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Show - pageVtwo i ... JPROVO - (UTAH) . . DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY r 22, 1939 e Case of 'City's hi) 1. 5:;BacbfqAAinesiirv Pittsburgh Returned Missionaries :Mt6Wes'MMical Interest 6n-Coast '3 Ffo ck to Allen - Strang ' , - -, . v. mmrV 'Hall 1 BOISE1 Ida.'' (AW) A ' , strange battle of devotion is v being carried on by members - of this dtys fire department -( who ame struggling to save ;;.'the I eyesight , and possibly A" the life of 'Their Little Girl," .. ; - 11-year-old Anna Giltner. O.. The. pretty little girl is euff er- Jng from a brain malady.. She la gradually going blind and may cue it a Drain growth is not halted. . Several specialist nave deemed an operation too danger- , ous. But Anna's friends at the Central Fire station are far from giving up hope -"When they heard of Anna's plight, they immediately "adopted" "adopt-ed" her. The firemen are drilled to save lives. - They put on a dance all inr "Their Little Girl's" benefit. Boise - t citizens turned out. More than $400 was raised. The firemen contacted a San Francisco brain specialist, who volunteered his services. The Union Pacific provided transportation. To California the firemen sent rrj their little friend for a delicate .v-. operation. ; Ther,e specialists decided against t operating. X-ray treatments were given. With chances for her cure - still in doubt, Anna returned Z home. - Despite this disappointment, the " men at the Central Fire station arp keeping on the trail to Anna's cure. They are planning to send her away soon to another specialist. special-ist. They are also planning to get i-ray treatments for her here anything to save or prolong the life of "Their Little Girl." Junior High Set For Graduation At Payson School PAYSON Promotion exercises - of the Payson". Junior high school - will be held Thursday, May 25 at v the Payson Junior high school. -The theme of the program will be - "International Peace." Tne follow- ing speakers have been chosen Don Barnett, Helen Coray, Ross Hen-drickson, Hen-drickson, Karl Nielson, V. R. G?l-son. G?l-son. Norma Taylor, J. E. Bott, lone Lewis, Lynn" Powell, Zina Butler. Erma Jean Daniels, and Barbara Smith. The speakers were chosen not on the basis of scholarship but on genealogy, abilty in speech, md citizens-nip. The following are candidates for promotion as announced by Principal N. Blaine Winters: Joe Baadagard. Jane Badham, Fred Baird, Zella Belle, Del Rae Barnett, Bar-nett, Don Barnett, Bob Barney. Richard Beddoes, Margaret Beck, Lola Billington, Leon Bjamson, John Edward Bott, Naomi Bry-son, Bry-son, Bernice Butler, Zina Butler, But-ler, Ann Cahoon, Norman Carter. Beatrice Cloward, Jack Conk, Helen Hel-en Coray, Erma Jean Daniels, Elaine Davis, Gerald Dawson, June Eleanor Decker, Virginia Dixon, Arlis Douglass, Dee Douglass, Doug-lass, Marsh Done, Nylan Ellsworth, Ells-worth, Dale Elmer, Jonas Erek-son. Erek-son. Ilia Jean Erlandson. R. L. Flanders, B. Fowler, Ruth Fran-com, Fran-com, Ralph Gasser, Rodney Gled-hill, Gled-hill, V. R. Gilson, Glenn Grant, Russell Griggs, Doris Haddon, Ot-Ue Ot-Ue Hamilton. Clyde Heath. Ross Henrickson, Madge Hiatt. Pauline Hill, Elmer Jackman, Clifton Jensen, Jen-sen, Vema Johnson. Junior Jones, Ruth Jones. Ned Kapple, Richard Lant, lone Lewis. Afton Lindsay, Wanda Livingston Melba Mad-sen. Mad-sen. Boyd Mattirvson. Mitzie Man-will, Man-will, Maydabeth Mayer, Geral-dine Geral-dine Montague, Thelm?. Monta-gue. Monta-gue. Elizabeth Moore. Barbara Mortensen, Dorothy Deal McClel-lan. McClel-lan. Pauline McClellan, Wayne J. McClellan, Jim Orton. Helen Page, Jessie Partridge, Dune Pat- J . :'::-;.;::.:;: .- ': -::. " ' x v : -:-:-:- ys -A:-. tt- v . v y 1 '-:-v:Af - .