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Show THURSDAY, MAY 11 OREM-GENEVA TIMES Orem - Geneva Times Published every TL..rsday at Orem, Utah M. NEFF SMART, Editor and Publisher (Entered at second class matter November 19. 1944 at the posiotL.'e at Orem, Utah, under the act of March 3. 1897. MEMBER: Utah State Press Association Subscription Rales: One year, in advance $3-00 DEXTER HEADQUARTERS IN OREM Mothers' Day Spocia . rfnX" I Dexter Twin Laundry Tubs Total Value ALL YOU PAY IS $199.50 AND YOUR OLD WASHER TERMS AS LOW AS $1.00 DOWN Make Mother's Day a Happy Day With this Deal Utah Hardware & Implement Co. Your Appliance Service Center in Orem We appreciate your patronage WANTED: CITY PHYSICIAN Qualified medical doctor wishing to establish good practice in Utah's fastest growing city. Applicant Appli-cant will be appointed city physician of Orem City. Appointment will not only aid Orem's health situation, situat-ion, but will enable doctor to build up good pract-ice pract-ice in short time. Wire or write Mayor J. W. Gillman, Orem, Utah- This advertisement didn't appear in any newspaper, but it might well have. Orem City is without the service of a city physician following the recent resignation of Dr. L. K. Cullimore who has held the title for the past several years. Mayor Gillman, who has been working for several weeks to perfect the reorganization of the city board of health, announced at Monday's night's city council meeting that he wns ready to announce the names of the board members with the exception of the top man the city physician. The mayor hfs been unable to obtain the services of any Orem doctor who will take the job. Doubtless the two doctors who live in Orem must have good reasons for refusing to act, not the le-ist of which is the token salary of 525.00 per year. Only last week Orem lost its public health nurse. She probably won't be replaced. Now Orem has no city physician. phys-ician. How interested are Orem residents in establishing an active, onab'fied, law-empowered board of health and city physician? POLITICAL HAY. READY FOR CUTTING Both Mr. Dewey and Mr. Stassen, GOP luminaries, have come up recently with quotable quips which were designed to. 'win votes for whichever of them (or Mr. Taft,) runs ahead in Republican favor in mid-1952. Mr, Stassen came up with : "Truman is the cleverest politician polit-ician and the worst president ever to sit in the White House;" and Mr. Dewey characterized Truman's Fair Deal as the "faro deal." We doubt if the two aspirants made much political hay with their phrases- We believe there are fields where the grass is taller, and riper. Let the Republicans expose the fallacy in assumptions that somebody else pays when Washington does the job. , And let them show by example that much ' social welfare work will be more carefully examined and better done on a state basis. Let them show, certainly, cer-tainly, that the "dealer" always takes a percentage for administrative costs if nothing more. He also acquires political power. In some fields federal intervention may be beneficial. In many the states can d. a better job themselves. Here, it seems to us, is the real opportnity for Republicans. Rep-ublicans. Let them show that they are not backward about needed improvements- Examples of meeting the need are more persuasive than peppery political phrases. And besides, the recent senate investigations have made us a little fed up with destructive words. Here is what you get: Twin Tub Dexter $199.50 36 Piece Rogers Silverware, Value 24.50 22.50 All Metal Iron Hoard Value 9.95 256.45 M DAY OH ! flow HEAVENLY TUlV IS j ViSH MORE TfcAYS tU TWE YEAH. VVER6 LIKE IT ' ft.L MAKE Mr" lBt. I'u sew Those Dress ; h ILLWA5H 1H WINDOWS' A Soow as we no. V pis - Ypt) WAMTf To SOW B Tw' KiTcHtM RtfOR. AFTER I Swte.f PP ', : A r; -&L,;'W TzV m ') T VI ANY MORE - - ' .. TIMPANOGOS Lucy Poulson - - 0845 Jl A Mother's Day program was presented last Sunday by the Sunday School honoring the h. uiiiors of the wurd. The program pro-gram was directed by Mrs. Er- i. ia ButU-r ot the Junior Sunday Sun-day School. Red roses were pre-stnled pre-stnled to the mothers present and. an additional white rose to the grandmothers. The flower presntation was msde by members mem-bers of the First Intermediate class- Mrs. Harold Thompson is the class leader. Officers of, the Primary were in charge of the program in sacrament meeting for their regular reg-ular confeence. President Erma Madsen conducted the program-Th program-Th theme was the Lord's Prayer. Pray-er. Relief Society work meeting was held last Tuesday. A quilt was finished and rags sewed for rugs. Refreshments were served by visiting teachers Eylith Hanks, Leda Shultz, Arvilla Bradshaw and Lucy Poulson. A fireside chat was given last Sunday evening by Mrs. B.:nM'e Watt; and Mrs. Yvonne MH'r a Mr. and Mrs. Roliace Pugh and daughter from California have been visiting at the home Mr. and Mrs. William Hum phreys of Ephraim, Utah visited here during the week with his . r. and Mrs. Dennis Davis. I mother, Mrs. Ellen Humpherys. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Harker were weekend visitors at the home of Mr. Harkrr's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Harker. ' i I 'if''' I i t X. l'jmt ! plJ i J . llW I ! c? Ofj IS ALL YOU PAY j 73 )0wHJ FOR THESE COOL ! CHARMERS J?l CRISP eiBOSSED COTTONS Summer 1950 . . . when the little budget goes a longer way . . . when the slim pastel classic is more important than ever . . . and much notice is taken of collars and fluid skirts. Penney's interpretations from left to right: roll collar classic, soft cape collar dress, and the Queen Ann casual. White, pink, maize, aqua, blue. Juniors', Misses'. J for rs cE th ir P bur School rlas.jes. The' group met at the Miller home. O-H'st speaker speak-er was Medhi from Persia who is a stuc:cs-1 at he. BYU- He spoke on schools and education in his native '.and. Following the talk refreshements wer? served '.n clarrs members. No meetings wi'l be held in the ward on Sunday. To Shed Light on the World This Week THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY: "Unless government force is used or war appears in minent, businessmen in general are going to de-central" ize only gradually. Major industries have massive root-not root-not only in their physical plants but in their intimate re! lationship to raw materials, power, labor supply and mat Icets." .National Association of Real Estate Boards' & port on Saturday. KEEP COOL . . . Rhoda Williams, radio actress, demonstrates how to defeat a Hollywood heat wave. Don a swim suit and sip a tall cool lemonade. It'U also get your picture In the paper if you look Uke Rhoda, "Free men and free nations everywhere will face in. ceasin'gly crucial tests in the years immediately ahead. The free world contains untapped moral and material re-sources. re-sources. We must develop those . . We should be doing $o even if intenational communism did not exist." Sec retary of State DEAN ACHESON before taking off f0j London talks on Monday. " for I am convinced that upon its (Crusade for Freedom) success could well depend the prevention of World War III." Gen. LUCIUS D- CLAY, former military milit-ary governor of Berlin, accepting the chairmanship of National Committee for a Free Europe, Inc. "The Kaiser organization will push comprehensive plans to develop the utmost potentialities of one of the nation's great areas of coal resources." HENRY J KAISER, commenting upon his corporation's purchase of the Utah Fuel company. "In the air world, the United States occupies an un favored position on the periphery ot .the principal hemisphere. hem-isphere. Communist Kussia is much closer to the hub. This would seem to make the forming now of one republic by western Europe and the United States even more important to freedom . . . -yet present United States i olicv makers have shown no awareness of this a;r fge 'situation " CLARENCE K. STREIT, menv bcr of the Atlantic Union committee. urn- i a i i 1 H ii ntos DreaK witn Moscow was tne greatest event since the end of the war." WALTER LIPPMANN, before United btates Chamber of Commerce convention- (T711 1 1 i.1 1 ' i J , Eleven years ago we naa inrce dictators to worn about, Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin. Two. are gone, and I expect to live long enough to see the third one go.' rAUb (j. riljr r main, chiel of Marshall Flan aid to Europe. i.n:B Luumij luusi any nuts every lime joe Stalin throws a scare into us when an industrially primitivi and illiterate country tries to bluff us. EDWIN' G iui win amiscr iu ricbiueiii lrump.n IB cautioning against the laying out of money for the mil-itary. mil-itary. "Big business wants protection for its profits, little business wants protection from big business, farm- vi want me government ro. guarantee parity prices, labor wants every man guaranteed a job ,- . but it is a fatal step for the government to undertake to guarantee them." Senator ROBERT A. TAFT, in speech before U. b. inamDer ot Commerce group. ;hor ;Q0N The P1 ,tf is ve: jit one : ling pw jents r f n resu jen tne irrectiy Thorn'; rete - jnder c inates jr.cern ' jacrete je. Wh jsiness jnodelii jey will lis cone jd com k use aste is it on i ;passed onomic area jiicn sp t rendc Sural OH SA Small ed hon Provo, ant Gi Pleasa: OR LE. Provo 1950 I Distric Provo- 0THE1 Have 3 at DTI Pay gi tier in uality lire chi J H- G i i IV 15 East 'OH SA Beauti brood ant G: Railroads Protect Possessions The problem of surface protection protec-tion is very important to railroads. Finishes must be applied not only tor beauty and decoration, but for protection as well. Generally speaking, signals are painted every year; passenger cars every three years; bridges every fiv years; and freight can every eight to ten years. J. R. Price, President of the Central Atlantic Mission, and his wife, Mabel, were honored hon-ored guests at a family dinner I at th home of Mr. and Mrs. I Frank D. Price Friday evening. Present were Mr. Price's sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Hicken of Heber City and four children, Glen, Audry, Wayne and John Robert; Presid- ent Price's daughter, Mrs. Sharp Daines and son, Randy; Mr, and Mrs. Charles Price and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Price. Mrs. Herman Richards ar son, Guy, spent lest week r Salt Lake City with her siste: Mrs. Louise Leary, who has now sen. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace RV.. William Hull and Vernal Me drum went to Pocatello, Idas to attend the funeral services s an uncle, Robert Franklin Tact-: ett. 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