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Show hi . i ThurwUjr, April . 15, MM Midwest States to Arrive! cf Svedes By SAM HANCOCK i United Free Staff Cirwipwdni. v f CHICAGO OJ.RK Twel mid-' mid-' western states are preparing cele-f'Wations cele-f'Wations commemorating the tide of Swedish Immigration 100 years "or more ago. v J - The event will be marked by of. flclal visits of Swedish royalty " and American officialdom, churcn "services,, exhibitions, music and , ', song. Americans of Swedish des-' des-' cent and others thus will observe I'the centennial at- various times " and placet in the Mississippi val- ley. The farm lands to its 1m-' 1m-' '' 'mediate east and west and at oth- Public to Pay "Big Price for Coal Walkout r ,' , . ,. ' . . NEW YORK, Apr. 15 (Special) V The steel industry, the steel consumer and eventually the public will have paid an Mex-horbitant Mex-horbitant price" for the coal strike, prophesies this week's Iron Age, nationally recognized iron 'and steel trades publication. J "The cost if the industry, In $ the next three weeks or so, gets back to prestrike operations will total about 1,400,000 tons, the magazine said. "Added to this may be several more hundred thousand tons loss over the next V several months due to dislocations disloca-tions and damage to equipment u because of the prolonged mine shut down "With no steel company holding ample stocks of coal above the groiud, the Industry In-dustry is helpless, against another mine shutdown if It should occur when present coal contracts run out on June 30. If a walkout comes then and there Is no aa-urance aa-urance that It won't the ateel Industry will again "shut down, but much sooner than it did this time. "The coal miners' pension plan means higher steelmaking costs - for all steel companies. Mine-z Mine-z workers wage demands, after the present contract runs out will also mean higher coal costs. The chance of the steelworkers getting get-ting more than a token raise now that Mr. Lewis has wrung what be wants from coal and steel operators is better this week. In view of this outlook a steel price rise later in the year is no longer a possibility it is a probability. "The steel labor talks were adjourned ad-journed last week until U. S. Steel management looks over the union presentation given them. When the meetings are resumed the corporation is expected to give its answer then the bargaining bar-gaining will start. It' will get rougher as the time draws close to Apr. 30. If no agreement is reached-then present wage rates apply for another year. But Jt won't be that simple. Management Manage-ment will have to gage the long term effects of a definite "no" to a wage increase." LOANS on your own SIGNATURE $5.03 monthly repays $5 $10.05 monthly repays $100 $20.14 monthly repays $200 $30.21 monthly repays $300 orrica hours m. lo p. m. 4 illy t A. a. m. ta 1 m. Saturday Appointments may be nail for after hours. Pens J7. KEN HOUSTON. Manager The Maytag Dulch Avtomoticalh turns off ths aas - . 'i t r . , - , -v ' k ' ' ' f - 1 k ' I Thrifty? You bet it is! And you can also use the new Maytag Dutch Oven Gas Range like any conventional' conven-tional' modern gas range with superb results. Its many unusual features will mean a cooler, cleaner kitchen . . . and less work for you. Come in today and have a look! DAILY HERALD Commemorate in Tliis Country r points well removed from midwest will loin in. Although there were Swedes in Delaware in the early days of American colonizationsthe full tide of Swedish Immigration came to the middle west between 1840 and 1850. The war years halted plans for a Swedish centennial during the early 40s. but this summer the preparations then held back will materialize. Prince Bertil. son of the Crown Prince of Sweden, has said that he will come to Chicago and visit other mldwestern cities during the celebration. Gov. Dw'ght Green of Illinois and members of a Swedish pioneer centennial commission com-mission named by the state legislature legis-lature sent the Swedish royal family an invitation on Jan. 2. President Truman iflso has been inv'ted to be one of the speakers at Chicago Stadium June 4. when Prince Bertil will be welcomed here. Twelve mldwestern governors three of them of Swedish descent have been asked to attend te stadium ceremonies. They include Frank Carlson of Kansa. Val Peterson of Nebraska and Luther W. Youngdahl of Minnesota. Chicago's plans for the royal party Include a banquet at the Palmer House the night of June S for official visitors. From Chicago. Prince Bertil and his party will go to Rockford. 