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Show PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1041 PAGE FIVE Qc3fdeno2 To Do Boili At Lake For aretoker Plan3 are going forward for a caretaker's residence at the Pro-vo Pro-vo metropolitan park at Utah lake, according' to Raymond Hig-gins, Hig-gins, national park service inspector in-spector from the regional office at Santa Fe, N". M., who was here Thursday. Joseph C. Nelson, project architect, archi-tect, is completing the plans for the -structure. Construction likely like-ly will get under way in June or July. Under present plans, the park service, department of interior, in-terior, will provide the materials, which will cost in the neighborhood neighbor-hood of $3000. CCC boys will provide pro-vide the common labor. Mr. Higgins, in company with Wells L. Brimhall of Provo,' project proj-ect superintendent, inspected the Utah lake harbor and metropolitan park project Wednesday and today. to-day. The inspector indicated he was satisfied with the general progress of the program. S. H. Hendricks, -engineer from Zion national park, was here Wednesday Wed-nesday to view the project and particularly to investigate means of disposing of the sewage from the buildings to be constructed at the site. Around The World With United Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden German Ger-man occupation authorities in Norway have discovered a plot to blow up a German munitions depot in Narvik. Swedish press dispatches from Oslo said today. ;0: TOKYO Rmpcror Ilirohito tonight to-night formally ratified the now So viet-Japanese neutrality pact, which the privy council had approved ap-proved earlier. 'I lie treaty becomes be-comes effective tomorrow. :0: ROME The newspaper Mes-sagero's Mes-sagero's Zagreb correspondent reported re-ported today that Ante Pavelic, chief of the new Croat state, had instructed Sladko Kvaternik, commander com-mander of the armed forces, to organize a new army. :0: ISTANBUL, Turkey Neutral diplomats arriving irom Rumania Ru-mania reported today that there had been heavy Rumanian and Hungarian troop concentrations on tne Russian frontier and that most of the German troops in Rumania hud been sent to that front. :0: STOCKHOLM, Sweden Russia Is working hard to improve relations rela-tions witn Sweden and Finland In order to offset increasing Ger-tian Ger-tian influence in. Scandinavia, dip-ioniatic dip-ioniatic quarters reported today. :0: MOSCOW Twenty-three officers offi-cers ani crewmen 01 the Jugoslav air force arrived in Moscow on April 16 and were scn In full uniform tod.iv in a Mo.-wovv hotel. :0: NEW YORK British imperial forces in Greece, "with energy and determination," can hold their position, Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney, rnmrnariflpr of the Australians in Greece, -aid in an order of the day p icked ,up here by Columbia. - :0: SHANGHAI Col. Ilsieh Ching-Yuan, Ching-Yuan, commander of the famous Chinese "doomc-J battalion," died today of stab wound.! inflicted by frur members of his battalion why i;;iid they did it because of his "hjl conduct." Oi.o species of African cobra rpits venomous spray a considerable consider-able distance. n t r ( , h u Yt i !i ill! Ii ! V 0 U ! ! can afford to SEE US TODAY FOR A LOAN! Imagine a Fine New Modern Home, all yours and your family's! This dream can come true if you earn just an average amount. . S. CURTIS-AGENCY 174 WEST CENTER Farrer Eagle Staff Views Winning Product Key members of the Farrer Eagle staff are, left to right: front row, Delbert V. Tregeagle, faculty adviser; Gloria Groneman, editor; Dawna Sorenso n, feature editor. . Back row, Jack Mitchell, sports editor, and Donna Bean, department editor. 