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Show Friday, October 14, 1033 VOICE CULTURE A AS HOBBY (By Mary Ellen Cain) Mis Marguerette Jeppersan, singer and Instructor in music and voice culture, believes that voice culture, even as a hobby, brings immeasurable bappiness to persons who study faithrutiy. It develops personality" Bhe said, and gives them self confidence and courage to appear in For some it opens up a public. new world, or transforms the old. To all it means getting away from life's dull routine at least for a few moments of each day. Binging la a wonderful safety-valv- e for pent-u- p energy, as well as a means of Miss Jepperson added, "and. In time of sorrow, music la the greatest comfort one can hare. Mrs. Hannah Packard, also a singer and teacher said, I believe the study of voice, as a dehobby, brings Its greatest Lovers of music find great Joy in getting acquainted with composers and their worxs And, she concluded, "the fact that one can slug gives a feeling akin to the divine joy of creation. PAPER FROM WOOD PULP velopment through contact with cultured people. Paper Is one of the richest It promotes health and de- gifts the forests have made to through modern civilization. Paper carvelops appreciation knowledge of the world of song. ries our thoughts, in writing and pointing. It helps educate our children. It wraps our goods. It records our obligations and even pays our bills, according to the C. S. Forest Products Laboratory. Provo Conservatory DANCING DRAMA ... Madison, Wis. Besides books, magazines, and newspapers: shipping containers, cordage, rugs, mats, felts, pails and bottles, surgical dressings, artificial leather, suitcases, cups, plates, forks, spoons, napkins, towels, hats, handkerchiefs, dresses, underwear, all are made RADIO For those who want the Best in Dance Training Professional and Cultural classes in Tap, Ballet Moderne Toe Acrobatic and Character Dancing. PRIVATE LESSONS FOR TEACHER IN PROFESSIONAL ROUTINES For Information kindly visit our studio 1 to 5 p. m. and 7 to 9 Hours: p. m. Daily North University (Entire 2nd. Floor) 505 from wood pulp. Our forests produce about nine-tent- h of the material for paper, in fact, wood pulp is by far the most important raw material for paper. Wood pulp has made It paper cheap and abundant. ALWAYS LOOK j Your Very Best u Lewis Barber Shop haircuts Are Better PHONE 1123 274 Weut Center Provo Complete Car Service You dont pay big money to get the best service for either Tires or Motor Care Let us ) t . 1 frit L f L tune-u- p 1. Check Our Tiros V Page Three UTAH VALLEY NEWS. are Sieberllng Engineered, and carry written guarantee for 12 months of service. 3. 4. Remove Distributor, Adj. Points 5. Test Coil and Condenser 6. Set Timing 7. Check Valves, Adjust Overhead Valves. Test Fael Pump Clean and Oil Air Cleaner It Is America's THRIFT Tire. Carburetor Adjust Buy it Now for Safe and . 11. Check Generator It. Check Starter Economical driving All Motor Adjustments Put Up to Original Factory DON'T GAMBLE BE SAFE Specifications 8. 9. 10. woods. rlllE Adjust anl Syehronlze I Going on NOW! Battery, 'Wire and Spark Plugs Test Compreis'o.1 I high-grad- BOY E. Johnson. Committee-Troop meu, also to Calvin Walker, ExTom Walker, plorer Leader; 1 SCOUTS HEWS BULLETiH Word has just been received by the Council Office from Naaora. Headquarters recommending a mdving Boys. Town picture and staring Mickey Rooney It is a play of Spence- - Tracy. boys interests, troubles, needs and desires, and shows the spirit of the good turn plus the need of good friends. This is a good play for parents, leaders of youth and especially boys. It will be shown In the respective communities during this Fall and Winter. Scouters should watch for announcements. COAL: Beet grade, dependable free delivery service. Storage G. Chris topherson. Phone 791. tfn rate. For Your Happiness BUY or BUILD a HOME UBIMAIIDILdDdDM MI ft DTOim Illllll To help you We have homes or lot. Own youf lot we will build a. home to your liking. We hare trades farms for homes, large homes for smaller. EXCHANGED MMi that a PROWS & HAWS REALTY CO. 53 North University Avenue, or Phone 456 for Appointment I'i'ttrvif and I la in. ..IS 1 s . ed Pa firms.. VJfeets ... Textures . . !' firrotls . . . florals . . fo s lark from smart a Barrel Do Heavy Axminster barrel? Forget it and remember that you can borrow what you need, when you need it, on an easy plan for personal loans. a LOW art 24-5- 0 For 7.6x9 size. Heady for use! BROADLOOM in a variety of patterns (An exceptional value at $3.75) Columbia Industrial LOAN CO. 1 I $3.15 SQ. YARD 64 N. Univ. Ave. Dr. G. H. Heindselman "With Heindselman Optical & Jewelry Co. Phone 1277 1 i umimiiinimiiiMmiiiiminiimHnmHliHitminnnMiiiuiiilsinmauin. VALLEY