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Show SUNDAY HERALD 12 Girl Scouts Rrema re For Summer Camp gt Trefoil SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 1956 Utah Cottnty, Utah Benjamin News and safety standards, as and health requirements. Girls of special interest to intermediate and senior camp- set by the National Girl Scout or may registered at the Girl Scout ers is being planned by the staff ganization, are maintained at Tre office, 186 W. 1st S., any Thursof Trefoil Ranch Girl Scout camp, foil Ranch. day or Saturday afternoon. For A program Residents Visit Ogden Relatives Trefoil Ranch is open to altLfurther information call Mrs. R. L located in South Fork of Provo mm BENJAMIN Mrs. Kathryn Lun- l teengirls wno can meet registration Tuckett, registrar, FR Canyon. A number of young dell and Gertrude Zeeman spent agers have already registered and a few days in Ogden recently to forward are eagerly looking ? visiting relatives. Their sister, outdoor living witl other girls A Mrs. Olive Paulson, returned who share their interests in hikthem to visit here a with fl,home ing, camping, nature lore, handishort time. craft, outdoor cooking, and archand ery. The weeks of July Mrs. Alice Steele entertained 2 this set aside are year July B. L. Bridge Club on Thurs the for intermediate and senior campwith prizes going to Edith day ing. Brownies will attend the Hawkins, Deloris Steele and Mel-b- a and July 29-weeks of July Hone. I T m I 8-1- 5, 15-2- 22-2- 9, The Girl Scout Brownie Aug. program is an excellent one, gear ed especially for the 7 to old Miss Florence M. Ross, profes sional camp director from Massa chusetts will again supervise the camp for her third consecutive season. She will be assisted by trained counselors, three for each 16 girls. A registered nurse will be on duty at all times. High 5. Mr. and Mrs. Orlan Tippetts spent the weekend at Gunnison With their daughter, Verla Peter son, ana tamuy. uieeue reierson, a granddaughter, returned with them for a short vacation. 10-ye- Spanish Fork News -t- Tv. -c . IVvV. Mrs. Patricia Wride was hostess Variety Club this week. Special guests were Ruth Stewart, Clafa Lee Clark and Alice Jewett. Pirzes went to Blanch Hawkins, Joan Caras and Alice Jewett. to the i',f '"Vf? Family Back From Texas V- -; ''"SHE fOJ t'.. Plane Talk : co-pil- ot Mrs. Alma Johnson recently were Mi's. Barbara Gleaves and chil dren of Albuquerque, N. M.,- and Mr. and Mrs. John Olsen and daughters of Mink Creek, Ida. SPANISH FORK Mr. and Mrs Benjamin O. Riches and son, Ben-ni- e, - returned recently from a vacation in Texas. While there, they were visitors at the home of their Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Humphrey of Mojave, Calif., are spending 10 days here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Andreason. son, Roland, and his family. Eunice Dixon of Salem is currently a guest at the home of her cousin, Jane Dixon of this city. Jane is a daughter of Paul S. Dixon and Eunice is a daughter of his brother, Seldon Dixon. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Anderson of Logan spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Anderson. The Sewing Circle 4H Club held its first meeting Wednesday at the home of Shirley Thompseh. New officers elected were Maxme Ashby, president; Karen Han sen, vice president; Joan Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brown and have family of Laramie, Wyo., been guests this week at the home of her father, James Finch. Mrs. Brown is the former Kathryn Finch. ' ' , V v secretary; Janette Willis, song m Icelandic people of this area are m an una leader; Joan Clark rporter. Betty reminded of the annual day of PREPARE FOR SUMMER FUN AT CAMP TREFOIL Breck Ludlow and Shirley Thompsen are fun and frolic, to be held June 16 Fagin, far left, and Hughes, second from right, veterans at the leaders. at Arrowhead Resort. Interested the Trefoil Ranch Kjay Scout Gill Camp, help Mary Ulibarri, second persons are asked to pack a lunch, Among those who attended the Bonnie! from and left, Briskey, far right, check, their gear for a funeral of Mrs. Betty Miles were bring their families and friends, and join the fun. week's stay at the cjamp which will soon begin activities for her sister, Amy Job, and Amy's summer. daughter and husband from Hol- Mr. and Mrs. Willis R. Hill and Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Bradford of Spanish Fork left this week for Los Angeles, Calif. While there, they will attend sessions at the Los Angeles LDS Temple and witness the marriage of the Brad-ford- s' son, Allen, to Miss Anita Carroll. II B, Cadet Lt. Gail Ann Keith, Orem, was one of two outstanding cadets chosen to attend the national summer encampment for Civil Air Patrol girl cadets at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex., June 17 to 28. The other girl is Pat Jensen of Bountiful. Cadet Lt. Keith is adjutant f Provo CAP Cadet Squadron, and her parents, SM William E. and WO Irene Keith, Orem, are members of Provo senior squadron. 