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Show ami Using our Investors AccuulatnPI Investors Mock r una lor a; a n - V'""" . ', vestment). With th.s common stock fund you become a part owner in more than 120 U.S. corporations. Call for free prospectuses; or clip this coupon. ZONE MANAGER'S OFFICE P.O. BOX 914 PROVO, UTAH 84601 Please send me Investors Accumulation Accumula-tion Plan and Investors Stock Fund prospectuses. Name. Street . City. .State. .Zip Fun Comes f t V m if, y . fr1 III II '"'I I II 1 1 1 V iinJlUIUXji It BIKE POWER-That's the real cry this year as millions of students hit the campus trail. Students of all ages are finding their bikes ideal transportation to and from school, and great between classes, too. . With the wide availability of sturdy and lightweight bicycles like the multiple-geared, highly maneuverable Japanese model above. 61 million Americans have already taken to bicycling, now the most popular participation sport in America. Bicycle clubs, competitions, and special spe-cial events featuring the sport, as well as thousands of miles of bikeway trails in hundreds of communities, have spread the fun of riding from coast to coast. And bike enthusiasts can also chalk up another asset for the sport. It's the exercise most often recommended by doctors for physical fitness. And it's ideal for weight-conscious weight-conscious Americans, too. 9K " national m mnpi ft m (n is octobi i i 4 Swtt SiiTH Stmt MMMHlit. MkmiMIt tMOl Investors Diversified Services, Inc. FounaaD 1894 j I in Cycles 5- .1 wiwm In Tune with the Times - OREM -GENEVA TIMES i Count on your newspaper, the independent inde-pendent medium, to bring you a well-NtwsPAPERs well-NtwsPAPERs rounded view of the world. Through MEo!irNENT the pages, of your newspaper, you're well-informed about current events and future prospects. You're well-entertained, too, with many special features. Turn to your newspaper! Weeks Wit 'What is so rare as a day in June? the poet asked. So far as I know he never got a satisfactory satisfac-tory answer to that question, although al-though the answer is a simple one: A Utah apple, or since a goodly share of the Utah apple crop is grown in Orem, an Orem applet Another poetess, Gertrude Stein, once wrote, A rose is a rose is a rose, and since the apple is really a member of the rose family, or Rosaceae, her poem might have just as properly said "An apple is an apple is an applel Since the month of October is the time when most of the apples in this area are harvested, harvest-ed, it's a good time to look "backwards in time to recall from whence the Orem apple sprung. And a long way back it goes. Although it is not mentioned by name in the Book of Genesis, the apple is thought by many to be the fruit of which Adam and Eve partook in the Garden of Eden, The ancestor of many cultivated varieties of apple is the common wild apple of Europe and western west-ern Asia. Some are also descended descend-ed from the wild crab apple, of Siberia. Apple trees were grown and prized for their fruit by the people of ancient Rome. It is believed that the Romans took cultivated apples with them into England when they conquored that country. Apple-Growing became common com-mon in England and many other parts of Europe. Both the seeds of apples and the trees themselves them-selves were brought to America from England, probably in 1629. John Endicott, one of the early governors of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, is said to have brought the first trees to America. Amer-ica. The cultivated varieties of apples ap-ples gradually spread westward from the Atlantic Coast. Indians Berg Mortuary S Services J Phon n 3-1841 J PROVO- ALVIN LEON JONES, Comp-ton, Comp-ton, California, funeral services were held Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel Chap-el of Provo. Interment in the Provo City Cemetery. DEBA BAKER funeral services will be conducted Thursday at .2 p.m. in the Agee Family Fun-, eral Home in Shatter, Calif. In-' terment in the Shatter CityCem-etery. CityCem-etery. ' ' 1 took seeds of these apples into the wilderness, and planted them in their villages. A white man, John Chapman, also helped to spread apple-growing apple-growing in the United States. He carried apple seeds with him whereever he went, and planted them in thinly settled parts of the country. We know