111., for a, two-day celebration, In cludin a folk festival in the Rockford stadium June 8. After Rockford. according to the tentative itinerary, Bertil will go to Detroit on June 13 and 14 The party will go the"n to Omaha Neb., for a June IB banquet and outdoor festival on June 20. After Omaha, the prince and his group will go to Rock Island and Moline. 111., and Davenport la. Augustana college, which has furnished much of the lmpetu for the centennial celebration, is at Molinc. In Des Moines, capital of Iowa, the Swedish delegation will be taken on a June 23 tour of the city, followed by a parade and banquet. June 25 will see tnem in tne Minnesota twin Gfei, Minneapolis Minnea-polis and St. Paul. Lake Shore By VERYL BELLOWS An important event of the week-end was the annual "joint party" of the Beta Aglain club of Lake Shore and the Aglain club of Spanish Fork. The party was given this year by the Beta Aglain Ag-lain at the home of Matilda Youd In Lake Shore. Interest of tho evening was the review of Kath-ern Kath-ern Tupptr Marshall's "Together," "To-gether," given by Fern Olsen. Verda Tuckett and Lenore Mea-som Mea-som sang three duets, accompanied accom-panied by Florence Bellows. A light lunch was served. The Junior scouts of the Lako Shore ward, under the supervision supervis-ion of Scoutmasters Joe Bellows and Gardener Barney, went on a delightful swimming party at Arrowhead resort Thursday evening. eve-ning. This was the first of a series of similar excursions to take nlace one night each week throughout the summer months. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Christmas gave a lovely party at their home In Lake Shore. Covers were laid for eight, and a delicious fried chicken dinner served. Those present, beside the host and hostess were Mr. and Mrs-Leon Mrs-Leon Bellows, Mr. and Mrs. Thor-val Thor-val Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bellows. The remainder of the evening was spent playing cards and visiting. visit-ing. Under the direction of Social Manager Reed Shepherd, the Lake Shore ward elders, and their wives enjoyed a party held in tho ward amusement hall. LeRoy Whitehead, principal of the Spanish Fork seminary. snowea nis turns on me centennial centen-nial parade, the rose bowl parade, his trip to Yellowstone, and pictures pic-tures of his tour of Utah. A light lunch was served, and after the show everyone joined in an evening eve-ning of dancing. Approximately 50 people attended. Oven Gas Range ttien kstps right, on cooking TACK AND JUDY IN BIBLELAND PO EXACTLY AS I TOL5 VOUf IFvYOU donT.weU. follow you! ANPySHCW W WHAT HAPPENS TO THOSE WUO Dff PV OUffffOBBER Boys Rescued From SALT LAKE CITY, April 15 iU.PJ Spring and the call of nature na-ture produced some fearsome experiences ex-periences for four Salt Lake nigh school boys. Fifteen-year-olds Gary Ranch A. F. Jaycees to Install Tonight AMERICAN FORK Tonight .n the Third ward amusement lall the recently elected officers of the Junior chamber of commerce com-merce will be installed. Ifc banquet ban-quet will be served beginning at 3 o'clock at which William H. Wright will be in charge as master mas-ter of ceremonies. The incoming officers are G. Easton Brown, president; Stan Oahl. vice president; Edward Smith, secretary; Richard Hunter, treasurer; Glen Barratt. Ralph Binnall and James Damieo. di rectors. Retiring officers are L. C. Lassen, president; Jared Kellar, Jr., vice president; Mr. Brown, secretary; Rick Rogers, Irvin Chipman. Harold Holindrake and Dick Eastmond, directors. The holdover directors are Wayne McTague, Douglas Nash and Glen Gordon. Mrs. Glen Gordon, Mrs. Jarcd Kellar, Jr., and Mrs. Irvin Chip- man of the Jaycee Wives are ar ranging the program. The affair will be formal. BUILD WITHOUT TAXES BROOKS, Me. (U.R Gifts In stead of taxes are building a $10,- 000 school shop and gymnasium in this tiny Maine community. Cash, material and labor pledged by residents will be combined with lumber from the town forest to build the structure. Under New Management CENTRE BARBER SHOP 274 W. Center Three Experienced Barbers To Serve You Formerly The Lewis Shop S SAND t WE WILL J ALL WE 5X l V I WANT TO OO