17, Ray Peterson, about 50. Sorine- in Fourth district Court Friday with revocation of probation, have been ordered to report to the sheriff June 13 for execution of sentence. He had earlier pleaded guiltv to charges of driving during revocation of driver's license, and been sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and serve 60 days in jail. Doyle Burningham, 31, 1316 N. 3rd W., Provo. was charged with issuing a fraudleht check for $10. Trial, was set for June 15. Carl R. Kern, 60, Orem, pleaded guilty to charges of house burglarly. Sentencing was set for June 29. Visiting at the home of Mr. and ville, charged Vacation By JOAN GEYER New radar controls will permit Commercial airlines business is a hundredfold more planes on the expected to double within the next same airway, Jack Forshey, re- two decades, while business flying gional Civil Aeronautics Adminis- now logging 4,000,000 hours' a year tration examiner, recently told expects to hit 8,000,000 by 1965. Provo Squadron, Civil Air Patrol. A qualified pilot starts , off at Space no longer will be wasted, $375 to $425 a month as airline coseparating aircraft by time and pilot, and can make up to $900 i mileage, as under existing controls, month as on a big DC-6he said. while the pilot, himself, can make A new radar airway already has up to $20,000 a year, said Forsey. been installed between Norfolk and United States, now entering the Boston, with radar controling traf rocket age, soon will be cruising fic from 700 feet above the ground at several thousand miles planes to 75,000 feet. The CAA examiner hour. per said he already had watched a DC-- 3 at 20,000 feet "completely Among the psychological factors humans must adapt to, he controlled from the ground." With radar control, a plane mov said, are "metal so hot, you burn ing too fast for traffic, due to a finger; high air so cold, snow tailwind, "can be electronically falls from your breath." slowed for you with or without Training of youths in jets is your consent," said Mr. Forsey. being made safer by synthetic Will robot thinking make the ground trailers, so that beginner erros result in a sharp reprimand pilot obsolete? Not at all, says the CAA officer not death. "If will make his field even more The military soon will be separtechnical. Youngsters who intend their fields from civilian airon aviation careers should start ating he added. ports, now to include electronics in their schooling." Provo Squadron Saturday was asked to assist in a Moab search by relaying radio messages to Utah Wing Civil Air Patrol, at Salt Lake City. Violation Of VV-- tended Mr. and Mrs. Otto Anderson at Probation the recent graduation of Brings their son, Ralph, from Brigham Young University: He received a Court Jail Order B.S. degree in engineering. ' Orem Postal Revenues Up For May OREM All complaints brought before the Orem City Court art prosecuted or otherwise OREM There was a 29 per being dealt the court declared with, cent increase in gross revenues of the Orem Past Office in May Saturday in clarification of what it termed a misleading story of 1956 over May of 1955 a total this week in The Daily Herald. , of $3,068.22 according to Postmaster Clyde E. Weeks Jr. The The story, concerning a study-othe court's monthly report by May total for last year was There was 14.29 per cent the Orem City Council com- increase in total gross receipts mened on the fact that there for the first five months of busi- were 96 cases considered by th$ ness above the first five months court during the month, whiltt last year. Also during May there "there were a minimum of from" was a 19 per cent increase over 10 to 50 violations daily in speedmachine cancellations. During the ing alone" in Orem. the previous year in canceling This gave many people the im first five months there was a 17 the court said, that, pression, per cent increase over 1955. these were actual arrests being t In the money order department made which were not being there was a 1.5 Increase over the in secuted p first five months of this year over Herald did not the court. Th mean to convey'1 the same period last year. this impression, and is glad tj make the correction. What was IT DID NOT PAY