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Show TUGS - Mrs- Ernest Wilson and Midren of Laurence, Utah and fcien Baldwin and children 5ihi visited with their grandmother, grand-mother, Mrs. Thomas Wells last , jjr and Mrs. Roy Humph-JL Humph-JL and family spent Thanks-Tinfi Thanks-Tinfi day in Logan with their fflnts. They brought their Sby back with them. She has Ln visiting with her grandparents grand-parents while the Humpherys Vere getting settled in their neW home. During the Thanksgiving holiday holi-day Mr. and Mrs- O. Q. Elder entertained at dinner for Mr. Ind Mrs. Delbert Wilcox, Mr. jd Mrs. J. D. Wilcox and Mr. and Mrs. Von Trandson, all from American Fork, and Mrs. Barbara Bar-bara Graff from Wellington, Utah. A Sunday dinner was enjoyed by Mr- and Mrs. R. D. Rice and family of Cedar City; Mr. and Mrs. C LSpohn and family of Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. Uax Brady and family and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Elder of Orem. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jarvis and son and Mr. and Mrs. James Brant and son of Tooele spent Thanksgiving day with Preside ent and Mrs. William C. Faulkner. Faulk-ner. Mr. and Mrs. Ral Triplett went to Logan Monday to attend a funeral. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1833 Uncle Sam Says (2 Armistice Day is, by custom, the day we remember our dead and the wart they have won. But this is also a time to think about living- American! Ameri-can! too and the struggle we all (ace today to keep those Ideals of liberty lib-erty and human dignity (or which they rave so much. Ton can help make America strong by making yourself and your family stronger through the wise use of prosperity. A regular Investment In C. S. Savings Sav-ings Bonds through the Payroll Savings Sav-ings Plan where you work will assure security for you and for your country. coun-try. NOW LET'S ALL BUY BONDS! U. S. Traofury Otpartnwil Mr. and Mrs. Grant Cluff and family have returned to their home in Meridian, Idaho following several days spent here with Mrs. Cluff a mother, Mrs. Grace McEwan, and Mr. and Mrs C. Sterling Cluff. YOU CAN HAVE IT PRINTED III OREM! Wedding Invitations tAt Personal Stationery Misionary Programs Personal Cards CLUB HANDBOOKS, LETTERHEADS, HANDBILLS, TICKETS, POSTCARDS CUSTOM PRINTING ttm-Sttttita JLxmtB Quality Printing Done Quickly PHONE 0684-J1 FOR ESTIMATE $50 SOUTH STATE ST. . OREM A house party was held at the home of Nadean Nielsen Friday evening. Helping with the program were Joan and Nancy Lewis, Opal Roberts, Wil-lard Wil-lard Gerber, Max Hill and Arthur Ar-thur Woffinden. The party followed fol-lowed a Thanksgiving theme and candy turkeys were given as favors. Games and dancing were enjoyed by the 20 young people present. I0 mmm'i : LEE RIDERS (Sanforiud Shrunk) AUTWNTIC WISTIRN COWIOY PANTS MEN'S 3.75 BOYS' 2.49 ILK OVERALLS A, (SonhriMd Shrank) I BOYS - 2.49 MEN'S 3.98 FLETCHER'S Provo, Utah 368 West Center "HERE'S THE DIGGEST READING BARGAIN EVER!" . . . GREAT SAVINGS FOk YOU! THIS NEWSPAPER AND ANY UAGAZINE LISTED DOTH FOR PRICE SUOVII MA1I II "Z" BirOlI MAGAZINE DEBIHED. ERCIOI1 HIT VITI OlBIl AMSaCAN OSSUL AMEXKAN HOMI AMEZKAN MAGAZINI AMERICAN POULTRY JOURNAL. BREEDER'S GAZETTE CHRISTIAN HERALD COLLIER'S . CORONET COSMOPOLITAN ... COUNTRY GENTLEMAN FARM JOURNAL AND FARMER'S WIFE FIELD AND STREAM FLOWER GROWER . FRONT PAGE DETECTIVE... GOOD HOUSEKEEPING . HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINI . LOOK McCALL? MAGAZINI MODERN ROMANCES -MOTHER? HOMI UFI.. NATIONAL LIVESTOCK PRODUCER $4.00 . 