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Show 2HE MUAY OGLE, Disasters Strike 41 jtah State Creates Cultural Center NovTltt-B- nvn a stone's ut Young's Social fr.a reTheaterg and he out""-- II . . uaj S ...i.r . - , o tha State Director E. J. Bird, has purposely been placed at a focal point in the business district so that it can serve all classes and groups with the least inconven- ij rtiL. ti. uc - .SOUUI !Q ted . iranMuijiicu, and Federal Art "The Utah State Art Center," in said Mr. Bird, "is designed as a rallying point for all persons in , who are interested in art. n i Utah, - Assistance will be given other Proj- communities in the securing of exhibits. Wherever groups will s i .1 proffer cooperation, branch centers will be set up." Governor Henry II. Blood is into stuW;f";nmS. offices, honorary chairman of the Art ' ana a Center advisory board and Mayor nrnviUL'u xw M. Wallace, John oo an, As one ol is active chairman Martin Gail j:"." n cnrune up unaer ine unec-:Jand Donald B. Goodall, formerArt Federal Project,- ly of the d the Chicago Institute of Fine . TTtah center becomes an acArts staff will be director of the e nation-widin a ::; Lake center. lament to break up the mon-r- f Salt larthe held by culture A. PLYMOUTH reenters of population. MEETING HELD to according Center, The Art The regular meeting of the A. was Plymouth School P.-held Wednesday afternoon in the auditorium of the school, Mrs. AUTO Hazel Paxton, president of the organization, presiding. Community singing was conducted by t Mrs. Metta Gerrard. A talk on "Achieving the Golden On Late Model Cars Rule" was given by J. T. Broad-benMrs. Pearl Phillips and RATES REASONABLE Mrs. Malva Mackay sang a vocal luet. A discussion on the project, increasing the year's L playground and its equipment, was led by Joseph Bennion, Rex Company Mackay, Ivan Frame, and David Owen, and a committee to work Bank Bldg. Murray 464 on this project was appointed. .t f" ' nnoi-no- tinoH . modern an . vice-chairma- n. P.-- T. T. LOANS t; N. Schwan Cross 420,000 Persons Following Catastrophes That the past year fc.s not been tho American Red Cross Is shown in a recent report Hating disaster! necessitating Red ia easy one for wide-iprea- Bam v fit nr N do not pay a penny extra for washed, sized and blended Utah King Coal the cleanest coal ever produced in the West. Try it youll like it, especially if you want yOU cleaner coaL 0E You'll Like King Waxed Special Stoker Coal Hi identically prepared for Priect liring duilless d with a thin film of Costa no mor than parallin. oiliTu now pay for l ng. Try it one and you'll us always. old-sty- EECOMMENDED AND SOLD BYi JORDAN PRODUCE COMPANY PIIONF MI'KRAV 4!). MILLER GRAIN & FEED PIIONK MI RRAV K.I MORRISON-MERRIL- & COMPANY L PIIONK lUrilRW 8 Be Wine Wise! Red Cross Nurses Aid Million Sick Red Cross public health nursi made more than one million visits to or on behalf of the sick during the fiscal year 1937-3S- . The patients live in mountain communities, on islands off tha coast, in Isolated swamp regions, and in crowded Industrial sections. P.irinR the same period the inspected 559.1S7 school children for Iw'.ilth defects !n cooperation with lnr.il physicians, and gave Instructions In home hygiene and care of sick to 5S.754 mothers and young SirK nuti Mrs. Theresa Hoffman reports favorable programs for the country store, a feature of the Hope Chest Carnival and Dance. Mrs. Hoffman is being assisted by Mrs. Cy Frasier, Mrs. Nicholas Julian, Mrs. Edward Bowler, and Mrs. fi.Y.U. RCM. Far East Menace Red Cross Volunteers Assist War Veterans Red Cross workers to chapters. hospitals and on posts of tbe Army. Navy, Coast Guard, and Marino Corps, assisted 122.35S a, live service men or veterans of 11 t!,eir families during the past months. Hod Cross service to these men Included such personal help , shopping and recreational leadership, but it also iiuliiiled financial assistance to their dependents, help In locating niiislns members of their famls. and nsiMance In Wing nec--i ary applications for pensions, pay. honpltalliatlon, or f r discharge from active service raupe of home needs. Tii" avc rape number of men fiMed by Red Cross workers earn month as 18,790, according to a ren-areport. In Good taste and gaicly cro reflected in the pleasing quality and brilliant f!a vors of these choice RomcX klter-wrltlng- Whil Port Bed Port Sherry Muscatel Blackberry! Tokay Sauternf Angelica Claretf loganberryt 8.40 Champagnt ErandyJ AlcoScl 12 lo 1 hi ! Ptsoi. At Utah