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Show OREM-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1950 Orem - Geneva Times Published rrj TLarsday at Orem, Utah M. NEFF SMART. Edllor and PublUhar (Entered at second class matter Norember 19, 1944 at the postoiLe at Orem, Utah, under the act of March 3. 1997. MEMBER: Utah State Press Association Subscription Rales: One year, in adrance 13-00 PRACTICE WHAT WE PREACH Merchandising people tell us that Utah Valley people do almost everything for Utah Valley products except buy them. We praise the quality of our peaches and pears. Our apples are deluxe. We write essays about the quality of our dairy products and eggs. No one can tell us that our home grown peas and beans are not super. Yet when the grocers total up their sales of Utah apples ap-ples against those from Washington, when the figures are in regarding California pack peas and beans as against our own products, when local milk and cream sales are compared with those of outsiders, it is often found that we buyers lack both loyalty and wisdom. In an effort to change that queer custom, Greater Utah Valley, Inc. is sponsoring a program which will I clp to identify Utah Valley produced merchandise and which will enable us to "practice what we preach." At your grocers next week will be a display of foods, identified ident-ified by the GUV seal, which are grown and prepared right here in this valley. It is merchandise which Utah Valley people are proud of and which is designed to compete in quality and price with merchandise which is 'shipped in. The program is planned to acquaint Utah Valley people with Utah Valley produce and hopes are high that housewives and buyers of home staples will, during the next few weeks, make an effort to acquaint themselves with local brand names. When you buy Utah Valley products you are getting flavorful, quality merchandise, and you're helping your friends and neighbors. It's just one of those little things which will make for a Greater Utah Valley. IMAGINARY LINE A parallel of latitude is man's invention, not Nature's though school children, brooding over the checkerboards checker-boards of maps, have often thought otherwise. The Thirty-eighth Parallel, a little over 2,600 miles from the North Pole, is no different from the others. Possessing Possess-ing length without breadth, possessing reality without oeing visible, it makes its way around the earth, creating creat-ing a crisis here, passing unnoticed through deserts, v ouromountains and across bodies of water elsewhere. "'T vfimjnsear Tientsin, and there is Communist-controlled, hear Golden Samarkand, and again is red; south of Ankara and not far from Athens, losing its ruddy color as it continues. It barely touches the boot of Italy and the northern rim of Sicily. In Spain, running well south of Madrid, it encounters a new dictatorship, and in Portugal, Port-ugal, which it crosses slightly south of Lisbon, another but milder one. In this country it is 1 detgree 42 minutes south of Messrs. Mason and Dixon's famous Line. Lexington, Lex-ington, Ky., is the nearest to it of our major cities, but St. Louis, Pueblo and San Francisco are not far off. It misses the main island groups of the Pacific but captains cap-tains of ships and planes bound for Tokyo are as likely as not to cross it, as President Truman crossed it in another part of the world, in Chesapeake Bay on his v yacht. i . History might have picked a more prominent parallel parall-el than this to make famous. Perhaps one divisible by ten, or at least by four, would have been better. But Thirty-eight has served its purpose. It has marked, at least momentarily, a latitude in men's minds, their breams, their fears, their hopes, their determinations. iIen have died for this abstraction, as for others. And indeed what Thirty-eight has taught us in that it is not always the tangibles trade, possession, raw materials for which men most fervently fight and die. Who ever saw a parallel of latitude? Who ever saw freedom or justice, either? But these things are real. They will endure en-dure when the Himalayas have been ground down into the sea. They who disregard them do so at their peril. New York Times ARE YOU ONE OF THESE? . ii i i i III I lOAA ELECTIONS I I is i v i "::.. II I I vO MILLION I I ' -ST- 1 Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Ekins