-V f iXi?,:: 's r e?,.. An entire city ct ' SO.OOOf has Id Anna Giltner (abovejthe Dance Recital In T Stadium Featuring Miss Margaret Bur- ton and Claude Snow, Brigham Young University Dance club will present "Prelude to Dance," Wednesday Wed-nesday evening, May 24, in the university stadium. Director of the production. Miss Burton, who is instructor of physical physi-cal education for women, will open the program by a solo dance "Sal- mutation." Mr. Snow, aiumnus of B." Y. U. and instructor at Farrer Junior high school, will perform a torch-lighting ceremony. j Piano, flute, cyrobols, oboe, and t drum will furnish the background of music for the program. Misses Esther Evdashin, and Dorothy Jorgensen, of Salt Lake City, and June Christiansen of Provo will provide this musical accompaniment. accompani-ment. Among the principal performers perform-ers in Uie presentation are Jane Newell and Beth Bird, Provo; Catherine Cox and Ivy Roberts. Delta; Belh Mendenhall and Venice Ven-ice Whiting, Springville; Ora Christenaen and LaVonda Hansen, Han-sen, Richfield; Vivian Keller, Manti; Janice Beck, Draper; Jeanett Gray. Tooele; and Carol Bement, Price. Mrs. Tess Tyler, Provo, former member of the Dance club, is assistant director. ten. Glenn Perry, Dale Persson, Lynn Powell, Evelyn Richardson, Keith Rogers, Lola Scnaugaard, Dow Reed Schramm, Loa Jean Simmons, Fern Simons, Howard Simons, Barbara Smith, Elaine Smith, Wilbur Snelson, Max Spainhower, Ralph Spainhower, Julia Staheli, Buelah Tanner, Gene Tanner, Margaret Tanner, Norma Taylor. Wendell Taylor, Walter Terry, Peery Thomas, Louise Webb. Derrell Wightman, Alice Willey, Clain Winget. June Zee-man. don't let your clothes spoil it for you . . . Tennis . . Dancing . . . playing . . . walking . . . warm air, starry nights . . that's summer! It's a time for fun, for real happy living! Enjoy the .season to its utmost, but be sure you're ready for enjoyment by having your fun clothes frequently fre-quently cleaned. Clothes, you know, do have a great deal to do with having a good time. Check your wardrobe at frequent fre-quent intervals . . . send -the soiled clothes to MADSEN'S for prompt and perfect cleaning! i ,:f taken tq its heart prefty il-year giri who is going blind. 1 ' SCHOOL NEWS , Exhibit, Field Day Success At Farrer FARRER JTJNIOR-HGH Another An-other Farrer Exhibit and Field day is now history, and a variod history of activity and show. A well filled house of school patrons pa-trons coupled with pupil performance perfor-mance of a hig"n type, and instructive instruc-tive speeches of Supt. J. C. Moff-, itt and Princial J. W. Thornton made the culminating P. T. A. meeting of the year a great success. suc-cess. The exhibit of student work was bieeer and better than ever, and was a great reveiauon to viewers of the splendid type oi WOI K W lias UCCll w,wiuiua4- ed in all departments during the school year. A fine display of dresses and other articles give evidence of skill developed in sewing. A varied var-ied array of wood and metal work revealed vocational skill developed develop-ed by the boys whose after school life may be that of assisting in the boulding of communities. Hundreds Hun-dreds of stories, poems, written writ-ten conversations, booklets, and project write-ups prognosticate the future in creative writing. Varied and numerous were the paintings, mouldings, and pottery produced in the art department! The Junior Red Cross display of articles to be sent abroad . portrayed por-trayed student and teacher ef fects in this worthy field. Ana the type budgets. yVhat an array of typing with unique tvoed cover designs over an enormous amount of typed rtioles. The morning tea afforded the boys and girls an opportunity