'Farrer Eagle,' School Papsr, VJins First Class Honors, national Hating The Farrer Eagle, Farrer junior high school paper, has been .accorded .ac-corded first class honors, according accord-ing to results of ratings for the fall semester issues of school papers pa-pers released today by the National Nation-al Scholastic Press association. This rating specifies, that for junior high schools this publication publica-tion is considered an excellent one. Only 10 other schools in the same division in the United States won similar ratings. The next higher honor is the Ail-American superior rating. The Farrer Eagle is one of the fev; junior high papers to receive such a rating. " This is the fourth successive semester se-mester that the same honors have been received by the publication. The N.S.P.A. judges mainly on the news values and sources, news writing and editing, headlines, typography , and makeup! and department de-partment and special features. Major credit for thi3 year's suc-?css suc-?css goes to Gloria Groneman, editor edi-tor in chief; Dawna Sorenson, feature fea-ture editor; and Richard Anderson Ander-son and M-ark Graham, business and advertising managers. Other staff members include Wanda Wright, Yvonne Farr.Wan-da Farr.Wan-da Brown and Joan Ballif, typists, and Rodene Farrer, columnist. D. V. Tregeagle is faculty adviser. SPRINCVILLE MRS. MANUKA BROWN Correspondent I'lione 223-W SPR.INGVILLE t Miss FauKhn Nielson was hostess1 to the 'Current 'Cur-rent Study club" Monday evening at her home in Pay-son. After a delicious dinner the group was I . : j ...:ti. 1 . . . r. , 1 wllu a iUM' "lu' view oi james iniwn u "Random Harvest." g:iven bo ably by Mrs. Lowcry Anderson. Club' members present were Bertha and Faye Beainson. Nell Matley, Grace Parker, Rea Straw, Minerva Johnson, Mattie Davis. Melba Sumsion. Elda Hansen, and the hostess. Special guests were the Mioses Fern Smoot, Vivian Georgenen, Cora Paige, Eva Lee, Thclma Snarr, Ileene Page, and La. Thell Gibbons. Sic M: A Here's finer tea-Schilling Tea-fragranlly Tea-fragranlly good . . . tleliciously refreshing. Compare quality! m m Pay Back "With Your Rent Money! PHONE S6 Electrical lYIen o Convene Here Preliminary plans for a special meeting of the Utah chapter. International In-ternational Association of Electrical Elec-trical Inspectors to be held in Provo in June were mapped at a meeting of Bob Murray, city electrical elec-trical inspector, and Provo electrical elec-trical contractors Wednesday night. The following committees for the meeting' were appointed: Entertainment, Paul Cochran, LaGrande Guymon and Lloyd Engle; refreshments, L. C. Guymon, Guy-mon, Oliver Johnson and A. N. Talbot; reception, H. Hurst, Douglas Doug-las Peck, Garth Guymon and S. Q. Grant; invitations, Mr. Murray, Mur-ray, all of the 'men' listed ' above? and Willard Ostlund, Charles , B. Sessions, Lynn Wakefield and L. O. Turner. More than 100 electrical inspec tors and contractors are expected to converge on Provo for the meeting, which is the first of its kind ever held here, according to Mr. Murray. Public Address System Approved Installation of a public address system in the Provo tabernacle has been approved by Utah and Provo stakes and the presiding bishopric's office of the L.. D. S. church, according to R. J. Mur-dock, Mur-dock, president of Utah stake. The project will cost approximately approxi-mately $3(x, with the church pay-ire; pay-ire; half and the two stakes half. It is planned to have the system installed in time for the next stake conference in .-May. . BOSTON DAILY TO srSPEM) Fl'BI.ICATION BOSTON. April 23 The 11 1-year-old Boston Evening Transcript announced today that it will suspend publication effective effec-tive next Wednesday. In an editorial statement, Pub- j lisher Richard N. Johnson ex plained that a five-cent price in the sharply competitive two-cent Boston field had failed to produce the necessary revenue to continue. The death of the Transcript will leave Boston with four afternoon dailies, The Traveler, Globe, American Am-erican and Christian Science Monitor. Moni-tor. TOO LATE FOR j ! CLASSIFICATION FOR KENT IXFTKMSIIKU 4 ROOI modern brick home. Phone 1013 or 546W. m23 IOU, SALIi-MJSCKLLANEOlTS LATE model repossessed Hoover. Mayccck Appliance. Phone 7SW. a27 BOARD AM) ROOM NICE clean rooms, home cooked meals. Reasonable. 