Liquor Stor.i and Facltaas Agnc!f Basketball practice began Monday evening at the Murray high school gym. Thirty boys were nrncunf Suits will be distributed immediately after baseball suits are returned. Mass on Saturday at 9 a.m. will offered for Mr. Edmund Kearns, generous benefactor of the St. Vincent de Paul parish. be extend People of the parish their sympathies to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pantuso on the death of their baby, Theresa. A visitor at the rectory during the past week was Sam Osworth, formerly of Tooele, now of San Francisco. He is a classmate and Melink-ovic- h teamate of of Tooele high school and Notre Dame university. Avers Speaker SALT I.AKF. PTTV "Tho far east is coming much closer" and is laiung a more significant place in the political life of Europe and America than hf wnrlrl ro. alizes, declared Harrison For- man, authority on the Orient, in a lecture at the University of Utah. Forman has spent nine years in China as an aviation in- structor, author, explorer, and news cameraman for "Paramount News and "March of Time". The menace of Japan to the British emDire in thp past was partially responsible for Eng land s conciliatory attitude in the Munich crisis, according to Forman. With Britain's navy engaged in a European war Japan, a "dollars and cents" ally of Germany with a navv almost as hicr as England's, could endanger unusn interests in Hong Kong, the East Indies, and eflV disrupt British control of Austra lia or even India. Dispatches America gets from the Orient are manv times inac. curate, exaggerated or inade quate, tne newsman said. For in stance, tne great Yellow River flood did not make near the news It should have done. Forman took the first and onlv mntinn pictures of that flood, which hp showed to the university audi ence, xt was not just another flood he declared, but a brilliant victory for the Chinese. Chinese cutting the dikes of the Yellow river destroyed much Japanese equipment and delayed Japanese approach to Hankow at least eleven months. United States' interests worth $250,00.000 will be jeopardized wnen Japan "slams the open door of China." "Two hundred fifty million dollars is a lot of money," Forman said, "but not near as much as It would cost to wage a war to protect it." STARTS SUNDAY at MURRAY 626 OF HER DAZZLING CAREER! Sonja'i the cutest thing on wheels f we mean skates I ) as the oueen ol a co-e- d campus I And tne incredible ice climax will bring you to , r I your ieei in wonaer . ..j j ( i.il ENIE- - GREENE miim mim wit JOAN DAVIS CESAR ROMERO Snow-dee- p BUDDY EBSEN Arthur Treacher in the George Barbler Louiie Hovick Billy Gilbert Patricia Wilder Paul Hurst DtncM bf Ror Dl Ruth rhythm of Gordon & Revel's eight new tongs i Dwiyl F. Zaouck ('Wsoewjl U mtni iiamOiium THE tlEVG Ur ALL I IIC WUIILU m SPIRIT AND FLESH SAID TO CONFLICT "Mortals and Immortals" Is the in subject of the all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, Nov. 13. The Golden Text is: "If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed i away; behold all things are become new" (II Corinthians 5: 17) Among the Biblical citations are the following: "Jesus answered and said unto him (Nicodem-usVerily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit" (John 3: 3. 6). Correlative to the citations are the following from "Science and This Health with Key to the Scripd tures" by Mary Baker Eddy: material existence affords no evidence of spiritual existence and immortality...Understanding of material the nothingness things, he (Jesus) spoke of flesh and Spirit as the two opposltes, as error and Truth, not contributing in any way to each other's happiness and existence. Jesus knew, 'It is the spirit that quick-enetthe flesh profiteth nothing" (p. 356). &m lesson-sermo- n u:i ). "So-calle- PHONE IT'S THE PICTURE ii iSii-- i 7 1 rV -- mm Ht NUtK mm Will. 11 IV . II I PATHFINDER answers the questions you and your friends ore asking with ils concise, vivid portrayal of the current scene. Events of national and international significance arc fully and impartially covered. Tacts, new and old, that odd clarity and meaning to the news are honestly injected. The very latest and most interesting news photographs freely illustrate the facts. More than a million readers. Subscribe now lo PATHFINDER, the most widely read news magazine. C, on0 1 PATHFINDER BUItl year Ulliy $ X.DU Newspaper & Write or call on Murray Eagle Murray 35 Murray Business Directory Call Business Houses Below for Goods and Services in their Special Lines. Prompt Service and Big Values Are Given by These Alert Institutions. SERVICE Watch for 24-Pag- e Christmas . . . IS OUR MOTTO! give you the best in motor and battery rebuilding, body and fender work, and ignition parts. Also servicing, washing, polishing and complete lubrication. MUCH LOWER PRICE! . . . We the Eagles Big TAILOR CAR REPAIRING BARBER Join tho Rod Cross Chapter In your c'ltiinntnlty during the Roll Call. November 11 to 24. 