to take their mothers and be initiated initiat-ed into that type cultural, social activity. The winding of movie cameras and clicking of kodaks made the whole affair a much photographed performance and provided a fine addition to the Farrer pictorial record. Despite the wind and cold the moning program of music, dance and fashion show were impressive. impres-sive. The afternoon sports pro-eram pro-eram was carried out with clocklike clock-like dispatch, with competing classes receiving first, second and third ' places.; The mammoth posture pos-ture parade of many competing teams was an impressive spectacle. spec-tacle. The most amusing and the culminating event of the day was a tug of war between three thousand pounds of ninth traders. The losing team, the eighth graders, grad-ers, were dragged through a stream of cold water from the fire hydrant. The coffers of the ninth grade nroject received a generous addition addi-tion of coins from the concession conces-sion grounds. Permission recently was given to Trans-Canada Airlines to fly non-stop aoross parts of Maine. The Canadian lines fly from Montreal Mont-real to Moncton, New Brunswick. 7 (Cocttauectroni Page One) tionably wounded him "tleeply. There la rto, likelihood, howefer, of a aerioua rift between thena.. Their friendship goes back long bef ore thev came to wasningion ana we incident will soon, be forgotten.; j But It Is significant for reveal-1 ing the tension, that exists behind l the scenes over the bitterly fought ! issue of - admlnUtratiprt. policy- to k ward business. . JBEAimFIED j jl wpjt beautv rjarlor came un-1 der scrutiny of the house investi-j trstttncr committee. The committee was told .that the State of Ohio' purchased lamps, dryers and swivel chairs and, Installed them in a basement room oi? the. State Hospital Hos-pital for the Insane. Then the WPA was asked .to supply unemployed' unem-ployed' beauticians as operators. This was done on the Theory that when a mental patient thinks of beautifying herself, sanity begins be-gins to return. In one corner of the committee room, with his head in his hand, sat fat Representative Louis Ludlow Lud-low of Indiana, one of the homeliest homeli-est men in the house. After listening lis-tening ta the. testimony, Ludlow inquired in a plaintive voice: "Could outside people go in there to. be beautified?" -n t-. r- . ' NAZI -SECRETS I - -r .KfK4 itfAA UWM OUatA It Hilt' mittee were not aware of it, but the most interested observer at their hearing on patent controls in the metal industry was Dr. Hans Thomaen, counselor of the German embassy, With .a secretary by his side taking notes, the Nazi diplomat iollpwed intently the astounding story of how Germany for a time dominated, world production of beryllium, an element vital because- of its lightness in the manufacture manu-facture of airplanes and dirigibles. Inside reason for Thomsen's concern was the appearance as a witness of Dr. Ferdinand A, Ker-tess; Ker-tess; agent in the U, S. for a large German metallurgical concern, who has been, charged in complaints com-plaints to the state department witb. undercover : Nazi activity. The committee had been unable to locate Kertess until the German embassy revealed his whereabouts. The story of Germany's control of Beryllium waa unfolded, by Andrew An-drew J. Gahagaii, president of the Beryllium Product company of America, who. related under ques-tipning ques-tipning how his firm had entered' into a secret agreement with Germany Ger-many to divide the world market. Gahagan was given North and i South Ajnerica, and Germany kept the rest of the globe. Later, how- everi - England and Franc smashed, the cartel by threatening to confiscate beryllium patents. Thomsen flushed when