5.50 . 6.00 . 3.25 , 3.50 . 4.75 . 8.00 , 5.25 , 6.50 3.50 3.50 5.00 4.50 4.25 6.50 3.50 6.50 5.50 4.25 3.15 3.25 OPEN ROAD (Boys) $4.00 OUTDOOR LIFE 5.00 PARENTS' MAGAZINI 5.00 PATHFINDER (26 Issues) 4.25 PHOTOPLAY j 4.25 POPULAR MECHANICS 5.75 POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY..- 5.25 POULTRY TRIBUNE 3.25 RADIO & TELEVISION MIRROR..- 4.50 READER'S DIGEST 5.75 REDBOOK 5.00 SATURDAY EVENING POST 9.00 O SCREEN STORIES . 4.25 SENIOR PROM 4.75 SKYWAYS 4.75 SPORT MAGAZINI 5.00 SPORTS AFIELD 5.00 TRUI ROMANCI 4.00 TRUI STORY - 4.00 THI WOMAN 4.50 WOMAN'S HOMI COMPANION 5.50 NIWSPAPBt AND MAGAZINI FOR ONE PULL YBAR Mtmw 4 to S Wmt for Hm CpU tt MnlM la Jbrf. dit orms Alt QUAIANTIZDI CM ijitiiii dmind mi mmdom with tompam. PVm sead ma the ofer Mi . jMdi sataoripdesi ( ymm papet. HAMS CKUJI. FOtronxx "Dolled-Up Dobbins Making a Comeback On Western Farms GLENVILLE, Minn. According Accord-ing to P. H. Cottrell of Glenville, who deals in horses, the once beast lor burden on the American farm is staging a comeback. But now he has a new role. He Is becoming a pet. He'll earn his keep by giving the farm pleasure of horseback riding, but use of that energy is a far cry from that he used to burn up tilling the soil. Cottrell reports the horse Is finding find-ing favor In southern Minnesota which is so highly mechanized that farmers don't even swat mosquitoes by hand. The section used to be proud of its Clydesdale, Percherons and Belgians. Bel-gians. Now such animals are as unusual as a 1912 Maxwell and at county fairs a matched team of Clydes get more attention than the midway. The draft animal gave way to tractors. And something went out of rural living. A farmer and his team of horses held each other in mutual esteem. They worked for each other's living and fared equally in the fortunes of the battle of wresting wrest-ing an income from the soil. Cottrell reports farmers are now offering fancy prices for saddle animals. ani-mals. To meet the demand he has Mad to go to the Dakotas and Iowa for stocks. It's a grand life the nag Is leading lead-ing now. Fed, groomed and cared for like high-priced milch cows, .hey go to the fairs trimmed with satin ribbons. Shed no tears over the horse. He's on his way back to a proper sta-'lon sta-'lon in rural America. Russians Remove Prisoners' Pallor With Sun Tannins UDINE, ITALY - The Russians Rus-sians want their prisoners to appear ap-pear healthy. As a result nine Mussolini diplomats got a month's sun-tan treatment to remove re-move their war-prison pallor before be-fore they were returned to Italy. The diplomats, arrested in the Italian legation at Bucharest and Sofia in 1943, were returned to Italy after seven years' confinement con-finement in Russia. When a reporter expressed surprise at their healthy appearance, ap-pearance, one of the group said they were taken from their Moscow prison and sent to a Soviet camp near Vienna. There they were ordered to spend their days In the sun. Trawlers Dragged at Sea, Captains Blame Submarine PORTLAND, Me. Two fishing dragger captains reported recently that they thought the mysterious underwater object that almost sank their ships was a Russian submarine. subma-rine. Capt. Arthur W. Jordan of the 110-foot Cherokee said that ten minutes min-utes after he had lowered his nets and made them fast with heavy steel