955 North University. a30 HELP WANTED FEMALE LADY capable of taking- over our books, typing: and some shorthand. short-hand. Good hours and pood pay. Address Box W-24 Herald office. a27 Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH In false tfftti drop, slip or wbb! when you talk, fat, lauch or sneeze? p.'n't he annoyed an'! embarrassed ly fiu-h hamli-iig. FASTKKTH, n ulka-lin- ( nun-ai'KI I powder to isprinkle on v..ur plates. keeps falne. teeth more firmly set. tlives confident feeling of security se-curity Btul milled comfort. So gummy. Pooey. pasty taut or feeling. Get KAS-TEKTIt KAS-TEKTIt today at any drusS tore. adv. Wasatch County v Fair Set Aug. 22 HEB ER The Wasatch county fair for 1941 will be held August 22 and 23, announces Riley C. Draper, who has been elected president of the fair board to succeed suc-ceed John A. Anderson. Officers in addition to Mr. Draper are Mr. Anderson, vice president; Herbert Rasband, treasurer and finance ofticer; Farrell Olson, secretary; John J. Barnard, exhibits, and L. C. Montgomery, Mont-gomery, Clarence Ostlund, Harold Har-old Stevens, Clyde Ritchie, H. Clay Cummings, Nellie DeGraff, and Harry Morris, directors. Horned - toads, or lizards, actually ac-tually shoot blood from the 'corners 'cor-ners of their eyes. ...-re Li UdQlrJ 4 V r--. : S- - LOWERI A lower center of gravity with increased road clearance and, greater headroom! That means new good looks a roomier, safer carl COME IN TODAY AMD SKIPP THE CUPPtRV PROVO CHORUS WINS HONORS The music section chorus of the Provo Women's Council won first prize in the music contest held in connection with the forty-eighth forty-eighth annual convention of the Utah Federation of Women's clubs, being held in Salt Lake City this week. The chorus, which is directed by Miss Marguerite Jepperson, sang two numbers at the general session ses-sion held Tuesday afternoon at the Hotel Utah. Mrs. Owen P. Hen-inger Hen-inger is the accompanist. Members of the chorus include: Mrs. Don C. William, Mrs. Lester Jcppson, Mrs. C. O. Claudin, Mrs. Glen Christensen, Mrs. Lyman Woods, Mrs. Elizabeth Sardoni, Mrs. George A. Brown, Mrs. E. Lewis Allen, Mrs. Earl Smoot, Mrs. Robert Reid, Mrs. Wilford Woolf, Mrs. Leon Miller, Mrs. Stanley Clark, Mrs. S. R. Bosweli, Mrs. L. H. Beebe and Mrs. Stanley Stan-ley Bonnett. A cash prize of $10 was presented pre-sented to the Provo group. The Aethenium club of Price, took second honors. , The chorus will sing the contest numbers at the council's open session being held Monday after- fnoon at the Women's clubhouse. The group has appeared on several sev-eral programs during the winter. Orem Resident To Observe Birthday OREM Jens C. Jensen of Orem will be honored Friday on his eighty-fourth birthday anniver sary. Mr. Jensen was born in Veddum, Denmark, in 1857. He Immigrated to the United States in 1891. He was baptized into the L. D. S. church in Provo in 1893. He bought a farm in Orem in 1894 and has resided on that farm since. Mr. Jensen served an L.D.S. mission to Denmark in 1902. While there he visited with many of his old friends and relatives, and baptized Maren Christensen, who came to the United States with him on his return and was married to him in the Salt Lake temple June 29, 1904. Mr. and Mrs. Jensen have four children, Mrs. Anna J. Harris of Provo, and James, Woodruff and Moroni Jensen of Orem. -.; ; a u) . for tha big four-door Mdon shown abovt. This Stunning straight-eight Packard Qipper is the first streamlined car that combines new comfort uith modem streamline design. O i 1 iAMJU.!. WIDERI Wider than high, by almost a foot! The widest bodies made (and widest front seat in any car) with standard overall car width! Corner 5th Center MIND YOUR MANNERS Test your knowledge of correct cor-rect social usage by answering the following questions. then checking- against the authoritative authorita-tive answers below; 1. Should a man wear a bou-tonniere bou-tonniere in his right or left lapel? 2. Is it good manners for a girl to carry on a long telephone conversation while her date waits in the living room? 3. 