OCR Text |
Show Columbia River! Responsibility Pact Reached WASHINGTON, April 20 UJ! An agreement dividing responsibility re-sponsibility f6r flood control and reclamation development in the Columbia river basin has been submitted to President . Truman By the army engineers and interior department. The agreement, announced today, to-day, was submitted in answer to the president's request's last year for a review of the respective long range basin development pians 01 me two agencies aner ' the 1948 floods. It is designed also to provide "an inventory and framework which would -be e xtremely valuable" to -4he proposed Columbia Co-lumbia Valley a dministratlon, the joint announcement by the two agencies said. The engineers and the interior department recommend that Columbia Co-lumbia basin public power revenues rev-enues be pooled to assist irrigation irriga-tion development. The agreement makes no change in responsibilities for presently authorized projects dui ouuines future areas or responsibility. re-sponsibility. Death Claims Famous Rabbi NEW YORK, April 20 (U.R) Funeral services will be held Friday Fri-day at Carnegie Hall for Dr. Stephen S. Wise, 75-year-old president of the American Jewish congress who died yesterday at Lenox Hill hospital of a stomach ailment. Burial will be in Westchester West-chester Hills cemetery. Wise also was head of the World Jewish congress and devoted de-voted his life to the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. He was senior rabbi of the Free Synagogue which held its services serv-ices for many years in Carnegie hall. From the pulpit and lecture platform he took a firm stand on - every controversial issue of the national and world scene. The Hungarian-born theologian was brought to this country at the age of one year. He preached that a Jew must be not only a good citizen of the country where he lives, but also a loyal member of the Jewish race. Wise entered the hospital March 30 and underwent an operation op-eration April 7. He had been on the critical list for several days. Jaycees Schedule Membership Meet OREM A climaxing event to the annual membership campaign of the Orem Jaycees will be a membership round-up banquet to be held at Parks cafe Wednesday evening at 8 p. m. The affair will be a joint meeting with the ladies auxiliary group and all new members will be welcomed to the clubs and recognition given to charter members. A special musical program has been arranged in keeping with the round-up theme and Robert Webster will be the speaker of the evening. TILL UNLAWFUL OXFORD, Miss. (U.R) The campus publication calls attention atten-tion to two ancient laws on the statute books banning dueling among Univergjty of Mississippi students and forbidding the "taking of milk from another person's cow." ASTHMA AND HAY FEVER Ask your Druggist for a Free Demonstration of Episcorb's remarkable relief. ' PtVEPHRix . vrr a Mrs a Inhalant for prompt temporary relief from the symptoms of Asthma and Hay Fever CITY DRUG Corner Univ. & Center Exclusive Central Utah Enractment Box Office Open Daily 1:15. to S MaU. 2:30 - Eve. 8:30 Extra Mats. Saturday and Sunday at 5:30 Mats S1.Z2 and 11.50 Eves S1.22 and S1.83 Borne seats SI. S3 (Mats.) and S2.44 (Eves.) 4 Days Starting; FRIDAY AT 2:30 P. M. I N T A kVT-ML Laurence 0LIVIER I 1 Summer Camp To Be Discussed At Thursday Meet Plans for a summer school camp of the Provo school district will be formulated Thursday at 8 p. m. in the Provo high school auditorium audi-torium when parents and sponsors spon-sors will meet to discuss the problem. As tentatively planned and approved ap-proved by the Provo board of education, the camp will be held in Rock canyon this summer beginning be-ginning the second week' in June. The various schools in the city will send a certain group to the camp for a one week stay during the 14 week period. The camp will be under the di rection of Rovce Flandro. who has been trained in camp work through the New York university and has done extensive scouting work and graduate work in coun selling 'and guidance. Message In Bottle Returns To Navy SAN FRANCISCO (U.R) A "message in a bottle" which took a year and nine days to drift from California to Hawaii has been turned over to the U. S. Navy hy-drographic hy-drographic office in San Francisco. Francis-co. The bottle is one of 100 scattered scat-tered across the Pacific between San Francisco and Okinawa by airliner Dec. 16. 