him better as "Johnny Appleseed," the legendary legen-dary figure of the old West, APPLES CAME to Orem back in 1887 when Newell Knight, Sr., Newell Knight, Jr., JohnH.Strat-ton JohnH.Strat-ton and his father planted the first apple trees. The first peach trees planted by Newell Knight Sr. in 1885 seemed to be thriving in the gravelly Orem soil, and it appeared ap-peared that apples would do as well. The new irrigation system becoming be-coming well established on the Bench at that time assured the new apples orchards ample water, wa-ter, and they did thrive in this ideal four-season climate. Along with the pears, cherries, apricots and prunes, peaches and apples soon became substantial cash crops, and Orem gained a reputation repu-tation throughout the state for its quality fruit. Motorists from all over Utah would drive to fruit stands which became established along Or em's State Street. The quality of Orem's fruit earned for it a national market, and fruit came to be shipped from Orem by freight car load. In 1938 203 carloads of apples were shipped ship-ped from Orem. . TODAY, APPLE orchards in Orem are in several stages of maturity, assuring a large and continuing crop of this delicious fruit for many years to come. The Jonathan, Delicious, Rome Beauty, Beau-ty, Golden Delicious and Greening Green-ing varieties probably dominate Orem apple production, but many other of the nearly 10,000 different dif-ferent varieties of apple are represented rep-resented in orchards and home gardens. As far as quantity of apples grown is concerned, the State of Washington is the leading state in the nation. New York, Virginia, California and Michigan rank behind be-hind Washington in that order. However, when it comes to apple ap-ple quality: flavor, crispness, texture, color and nutrition, Utah apples can't be beat. In spite of the high-powered advertising that some states do to promote their apples sales, Utahns overwhelmingly overwhelm-ingly prefer Utah apples. Yes, the apple is the food of the gods. The ancient Greeks had a legend that a golden apple caused quarreling among the gods and brought about the destruction of Troy. Poets and storytellers of many lands have praised the beauty of apple blossoms and the goodness of the fruit. WHETHER IT'S flakey-crusted apple- pie, steaming baked apples, ap-ples, tasty apple salad, tempting apple dumplings, tangy apple sauce or delicious apple cider, .the Orem apple has my vote for the blue ribbon! Yes, an apple is an apple is an apple: as long as it is an OREM APPLE! THE SEARCH FOR HEALTH fit PORI FROM THE NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 8fiHisoi mum Research and Lang Cancer Population studies, animal experiments ex-periments and clinical examinations examina-tions have yielded conclusive evidence that cigarette smoking is the major cause of lung cancer. can-cer. This disease annually takes the lives of an estimated 59,000 Americans, of whom only 10 percent are nonsmokers. Research Re-search is being conducted to determine exactly how tobacco smoke causes cancer, and how smoking interacts with other factors which may influence the development of the disease. In order to understand lung cancer more fully, scientists need to reproduce the disease in laboratory animals. This is . a difficult task because no animal ani-mal will duplicate precisely the act of smoking as it is practiced prac-ticed by man. Scientists are attempting to produce lung tumors in animals by other means. Experiments in which tobacco smoke or extracts have been applied to the lungs or windpipe of animals have produced pro-duced changes resembling those that occur in the cells and tissues of heavy smokers. These may lead to malignancy. Among these changes are alterations in the cells which normally help cleanse the respiratory res-piratory tract. This allows the accumulation of foreign substances sub-stances which may be carcinogenic carcino-genic (cancer-causing). Scientists have isolated in small amounts and identified a few carcinogenic substances from among the hundreds of different chemical components of cigarette smoke. These substances, sub-stances, when painted on the skin of laboratory animals, or injected under the skin, produce cancer at these sites. Most of the carcinogenic substances found in cigarette smoke belong to a class of chemicals known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. 