cables, the nets were pulled taut and the boat was pulled, stern-first, stern-first, for 25 minutes until the cables snapped. Soon after that, the Cherokee picked up a distress call from the dragger Evzone, commanded by Captain Jordan's brother, Thomas. The message said it had been pulled astern for 90 minutes until the cables snapped. Both captains ascribed their experiences ex-periences to a Russian submarine because the Coast Guard reported there were no America! submarines subma-rines in the area. Neither did Canada Cana-da have submarines there and It was not a whale, they held, because the cables had been snapped by metal. Pet Pig, Squirrel Follow Ohio Youth to His School CHILLICOTHE, O. Jerry Peck, a first grader at Western school, has a pig, Susie, and a squirrel, Sugar, and they follow him to school almost every day. The pig trails along behind Jerry, and the squirrel races along or rides on the boy's shoulder. His mother accompanies him to school so she can take the pets home. Susie is one of -. litter of 12 which was really more than its mother could feed. She was only a few days old when given to Jerry. A bed in a basket was provided on the Pecks' back porch, and Jerry fed Susie milk from a baby's bottle. bot-tle. The squirrel, Sugar, was a gift from a humane society officer who found it in poor condition after its mother had been killed. Jerry used a doll baby's bottle to feed Sugar who would throw the bottle down when it was empty. Now the baby squirrel has grown and has a bigger appetite. The squirrel even insists on sitting on Jerry's shoulder at breakfast and begging toast and jelly. Orem Area Servicemen, Missionaries Sgt. Raymond L. Gordon 19311119 1st Maintenance Group George A-F.B. Victorville, California PFC Glen W. Gordon 19334639, Hq. Co. 2nd Bn. 31st Inf. A.P.O. 7, c0 P.M. San Francisco, California. Kenneth Balser Rt. 4 Box 389 Riverside, California Luke C LeFevre, G. M. 3 U.S.S. Toledo (C.A. 133) 4th Division, co F.P.O. San Francisco, California Thomas G. LeFevre 369-39-17, S-l, U.S.S. Toledo (C.A. 133) co F.P.O. San Francisco, California H. A. LeFevre R.M. 3 Cominron One Staff U. S. Endicott D.M.S. 35 co F.P.O. San Francisco, California PFC Kay DeVon Adams 28922391 Hq. Bty. 145 F.A.B.T. Fort Hood, Texas Rulon Adams, D C.W. 2 General Detail, U. S. Naval Rec. Station, Treasure Island, San Francisco, California Sgt. Willis D. Adams, 19011411, Hg. 2 Hq. Bt 145 F.A. Battalion Fort Hood, Texas Cpl. Marion D. Bliss AF 19352961 1273rd A. T. Sqdn. A.P.O. 226 co Postmaster San Francisco, California Eldon Rawlings Veterans Hospital Lyons, Colorado Gerald Muzzell A.F. 57600125 432 2nd Food Service Sqdn. A.P.O. 927 San Francisco, California Elder Lloyd K. Davis 32 Hess St. So. Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Cpl. Thomas W. Cluff R.A. 19334118 538th Eng. Mt. Co. A.P.O. 660 co P. M. San Francisco, California Sgt. Lewis L. Miller, 19334068 610th A. F. Band Tyndall, Florida William H. Cluff, 56059073 Co. C. 48. A.M.B. Fort Hood, Texas Shirley H. Allen Pfc. R.A. 19352537 114 Signal Service Co. A.P.O. 66 co P. M. New York, New York Staff Sgt. Doyle Pulsipher 39918103 Susion 5th Vehicle Sqdn. Field A-F.B., California. R.C.F. Kenneth Williams U.S. 56058777 Holding Co. Hospital Fort Riley, Kansas Sgt. Ramon Bilboa 19316223 Det. 241 Air Postal Sqdn. A.P.O. 917 co Postmasteh San Francisco, Calif. Ret. Kay R. Davis U.S. 56059051 Co. E. 102 nfantry Reg. 2nd Bn. 28 Division Camp Atterberry, Indiana