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Show a w ' f FATHER OF MRS KARL E. WARD OF CALIFORNIA ORGANIZATION ALBERT EARL -- EIRIED THIS WEEK Funeral services were conduct- If.: A ME.AIEER ATTEND BIRTHDAY FOR VRS UZZIE KAY LOCAL LIBRARY ILANS OBSERVANCE OF AMERICAN BOOK WEEK A :roup of local peop'e were clipping from a Brings in Mor.a Sunday to attend a "The annual potter ci,r.t .st for Montana paper te'.Lj an interest- - b.nhday celebration Mrs American By,k Week will b lng slory about a "Golden Dolp-z-Kay on her 76th annivrr-Ea- rl concluded Friday," slates Mrs. A:nonK lh" Poup hinH organization orir-tewho Mattie Stone, librarian. The consar' by test, sponsored by the Library e" the tM Dr. Margaret J. Chung' Amen- ci.p'es calvm K.y. Ed Newton. board, enters around fie Cn.nose women of San Sam 1 Kay, Uuis Spactunan. Law- ' ed slogan, -- Make Friends with icnce Uoyd, Ah? Kay, Oscar Ko- - Books," and is open to all stud-forto Voo natlons Nic Chournasko, Mrs. John ents in the McKinlev School. military aviators, submariners C. Garfield, Mrs. Leola Bott of City Three groupings of porters are and entertainers of the nation. and Mr. and Mrs being considered: Groupe one, He is survived by his Cay widow.; Karl E. Ward, son of Mr and thm? dauEh", 36 Mrs. John H. Ward, is a member Walt H. Heaman of Pampa, Tex- first to fourth grades; Groupe as were also in the crowd two, fifth and sixth grades; 18 great of this grandchildren and organization, and speak Group three, seventh and eighth grandchildren. highly cf thfl fine work done f(jr FATHER OF LEROY Braues. winning posier conservicemen during the war and BUNNELL DIES AT FROVO testants will receive books as. VISIT YOUR LIBRARY .continued since that time. New books to be found there h, Leslie L. Bunnell. 80, of Provo prizes. Th The pasters chosen to receive are: Mary . sh0iem Asch. died man's Thursday morning, after an organization is will be on display in the priaes Peaceable Kingdom - Kenneily; near thefamily 1500 mark and she re- illness of several months. As the Utah Power and Light company A Feather on My Nose - - Billie members them all with a card or Leader went to press, funeral and window, Judges will anBurke: The Great Salt lake wire tentatively set for nounce the winners each Christmas time. gift in next LDale Morgan. Saturday in Provoweek's issue of the Leader. Mr. Bunnell is survived by two ASTR1D STRAND TO SPEAK daughter, six sons and 40 Mr. and Mrs. Merlin G. Wood Miss Astxid Strand will be the had as their weekend guests, speaker on Mrs. Axel Fredrick-son- 's Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Hatch and .v7 YrtP program broadcast regu- BOH BA1KD ATTENDS son of Burley; Mr. and Mrs. II. C. larly at 10 a. m. Saturday over FLORAL SCHOOL Ilaight and children and Mr- and KBUIL Bob Baird of Korth Floral has Mrs. Bill Higgs of Salt Lake. v 3 just returned from Pocatello, Grandchild for the where he took a four day course Chester Nelsons in advanced floral designing. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Nelson The instruction was Riven bv cf Park Trail Ranch, Toston, some of the best instructors in : Montana, former residents of the the nation. W- 'JUstJ'f. Bear River Valley, are happy to announce the birth of their first Attend Opera grandchild, a girl born to their Mrs. Elmer Winzrter, Mrs. daughter, Mrs. Elaine Taylor. Allen Mrs. D. Rand Quer.tin Come in and get it! to Ogden Wed- Waldron drove Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Ward atto attend the evening nesday tended Open House held Sunday in Brigham City for Mrs. Maria Boston Grand Opera Company's of Verdis ' Rigoletto' Zundel, honoring her eightieth presentation at the Ogdien high school. birthday. The affair was held at Jin 2J the home of Carl Jospphson, a LEADER WANT-AD- S PAY! nephew of Mrs. Zundel. A ed Monday in the Brigham City