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Show V, PROVO (UTAH) DAILY ' HERALD,- r FRIDAY, JUNE- 16, 1939 PAGE FIVE 50 LEADING UTAH EDUCATORS TO JAKE PART If CONFERENCE '.'' ' - ., . . . . . . v. r, '. i, . " .-. " ' ' 'j ' ""'-.',, ' ' - - ""' --.i' f' -XX .9. j"'',--- -V' . ';'-" I -V - - More than 50 o'f the leading jnick, principal of the . Lincoln educutors of the state are ex- high school;' Clark Frei, principal, pectcd to act as chairmen and ; south Summit district; ' Earl Acord, 7 principal of castle Gate give talks at the Brighamr Tfaung , 1 university ; turamer conference on ,. education, it , was announced Wed 1 nejsday .by-,; Dr; A ' C. i , Lambert, dean of the summery session, fol ' lowing receipt of acceptances from those invited. " The conference is slated i for five days,' -from June 19 to 23. ; ' . .v Heading ihe list will be Charles . H. Skldmoret " superintendent of the ' state department : of "public Instruction," Salt : Lake City. ' Also '. attending from 'the : states-depart ; ment will be -Barton K. Fam. worth the director of secondary J instruction. Miss Jennie Campbell, ' supervisor I of ;i elementary educa- lion,1 arid David Gourley, assistant j state superintendents v Panel CIiairmcnNamed i Chalrmenfor 'the : panel discus Elona have bcen:iiamed, .by Dr, Lambert. .. Included among these arfc A. M. Maughan, principal Richfield ' hjgh 'school; El Roy Jones of - the Price city schools; ;r. -u. iieoertson, principal m me Alpine .district; Miland R. Steph- ns of the Ogden city schools; E- R. Spillsbury of Preston, Idaho; Allen Tuft, principal of Blanding school; ft.' A. Anderaon,'- principal Spanish .Fork-high chool; D. R. Mitchell, superintendent ; Alpine school district; J. E Christensen, -principal Sevier county schools; Grant Gardner, Springville . Junior high school; E..L. .Hansen, principal prin-cipal Coalville, school; and fTen S. Lee, principal Garfield .county hlfrh i school, . : Tatting .part in the discussions by giving talks are: A. P. War- school; . LaVeta - Wallace, supervisor super-visor Cache county school district; C Ray Evans, superintendent North ; Summit school district; L. G.' Noble, f superintendent 1 6f Uintah Uin-tah county school district; Milton Moody, superintendent of Washington Wash-ington county school district. -, , B. M. Thompson, principal . of North Sevier high school; G. - W. Seegmiller, principal of Delta high school; Miss Nellie , , Hendricks, supervisor, Weber county schools; Mrs. V Mary Ricks, ; superintendent Uintah county school district. D. J. Thurman, principal Granite school district; Almo 'Pack. Cyprus Cy-prus junior high .school ; , Arch Thurman, director of the department depart-ment of pupil personnel, Salt Lake City public schools. t . Fred Strate, Provo city schools; G. W. Larsen, American Fork schools; Darwin Ellett, y" Spanish Fork schools; A. Luke,Clegg, prin cipal Atterra high school; and Milton D. Taylor executive secretary, secre-tary, Utah Education association. Many members of- the regular Brigham. Young university facul ty will also take leading parts in the conference. Headed by Dean Lambert, the following faculty. members will be heard; Mae Ham mond, Elliott Tuttle, Mis Georgia Maeser, Dr. Wesley P. Lloyd,. Dr, Billle Hollirigshead, Jackdbb, Dr. Joseph Sudweeks, C L. Jensen, Ed- ear M. Jensen and Mrs.Flora D. j Fisher. The final panel discussion by Dr. Lambert as. chairman and will evaluate the conference .. s i - , C I. O. Walks Through A. F. of M: if f i v r f i i 1 i J: Flanked by police, - workers walk through' picket lines In front of General; Motors plant- at Saginaw, ' Mich., Just before Interunion strife burst into violence. Twelve Vere injured as pickets of striking ' A. F. L. unit of. United Auto Workers clashed with police. C. L O. division of U. A. W. ppposes strike. Playground m Activities oooooooooocoooooooooo o o o o o o o