Heater and radio, very clean. Priced for quick sale. . 1938 FORD 4-DOOR New paint and seat covers, 41 Mercury engine. A good buy. 1939 PLY-COUPE Radio and heater, good shape, new paint and , seat covers. Here's the one 1940 CHEV. STATION WAGON With heater and radio, only one, so see it quick. NAYLOR AUTO CO. 70 EAST 1ST NORTH PROVO, UTAH er on a welfare subject in me South ward chapel at 8 o'clock April 14. The North Sanpete j chorus will furnish some of the musical numbers. This is the occasion of the North Sanpete welfare open house program, and adjoining stakes, Moroni, Nephi and South i Sanpete San-pete have been bidden to attend. Former Sanpete residents now in the Provo area are cordially invited in-vited to see what progress is being made here. Loud speakers will be in every room in the South ward building to accommodate accommo-date overflow crowds expected to come. The welfare building itself, lo cated on the corner of First East and Main streets, will be open for public inspection from 6 to 8 p. m. Stake President Golden Carl-ston Carl-ston of Fairvlew, and First Coun selor J. R. Bagnall and Second Counselor W. C. Olsen of Mt. Pleasant together with Relief so-eiety so-eiety presidents and other mem bers of the stake high council will receive the guests. In each of seven parts of the building Will be a bishop to explain the equipment equip-ment and program of canning. weaving, sewing, etc. that will be carried on. Bishops counselors will act as escort3-to usher people peo-ple through, and refreshments will be served by. .Relief aoclety women . All bishops will attend to transportation trans-portation for their own wards, and everyone is invited. 6 '47 v '48 1 I II OUR CARS ARE GUARANTEED Plymouth - Dodge on it. a reai ciassy car. Marine Corps League Formed A hew Veterans oreainzation, a local detachment of the marine corps league, was. formed by 10 marines and ex-marines r naay night- in Provo. ' The, organization was given the name of the Brigadier General Evan F. Carlson detachment, de-tachment, after the famous leader of Carlson's Raiders, an Mtatanding marine group of World War II. Master Sergeant Vernon D. Sexson, head -df the Provo marine recruiting office, was chosen commandant. The prganization meeting was held at his home, 1032 West Center. Other officers selected included: Vice commandant, comman-dant, Clinton LLuke, student at BYU and volunteer recruiting of ficer for the marine corps reserve; re-serve; Judge advocate, Sergeant Eugene Ellis, attached to the Provo Pro-vo marine recruiting office; chaplain, chap-lain, A. William Meyer, Provo; adjutant, C. S. Stevenson, Pay- son; paymaster, Sharrel K. Otte-sen, Otte-sen, Spanish Fork, captain in the marine corps retserve; sergeant- at-arms, Herman Heath,, BYU student; public relations officer, Robert T. Divett, BYU student and sergeant in the marine corps reserve. Officers pointed out that that the organization does not have reserve tsatus, but is - merely a veterans' group similar to the American Legion Le-gion or VFW, with membership member-ship limited to ex-marines or those now in the marine corps. Those who served as women marines are also eligible. eli-gible. A publicity and recruiting drive is being launched before the next meeting, scheduled for Friday, Apr. 23, also at Sergeant Sexson s home, 1032 West Center.- Those interested are urged to contact him or other officers before the meeting, or to attend the meeting. meet-ing. LANDLORD WINS POINT ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. (U.R) It was the landlord's day t) court here when the judge dissolved an order preventing the landlord from turning off heat in an apartment. apart-ment. Tenants complained the landlord was trying to freeze them out but the landlord con-j tended the heating system was too dangerous to operate. The judge agreed. APRIL IS DIMOIi llITl' " j IfvV awreksie yr diaaeatft at w ! ' friH - ' J fat prehaea . . . specially price i ffii VS? f aV April tke UMe. VTU Ti f Mf Diamowl Solitaire; V-j hl'S? AWW Engagement Ring i wir' ' $8'' ... Six-Diamond VmSSv Hdal-Enembl Engagement Ring; ) ISPV ' ""X ' $"5.oo Ju) ay lies w c I m w in down P liV ' JEWELRY CO. JjjY Spanish Fork Council Studies Plans For $79,000 Airport Improvement SPANISH ' FORK Plans for the proposed $79,000 Improve ment program scheduled for the Spanish Fork-Springville airport Music Festival At Midway Planned Tuesday MIDWAY. The MIA music festival for Wasatch stake will be held April 13, at 8 p. m in the tabernacle, Music Directors Mrs. Owen Probst and" Madeline Wooteh announce. Each of the stake's 10 wards will participate, presenting music mu-sic and folk songs from a nation. The wards and the nations they represent are Center ward, America; Daniel ward, Hawaiian Islands; Heber First, Scotland; Midway First, Holland; Midway Second; Switzerland; Wallsburg ward, England, and Charleston ward, Bohemia (Gypsy). AUTREY BOOKED FOR SALT LAKE RODEO SALT LAKE CITY, April 10 (U.R) Chairman Sheldon Brewster announced today that movie cow boy star Gene Autry has been hired to head the cast of the days of '48 rodeo that will be pre scnted July 19 to 24 at the Utah fairgrounds. FACTORY COOPERATION 21.20 CLUB ALUMINUM included with every Monarch purchased during this sale The Best in Gas, Coal or Electric Cooking . Exclusively' At BDvQ were given a thorough inspection by the Spanish Fork city council at Its meeting Wednesday night Al Sorensen of the engineering. firm ol .Caldwell, Richards, and Sorensen, of Salt Lake City presented pre-sented the plans to the council In addition to the airport plans, Mr. Sorensen also presented the proposed schedule for lmprove- ments of the ' sidewalks along Spanish" Fork's' Main street,, a project to be started in the. near future; The air port plans had been previously approved by the group, but Wednesday night s examination ex-amination of them. was deemed necessary to insure a more.com- lete understanding of the project by all concerned. Another matter to come before the council was a report by Police Chief Archie Hales on the city's recent crackdown on pinball machines. ma-chines. Chief Hales reported that the- devices had been changed from a cash payment to an amusement amuse-ment only basis in conformance with the April 1 deadline previously previ-ously set by the council. , Every machine in the city is now tran-formed, tran-formed, the chiefs report stated. In addition, a proposal for blanket insurance of all city buildings was considered by the group and unanimously approved on a motion by Councilman Mark Adamson. This plan would give the city insurance on all civic structures at a rate of $4080 for five years. Range Sale ! S 1 1 i-1, . ... i' |