had as their weekend guests Mr. ;-nd Mrs. A. L. Ekins of Hinckley, Hinck-ley, Utch and Mrs. J. Redd of Monticello, Utah. Mr. and Mrs. Don Stubbs Sr. left Friday for a two weeks trip to Canada. Shelby Adams left Wednesday Wednes-day f:r Treasure Islands, California Calif-ornia where he will be stationed vL;h '.he armed forces. Mrs. Adams Ad-ams will iive in Provo with her m: th:r 1'cr an indefinite time. SCHOOLS OF EARLY DAYS DISCUSSED AT DUP MEET Members of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Camp Windsor, held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth El-izabeth Erickson. Captain Emily Em-ily Long was in charge and Vida Lystrup gave the lesson 'Schools of Early Days." The history of John Walde-man, Walde-man, father of Mrs- Erickson r.nd Mrs. Elna Hampshire, was read by class historian Blanche Nie.'son. Also present were Enid Johnson, Dorothy Johnson, Ethel Eth-el Lowe, Jennie W. Johnson, Pclly Harris, Emily K. Aston, Martha T. Kectch and Lottie W. Harris. Vemocfxzcy Speaks KEVA BECK Mrs- Carlos D. Miller underwent un-derwent a major operation last week at the Utah Valley hospital. hospit-al. She is reported to be improving. Lincoln Students Begin Work on . School Annual A representative year book with a humorous' twist or two is promised by staff members of Lincoln High school's Rail- splitter, who are beginning this week the sales campaign for the high school annual. Every department and every activity at the school will be represented in the book and a humorous theme is being plan ned. This year the price of the book will depend upon the num ber of students who make a down payment in advance. The more who sign up for a year bock the lower will be the price, according to Jean Bridget, bus iness manager. Individual pictures are now being taken of 10th, 11th and Big Steel Seeks Increase In Raw Materials Steel companies will have to assemble larger quantities ol raw materials than ever before to meet the requirements for I record hieh capacity which has i been reached this year and will be raised further in the next I two years, American Iron and ' Steel Institute said today. In order to operate 109,963.000 i tons of raw steel capacity, planned plan-ned for the end of 1952, an est imator tntnl nf nparlv one and ' a half times that weight of iron I ore will be needed, or about 153,500,000 tons annually. Fuels I required will be about 116,500,-1 116,500,-1 000 tons of coal, 2.6 billion gal-, gal-, Ions of fuel oil and 560 billion cubic feet of natural gas. More than 60,000,000 tons of scrap iron and steel will be needed a year and 1,865,000 tons of manganese ore. These estimates esti-mates are based on average consumption con-sumption of materials as related relat-ed to steel production in 1949. Steel capacity of nearly 110 million tons a year, scheduled ; by the end of 1952, compares with 100.563,000 tons annual capacity at the time war began in Korea. The latter figure is 12 million tons higher than when the United States entered World ; War II and 45 million tons more I than when World War I began for the United States. 12th graders, with a group picture pict-ure slated for the 9th. The book will be distributed during . the last 10 days of school. Velyle Bunker is editor of the RailsDlitter. with Mar Jean Stratton as assistant editor. Other Oth-er staff members include Floyd Newby, assistant business manager; man-ager; Betty Hodgkinson and Patricia Lemond, indivdual picture pic-ture editors; Robert Childs, fine arts editor; Nyra Colvin and Noreen Allred, clubs editor; Ar-dis Ar-dis Westwood, copy editor; Don Christensen and Dan Allen, photographers; Ray Gilligan, sports editor; Verla Ivie and Bonnie Stalker, faculty editors. Faculty advisor is Kent Watts. ine Democratic Party was the first to recognise that we live In a complex, industrial age which calls for different solutions from those of fifty years ago when the country was struggling for expansion and development. 