Flour & Feed J. Your Eyes are in the care of State Registered Optometrist Thousands of Satisfied Customers. things look so bad financially that you feel youll just have to go around wearing a i:w... lot many iJlfis vp to tit it Just a few of these Low Prices! Appearance The Tfighest Type of Service MODERATE PRICES -- 5! Jdii .ui ; G8 J years this firm has provided Provo 'families with beautiful services at costs within their means. Now, although modern facilities enable us to provide een more impressive services, our charges remain within the easy reach for all who call upon us. We gladly invite inspection of our modern mortuary at any time. Your visit will prove both Interesting and instructive, and will incur no obligation of any kind. S. Smith & Sons PROPRIETORS WHITE FAWN FLOUR Leads Them AH! But we Guarantee Thrift and Red Rone Floor We Feature - - - . PEACOCK LAYING MASH and Provos Has Provo a rlayground problem? If you do not think so, take a look any evening or at noon on any street in the residential sec- No Need to Wear . in your room measurement Tailor-Mad- e right away and select a size to the in right Rng fit, just a yon buy your headaixe in hat! Prices are low in this great Event . . . and every mg is woven of sturdy, imported Lively WooL Hurry! r 4 w Playground Problem Offered by Writer TO Dont pass up this chancel Bring Vision-Bette- 1 (3) Halloween Good Turn (4) Fathers and Sons Banquet (5) Start Troop Budget Plan November on (1) Tenderfoot Round-u- p November 6th (2) Court of Honor (3) Boulder Moapa Outing (4) Hike Muligan Stew and Treasure Hunt (5) Boys Life Campaign (6) Explorers Vanball starts (7) Thanksgiving Baskets A Solution to EXAMPLE Better Mi-- s Wag rs, you cant sleep in my class. I.a Verne, if you talked lower could " , FOR WHAT YOU WANT E7" Vi Center Dean, Surely your mother couid find pieces of material more like your trousers when she putt hed tin in " Lilatid, That a not a patch That s me , (1) Court of Honor (2) Diiie fur every Scout In, Uniform (3) District Rally or Circus (4) BoysSLlfe Campaign (5) Every Troop (6) Christmas Good Turn (7) Skating and Skil events (Eli (8) Winter Camping plorer). SEE find rug really FITS your room JfJf Furniture Exchange 316 W. Beautification. December Provo, Utah SOLD and Grounds e, CLAYSON & NIMER BOUGHT thing but planning, a cooperative spirit, and a litlte work, li would be a paradise for the children, a place of safety and a place of beauty The city ha-- , told the writer it would help with equipment and furnish a pis leader. The writer will be glad to help plan the area, and native materials can be had from nearby cuuvons and mountain sides with which to plant the grounds Do you want suih a happy play- - In Pow-Wo- Our Workmen are Factory Trained New and Used Furniture e; Plans are going forward the thirty-seve- n Districts of Utah A great Training Program to National Parks for a big TenderRound-u- p Program to be mobilize all leaders of Scouting Is foot November 6th in th culminated anunder way during October form of an Investure Ceremony nounces Roy Passey, Council Chairman of Leadership Train- held by each Troop, announces Council Chaircalls for: Charles DeGraff, ing. The Program man of Advancement. The pur(11 Organ! ation of Districts and pose Is to give every new twelve Troop Committees; (2) Setting boy a chance to be a Scout year up of objectives for the season; and to receive his Badges on the (3) Planning Training Moots for above date. November and December; (4) Planning Finance Program; (51 Promoting Tenderfoot Round-u- p CALENDAR Investures for November 6, 1938 TROOP All Bishoprics, Stake and Ward M. I. A. Officers, District and SUGGESTED Troop Scouters and Stake Presidencies as well as the general public are especially Invited. Recently released from Council Headquarters In Provo Is a One of the High spots in Scoutof Troop Calendar occurred recently in suggested ing Events for the remainder of the Pleasant Grove, Third Ward, 1938 In which Scout and Exwhen 17 Scouts and a father re- year are urged to particeived their Eagle Badges, the plorer Troops cipate. highest rank in Scouting. For one of the finest accom- October (in (1) Opening plishments in the L. D. S. Church, of some great as well as in Pleasant Grove outdoorsmen: Watermelon treat Scouting activities, great credit over goes to Fred Shoell, Harold S. by older Scouts) maybe night. S. M. W. Hilton, J. Walker, (2) Tenderfoot Recruiting for Harold Wright, and H. Round-u- Body and Fender Repair Service 275 So. University Ave. Scoutmaster and Jean Fugal, Assistant Scoutmaster. Those who received Eagle Badges are: S. W. Huron, Jean Fugal; Boyd Fugal; Bill Told; Leslie Smith; Don Hilton, Sam Hilton, Jr ; Fred Halllday; Dale Atwood; Dale Fugal; James Glen Nielson; Booth Kimball; Leslie Neves; Stanley Walker; Abel Ekins; Max Walker and Tom Walker, Assistant Scoutmaster. An unusual feature1 was tha' Sam Hdtot and his three sous Sam, Jr., Abel and Don received , their Eagle Badges together. Talk !1 flowers, and fur a little work g i and on your block? Then with over sand make a with your ne.ghbor. pool, ad;ug bex.