13 it correct to use initials rather than full names on engraved en-graved wedding" invitations ? 4. Is it the duty of the bride or the groom to make arrangements arrange-ments with the clergyman for the wedding ceremony? 5. Ts it better for a saleswoman Kto say "Right this way. Madam" or "If you II come witn me, please" ? What would you do if , You pass your plate to the head of the taMe for a second helping (a) Hold your knife and fork in your hand? (b) Place the knife and fork across the plate, as you do at the end of a meal? Answ 1. Left. 2. No. Girls sometimes think they will impress-.their dates with their popularity by doing so, but j they only snow their lack or manners. 3. No. 4. The bride's t hough the groom pays him after the ceremony, cere-mony, or gives' the money to the best man and lets him pay the clergyman. - . - 5. The latter. Best "What Would You do" solution so-lution (b). Qui Viva Sets Date for Formal Plans are being rapidly com pleted for the annual semi-formal dance of the Qui Viva club of Provo high school to be held Sat urday in the high school gym, ac cording to Mildred Jean Bennett, club president. - ' v Algene Ballif, Geniel Kimber, Barbara Carter, juniors; Annette Reynolds, and Geraldine Simmon3, sophomores, and in charge of refreshments. re-freshments. Fern Frandsen and Ruth Ercanbrack, seniors, are making orchestra arrangements " 'Submerged' will be the theme, and 'Junior Prom decorations will be used," states Mildred. ursr i ' i in wi- ' ly- ...Vi - : - ' "- 1 .- -nu:-. k - - . - -'.sa(fi --,.,,.1 SMARTER! The Clipper's dashing grace is matched by new luxury inside. New paneled mouldings . . . new trim . . new upholsterings. ALLEN West and Street V.F.W. Women Install Officers Installation of new officers was held at a meeting of the auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, held Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Nancy Moe. Mrs. Ardel Eldredge of Ogden, department president, and Mrs. Mary London of Ogden, department depart-ment chief of staff, were in charge of installing the following officers: Mrs. Nancy Moe, president; presi-dent; Mrs. Ellen Carter, senior vice president; Mrs. Clara Nusink, junior vice president; Mrs. Cleone Tyler, secretary; Mrs. Mina Adams, treasurer; Mrs. Elsie Poul- VALUES $6.50 TO $14.93 Lomas, Nelly Dons and Clair Tiffanys priced to sell Now ... On Sale Today $3.(34 05.64 QSO.CC BETTY ROSE COATS-SUITS Our Complete Stock of These New Spring Coats and , Suits now Reduced as much as l,t . 32.64 nw- U.C -0-- 16.66 OHE GROUP I'JOr.lEfJ'S QOATS Sport and Dressy Types .... Regular 12.50 , 07.C4 nd NOW CilSUTY STYLE SERVICE - rr r i 8 .. - , i . fr7 fiW2)ff Examples: Widest windshield for unequalled visibility. "Widest rear doors. Most rear -seat headroom. A double recessed back in the front seat that gives exceptional ex-ceptional rear-seat legroom. First car to give "front-seat fide" to rear-seat riders. 1 r'S AMERICA'S newest car. Not just because of its mid-season birthday but because here is a new conception of streamlining ... of functional beauty that serves a purpose! While the dazzling beauty of the Clipper delights your eye, every feature contributes to your safety, comfort and convenience! There's full headroom in rear as well as front . . . vision all around (no mere skylight in back). See the Clipper! G LIN CO OF CARS-41 CODY STYLC3 PRICES BEGKI AT s907 Delit ered in Detroit, u bite sideu all tires and State taxes extra. Price subject fo change without nofic. 1 ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONI AUTO Phone IS 10 Provo, Utah Engagement Of Couple Announced PLEASANT GROVE Mr. and Mrs. Earl Loader are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jean, to F. D. Alldredge of Cresent. Nuptial plans are being made for some time in Aray. Mr. Alldredge is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rue Alldredge of Mid-vale. son, chaplain; Mrs. Ramona Cot-tam, Cot-tam, historian and trustee. A tasty luncheon was served, and the rooms were cheery with spring flowers and shrubs. 09.64 I i : f i U 3 x ESSES |