o c o o c o o o o o Q It u IB liP 08 03 10 G) b! if . i ' - 4 -5'1 s "-0 o o o o c o o o o o o o o o o o o o By MARY. BEE , The Lambeth Walk! Jitterbug- ging! Fun! All three found at the big dance held at-tbe-high school last night for junior high students, senior high students, aiidTadults, Don't forget there is a dance every Thursday evening from 8:30 to 11:30 at the high school gym. IT'S FREE! Come and bring" your friends. See you there next Thursday! Thurs-day! r . Uocd time in the water. Supervised Super-vised play will be held at the playground play-ground for those not going to the park. All boys that would like to join the ball teamcome ' to the Maeser at 4 o'clock tomorrow. "Red letter" day was held at the Maeser school playground yesterday. yes-terday. Startin&r the afternoon with special .events, the following prizes were awarded: Sand modei- and Jack Schofield; sand modeling for girls, Shirley Long, Marion Bailey and Ella Mae Redd. .Crb-auet, .Crb-auet, Joan . Hurst , and Nellie Meacham; ball bouncing, ' Berle Jensen, Horseshoe, Russell Elliott. The entire group participated in races and games, and candy was enjoyed by all- At 4 o'clock Maeser Mae-ser school baseball team won the "ame played with the North Park team. At 6:30 "over. 150 children ! made up the audience for the ama teur Major Bowes program. After A toasting marshmallows the entire i group dancedVh 4ftrglnS teet and the Lambeth Walk with music furnished by Elmo Alfred's sound car. Boys and girls at the Maeser school playground that wish to go wading at Memorial Park tomorrows-come ... prepared to have a The orchestra department of the recreation summer school has Jthe largefct- enrollmentof any1 year in recreation teaching. Mr. Hil-gendorff Hil-gendorff teaches 10 classes with an average of 16 students in each class. ; Classes meet three times weekly. Regular rehearsals are held for string quartette playing, and a string orchestra is being organized from the best students of the entire school district. This orchestra will rehearse regularly beginning next week, and will play at the U. E. A. convention at the Tabernacle next fall Fdrtv beginners studvinir strins instrument started this summerT" There are still a few instruments available to students of 7th grade age, who feel an inclination for talent of a stringed instrument. You should see Mr. Hilgendorf f at once at the Central school building, build-ing, room 17. " The orchestra classes will continue until August 5. A girls' doll club is part of the Maeser school summer recreation program. .This club has 12 merit efrwhic1i riteet eVe Wearies day and Friday at 10 o'clock. The girls are making doll houses of cardboard boxes and wooden boxes, furniture out of spools, scraps of wood and cardboard. The president uof the club is Gloria Stimpson, and the news reporter is Shirley Rae Alfred. . , . I BAKE AND SERVE IN THIS SAME DISH. SO rrs Kwie kKi c kit I mm"Y ft " " L"" ' " 'J"' I- '-'l Mwjjjjjjjj i.im i .i.iiiiuiiL I. mi in Mil! .11, 1,11111 r' ii actually V, tiff .-x, am (H INCHSACROSSA Mlh ' ' M ijtr QA R'T -.y i . wAa -V. E 1 tSUZ: fl--7x GIENUJIIRIIZ (GILASBMSIZ v -.. - burru j 1 &&iS-M v y,.jk syj jj.. t JMe-'"yi'f' " a-l"11 "T 1, L . hYTS GUARANTEE! -jf& J ( AGAINST OVEN ) jl 7 V,bakage! .:yJ& yours at a remarkable bargain price when you buy 3-1 b. Crisco . J sin s bairgAM m&jws IT'S A BUYt You'll find dozens of uses for this sturdy, genuine Glasbake Casserole! Use it for apple betty, chicken pie, baked beans, rice pudding, custards, deep fruit pie, scalloped dishes., Just, (buy a '&-lb. can of new creamier Crisco and this attractive baking dish is yours at a fraction of its regular value! We offer you thU amazing bargain com- "You can mix up a light lovely cake in " . bination to get you to try the NEW W time! r- : CREAMIER CRISCO. vj And new Crisco can actually make your , New Crisco Is grand news