Fifth ward for Howell Henr'v Mifflin, 81 father of Mrs. Albert of Tremonton. He was taken to Malad for burial. Mr. Mifflin was a native of Malad, and has been active in the L. D. S. Church there and since his residence in Ericham r J fr ie d f' . J ntl d, Bri-ha- m t ) i J f, I f ,7r ,.,-m- ...,.,,,,, DN ARCHIBALD, married in SHAR MRS. AND MRthe Idaho Falls vr P1KTY OF :DL Reading left to right the bnae's attendants are Lila Miller, Barbara Call 19 Dennis Miller, best man the groom's parents' Dot Kay, the bride and groom, bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mirl Mason. Connie Jean the and Archibald wrley -- v t-'o- -- n :'r 1 the groom was flower girl. of 2 Bothwell, Penrose and Thatcher had a very successful pheas- ant hunt and according te hunters in this area, they were very high in their praise as to 19th Nov. i, IN CLOSED AREA on Tickets November morning, n:uu a.m the ' method of handling the for hunting area. re of the at sale the The first day 67 on yin go tr high school. These hunters filed up; The second home day they were not so successful ,;i for eleven Ap-$10.00. and the third day hunting was sen for ;3 seats reserved ioo really tough; however, the evey is ning of the last for 2 hours the f : ; standing room rfl be sold the night hunters had a very good shoot. IS "ame for that game There were 22 deputies who worked the area and they, in school most every case, were full of 1( River high .estab-j prais3 toward the hunting pubj;smittee has lic. These men, together with all Mowing rules: tic-served seat season j who assisted to put over the sale Saturday on hunt, furnished their cars and jo ; November 19, from worked on the project. vinvinrk in the Bear 1 AH school office. Any T iet not purchased at let's be on sale during i 4; tickets season it ?i it y i Confucius Regarded As Puzzling Figure After 2,500 Years will the week p through - 25. Jer 21 for which is good M, a games, will cost ten 4? tickets. tse as will be sold to high under children or Bear soils, 5 age, River Kibers. iron purchase may jackets. season it bought before Fri- f rasr25, 1949, will go on .fserved y tj i :t seat of each for of game at the price only J H that e this plan will satisfaction greater the needed gymnas- -i greater seating its s built. its asSIONCALL Coombs, daughter I Mrs. John E. Coombs ihas accepted a call' L e 1 LES u ,o the 'au , the Howell to the J ;3f i liS j - j ' ; Adam's Drug Store 7otfGctft jill. j.i i x i it i r .,jt,i... -- ,. 4 . : f , :;, .vth- I .';:": r vl : f(!lH' 'Hi S j ' F ' H t ' : s members rlon w f of Christmas suggestions will is now -- mna. Hansen, and Shantung province in north uiner researcners Deneve after digging into earlier records that he may have been given some fancy titles but no real authority. H. G. Creel, associate professor at the University cf Chicago and author of the new biography "Con- ma be fea RELEASED fucius, The Man And The Myth" daughter of (John Day) says he died believing pne Miller of himself a failure who would be from forgotten. Mission s' I I I 1 i. tS r j 1 VA Would Clamp Curbs On School WASHINGTON. The Veterans administration wants curbs on the enrollment of veterans in proprietary schools said to be mushrooming in unemployed areas. If this isn't done "taxpayprs are going to be bled white," says H. V. Stirling, the man who runs the vast GI bill education program. Stirling says 1,400 new proprietary schools teaching everything from business administration to paper hanging have sprung up in the last year, concentrating in areas where veterans can't get jobs. If something isn't done about It, he says, 1,000,000 veterans will be enrolled in these schools by next January, Stirling has no quarrel with long - established proprietary schools or many of the newer ones. Cut he says the cost of sendr ing one veteran through a 'Methodist i wrch .. 