Show THE GARLAND TIMES Vetmld Wm Johns PUBLSIIED Editor EVERY THEN AMD NOW DAY INDEPENDENCE and Publisher FRIDAY MORNING Entered as Second Class Mall Matter August 1928 at the Post Office at Garland- - Utah $200 Per Year Subscriptions: $250 Outside of County Page Two Friday July 2 1951 From Christy's Scrafr File By L C Christopherson Few persons know there is a the library of Harvard University fifth stanza to the national an- - reads as follows: them Banwritten by Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1861 It was composed in response to bitter parodies of this song current in The original routhem states copy of this fifth verse now in “When our land is illumined with Liberty’s smile If a foe from within strikes a blow at her glory Down down with the traitor that dares to defile The flag of her stars and the page of her story! the millions By unchained when our birthright was gained We will keep her bright blazon forever unstained And the Banner in triumph shall wave O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave” ner” By LYN CONNELLY —Ham Park YOUR church choir college or high school glee club even the local barbershop quartet seem to FIELDING 4 II CLUBS perform better these days chances HOLD MEETINGS are Fred Waring may have had it Fred to do with something A 411 Club group met at the and hla singing Pennsylvanians stars of CBS Television’s “Fred home of Mrs Charles Pulver TuesWaring Show” have set a pattern day afternoon for their first meetof choral music recognized as ing Officers elected were Linda tops among millions of television Lana Godfrey Anger president viewers of his Sunday night televice Bonnie Baird secpresident cast series Many viewers Sharon Anderson song choral directors themselves have retary requested specific Information on leader and Christine Coombs reMrs and Sandra Pulver As choral porter techniques Waring Mae a result Fred spends his summer Hansen are the leaders vacation teaching them the fine —Reported by Bonnie Baird points of preparing better choral The Four 4 H’ers met at the programs At the Waring Choral Workshop home oi Miss Norma Burton on ten Tuesday with their class leader Delaware Water Gap Pa minutes tom Fred's Shawnee Miss Margaret Burton Officers home some 700 choirmasters and elected were for Miss president singing teachers from all over Reta Richards vice president the country this past cummer Ann Hansen secretary Mary learned the latest techniques in from concert choral Norma Burton and chorister Kareverything en Skinner enunciation to television — During Its seven years Reported by Karen Skinner of operation more than 4500 people have attended the unique nonprofit school—the only one operated for by a professional entertainer teaching trade secrets to directors of choral groups LEARNING TONES SYLLABLES Fred estimates each of the vocal pedagogues directs or teaches three or four choral groups of about 75 members each This adds up to some 1000000 choral singers the country who have throughout or Indirectly been Indirectly fluenced by Waring choral techAnd as the "muslo niques '' teacher’s muslo teacher” puts tt if y' that’s a lot of noise even In the I universal language of muslo 3 V IF Mr & Mrs Arbon Bowcutt and reBowcutt is expected Sonja were in Ogden Tuesday home this weekend from San the family Nadine remained there to help Francisco where she has been Sons of the Pioneers They had her aunt wdio is ill visiting relatives also visited at Ames Iowa with and daughter Mr their " " & Mrs Dale Haws and young K ' 1 i son ' V Mr & turned Frank Munns Mrs their from with trip If Mrs Maiy Bradford entertained Thursday afternoon at bridge honoring Mrs Ethel Pettcrson on Mrs her birthday anniversary Pettcrson was presented with a gift ' I 4t :c "If You Can Keep It" Visit at Rogers Home Lt Col & Mrs Wayne Rogers and four daughters Karcn Joan Judy and Carla are visting this week with his parents Mr & Mrs W C Rogers Lt Col Rogers who has been in Washington is DC for three years being transferred to Hamilton Field ' it rh li ' yj ' it Tf r — 4 d i ? 7' ' Ss I V j ° Uah" h Co"9re“ h ®ne SJefs to show the nation's copitol Left to right J9 0U"9 peopl R mBtir(Vep0WaUam' A lewis Summers Kingston end Rex Richins Pleasant Grove The Utah visitors' were attending the 24th national convention of the Clubs of America 0o°oVuTotfruTV Joan fro- Glen ©N ihh yet Ly by thy twotd O HccJorn' Noy yrt clot thy kit in ilumbcr Fof thirx enemy never ilcrpt And thou mutt watch tnj combat — VTilluim Cwticn iX i i'? U tjf tr ' W'' V V" ' ond t"' Sfelow Permanent ilid for Utah Mines Sought bv Senator FJatkins Laugh With Leo “Look at that one — the one staring at us through the bars Doesn’t he look intelligent?” There’s something un"Yes canny about it” “He looks as if he understood every word we're saying” “Walks on his hind legs too and swings his arms” He's got a peanut “There! Let’s see what he does with it ” “Well what do you know about that! He knows enough to take cf the shell before he cats it just like we do” That’s a female alongside of him Listen to her chatter at him He doesn’t seem to be paying much attention to her though" “She must be his mate” “Thdy look kind of sad don’t they?” Yes I guess they wish they Were in here with us monkeys” ' r vn: si ' 4 t i W faintimt — SIRY ICE Xlagti ar pabUcal tea CiJiet rrxtt Company As Benjamin Franklin left Independence Hall a woman asked him “Mr Franklin what kind of a government have you given us?” He answered gravely “A Republic madam if you can keep it” In painting this Independence Day scene in Hometown USA the artist E Franklin Wittmack has found an echo of Franklin® warning in a quotation fnSm the poet William Cullen Bryant The historic scene of Magna Charta the signal light on old North Church Tower the embattled “rebels” of a great new nation — symbolize tVe hard-wo- n victories and the priceless freedom which on Independence Day 195vre given every Hometown in the land — not done to celebrate but to protect Approval of the US Tariff Commission’s recommendations for a 50 c hike in tariffs would be a big: step toward a “permanent and sustaining remedy” to the c plight of the domestic industry Sen Arthur V Watkins (R? Utah) recently told President Dwight D Eisenhower In a letter addressed to the presi- a few days after the govc ernment’s new stockpiling program backfired and weakened the market Sen Watkins referred to a Tariff Commission report on the effects of foreign imports on the domestic c industry The industry had appealed in 1953 for relief under the clause escape of the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act the Simpson bill Mentioning introduced in the last session of Congress to provide a sliding scale flexible tariff to give permanent protection to the industry Sen Watkins wrote: “The flexible import levies of the 1953 bill were in my estimation a good solution lead-zin- c problem but on ' the reasons the proposal failed war that remedial action had not beer taken under the escape clause of the prevailing tariff act” “Now” the Senator continued “more than a year later such escape clause action has been taken and a tariff commission report is in your office awaiting administrative a c t i o n Furthermore an earlier voluminous report also has been submitted by the Tariff Commission fully docu- c menting the plight of the industry and plainly showing that the mine shutdowns in the producing states were caused chiefly by the competition from to the y The foreign producers” e 1 1 c r added should the Commission’s recommendations be ignored in the clear cut cdse prec sented by the industry “it will be apparent that the escape aus-‘ is empty of meaning-ap- d taat there is no protection in this measure for American and domestic industries” |