all by It- fried foods more delicious than even' self. It's now made creamier than eyer by Crisco-eVermade them before. Foods cor-" : the new million-dollar Gyrohurn Process. rectlyfried in Crisco are as digestible as , Tender pastry is no trick with this new if baked. ' ; , . creamier Crisco, The Crisco blends easily" Get 3-lb. Crisco today and the bar-' . and thoroughly, shortens your pastry mix gain casserole, too. You-Tl be thrilled with x all the uny through. x your bargain. And you'll find new crpara- " This creamiexjCrlsco takes all the hard ier Crisco better than ever before. A grand .work of ' creaming out of ; dike-making, help in your kitcheu. i ' -3 URRYI SUPPLY IS LIMITED!; m f you'll be crazy about City Court f James John Maxwell, Eureka, began serving; a 10-day jail sentence sen-tence today after pleading guilty In city court to two offenses---! being intoxicated and disturbing the peace. - He was arrested at the Provo-liquor Provo-liquor store when he used "loud arid abusive language, , calling one of the employes vulgar, names.'' He was given choice of h $10 fine or five days in jail on each count, and chose, the latter. " Tom Hamilton pleaded guilty to vagrancy and was given "a 30- day sentence. William Neetiing forfeited $5 j bail bond on a charge of run-1 ning a stop sign. . N Colorado Builds Auto Road to Top Of Mount Evans DENVER, June 16 OLEK-rColo-rado's newest mountain highway a broad, oiled boulevard to the top of Mount Evans earned to day by the scant margin of ,one loot . the. tme or "nig nest auto mobile road in the world."- ' r State -highway-'engineers an nounced that.- altitude readings showed the , new . highway was 14,111 feet above sea level at its highest point. : , - . The announcement tumbled from its throne, as ""highest' road" the . highway ; from - Colorado Springs to " the " summit ' of famed Pikes peak, 14,110 feet "above the sear- , . . : v Mount Evans, lofty segment , of the Continental Divide only s 52 miles' from Denver, is 14,259 feet high and the new road to its sum mit runs to the base of a mound of rocks which form the peak of the mountain. - ." - Engineer's measurements show- eoV that t the " highway along the summit dips from its highest point of 14,111 feet to 14,104 feet be fore it winds on down the moun taln.--; The road to the top of -Pikes peak, which has carried cars from every state in the nation and most foreign countries, goes right to the summit of the mountain, al though observation' towers above that, pointv have been erected on rock1 "mounds. , v - . State officials said no other auto, road in the world comes "within several thnnsan1 t pflt." nf the elevation of the two Colorado highways...: Goop!3 '.Cnjurd- :0n Ganyoh Grcsh 10,000 Utahns Aided By FHA Financing . Recovering from injuries, suffered suf-fered when the car in which they were riding ran off a 10-foot 10-foot embankment near Colton Thursday afternoon. Dr. Richard Waldapfel,: 44, of Grand Junction, Junc-tion, "Colo., and his wife, Margaret Mar-garet Waldapfel, 36, were reported re-ported in good condition at Alrd hospitafl today. v. Mrs. Waldapfel suffered" head and chest injuries while Dri Waldapfel Wal-dapfel -'incurred a cut lip and chest bruises. ' ; State Patrolmen C. - H. Alfred J and Jack Sullivan said Dr. Waldapfel Wal-dapfel - probably ; dozed at the wheel. The Waldapfels were x en routev to California. . Freight Rates On -Butter and Eggs Cut . Increased ' consumption of Utah and . Idaho butter, eggs, cheese and dsessed poultry in the Los Angel efcf and San ; Francisco met- ropouiui areas is roreseenr in announcement by the Union - Pa- cif ic6i voluntary reduction by imr rauroaas or carload rates on these commodities. Reductions ranging fronr six to 20 cents per hundred pounds will become effective June 1 22, it is "announced by Ambrose J, Seitz, assistant traXfic 'manager of the Union Pacific for Utah and Idaho; district. , I . UltJEYAPiD MRS. GEORGE F. XLLS Reporter rhon 01-R-4 A total of 9,999 Utah families have repaired and modernized "their homes with FHA insured loans- totaling $3,723,911. These home improvements according to Franklin D. Richards, Federal Housing Admmistration director for Utah, have all been made since the government's "better housing" hous-ing" program was begun in 1934. 