-s- , let ns get together and make and even a Little Theater Provo anneal home and college might be provided. The fact Is the whole project town. ELGIN OLIPHANT, for almost any block la the city VP A adult Teacher on is possible for the expense of no- p. your motor: All Connections 2. Test, Clean and j has put books, magazines, and newspapers into the hands of prattically ever one who is able From its two original to read. uses writing and printing the uses of paper have spread to cover hundreds of daily needs. Tho essential substance of paper Is cellulose. Wood Is the most compact and the cheapest source of cellulose yet discovered. Wood pulp falls into two main divisions, mechanical and chemical. To make mechanical palp, the wood Is simply fed to a wet grindstone, and the fibres are torn loose and floated away as pulp Chemical pulps are quite different 'hby're made by cooking wood, in the form of chips, with chemicals, acid or alkali. You want different kinds of paper for different purposes. Just for illustration, take a sheet or typewriter paper. It's tough, fairly hard, with lots of snap and firmness to it. These qualities e are what you get in a bleached sulphite paper, generally from spruce. The United States wouldnt need to look to foreign countries for a single stick of pulpwood if we could turn our logging wa-e- s and our less used species Into the kinds of paper the market demands. It would mean added values for forestry. Employment for thousands of workers. New Jobs for capital." New support for rural and town communities through tax revenues. For example, take the fairly recent pulp and paper development in the South. One of the first pieces of research, when the Forest Products Laboratory was founded in 1910, was to pulp and process a typical selection of southern pines. The influence of that research has been steady and continuous in the growth of the southern industry. The Labor atory's experiments have covered the pulping of over 100 different tions and see the childrern playing in the street. It Is the child's Inherent right to play. Only two playgrounds exist In the city, and both of these are on one side. But every child in Provo can be provided with a playground without even crossing a street. All we need is the desire and the application of the same qualities which made and some planned work. First, Provos blocks being 24 rods square, provide ampie room in the center of every block for a playground at least 8 rods square, or any other convenient size according to the buildings found on the block. At present this Interior area back In every block Is generally filled with from one to five old barns, eye sores and fire traps, and Infested with weeds, piles of ashes, old cans, and other rubbish, both unsightly and unsanitary'. Lets see what could be done about this area: By a survey made by the city an estimate gives the number of these c!d barns as more than 300 wituln the city. Why not clean them out, remove the rubbish and ashes, and weeds, and establish a playground In every block, where a high fence, a hedge or other enclosure could be built which would beautify the area and make It secure for the youngsters. Here we could plant shrubs, evergreens, and hardy EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO ENJOY HUNTING INCLUDING the MONEY with our new Fitted finance which gives you nationally advertised equipment RIGHT NOW with only a small down payment. Youll be amazed at the variety of Merchandise Take a you want that is now within your means. Look Now and Be Prepared Hunting Coats Priced As Low As HUNTING Aa 9 ha 17 Red Head ACCESSORIES SPECIALS Ka-Ba- Better Grade Coats from Hunting Gloves i Fleece Lined Remington, Model 31-Winchester, Model 12 A Hunting Knives r 9Sc and up $5.49 to $9.00 Leather, ! Shell Belts 89c and up Recoil Pad 59c up 'Leather Canvas Gun Cases 98c up Sheepskin Moccasins $1.39 Shotgun Clean Rods 39c or Bergman Shoe Grease 23c Repeating Shotguns 12, 16, 20 Gauges as Marbles Anti-rus- t. Ropes 49c and up Stevens Double Barrell All Gauges $21.75 Hoppes No. 9 Solvent 40c Cleaners $1.23 in Single Barrel Guns 15c 12, 16, 20, 410 Ga. Hoppes Gun Oil Tri-Pa- k ALL SIZES VALLEY MIX Dairy Feed USED TIRES HAY and GRaIN 151 N. University Ave. PHONE lie L. & H. Tire Co. 848 W. Center Phone 408 $7-4- 9 Oscar Carlson's Sporting Goods .112 No. Univ. Ave. Provo, Utah |