meant, was the court contention RALEIGH, N. C. CUP) Ran- that 10 to 50 speeding violations dolph Chavis is probably more are made each day through than with else anyone impressed Orer- which could result in arthe axiom "crime does not pay." He told police who arrested him rests if the city had a lare police force to make ' Friday that when he returned to enough The them. figure, as spoken jf the spot where he had hidden his in ine concern shre of the loot from a robbory, arrests story, did no but only actually made, he found somebody had stolen it. potential cases of violation. The "mortarboard" is said to Traffic experts have Ion,' rechave originated at Oxford uni- ognized that it is impossible fpr versity, in England, about the a police force the size of Orent's to catch all the violations alofig middle of the 14th century. U.S. 91. Experts have skid that if every violation ' were nabbed, the total would run into the hiin dreds each day. f $1,-999.6- - v . 2? nyvy, j, , f.mmilly?H.W,ll,lll , , Vvfv" ,, ,m., s , W.,.U..., ml w.w..,, 1!hmITaM f i munications at Heber SARCAP last year; and on mess duty on a real search at Delta. Another highlight of her enlistment was helping senior officers entertain visiting Peruvian cadladay; a brother, Sam Bulow, ets, in Provo, under the Foreign and family of Moroni, and daugh- - Exchange CAP program. ters-i- n V Ml "J law, Mrs. Jean Paschel At Lackland, the girls will tour and son of Long Beach, Calif., Randolph AFB; visit San Antonio, 1 JfcvliJt Mrs. Rachel Bulow and daugh and study such courses as leaderter, Carol, of Richfield and Mrs. ship, character guidance, aviation OUTSTANDING CADET Cadet Thelma Butler and family of career opportunities, and field Lt. Gail Ann Keith, chosen as Wellington. training. outstanding Utah Civil Air Patrol r "2 '"'I -- .gBi i lib kl0 patented, fabulous new setting that make the larger center diamond look like a dai-iliheart. The rings ore beautifully fash- A, c i $ ng tea Can Get If On Credit! wdr.MOiMEY DOWN 7750 ! V V ioned of 14K yellow or white gold. Fciher's Day, June 17 f xk " l i l i nr - .A:YEAfl:,TO::PAY- ; - HiMi ml 1 LUXURIOUS i l .r DAD'S IDEA mlm. jii.ul Darrel immediately but tempor arily, happened in Brigham Gity.., where Darrel has been the guest of an uncle, Melvin J. Roberts, while working for another uncli, v Walter C. Everton. The Diamond Rings That are Taking the Country by Storm sr.... OPERATION AIRED WEST NEWBURY, Mass. (UP) Alcide Bergeron, 40, gave his friends a "stitcby-stitch- " ac count ox ms operation. Bergeron. who underwent surgery for an ab dominal ailment, is a "ham" short wave radio operator. He rig ged a portable set at, his bedside and flashed out daily and hourly reports of his recuperation. LINDON Darrel Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Johnson of Lindon, hli' been wearing bandages over jhls eyes since Tuesday as a result of burns received when he removed his welding glasses while doing some welding on his automobile. ,. i The accident, which blinded mm gs3 kbto wmim namMIS ., 2.' - Roy Fortney of Mattoon, CI., is fhe current house guest of his daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Crosby. He will return to his home In the Midwest after a short' stay, c FIRST KINDERGARTEN The kindergarten was made an integral part of the public school system of St Louis in 1872, and it is claimed this was the first city to take that step; . ; lf-year-- old of tho ideal gift OJ l f V ,,,..,,,, Youth Recovers From Eye Burns She enlisted in CAP in September, 1954; attended regional encampment at Mountain Home AFB, Ida.; served on ground com- Gifts For Father i 7. . I Karen Christensen of this city, left recently en route to New York for a short visit with friends there. While in New York, slfe will be the house guest of Jackie Karyst. She expects to visit points of LDS historical interest in that area. She will also call on her uncle, Dr. Mark B. Gardner, in Summit, N. J. Court Report Story Clarified , j ROOMS Priced At SNIVEL I E? BOTH RINGS, I I DOTH RINGS ;t.iOTH RINGS ; Only I BETTER FARM. REPAIRS WITH SAKRCTE f Vv:v7',..-,- EASIER, DECORATOR FABRICS with Lnrex Choice of Colors I 0r ONLY It you need a new feed troughs or if , the old ones need repair : . it's quicker and more eco nomical with SAKRETX. concrete and mortar In a imt I II! add water and it's ready to use. Your ; rtftfrws. ImmJk . are cut by clean, durable cement feed troughs resistant to acids "SL.wear from drainage. SAX. RETK mean quick, convenient "farm repairs and it's perfect for. ccmcm, marcnes. wauts and patios.. 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