1947. Each con- BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By EDGAR MARTIN H i?J LDQ Hwtif Mr. Goes 1o CoMc TOM DRAKE "AUK Nllllirxvt Jiit rout lllOII !Hlll AlVIN CHIKNAX . PAUL HIV1T. Open Daily 1:00 p. m. amnm I Added: Cartoon America Latest News STARTS Coconut King Reported Slain MANILA, April 20 (U.R5 Rt-ports Rt-ports from Basilan Island in the far south Philippines said today that W. D. Robinson, 68, known as the Coconut King of Zambo-anga, Zambo-anga, had been shot to death Monday by a discharged Moro employe of his plantation at Lamitan. Robinson bought and developed develop-ed a 100,000-tree plantation after spending his honeymoon in the Philippines as a young man. During Dur-ing the war he and hit wife, the former Anne Hodges of Dallas, Tex., were forced to live three years as refugees in the hills. Robinson was shot five times with a carbine. Witnesses identified identi-fied his assailant as Beneson Masaganda, who had been dis charged for cattle thefts. tained a message giving the position, po-sition, date and a request, printed print-ed in seven languages, for its return re-turn by mail. This was the fourth bottle recovered re-covered so far, three being picked up along the Philippines. Hydrographic experts said the Hawaiian-found bottle, which drifted approximately 2,000 miles before striking land, ' averaged five miles a day. New knowledge about the direction di-rection and speed of ocean currents cur-rents gained through the experiment experi-ment is being passed on to mar' -ers by the navy hydrographic office. of-fice. Wfc WW 1WL 1 rVei HUtMIS . TIUOI N0tM(S V IIIIT Kllll. 101 Mill X" Last Show 9:55 TODAY 7 I V k WILBUIt Little Bluegrass Left In Kentucky LEXINGTON, Ky. (U.R) Kentucky, Ken-tucky, which won the nickname of the "Bluegrass State," no longer long-er is among the leaders in production pro-duction of the pasture grass. In fact, Kentucky now produces pro-duces only a fraction of the blue-grass blue-grass seed sold in this country. In recent years, leaders have been: Minnesota, 1943; Nebraska, 1944; Minnesota, 1945, and Iowa in 1946 and 1947. The 1948 crop in Kentucky was only about half that for the previous pre-vious year. TACK HUNTING MADE EASY CLEVELAND (U.R) The fluoro-scope fluoro-scope has eliminated another occupational oc-cupational hazard. One large' shoe corporation, which formerly had inspectors feeling into the dark recess of its shoes in a search for stray tacks, now has replaced them with the fluoroscope. The company says the machine is 100 per cent efficient and has eliminated elimi-nated nails in the knuckles of inspectors. KNOTTY PINE For Inside Finishing Widths 6-8-10 &. 12 inches $130.00 per M ROSS L. JENSEN LUMBER A BLDG. SUPFLT 496 N. 7th E. Provo PHONE 1918 4 l V Playing Tonite & Thurs. Opens 6:45 ITS A SCREAM WHEN RED CRASHES THE SCREEN! IN "MERTON OF SBCOND HIT "THE UNFINISHED DANCE" IN TECHNICOLOR With MARGARET O'BRIEN y Tickets office By BILL RUBLE Sharks' Love Life To Remain As Is SAN FRANCISCO (U.RJ The California Fish and Game Commission Com-mission has urged that there be no meddling with the complicat ed love life of the soup fin shark. In a report, the commission described de-scribed a state assembly plan to bring the male and female sharks together as expensive and of dubious biological value. The assembly suggested capturing cap-turing large batches of the males and transporting them to southern south-ern waters where females reside. By this it was hoped to speed up mating among the six-foot-long fish famed for the high vitamin A potency of their livers. I The commission argued that ithe soup fin family has managed to (jet together satisfactorily over i many millions of years without Ithe "dubious benefit of man's in terference." all First Show 7:30 THE MOVIES 15) mj Speech Department presents the Hilarious Comedy The Fortune Hunter" April 20, 21, 22, 23 CURTAIN 8:15 P. M. Call 2460 and ask for ticket Open daily 3:00 5:30 p. m. Graveside