Gahagan. under examination by Hugh Cox, justice department patent expert, disclosed that in, T335 rnore; than 15,000 beryllium arplane bushings C-c " 1: 'l'f eStAWr,, Chesterfield's happy - - - f ' :x-xx:xfe:v:::::: f ??!?f?feffi? MISS DOtOTHf QUACKENiUSrl (Miu Amiriio Aviation 193 8-19 Wl.l all charming T.V. A he$tottit,. U .et jvur rrrc cror acrcMt tarn m f f P ;:;, Down the track toward ooen mine few; rJSi:'-r ' -. : t j WOrK go son coai miners 01 nusDurgn, fa., aismct, as snutapwn. I I. L. . . a . . . J which accompanied negotiations were, in use in uermany. committee commit-tee members missed the true significance sig-nificance of this, but what Cox meant to show was that even four years ago, the Nazis had an air aumade large enough to need 15,-000 15,-000 bushings.- Thomsen, of course, understood Xully. Kertess was a cagy witness, flatly flat-ly denying that beryllium was being be-ing used by Germany. When confronted con-fronted with Gahagan's testimony that his company alone had shipped ship-ped large quantities of the key military metal, to Kermany, Kertess Ker-tess tittered nervously, shot a quick glance at Thomsen sitting nearby, and continued to utter his bland denials. r . ; : MERRY-GO-ROUND I Welly Kennon Hopkins, one-time Texas cowhand and chief of the justice department trial division, is leading contender to succeed Assistant Attorney General . Brien McMahon. He's said to have the backing of Jim Farley. . . . Washington Wash-ington newspaper women, who include in-clude some of, the ablest members t of the press corps, ; ft being referred to are seething as "society aitresses by Lady Lindsay; wife tit the British Ambassador. leaders credit Harry Hopkins with the .resident's personal intervention interven-tion that led to settlement of the deadlocked coal negotiations. (Copyright, 19Sb, by United . Feature Syndicate, Inc.) utvmiryt . ' r - Hrp fry w m IFFY ? -MW - :r-"V Uorothy Quackenbush, , m, . v v ' '";,;' V ; 'witMiet'smile. and her Chest-: . v vFvlS; r-V- - fromcodst to coast. . ' 7 ; " v..:- . 4 shaftand 'resumrilirtiv -f friaifv, between operators and United . Mine w oncers, ends. - -riir PLEASANT G MISS VTOlJ WKST Correspondent Phone 28-W 1 Mr. and Mrs. George Peay entertained en-tertained at dinner one day this week Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wood-worth Wood-worth of Salt Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Ethan Peay of American Fork; Mr. Parley Olson- and daughter Vel'ma of Provo; Mr. and Mrs. Golden Peay, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Jacobs. A delightful affair of Wednesday Wednes-day was the party which Miss Betha Storrs :gave for the -45 students stu-dents of her junior- bandvOfiA itmg table- beautifully decorated with a large-cake, held individual place cards for each persons, and after the luncheon the hostess, present ed -each guest -with a present -Mrr and4 Mrs. liomelRdyai4 of Moiiticello have come' home for the summer. Mrs. Royal - will recuperate re-cuperate from- an appendicitis operation while staying with her parents Mr and Mrs. George Peay. Mr. Royal taught school in Monticello. ROVE mmm o-:ox'xVxy:-x:X;:vX';' Allen kail; men's dormitory , of Brigham Tounr . university, k has become almost a:nissloh home," having? thirteen . returned .mission ariea from nine different, missions living in It; according to. Dr. H. V Hoyt j dormitory supervisor. ; ruThe exmtssionarlea? andr Jtheir missions are ,: as follows ; Jay .Old- royd Wvenicei fromisWestern States Ferrel Walker, Delta, from Great Britain; Leonard Bice, Clifton Idahpilj from California; William . Ree.Ye,L.Qgden, , from" Germany;.. Ger-many;.. Alton,; Johnson, :vuVernal, from . Sputhern. .States; John Landward, Salt Lake -City, tfrom Netherlands,., Roscoe;, .N elspn, Spanish r Fork, from .Germany; Don Wadsworthi ,Penaca,4 Nevada, from . New .? Zealand ; Hyrqm s J Smithi Salt Lake 3ity, from Gee-many; Gee-many; ;Vljrgil StUCkL Delta, from Germany! Preston; GledhilL Rich field, from France j Nephi. Conrad, Las, .yegas,iNeyada, from, pastern States; and Jack, Reynolds, Wash-ington Wash-ington D C; rrom Southt Africa, -:;The returned missionaries at Allen Hall prove that Jthey did not lose-any. of. their musical , talents while pn. their-: missionsv.. as. . they entertain the vinmates of the dormitory dor-mitory .with, thelr.r:yarious .instruments. .instru-ments. Mr; Reeve piaya the accor-dian accor-dian and pian; Mr. Wadswprtn, the, ban jo; Mr Jonnson, the piano and gjilrnr;--..-v.Mr. uReynoldav the piano; and -JMr Stuck!, the trum-pet, trum-pet, U - Of the 80 , students at! Allen Halt the missionaries comprise approximately 16 per cent, whicn is. more- than double tne proportion propor-tion for, the entire university student stu-dent body. , Training School Doard in Session AMERICAN FORK A total of 701 cases are currently under ob servation at the Utah state training train-ing school, Superintendent H. H. Ramsey told the board of trustees at its regular meeting Saturday. Dry Ramsey reported expenditures expendi-tures for April were $13,463.74, which included $5728.81 for payroll pay-roll and $7241.16 for power, water wa-ter and miscellaneous expenses. The superintendent reported his recent attendance at a conven tion of the American Association on Mental Deficiency at Chicago. The trustees approved, suspension suspen-sion of most of the academic school work for the summer months. Music work, manual arts land practical training will con-I con-I tinue. Attending were Dr D. A; Skeen, Salt Lake City, president; "Sol G. Kahn, Mrs. "Amy Brown Lyman and Laura M, Thomson, of Salt Lake; Dr. G. S. Richards, American Amer-ican Fork; Alex Hedquist, Provo; and S. T. Jeppesen, Ogden, raem- ibers. erfieldsf, keeps smokershappy giyesrismpkers just what they want imit irig mildness, iihg aroma. t" FVeG SllOW N lit Uinta Theater, All the children in Provo are invited to the firSt meeting of the Lone Rangerjelub' at the i Uinta theater for 4 a. big; free enow Saturday Sat-urday morning at ,9 :30. t,; Gifts will -be, giyea away such as flashlights,.wrist:watches, fountain foun-tain pens, and radios;, with . the big f gifts; of one;;.boys : and one ' girl's, bicycle -and a. free . trip to the San, Francisco ' World's ..fair, details of .which will be given Sat-day. Sat-day. "ir ' ' I "' A big program, chosen especially especial-ly for children isj4 being, arranged so that everyone wilt be' sure ; to , enjoy the whole show, t There, will, alsq be free candy. i. S, I s T- mi ft; PRICES NOW LOWEST IN HOLLAND'S IIISTORy X7HY not at least find, out what : V V Holland can do for you- before deciding to endure another winter of discomfort, extra work and high fuel bills caused by. a faulty furnace? See the famous Holland .demonstration- learn all about the -many; advanced proven featuie3, scientific planning fuid exclusive, installation method which make possible Holland's unequalled ' guarantee of perfect heat in ever room. No obligation just call thftfao tory branch below. . : 471 W. First S Phone: 417 . Provo, Utah V f HOLLAND. FUmiACECO. HOLLAND, MICH. . - World t Largest fnttalhr ?f Hpnie', Heating arid Air Conditioning Sat$ma ; combma rs best tobaccos cigarette . . . refresh- better taste, tnore: , ii .1 . VJUV '': i . "S ' ' f"'- V S t , itf" - - - . . v . . c When you try them you mil khom'y' tvhyiChestetJUlds give niillions of men zand women- more 7 smoking - v. ThsMornin r CcrtcrsLiillaLivcrFHb - - - - mm t a. r v LV. - |