IS 6ETV 1 ff A , ''lf r, . I OUT OP WERE ANt . X l f ffX Mpv " - K fvou two stopUers amp vohtJ FJJ&M1Wm&& MOVE I'M GONG OVER TO TALfcJ I WAVE A MESSAGE FOR YOlA WITH TMEML Miigffi F TMC GUIDE C THE u carefoCm caravan y ' r-rtrtLZ-JI -J. XT ? f V bam OFFICIAL REPORT SHEET The Provo Junior Chamber of Commerce KING AND QUEEN FOR A DAY Clean-Up Paint-Up Fix-Up Campaign (A Clean City is a Healthy City) Location of premises cleaned: CLEANED Alley lots Back yards Front yards Vacant lots Basements Attics House gutters . . Porches , Garages . . . ; Furnaces PAINTING AND DECORATING Houses . Walls . Floors : , Woodwork Porches or Stairs Fences Out buildings Screens .i Roofs Walls (papered or kalsomined) . Walls cleaned I certify above has been completed . . SEE THOSE STAY CLOSE KTW1 EVES. BE QUICK ABOUT IT.' SPEAK UP A BCMJ SPEAK VP r r it i ?i iT7a . - High Cliff and James Leonard Watson, Jr.,; and 14-yerr-olds Jerry Dahlbcrg and Stanley Hall decided yesterday yester-day that too much of books was enough. They set out for the foothills of the Wasatch range, far away from the classrooms of Olympus junior high school. The two older boys decided to go in for some mountain climbing. climb-ing. They got themselves stranded strand-ed half way up a limestone cliff. Jerry and Stanley went for help and got a work crew to come to the aid of Gary and Jimmy. The foreman of the work crew notified the sheriff's office, and with the help of a few deputies and a strong rope, Gary and Jim my were hauled to safety. Now. they've got to face school again.' JOSEPH ? r TO ME.' P0KT J hSSxr Ire SCARD r r .a t. am .sav. i - - a 3 HOW! ANYONE CAN HAVE HOT WATER QUICK! NEW POCKET-SIZE WA7ER HEATER COSTS LESS THAN s $2.25 Heats Water Fast Merely place a portable FAST-WAY' FAST-WAY' Water Heater In a receptacle recep-tacle containing water. Plug in the nearest socket. Lo and behold! Th FAST-WAY goes to work at once, heating water like sixty for 101 purposes a sufficient quantity for bathing, washing, scrubbing, cleaning cream separators, etc. The speed depending on quantity. CAUTION: Directions for using are furnished with each heatet. Read and follow. Costs less than -32.25, No fires to build or hot water to carry. No running up Timpanogos Hatchery and Farm Supply 532 South University Avenue Provo, Utah Phone 613 . n a ..n n n n . .n -a MISCELLANEOUS Rubbish piles burned .' Insect breeding places destr'd Fences repaired , Porches it steps repaired Water faucet leaks repaired , Screens repaired Ash cans emptied Refuse cans disinfected Shrubbery trimmed Trees trimmed Dead trees and stumps remsved n n Labor Unions Lose Fight In Illinois Vote " . ; v ' - CHICAGO. April J5. (U.R) Labor unions have lost their fight In . tho IllinoU primary to whip congressmen who voted for the Taft-Hartley law. All of the state's 21 incumbent congressmen were renominated Tuesday even though many were opposed by. labor groups and all were seeking candidacies in new districts under the reappointment ma oped out last year. Balloting was fairly heavy con sidering that most of the state wide candidates were unopposed. Local fights seemed to have swelled the vote. In the gubernatorial contests, Gov. Dwight Green was unopposed unop-posed for the Republican nomination, nomina-tion, and Adlal Stevenson, one of the U. S. founders of the United Nations, had a clear field for the Democratic nomination. Because of their unopposed candidacies the Democratic and Republican gubernatorial votes are expected to give a fairly clear picture of party strength in Illinois, Il-linois, a pivotal state in next November's No-vember's presidential election. Early today, however, only half the returns were in and they gave a distorted view because most were from heavily-Democratic Cook county area. Sen. C. Wayland Brooks had only token opposition in the Republican Re-publican Drimary. His opponent was William Baker of Chicago, a perennial candidate. The Democratic Demo-cratic candidate for the senatorr ial nomination was Paul Douglas. University of Chicago professor, who was unopposed. Illinois will elect 28 congressmen congress-men in November. 