35f f hr Minister 13 ' "eat . :- School vl":jrip. 3; nl :- Sermon .I L wampler.i District, 35 ' urch. p;'n of ": : Jace rat .55: i the willj at church C at 1:43.1 . vUn at the1 Refresh-- 1 ad the On t.hr. tV " m :'0r Our the tv. IltO! of meet , ' r'e ronton is one-jea- in- - i'hool i tr. course at a teaching house painting, r example, mifiht cost $1,020 tuition and "consumable supplies" fur which VA would pay. f 15 at w " f l : . Z ,ft 3 . Mother and Dad holding secret conferences . . . Junior being very behaved . . . Christmas is definitely on its way! We think that this Christmas will be one of the biggest and happiest ever. And lo make it extra nierrv, Tremonlon Merch-ant- s have stacked their shelves to the rafters . . . filled their showcases 'til they're fairly bulging with nationally known brands of "just what you've always wanted". Now the only question is, how to take the hustle and push . . . the fatigue and short tempers, out of your annual Yuletide shopping tour. We've a suggestion. Shop AT HOME, where you will be served by friends and neighbors . . where you will be served best, because your salespeople know you! Shop at home because you are supporting the merchants who are support ing YOU . . . through their interest in better schools . . . better churches . . . better public services. LIB AID WW ht S vmwv in district. ii mpmvvm wmm ii . ! MmXfmcm wrnmrmiTiirmnATrvT ward states. couldn't Apparently Confucius of hanging onrton Farm Bureau learn the know-hoto a himself. the scholars November 17 at argue.jobSome say Again he became even lUfulnewHow- - prime minister and minister of crime In his native state of Lu. (Lu 65 ...J W:ifp:HjJU. rt re- cius, have it! We Cancer Research Atomic energy commission has granted, through the office of naval research, a fund to the University of Delaware for continued research by Dr. Mary A. Russell on a project with potential significance in cancer control. The project involves a comparison of the effects of neutrons and mustard compounds on the growth and development of corn seedlings. Somehow (you take your pick again on details) he set up as a teacher on government and politics. For the rest of his life he was busy teaching others how to get good jobs with the feudal lords who had split China into an endless and constantly warring assortment of petty - mis- - nard-workin- g name.) Texas-Louisia- 25, hs Dec.enter 5th, SG YORK.-Confu- - BUMPER CROP Six Platinum Metals There are six platinum metals. They are platinum, palladium, rhodium, ruthenium, iridium and osmium. These precious metals serve the public extensively in induscommercial tries as well as tor jewelry. Two, platinum and palladium, are most used for purposes of personal adornment garded by many as the peer of philosophers through the ages, is held by others to be more confusing than he is enlightening. Pretty soon now it will be 2,500 years since his birth. In all thaU time scholars haven't found out what he really was like or quit arguing about it. The only thing sure is that he was a key figure of world history, and he has been called about every good and bad word in the. dictionary. Most of the experts say his birthday was (translated into modern calendar) August 27, 551 B. C. Others say it happened in the middle of the next winter. Or maybe the year before. His parents were either distinguished nobility, which occasioned "spirit maidens" and dragons to hover at his birth, or they were nobodies. No one knows their names and Confucius himself let out that he came of humble origin. (His name is just the Latinized form of a Chinese phrase meaning K'ang the master; K'ang was the family appear in per- - I must k NEW - , HUNTING SUCCESSFUL ii Basket . 7 v r; - SERVING THE EEAR RIVER VALLEY "" ""1 ; i 4 " 4 . - ft- 5 ' J 5i 1 1 r 1 1 v 4( 7Va). - V X 1 V .' ':. ' if ? - 7 1 7f 'r , v ' |