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Show THE Bridge Spans Polomac River o a one-wa- y e d mid-ba- y ter. Europe has the largest masonry arches. The record is the arch at Plauen, Germany. 295-fo- ot Royalty Visits American Farm OSWEGO, m. King Paul of Greece was a guest while in the United States of the J. George Smith family. The Smiths, who own and operdairy and hog farm, were chosen because their farm was considered typical of the region 45 miles west of Chicago. Mrs. Smith, 34, said upon hearing that their farm had been chosen, "I don't know if we can quite come up to this, but we'll try." The visit, however, went off without a hitch and was pleasant for all concerned. The Smiths have four children, Nannette, 11; Cheryle, 8; Kent, 5; and Lois, an infant Mrs. Smith objected to part of th officially suggested menu for the royal guest. She agreed to serve fried chicken, squaBh, string beans with bacon rind and green ate a S50-acr- e apple pie. The Smiths are graduates of the University of Illinois, he in agriculture and she in home econ- omics. Dogs Do Not Mind Living in Flats BAR IIARBOR, Me.-Clar- ence vice president of Guide Dogs for the Blind, says dogs prefer thinking to running and don't mind living in small apartments. If the landlord is willing, there "is no reason why a puppy can't be quite happy in an apartment," said in a lecture B. Johnson Memorial Laboratory. Pfaffenberger demonstrated a puppy pen he designed for apartment use. The cage keeps the pup safe and clean and automatically housebreaks him. It prevents him from chewing furniture and soiling carpets. And the pup thinks it a treat when tikes out for s romp. Pfaffenberger at the ce j , j e d were-wpt- above-describ- Roscoe wire-botto- Tourists Flocking To Baja, California WASHINGTON Mexico'i Baja (Lower) California, one of North America's most scenic yet least known regions, is emerging from its wilderness stats. Throughout the "back door" to the United States, sandwiched between the Pacific and the Gulf of California, a development boom is underway. In less than a decade the population has doubled. Towns are expanding, and paved highways are being rushed to completion. Fishing and canning Industries have stepped up production, and irrigation projects promote agriculture. Resorts and dude ranches have sprung up along both coasts. Nine airfields are in operation. Private Mail System NEW YORK A majority of country editors answering a questionnaire sent out by the magazine American Press say the Post Office should be turned over to private business. A total of 73 expressed belief that private business could handle the Tost Office better than the government has been doing. The magazine sent out the questionnaire to test sentiment regarding an editorial which suggested the possibility of letting private business handle the mails. Of the 228 editors who filled out the questionnaire, only three thought the idea impractical. ed u-h- n - son-in-la- Broadhead, Nielsen Named New Assistant Foremen w m-i- n ' two-thir- ds 14 Win Suggestion Awards One-ten- th - J 30 Million Babies Born Since War Eight-year-o- ld ed s, i s 1;;';""''" . 20-6- 20-6- J. Pfaffenberger, pest-oifi- Puzzles Doclors 100,-OO- I?54 DEPART- envelopes accompanied by certiUNITED STATES money MENT OF THE INTERIOR, fied checks or Bureau of Land Management, orders made payable to the Treasthe Land and Survey Office, Salt urer of the United States for Mr and Mrs. Arthur Scott spent bids. The envel-- I of the amounts 1954 Lake 27, Jan, City, Utah, Known , Saturday in I'rovo. in the lower Under provisions of section 243o, o'w-.- miKt hp marked corner -- Public sale bid, R. S., as amended by section 14 ieft-hanMr. Shaw Norman and and Mrs. 1 of the act of June 28 1934 (48 Serial No. U OT4U1. Sale, warcn family of Murray visited with! Stat.. 1274; 43 U. S. C 1171). and 3a VA at 10 A. M. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Shaw overij reend. week the pursuant to the application of The highest bidder will be NEW YORK Doctors are puzHorace Monroe, of Scipio, Utah, quired- to pay immediately the zled by a new "mystery" disease, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Randle and Serial No. U 07401, there will be amount thereof. the which acts like flu, but isn't, and daughter Marjoiie of Eureka offered to the highest bidder, at Any adverse claimants of file is apparently far more common. end puesU of Mr and Mrs. j; land should a public sale to be held at 10 Dr. Jonas E. Salk, of Pittsburg, o'clock A. M. on the 30th day of their claims, or objections, on or George A. Sperry, parents of Mrs. March, 13o4 next, at this office, before the time designated for recently described the disease to tne following tracts of land: sale. The Bureau of Land Managethe American Public Health AssoPrivate James M Ktrrihensnn. SW'A NW'4 Sec. 12 (40 acres) ment has not searched the records ciation. He reported a new vaccine son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stepat not less than $2.85 per acre. of Juab County to ascertain the which would protect against the henson is home for a few days NWViSWU Sec. 12. existence of an adverse claim. SEWNW'4, i flu virus, but said there's no pron ho is nn fiirli'iiK'h Hf has (80 acres) at not less than $2.00 Any contiguous owner claiming ht-C.;A-fit Fort Ord. tection as yet against this "X" ctatinnnd i a preference right must assert per acre, SV'SW! NE'SW?4, disease which usually hits during ifornia and will leave Friday for t :m?c. iz. YVNW. SEviNWVi right within 30 days from the a new assignment af Fort Bliss. L. flu epidemics. Sec. 13 ( 200 acres) at not less above sale date. RUSSELL E. NIELSEN GLENN D. BROADHEAD The exact causa of the new dis- Texas. ERNEST E. HOUSE, than $3.00 per acre. All in town ease is not known and it is possible ship 16 S.. Ranee 2 West. S. L Mrs VI IT Stuart snnt- tun Hnvs Manager M. (A total of $87400 for the en- Dates of publication: February 11, that it might be the of last week in Orem visiting tire tract.) No part of this land 18, 25, March 4 and 11, 1954 in "Virus V", blamed for grippe-lik- e and daughter with her win The Times-New- s, be sold separately. Nephi, Utah. ailments. and family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Bids may be made bv the Dr. Salk, who developed both the iai lit a ' cipal or his agent, either personal NOTICE OF STATE new polio vaccine and flu vaccine, Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson and From Thermoid Western News LAND SALE Glenn started with Thermoid ly at tne sale or by mail discovered the mystery ailment Bids sent by mail will be con family of Trcmonton spent the Two Thermoid Western employes Western January 13, 1943 as a Notice is hereby given that in during studies of Influenza and his week end with Mr and Mrs. Twit-only if received at this nf. accordance with law the STATE He subsequently sidered received promotions during Octob- press helper. vaccine at Fort Dlx, N. J., during ard Sudweeks. fice prior to the hour fixed for LAND BOARD of the STATE OF served as a er November. and tank press operator, the last few years. The "X" distne sale. Bids must be in sealed UTAH, will on March 8, 1954, at Glenn D. Broadhead was named lmcr and process instructor. Mr. and Mrs. L, Dwanc Tidwell ease accounted for about 2 P. M, on that day, offer at assistant foreman in Molded Hose Russell's service dates back to of all soldiers hospitalized and children visited Sunday in in October and later was trans- June 10, auction in front of the public when he started 1948, Moroni with Mrs Tidwell's parents Court House in Nephi, Utah, the during the wintertime flu periods. Mr. and Mrs. Forris Blackburn. ferred to Flat Belt, Miscellaneous as a lead pot operator. He later Blood tests prove when SEfcNEK, WHNEVi, NVNW Moulded, Fabric Cutting and Tank held various jobs in the hose deperson and NE'SEU of Sec. 22, T. 16 has the real influenza. Russell E. partment and was an Mrs. E. O VVhiUington has re Lining Departments. forewas So., R. 1 E., S L M, con. 200.00 made after Neilsen assistant The "X" disease causes fever turned home having spent inspector and process inspector at acres, m. or 1. The land may be and all the other symptoms of about four weeks in California. man, Molded Hose, in November. the time of his promotion. , to the highest bidder, subsold Mr. visited with she While there flu. but the