13 from the metropolitan Cook and Lake counties and 13 from doWnstatc under the new apportionment. Previously, the state elected 10 from upstate, 13 downstate, and one from the state at large. AS HIGH AS LONG DES MOINES, la. U.P. Guy Miller's postman's route is a block long and almost a block high. For 16 years, the 63-year-old De Moines carrier has delivered mail along a one-block route in the business district It includes the 11-story Fleming building, and down basement stairs. No heating tanks full when a few gallons or a quart is wanted. Handy! ' Portable! Inexpensive. PLANTED Flower boxes Flower Gardens Vegetable gardens Q Grass plot sowed Shrubbery Trees a n n .i,. ... Parent Stassen Cuts Big Slice I J . f ; i -" --V ' . 'i i (NEA Ttltphof) 3.'ling broadly, perhsps at his victory In Nebr:!i's seven-man Ra':n': ' r-- "' " ' ''iwi eu's the first piece of bis birthday cake at Omaha, before leaving for his Minneapolis, Minn., nome q aaii ituu ol At prunary there. PHILIPPINE TREATY OF FRIENDSHIP RATIFIED MANILA, April 15. U.R The senate today ratified the Philippines Philip-pines treaty of friendship with Spain. Seventeen senators, " one more than required, voted approval. m nrr euAATU $1 muiki ainwwin 1 DOILINa DIXIE LAWNM0VVER l Tkls fins, firs-blad saowsr is built to gir yars of fS ssrvle. Cuts a 16" wld swath with cutting height adjustable from Vt" to IV". Has ball bearing mounted rssl; rubber tirsd wkssls. EASY TO PUT ON AND TAKE OFF GRASS CATCHER 1 I! 98 Well made with an aluatlnum bottom and heavy duck sids. Fits all 14" to II" hand stowsrs. m SB-rfBS1SBSS1iBV RIOULAR tf TWO-IN-ONI WEEDING HOE SNCIAL RtCI Two sharp 5" prongs on on side 4" cut ting edge on the other. UOHT WIICHT, UVU GARDEN RAKE Has 14 tin lorgsd steel head and lull length hardwood handle. -- -- E IT U 3 BBr SBSV 3k F'L : 1 ' " I COMMERCIAL TIRE SERVICE V i. A: 1? i JUST ARRIVED Wool Sleeping; Bags With Water Repellent Cover 4.95 BOB'S Army1 & Navy Store 73 No. First West SET P ( rOR FUN AND HfALTH WW A BIKII S trxmllBtxI bSOUtT lalina and ire rollina top quality bike built to sirs f troubls-ires wwrrivm. SHELBY BOY'S OR GIRL'S 26-INCH You'll Usl plenty proud owning this big dslux modal and it's loadsd with "extras" lor safr, easlsr riding. Has a chain guard, headlight, luggage carrlsr. tall light rsflsctor and slsctrie horn. Streastlinsd design with coAlortabls Trozsl saddle. 1YON WHITI SIDEWALL DISCS 16" B" Dist. Was 9.95 Special . 580 Fsrfsct iittlng stssl discs with whits namtl finish, lnira-rd treated to retard discoloration. DeLu discs have chrome ring trim. MORI SKID MORE POWER PER DOLLAR. Vt or 12 H. P. 0UTD0ARD MOTOR Light weight but powerful with a boat speed Of l's to 12 mph. Has full pilot reverse, self pilot and other "big motor" features. lAo MORI NON-SKID MILEAGE AVERAGED IN ACTUAL ROAD TESTS NEW GOODYEAR TIRIS LBItAl TIACMN A110WANCI FOE YOUX CLP TIKIS - - .1 , 2 City-Family Diet Survey Started wicurvrTAM Ann it nrm i The agriculture department wanta J to know whether the eating habits of city families hava'J changed in the last six years. To find oui the department hat started a nation-wldesurvey of'l city-family dietT. It's the . first j such survey since 1942 and will be conducted in 68 ciUes.: f r A representative cross-section of 22 to 80 families in each city will, be asked what kinds of food I they are eating and how : much, t they will be asked also what fac- ?ors miiuence tneir cnoice or t foods. The survey will obtain up-to- i date facts and figures about con- sumption of specific foods. Dr. , Hazel K. Stiebeling, chief of th department's bureau of human nutrition, and home economics, said the fixtures are needed for;! developing programs to increase consumption and improve con Burners' diets. ,: The department also disclosed that several hundred families. have been cooperating in a four j city survey designed to get Infor- . mation on seasonal differences In V food consumption. This survey v has been going on since water. The cities are Birmingham, Buf- k falo, San Francisco and St. Paul- Minneapolis. The cities in which the nation- wide inquiry will be made in-1 elude: f California Chlco, G i Iroy, t Inglewood, Los Angeles and San i Francisco. " UUh Salt Lake City. About 70,000 women ara em- ? ployed by the British civil service, jj largely in the post office depart- i ment. ' C U8 IF YOUR MOTOR OVERHEATS! Specialized, Efficient Radiator Service. AHLANDER'S 490 South University Ave. Phone 100 goodveaci Roy's or Girl's 26-lnch DICYCLE that ysms BICYCLE phis tan .00x1 .. ... - - . Sfls 7 TP i Name NORTON & FAKLER . 140 West Center PHONE 1780 iidii mi n viti ia res ress ame |