1H0MAS 'rfMn' J& with31b.can -mAUF0-m jplSEisi ..... . 2 lbs33c: TOILET TISSOE Comfort . . . 4 for 10c JELg-naTg fe. Dottle 10c; SPjOlieH StE . .... no.B:can13c P jnEipiE ; . . Ho. 2f caR 16c Q3CVB0L . . , Large package 20i GAH7AL00PES!1umbo 2for15 POTATOES muTE 10 - lbs. 10c BETTER 11VMI BETTER MEATS UlUm MEALS LEfi LAPP, 6enuine . . . , Lb. 25c OEEF nOflST .ggg. Lb. 10c 0A00I3 .SQUAQES gg ff.'.:. Lb. 15c PRIME RIB ROLLED V , ' " OUEfl- QOAST k. Lb. 25c FILMS SHOWN As the first of a series of week ly exhibitions of Visual instruction procedures, . a lecture and demon stration was" given Wednesday aft ernoon at Brigham Young" university univer-sity by. Thomas Peterson, secretary secre-tary of the Bureau of Visual Instruction In-struction of the university. . The tarsier, an. animal . of the East- Indies, has suction cups on its toes. . Mrs. Nellie Bliss left -Thursday for Spokane,.: Washington, following follow-ing a five weeks stay in Utah. She was the: guest of her uncle Thomas Wells during her stay in Vineyard. ' . ; . Mrs. Mary E. Morgan of Baltimore, Balti-more, Mr., and her daughter, Mis3 Mamie E. Morgan of , New York City and Miss Elizabeth Souter of Provo, . were guests Tuesday at the home of Mr. andMrs- Mil-tort Mil-tort L. Holdaway. Mr.' and Mrs. .Joseph H. Clegs and family and iloy O. , Clegg attended at-tended funeral services Thursday in Salt Lake for their aunt, Mrs. Rachael Ann Clegg, wife of the Iate Bishop Thomas . Clegg of Provo-: Other, relatives to atteni the' graveside services in the He be r City cemetery, were Mrs. Rolan l Harding, Mrs, Lewis Clegg, Mrs Leah Rowley, Mrs. Bina Clegg an 1 Hal Holland. - t i ; y. Albert Holdaway received word of the birth 'of a grandson, born June 13 to Randall and Ida Wap-staff Wap-staff Holdaway at their home in Ronan, Montana. "There .will be no, church services ser-vices held here Sunday due to quarterly conference being hel J at the Lincohi auditorium. Mr., and Mrs- Raymond Harding were Salt Lake visitors . Wednesday.-,;. V " Mrs. S.' H. Blake xeturned to her home Thursday from the Holy Cross hospital in Salt Lake follow ing a two weeks stay, where she received-medical treatment. f m IJJ..W ) GROCERS VEAL STEAK rShoiilder ! Pound' . V. : Fresh Sliced; Young, BEEP OLIVER Pound'... ; -" '-. ' Tender ' ; HAM HOCKS Pound .. . . . .:..I103 LAMB STEAK Pound LARGE : ' DILL PICKLES : 3 tor... ICS Assorted Fresh Sliced LUNCH MEATS 2 En Fresh Dressed " STEWING HENS Pound . . . . . . . . , ls Fry or Bake' HAM LOAF Pound r .... ... LJf If M 1 nnvnr ) FRESIf DRESSED W We Clean Thera .. 1 4G0: .VJEST-'GEIlTEny PHONE 534 FREE DELIVERY Right in Quantity - Quality and Price! Vi Size t TUNA FLAKES Sfor. j;;.;.-. 29s CORN BEEF . SUNGRAZE ' ' n02:..,..;... agg JELS-RITE 8-Ounce . . : Bottle iiUj; OXYDOL Large y X .-,"ni ' Package . . . . ... .fciww DEL MONTE x TOSIAQ JUICE 4iOnnqo?;.? f ;t? Tin ........... iiw fSkjes CORN EELLOGG'S 13 Ounce C "Package SEGOor MORNING Tall Cans v.. . .... ... . ;4fof 20c SOOTTI0SO Soft As Linen rolls 23 c FL0OO ?j&;C . x. 80c SOAP : y . ... 10 Mrs 31c mT nrnro califnavels 344 Size ....... PiaAT0:t,.;-.2l6s15c oflnfljnsI.:,.:.3is.:i0c POTATOES i WHITES v..::ioi25c . ' ;t- QUALITY CHEATS BAGOlllSTniPS.-.'-i Lb, PQTgnOASTa . . ;; Lb. ICc. SLEGEBlDAeon : : .- . : Lb. 23s leahisalt; psnii . ld. isc Assorted 1 .UEALvMEAST; For ; Pocket ... 'UEAM.0GA8T8, Sbdiiir . Lb 1. POOQOASTS iSS OC 19c UL-ia liXJL lO li BEEF . t--- L 4 ' , X Springs Fry s and Stewing Hens j |