Elder D. Scott Wilkinson No. 8 Greenfield Parade Bankstown N.S.W., Australia Mrs. Allen Johnson enter- ttined for her son, Allen, at a birthday party Friday evening, A picture show was enjoyed and refreshments served to his many friends present. T. Frank Coppin Frank Coppin Gets Top Job at P. E. Ashton Co. T. Frank Coppin, veteran em ployee of P. E. Ashton Co., this week was named assistant manager man-ager and sales manager of the Provo Chevrolet-Buick dealer. Mr. Coppin was elevated to this important managerial post foll owing nine years service with P. E. Ashton Co. during which time he served as service man ager for six years and used car manager since then. Prior to coming to Provo he had been employed for six years with Arch Browning, Inc., Buick agency ag-ency in Salt Lake City. An active civic worker, Mr. Coppin was a member of the Provo city recreation board for four years. He is a member of the Kiwanis, Footprinters, and Provo Boat Club, Also active In scouting, he is now a scout com missioner. He filled an LDS mission mis-sion to Holland in 1929. Mrs. Ida Carter has been in Salt Lake City this week with her son, David, who underwent an operation. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mc-Clain Mc-Clain have purchased a new home in the Edgemont subdivision subdiv-ision and are moving into it. GET GENUINE SAWDUST RUBBER TREADS AT YOUR DEPENDABLE OK Rubber Welders 81h South and Stat St OREM YOUR ATTENTION FLEASEI PEOPLE DONT Go driving just to read the bi3 boards PEOPLE DONT Have windshield wipers so there will be a place to tack advertising advertis-ing matter PEOPLE DONT, Build front porches to hare a place where circulars, shopping sheets, etc. can be thrown, D U T When they lay a nickel on the line for a copy of the Orem-Geneva Timet, you can be sure they bought it to read-You. read-You. advertiser!, are assured they will got their nickel's worth by going through the paper carefully. Every Dollar spent in newspaper advertising advertis-ing will net far better returns than ten times the amount spent for any other kind of advertising. Throughout this Locality Everybody Reads " The Orom-Gcnova Times Your HEADQUARTERS FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS IS YOUR OREM GENERAL ELECTRIC Dealer . . . A I. DUCKETT SALES AND SERVICE 1 Door North of Utah Power and Light Co. Phone 0767-RI Th& Jacket that Know its Place -and Keeps it 9 Mr. and Mrs. Birch Boyce visited with friends and relatives relat-ives in Vernal on Thanksgiving day. Metal Beds Termed Safe In Electrical Storm ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Emmet Cox, Chicago fire prevention expert, reported the safest place to be In a lightning storm Is in a metal bed. He explained this to the annual meeting of the National Fire Prevention Pre-vention association. A lightning bolt entering a room would follow a metal bedstead and leave Its occupant oc-cupant unharmed, the expert said that Your Family Should Have 4-Way, Low Cost Idaho Mutual Benefit Ass'n Life Insurance ...wgndlen of yeyr income. L MERLIN RASMUSSEN . 635 North 1st East Prove Phone 1038-W f "7 DRIZZLER GOLFER NYLON-PROPORTIONED BLENO Dead, squirm, itoop or turn, McGregor's Drizzler Golfer never leaves your Met DrizzJer meant dazzling fit It's done with band of elastic that hugs your tips snugly yet comfortably. Drizzler is smooth, wind and water-repellent, ttnplofwtsfcabb. I108S Mwt Stek ta U.S.A. ft in if r Provo's Finest Store for Men PROVO, UTAH |