Rites Held For Infant OREM Graveside services in the Orem cemetery were conduct ed today for the infant son of Garth and Rowena Thomas Niel- son, Orem, who died Monday night shortly after birth at a Provo hospital. The services were conducted by A. J. Higbee, counselor of the Timpanogos LDS ward. Surviving are the parents, two sisters, Linda and Diane Nielson, Orem, and three grandparents, A. F. Nielson. Siffiirri Svir pmmtv and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomas,' payson. Infant Rites Held In California City SPANISH FORK Funeral services ser-vices for the infant dauehter of Garn and Shirlee Dart Carter, Na tional City, Cal., who died Mon day at birth in the National City hospital were to be conducted today. According to word received by relatives, the services will be in the National City mortuary. Burial Bur-ial will be in a National City burial park. The baby is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Garn Carter, Car-ter, formerly of ProVo; the paternal pa-ternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vern E. Carter of Provo; Mrs. Fred S. Dart, maternal grandmother grand-mother of Spanish Fork and Guy L. Shoemaker, great-grandfather of Payson. BETTER THAN BABY SITTER LOUISVILLE, Ky. (U.R) Members Mem-bers of the new Beechmont Methodist church won t have an excuse for staying home just because be-cause of a baby. The church has a modern nursery, soundproofed, where mothers may sit with their children by a large window, higher high-er than the children's heads, and see all that goes on. They listen to the sermon via loud speaker. Adding Machine Typewriter Sales & Service . Authorized Remington Rand Agents HANSON OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO. PHONE 1.30 11 1 rat You pmxTArxwfT i?joxmatiqn Ph novo W X "- : : ti)M:f:v i ; Plus Cartoon 7:30 TONIGHT 9:30 r FAMILY NIGHT Starts Thursday 'BLOOD ON THE MOON" Please Help Your Orchestral The Intenountain Symphony Orchestra Allen Jensen Musical Director presents A BENEFIT CONCERT -PROGRAM-MOZART Majic Flute, Ov. GATES Suite for Orchestra (World Premiere) CHABRIER .Espana Rhapsody TSCHAIKOWSKY Symphony No. 4 PROVO LDS TABERNACLE No Admission Charge Only Voluntary Contributions Will Be Accepted. DAILY HERALD Wednesday, April 20, 1949 11 Heart Attack Takes Prominent Lake Shore Farmer LAKE SHORE Frank Scott, prominent Utah county farmer, died Tuesday afternoon of a heart attack while working at a farm near here. Mr. Scott, 54. was working at the farm owned by his mother, Mrs. Maggie Baadgaard, when he was stricken. He died after going to her home to rest. . A -native of Lake Shore, he was a veteran of World War I. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Esther Anderson Scott, two sons, Ted and J. Frank Scott, and a daughter. Miss Ella Scott, all of Lake Shore. According to biochemists, water is a food, even though it does not supply energy as do carbohydrates, carbohy-drates, fats and proteins. Playing Tonight A Thursday "Dream Girl" 7:00 A 10:15 "Romantic" 8:35 r z mm Also Added Tl-ttf inrt lka TwA4fvCa Town for a ricfe! Short 8:15 P. M.. TONIGHT at mm n - ffrmL ft .... J l .; 'J l - - ' ft 4) MIA Plans Stage Drama Thursday OREM "Seven Keys to Bald pate," is the annual play production produc-tion being prepared by the Geneva Ge-neva ward MIA for presentation in the Timpanogos ward hall on; Thursday evening. The play is a; melodramatic farce in three acts," being directed by Charles Halford and Lovena Rowley. i. Those appearing in the cast are Lyle DeLange. Mrs. Charles Hal- ford, Jim Bonner, Harold Excel!, nob Fautin, Lyla DeLange, Kay Baker, Jane Peterson, Jean May-cock, May-cock, Tom Patten, Charles Hal-ford, Hal-ford, Clarence Moon and Jean Bishop. ' " Proceeds from the production are earmarked for the ward, building fund as are those from-candy from-candy booths being sponsored bjr MIA groups. ' Consistently Good Food at the RAL-MAR CAFE Provo Salt Lake' IS? W. Center 1054 8o. State 4 IOM BIRCK Extra! Color Cartoon t Novelty Latest News Ends Tomorrow ?f ' , Late Nwi Color Cartoon Eyes on HoIlywooA Last 2 Days! 1ST RUN IN PROVO -PLUS- fMH It WOT A WU tTOST A'AVm 1111 rotnoi J Briar BUTTON i f lekB nUXAMD 1 - Jj'vw '', &m |