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Show OHEM-GENEVA TIMES SKATES SHARPENED SAWS FILED JBy Machine er Hind SCISSORS find BLADES SHARPENED WELDING CARTER'S REPAIRS NEW GENEVA HIGHWAY Utah County Mattress Factory COMPLETE-MATTRESS COMPLETE-MATTRESS and BATT SERTICE Only Factory la Vtah County "We are not represented by an; transient mattress workers, bu will call for and deliver wtti out extra charge. JUST PHONE 345 Or drop us a card 681 West 2nd North PROVO UTAH FOR SALE Native Lumber O. E. Wilde 265 East 6th North, Provo Phone 886J IMiiinitimiiiiinimiiiiimi4iiuiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiumiiiniiiii I FOR SALE i NEARLY NEW General i Electric furnace oil gun and 1 275 gal. tank on legs. COMPLETE for $110. 1 159 N. 4th East St., Provo I Phone 691W I I or see LaVon Payne 1 1 ' ' i amtiwiiiiwiMiiMWiuwaiuiuiiiiiHiinuiw! ,miwuiuwiuiia WIIMIIIIItHHMIMIIUllimWMI"W"""'""""w"l'ml'"lT I FOR SALE ALMOST NEW 1 4" Delta Joiner only $46.00" I BURR'S SPORTING GOODS umsmttmtttmsx If you Uke ska kast try SnelsroTc's DistinctiTC ICECREAM SCERA SNACK BAR FmtJXT PTJXC3 COMCEKTRATE for partisa ::::::::::::::::::::: Mini I J LILLY'S I PASTRY SHOP S 1! 407 West 1st South, Provo 0 Phone 1430 M SPOTLIGHTING UTAH St George Temple, Gets Mew Orercoat The St. George Temple, which has been under renovation for several months will blossom out in January with 'a new outside coat, white as snow. A Salt Lake City Corporation has been engaged en-gaged in removing the old plaster plas-ter placed over the original red sandstone walls in 1876. Oddly enough, the. new outside finish is cement, not plaster, and is being applied by "airgun" in the hands of trained workmen. The finish coat will be "gunned on" cement, a permanent hard fin ish requiring no painting or, upkeep up-keep other than washing. When also and will be white stucco completed, the St. George Tem pie in its brilliant new white covering will be the first object to attract attention of the tour ists and others passing through the region. Utah's Scenery Scores Again Al Morton, Salt Lake City amateur movie photographer has won the Hyrum Percy Max- ium World Memorial Award for the best non-theatrical movie produced pro-duced this year. Morton's subject was Utah's Colorado Kiver. Titled "Adventure on the Color ado" the picture was filmed in southeastern Utah and portrays some of the finest river running scenes ever photographed on the Colorado. Morton is already on his way to the premier showing of his film and the receiving of the award at Hartford, Connecticut, Connecti-cut, where he will be a guest of the Amatuer Cinema League of the World. Last year, Morton's picture, the "Call of the Can yons," also filmed in Utah, won third place in the Union Pacific movie contest and has. been pur chased by the Utah Department of Publicity and Industrial Development De-velopment as a loan film to be distributed throughout the na tion to clubs, groups and indi viduals interested in seeing west em scenic pictures. Incidently, the State Publicity Department has it eyes on Morton's Colorado River picture as a similar med ium to Publicize Utah. Utah Needs More Ice Skating Ponds Mrs. Avard Fairbanks, wife of the famous sculpture, Avard Fairbanks formerly of Ann Arbor, Michigan, and presently Dean of the University of Utah's school of fine arts says she misses ice skating in Utah. Hav ing a family of eight boys, she -says she has a trunk full of ice skates bright from Michigan and wonders where they can be used. "You need some ice skating ponds out her," she declares, In answer, it is pointed out that in the valleys, Utah's winters win-ters are so mild that the ice skat ing season is very brief. However, How-ever, Utah's ski-nic mountains furnish, the best skiiing in the world, and Utah youngsters are so taken up with skiing that (hey have little time for ice skating. South Utahns Want More Electrical Power Iron and Washington county citizens are " palling a special meeting to work out a means of solving the electrical power shortage in those areas. The group has already discussed the possibilities of promoting the installation of a Jarge steam operated op-erated electrical plant using lo cal coal as fuel. The group takes, the stand that