7 Frank Mash. The mission at the St. Vincent de Paul church opens at 8:S mass Sunday morning. Exercises are scheduled for morning service. 7 to 9 a.m.; evening service, 7:45 p.m.; children's service. 4:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. The Rev.' Robert Murphy, Paulist missionary recently of New York and presently in charge of the Paulist church and its many mission stations at Vernal, Utah, will conduct mission exercises. Aids Cross relief throughout the United States during the past twelve months. The report reveals that 129 domestic disasters called for Red Cross aid In 217 counties of 41 states, and that assistance was given to 420.000 persons who were disaster victims. "That this has been a very active year Is obvious when one compares this year'B operations with the average of 92 disasters requiring Red Cross aid annually for the past 15 years," Chairman Norman H. Davis said in commenting on the Red Cross Disaster Relief Service report. These included catastrophes cloudbursts, cyclones, epidemics, ares, floods, forest fires, hailstorms, mine explosions, a school bus accident, a shipwreck, tornadoes, typhoons, and wind storms. "Disaster relief was the first humanitarian work of the American Red Cross after its organization in 1831," Mr. Davis said. "In the ensuing 57 years the flag of the Red Cross has flown upon every scene of major disaster in the United States. The Red Cross has carried relief-fo- od, clothing, shelter, medical aid, rehabilitation of homes and families to more than 2,200 scenes of disaster at home and abroad, and has expended over $140,000,000 contributed by the American public In this work of mercy." The Red Cross policies of relief, the national chairman pointed out, have been established over a period of years through actual experience of its workers in the field. Relief is glren on the basis of need of sufferersnot of losses. Loans, he pointed out, are never made, but relief is a gift from the Red Cross in the name of its members and contributors tc its work. "It would not be possible for the d Red Cross to carry out such rel'.el activities without the belp of thousands of volunteer workers," Mr. Davis said. "Volunteers are the mainstay of the organization, and in the past year's work issistance from many cooperating igencles has made It possible for us to answer the many calls for help." While relief was being given to victims of natural catastrophes, the Red Cross was not unmindful ot the necessity for preparedness plans to meet emergencies that may arfSe in any American community. Red Cross chapters in hundreds of counties have organized disaster preparedness committees charged with responsibility to map relief plans in advance of need, and to organise re sources of communities to prevent duplication of effort and waste ot materials when calls for help sr received. These plans are proving espec!a ly advantageous in localities subject to frequent floods, tornadoes, or hurricanes, and actual tests of such planning have demonstrated the necessity for such measures. "The administration of such relief for disaster victims is made possible by annual memberships ot millions of Americans in all walks of life," Mr. Davis pointed out. "The extent jf Red Cross aid to such sufferers Is entirely dependent upon unselfish sharing on the part of all of us." Page PARISH NOTES States During Year ience. - - THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1938 Issue-O- ut December I5I MURRAY SERVICE GARAOE Phone Mtirrnv fi2f) SHOE STORE MACHINISTS Something New I Mechanical -- Shirts Ties -- and Socks Up to the Minute In Style at HECKEL'S SHOE STORE Between Tost Office and City Hall. Murray Saw Filing For Short Time ONLY All Woo! Suits with ox-t- ar pair i.f l'ants $050 Come in and select any of the sc.isnn's latest Fabrics. MURRAY CLEANERS AND TAILORS ilunr n nf IrU thentre 1 WATCH MAKER TOR MODERN OPTOMETRIC SERVICE S. A. S EE ANDERSEN J. P. O'BRIEN PRKC1SK WORK QUICK SERVICE Hv. rOU-- J Salt Lake 2305 So. Main Gty.Utah Jeweler and Optometrist MURRAY, UTAH |