attack is usually mild, to the provisions of Title 65, famPeterson Mrs. and ject J. M. lasts from one to five days. To and 1, Sec. 40, Utah Code AnMrs. of Chap. Mr. and Hoaldesburg, ily date, no deaths have been attribFrom Thermoid Western News notated 1953 and other acts apMr and Mrs, Hoy Whittingt.on, uted to it. Dr. Salk believes that Leo Fourteen Sugestion Awards to- plicable thereto. The land will Stuart, Mrs. Dave Waloff and the existence of the "X" disease $115 were presented to not be sold for less than the ap talling all of Richmond. Hopkins, Roy Thermoid western employes dur- praised value thereof, and the sale may explain why the new flu vacMr. and Mrs. John Wells spent ing October, November and Dec- will be made only to citizens of cine sometimes seem to fail to ember. the United States, or those who work. His tests proved that the two days last week visiting in First prize of $15 for October have declared their intention to vaccine gives real protection Ileber City with their son in law went to Harold Liddiard, Molded become such. Mrs. W. W. against flu for at least two years. and daughter, Mr. and Hose; second prize of $10 was of the Terms of Sale: But the "X" hit equally among Scribner. won by Elmo Anderson, Finished in cash at price purchase payable troops vaccinated against influenza John S Wells of Reveria, Calif Stores, and $5 third prize went the time of sale, with five percent I and those not vaccinated. ornia visited with Mr and Mrs. to Earl Ingram, Rotary Hose. El- interest on the remainder of the The problem now, according to John Wells last week. mo Anderson also received a $5 sale price to the first of January award for a suggestion in use. Dr. Salk, is to find the cause of cfollowing, plus the $2.00 CertificMr. and Mrs. W. W. Scribner, November's top winner was Eu- ate fee; the remainder of the pur"X". The influenza vaccine can Mr. .4 gene Hintze, Mill Room; number chase price to be divided into not then be expanded to protect son in law and daughter of moved have Mrs and Wells, John two man was Ralph Boswell, Mold- more than twenty annual payments against the "X" as well as against from Whittier, California to Ileber v ed Hose, and third prize winner with interest at the rate of five the flu, he said. ... was Ove Lund, also of Molded percent per annum on the deferred , City where they will make their Hose. home and operate a Dairy Queen. Three suggestion in use payments. awards went to members of Mold All mineral is reserved to the Dr. Neil W Brough and two ed Hose: Bobbie Olsen, Harold State of Utah. Bleek-ert, Bernice Miss Liddiard and Ferry Ostler. Harold daughters, and The Board reserves the .right to II his secretary, all of Salt won one on his own, and shared refuse all bids or to withhold the Lake City visited at the home of the other with Ferry. tract from sale. MINNEAPOLIS Since the end Mr. and Mrs. Reeve G. Richardson Ralph Boswell, Molded Hose; By order of the State Land of World War II, 30 million babies and other relatives In Nephi last Jesse A. Bailey, Molded Hose, and Board Jan. 5, 1954. have been born in the United week. Jay Howell, Rotary Hose, received LEE A. YOUNG, States. Due mainly to this postwar the $15, $10 and $5 prizes respectLITTLE BIG BUSINESSMAN Jay Loewer MANAGER baby boom, the number of young plow to work on his neighbors sidewalks ively in December, while Howard Dates of publication: February 11, Mr. and Mrs Ralph Carter have puts his Taylor, Rotary Hose, received the 18, 25. and March 40. 1954 in after a recent snowfall in Dayton, Ohio. Jay is one youngster who people under 20 in the U.S. Is returned home after spending $5 check for his suggestion in use. The Times-New. has learned to combine pleasure with business.' now 11 million greater than it was just a month in Salt Lake city. Nephi, Utah. in 1940. This is a growth equal to the combined populations of Chicago. Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Detroit and Cleveland. Since 1940 the number of people aged 65 and over has risen by over four million. Thus the population in the essentially dependent age groups, young and old, has gone " A . , - -up 15 million, against an increase of only 13 million in the number of the age group persons aged to whom the dependent population must look for shelter and the production of goods for their living necessities and comforts. v':"In 1940, people in the age group 59 made up nearly from per cent c! the total population. Today they comprise 56 Mi per cent, and by 1905, if population factors conT m m me mm ..www. tinue at about their current retes, 52 only per cant of the American people will be in the group. This will be approximately the w same ratio as prevailed back in J X i I j WASHINGTON Traffic experts believe the world record for the heaviest traffic load some automobiles and trucks a day goes to Washington's Highway Bridge. Close rivals for this dubious honor are the Manhattan and Queens-borbridges at New York, the Bridge and the San Francisco Bay Bridge. Their daily loads, however, have not equalled the 118,000 vehicles that once crossed the two spans over the Potomac River. District of Columbia authorities seek an additional bridge to Virginia to ease the jam. Most of he world's biggest bridges arch, suspension, steel truss, movable, timber and floatinghave been built in the United States. The Golden Gate Bridge at San Francisco and the George Washington Bridge at New York, 4,200 and 3.500 feet respectively, are the longest suspension spans. The Bayonne Bridge, crossing the Kill van Kull to link Staten Island with New Jersey, is the world's largest arch bridge, spanning 1,652 feet. San Francisco-OaklanThe seven-milBay Bridge, which touches on a island, is the longest bridge. Next to it ranks Virginia's James River Bridge, which crosses five miles of water and marsh. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge, measured from abutment to abutment, is the longest bridge over an unbroken expanse of waCamden-Philadelphi- II fh. February Thursday, Nephi Items Mysfery Disease, Cause liol 'World's Busies! NEPHI, UTAH TIMES-NEW- S. 4 """w, 20-6- 4 - 1M v 1900. Four-Year-O- Runner ld Leads Sheriff Chase HENRYETTA, Okla.-L- aw cers in this Oklahoma town gratulated one another a who when four year old, "runs like the dickens" was finally returned to his parents. The boy barely lost two close races to the sheriff. The child, staying in Henryetta with an aunt, decided early one morning to return home to Okmulgee, which is about 15 miles away. He got out of bed and away he went running at top speed. The excited aunt called the sheriff and the chase was on. The officer caught up with the boy still running about seven miles from Henryetta. Ills duty done, the sheriff hauled the lad bssls to the aunt's house and returned to his office. A few minutes later he received a second call. The boy was off and running again. This time the sheriff took no chances. When he overhauled the running boy, he took him under his arm gently, returned him to bis office for safekeeping until the parents arrived. fleet-foote- d vW offi- con- Air Force Chow Pleases Palates of Gourmets GARDEN Air CITY, N. Y. Force chow pleases the Gourmets. At least, it pleased the members of the Gourmet Society of New York, who usually eat plates at six dollars or more at only the best places. They called the meal delicious. The mess officers of Mitchell Air Force Base invited the 70 members of the society for ham with horseradish sauce, csealiopsd potatoes, peas, ice cream and layer cake. The Gourmets went through chow line like G. and ate from mess tray compartments like veterans. Some of them went back for second, even third helpingj and the mess sergeant was called out for a general round of applause. I thought Jim was exaggerating. cars. But about You know how men are what a difference it really makes to ,. : drive a car built for traffic! These wonderful power features that thrilling , and engine! V-1- you can't imagine what 'it's like to escape from traffic tension brakes. No-shi- ft Merc-O-Mati- that make driving ! A power seat Power steering. Power They're the optional features c liquid-eas- And wait 'til you feel rJ2EC2CUEJV Priced for Western budgets The Car Ball-joi- nt front suspension! the West Likes Best Powered for Western driving 60-ce- nt If " G3?:e.par;i:i i:mi go. - 70 South Main Street Phcne 312 liephi, Utah -- |