1 p.5-? .A SEVENTH GRADE OFFICERS recently elected at Lincoln Junior High School are, left to right, Gwen Walker, secretary; Ron Keele, president; Dorothy Black, vice president. - tlx V f ff . ' I DOUBLE-DUTY litterbag fori travel trash to HELP Keep i America Beautiful also appeals tor roadside aid. THUMBS UP siglrTis W 'Sf given happily by , Nj Janice Aldrin, 11, li?M t -...J moon-visiting astro-S astro-S . Xr55! naut's daughter. I""1 "-'I ' SUPER-CANTILEVERED is this new pipeline bridge over the Danube near Vienna. They say the "main plane structure is formed by two surfaces consisting of suspension suspen-sion and support cables inclined against vertical line." . "Vanessa is simply great" LIFE Magazine VANESSA REDGRAVE "THE LOVES OF ISADORA" Bawl iIHiihi Mints IU ' TECHNICOLOR' EXTRA 'SNEAK PREVIEW FRI. NITEH Sorry we can't tell you the name 'Natalie" -But - Come as late Fri, As 7:50 - See the Sneak and Isadora' NOW PLAYING I ITS THE DIG ONE TECHNICOLOR PARAMOUNT PICTURES (Ktunll -Jacli Lenin: ca MIA FP Kaffir Tit CVdfl t . i Couple ipmWJ l if TRIPLETS, a rarity among ti- presses, shown with Tiger Girl at Thurs. thru Sun. Cont. from 1:30 Other nites 6:45-9:20 PM SPECIAL El Dorado 7:30-11:20 Odd Couple 9:30 only WITH THE DIG TWO! A PARAMOUNT PICTURE andWkttertlattba JSW TECHNICOLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE m are j Orem-Geneva Times BY BOB BREWSTER LET BAD CASTS LIE! Casting for fish is like being a pitcher in the last game of a tied world series. Every throw has to be right. No matter what species you seek bass, trout, pike walleye wall-eye or crappie every cast should be made as if It were the winning pitch. Anglers who recognize this fact are often frustrated by the antics of those fishermen who don't appreciate the fine art of casting. But, according to the fishing authorities at Mercury outboards, bad casting cast-ing habits are easy to over, come. Long casts are seldom necessary neces-sary or desirable. For one thing, the longer the cast the less chance of hitting your intended in-tended mark. By motoring quietly to within easy casting distance and not dropping the tackle box in the boat you'll not scare any fish. In other words, be quiet and get up close. Your casts will have a better chance of landing where you intend them to go. Overcasting the mark is another an-other common fault which can be corrected. When working a shore line, if the lure goes beyond be-yond the intended site, it may become entangled and youU scare any fish around trying to get it loose. Depth perception is an individual indi-vidual matter, and each fisherman fisher-man has his own formula for determining distance. A com 2nd SMASH WEEK! Not that it matters, but most of it is true. Now! - AT THESE Thurs, Fri. Sat. Sun, from 1:30 Other nites from 5:30 So f illed I with magic you'll ' hardly believe your eyes ! V.. amiTniPairuic '- N. HUM LI UlOilCI O if; r - Albert SHARPE Janet MUNRO i. Kit RON MOORE ESTELLE Hr DivlnlHilnl Hi HUINI . Co-Hit Uinta-r MICKEY MOUSES I BIRTHDAY PARTY "... t, nl i HEY!! BOYS GIRLS - LOOK! FRIDAY AT 2:00 PM - SPECIAL! "DARBY WILL BE HERE" (Free Drinks To First 100 Kids! Thursday, October 9, 1969 mon method is to examine nearby objects and Judge the distance by their relative size. This is then translated into the degree of arm power put into a cast. The result hopefully hope-fully is a perfct cast. The third casting rule is simple. When you nuke a bad cast, let it lie! The Mercury lads advise that you dont tear the water to a froth by Immediately Im-mediately Jerking the lure back to the boat. Fish it back. Who knows, it might be the best cast you've made all day. BEST PICTURE flFTHF izzzf YEAR! WINNER 6 ACADEMYAWARDS! COLUMBIA PCTURES munn tw ROMULUS proouction,. LIONEL BART'S Mats. Sat. 2 & 5 Sun. 2 p.m. Evenings 8 p.m. only F" J NATliNAl atWtBAlCOftfOBATlMi LFODH tneatre l230 lil2ndW.t 374-5526 20th CENTURY-FOX PftESENlS FnUL NEWMAN ROBERT REDFORD KflfmMifSE ROSS BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID STAR APPEARANCES CO-HIT PIONEER ONLY "PLANET OF THE APES" Regular Admission Prices PIONEER: 7:45 ACADEMY: 6:30 2 THEATERS! OREMonHWY. Open 7:15 PM Cont. from 7:45 PM "A TECHNICOLOR' Sean CONNERY Jimmy O'DEA W1NW00D WALTER FllGERALD Dsli-bul'iH C. In I4h!l ,ill Oimwi PrnliitlOTt r- Co-Hit Genev 3 'BLACK BEARD'S GHOST 'J, 6 |