ueiiuer me ci lies nor xne indus tries ofj Washington, andlren'f. Counties can develoD further un less additional sources cf electrical electri-cal power can be provided. It was pointed out that an approximate approxi-mate loss of $300,000 was suffered suf-fered last season by agriculturists agricultur-ists of the region because of insufficient in-sufficient electrical power ; to pump water for irrigated areas Ii in the Escalante desert, Cedar I II Valley and Parowan Valley. j II Pulling on the Brakes !j The simple act of putting on'li the automobile brakes is to be 3 given special study by the U. S. ii Public Roads Administration. Re- II search of this nature started in j! 1941 as a safety measure but II was stopped by the war. The II new program of "putting on the !l brake research" will be started Ii this spring and will determine II such things as stopping distances j of automobiles at certain speeds H with certain brakes. In the mean- II time, the Utah State Road Com- jj mission is considering placing a jj 35 miles per hour speed limit on jj highway 91 between Salt Lake ii and Ogden as a means of mak- ii ing this particular highway safer ii for motorists. ii Air Travel Upped The U. S. Department of Com- II merce says that air travelu be- II tween the United States and Eu- ; rope, strangely enough, are not 11 people of the higher income jj group, but come from the mid- ii die income group the same ii individuals who before the war ji went by steamer, second or third H class. In the meantime the Utah II State Department of Publicity jj is stepping up its publicity ef jj forts hoping to turn American.;! minds westward, to seeing Utah II first. If the great American mid- jj die class can travel to Europe by jj plane, they certainly have the jj cash to motor out west and see jj the attractions of their home PLEASANT VIEW Sunday-' evening the Pleasant View ward choir furnished ft Christmas . concert, at the Mt View ward in Salt Lake City. Ap proximately 75 members trav eled to Salt Lake to participate Elder Briant Jacobs was narrator and speaker. The choir rendered several numbers, with Harold Peterson, Stanford Ekins, Stanford Stan-ford Patten and Diantha Ekins singing solo parts. C. Sterling Cluff Is choir director, Harold F. Peterson is manager, and June Gammell and Kenneth Perry are organists. Earlene Foote was hostess to the Sunday School, officers and teachers at a Christmas paicy at her home on Friday evening. Gus Noren conducted clever games Delicious refreshments Were served to the 25 guests present. ; A special Christmas progran will be given next Sunday at Sunday School. Monday evening the Sharon Stake MIA dance was sponsored country, it is pointed out. Navajos Get Food . By this time, hundreds of tons of food donated by UtahuS is being distributed among the Navajo Indian nation in Utah, Arizona and New Mexico. Man's benevolence to man has again been demonstrated and the hungry hun-gry have been fed. There are still several months of winter ahead and it is hoped that since the newspaper talk about the Navajos is subsiding, the Nava jos will not be forgotten and allowed al-lowed to starve during the balance bal-ance of the winter. W1ff wnwrimxnmnnnmnnMnn n V. S? ' !- : ; p rf A ff . - Never a Christmas morning i Never a Christmas morning, i in ever an old But that someone thinVs nf () someone - Old days, old times, old. friends! i ; , . : ; ' ; OREM FLOWER SHOP jjf !$ In This Joyous Season cf Christmas we want te renew all our old friendships, want each of you to feel your importance to us, and to realize that without you the story would have been quite different. A very Merry Christmas to all of you, friendly people of this community! ElnGbeo'c E3ocno by the' Pleasant View ward. The semi-formal affair was held in the Pleasant View recreation hall "Winter Wonderland" was the theme. . , , iia.i The ward .MIA will hoi Open Night on Dec. 23. The pro gram will consist of 'One Elack Out,' a three-act play, speeches numbers from the class in music and dancing.' Howard Nelson Orchestra will furnish the music The Daughters of the Utal Pioneers held their regular meet ing Thursday at the home of Mel ba. Cluff. Ida Ercanbrack gave the lesson, after which a Christ mas party was