1 Pol. Adv. by Democratic State Committee I PROTECTS VOUH STOCK Permanent, neat, sanitary, fire-proof, weather proof and economical . . . Utah-Idaho White Lava Building Block is the perfect answer to your building problems for livestock and poultry. Light and easy to use, too! ft; m HUNTERS: SHARON INDUSTRIES IS NOW READY TO CAN ELK AND VENISON AND WILL CAN BEEF, MUTTON AND OTHER MEATS FOLLOWING THE DEER SEASON. WE BUY DEER AND ELK HIDES All Canned Goods left at the cannery should be called for immediately to make room for venison, etc. Mrs. Maybelle Miller is vacationing va-cationing in Omaha, Nebraska. WISE to get your hunting footwear foot-wear to the shop Friday before the rush so you can get them Saturday! WE BUILD LOGGER HEELS IF WANTED! VEEN'S SHOE SHOP 546 So. State Orem Geneva Times Building YOURS FOR Smooth Sailing Enjoy fast, air-conditfoned travel in smartly appointed coaches, or the comfort and privacy of modern Pullman accommodations. Relax in the attractive club car, or stroll leisurely about. Eat delicious dining car meals you won't soon forget! The dining car feature for October is thick juicy steak . . . charcoal broiled to the point of perfection ... and served piping hot with the chef's special French fried onion rings to help enhance the fine beef flavor! Yes indeed it's smooth sailing . . . pleasant traveling . . . when you go Union Pacific! For details and reservations, inquire at the nearest Union Pacific ticket office. For Oepencfabe Freight and Passenger Transportation Be Specific . . . SAY To Shed Light on the World This Week THESE JUEIN HAU mis TO SAY: "If a substantial portion of our national incomo our national production are to be diverted (for rfefL ? for five, 10, or 15 years into the future, then our i1??e) standards must be cut back. That's going to mean austerity for everyone of us now if we are to n!0 in the future." CLTOE A. PUTNAM, presided? SB ional Association of Manufacturers. im "Never before have we so desperately needed kn ledge and understanding of foreign affairs by Amv an men and women and constructive public Hijp,,0o; of the problems involved." CORDELL HULL W1 secretary of state, in birthday statement. ' & "Increased productivity, not rigid government cm, trols, is the best answer of the American economy?" the 'long, hard pull' of combatting the greatest thro? to free peoples in the history of the world " LEON u KEYSERLING, chairman of the president's council nf economic advisors. 01 "The United States needs a good five-cent ideoloirv because it will lose the present battle of ideas if it no tinues to fight with the technology of 1950 with tZ ideas of 1850. The greatest weakness of Americans to. day is that we seem to know only where we don't want to go. We no longer seem to be explicitly creative and forward-looking in the realm of ideology." DR PT Yrw K.M. KLUCKHORN, professor of anthropology and dir ector of the Russian research center at Harvard univer sity. "Just as industry found it practical to integrate into large seal operations, the farmer has found it necessary to combine with his neighbors in providing cooperative marketing the fact that farmers on the average receive less than half the retail price for all the food they produce is proof enough that farmers still have a big job ahead in the marketing field." J. K. STERN of Washington, president of the American Institute of Cooperation. Co-operation. "We must ha,ve strong credit controls to cut down civilian buyin'g .... we must have much higher taxes, on a pay-as-you-go basis, to keep purchasing power down to a level of available civilian goods." STUART SYMINGTON, SYM-INGTON, chairman of the national security resources board. ' "Though God is in his heaven, it is up to man to make all things right with the world." DR. RUFUS B VON KLEINSMID, chancellor of the USC at jubilee convocation convoca-tion exercises at BYU on Monday. Mrs. Alta Walker of Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove spent the weekend with her daughter, Mrs. Sterling Sterl-ing Cluff. e Mr. and Mrs. C. Sterling Cluff, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Peterson Pet-erson and Mr. and Mrs. Mait-land Mait-land Spencer went to Morgan, Utah last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Hunn were Salt Lake City visitors on rriaay. Grant Richards spent the weekend at Smithfield, Utah. You can save yourself a lot of trouble by not borrowing any. Mrs. Charles Depen of Pay-son Pay-son spent the weekend visiting with her sister, Mrs- Ruby Hunn. A man is just as big as the thing that makes him angry. T-T-D THAT'S FOR ME fH AT IS IT? WHY IT'S UliL JUL u m TEJADUN DAYS! THAT'S FOR ME! 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