enjoyed. Diantha Ekins sang a solo, accompanied by Melba Cluff. Marian Ercan brack read the Christmas story, "The Other Wise Men." Laura Perry conducted clever . games and gifts were exchanged., Refreshments Re-freshments were served by the co-hostesses, Melba Cluff, Laura Perry and Leah Peterson. Mr.' and Mrs. Paul Crandail have just returned from a two week trip thru Arizona, Texas and New Mexico. Ray Hanks and Frank Woffin-den, Woffin-den, Sharon Stake High Council members, visited the Priesthood Sunday morning. Mrs. Vineyard of the Sharon Stake Sunday School Board was a visitor; at Sunday School. The M-Men and Gleaner Girls held a Fireside chat Sunday eve ning at the Trotter home. Games were played and group singing enjoyed. Delicious refreshment were served by the hostess. The greatness of a loss, as the proverb suggests, is determinable, determin-able, not so much by what we have lost, as by what we have left. , Bovee year ends, 'J .... '..---'ii " d h n '"fi - 0 PITTSBURGH, PA. This boy and his dad are shutting the Chimney flue not to keep out old St Nick but to cooperate in the national effort to conserve fuel this winter, with fuel demands at an all time peak, only public saving of heat will assure all homes being warm. Besides closing the chimney when fires are out. Gulf fuel oil research laboratory advises these basic conservation measures: Make sure your furnace srives 100 efficiency calling the furnace-man furnace-man if in doubt; keep temperature at or below 70; shut bedroom doors if windows are open at night; shut off and do not heat little . used rooms; seal heat in home by caulkinr cracks, weatherstripping fgjndows and doors, and insulating roof and walls if possible. ( LAKE VE7 TO Gordon ZoBell 011-R4 The ward members were fur nished a rare treat Sunday even ing when they were entertainet by the Mendelssohn chorus at sacrament meeting. The chorus was under the direction of Elvis B. Terry, and featured special artists who are now attending the BYU. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Madsen, their son, LaVor and daughters, Donna and Ruth have returned after visiting with their son, Milo Madsen and family , in Boise, Idaho. . - - Rhodes Jeppeson of iake View and Bert Adams of Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove have returned after t business trip to Burley. Idaho. ; . The residents of Lake View 'are now enjoying their first Christmas season with outside lighting. The "Welcome" monu ment at the . south end of the community has been illuminated by a flood light, there is also a decorated Christmas tree on top pf the monument. Lighting of the tree and monument will continue throughout the holidays. The Book of Mormon Club, builders of the monument are also the sponsors of the lighting and the decorations. The Forget-me-not club gave a party honoring Mrs. Dean Tay lor at her home in Lake View last Thursday. Rook was played and prizes" awarded to Mrs. Leon ard Adams, Mrs. Floyd Hcrrick and Mrs. Earl Groo. Other mem bers present were Mrs. Irwin Bunnell, Mrs. Tony Madsen, Mrs. Malinda Jorgensen, Mrs- J.-Jacobseh J.-Jacobseh and Mrs. Griffith Nut-tall. Nut-tall. ' Our bravest and best lessons are not learned through, success but through misadventure. A. Bronson Alcott Adversity makes a man wise though not rich. Thomas Fuller For Real Christmas SAVINGS - Shop in Orem at PATE HEATING & APPLIANCE CO. ,. . MAJESTIC RADIOS G. E. WATER HEATERS G. E. ELECTRIC BLANKETS APEX WASHERS & VACUUM CLEANERS OIL AND GAS HEATERS RITTENHOUSE CHIMES GAS APPLIANCES Open Evenings until 9:00 O'clock o PATE HEATING and APPLIANCE COMPANY Contract Wiring and Lighting Fixtures r jkl. kovzl n.. 1 C LV:2,CO C2 V.Tim rim n r .tat. ' j r r- IT TrS LUTJ2 TT-- u r.r2j KZCZ CF FA.-23 KXLD III K33 IT IN rUZZ.ZZT IT in a accx c" x.tzo tr mi. r-"t r rr. ' QEZm ANO PLANTS TRANSFORM TKS H0UC2 FOR THE HOLIDAYS. frnT' t(- I ,. -on: t;i I " u u x izz c.::ji ' The Sunday School will present pre-sent a Christmas program Sunday Sun-day morning. There will be no class work. .. ;t A large group of relatives and friends greeted Mrs. Ellen Humphreys Hum-phreys at open house held Saturday Satur-day at the home of Mrs. Ruth Clegg a granddaughter. Gifts and cards were presented her and refreshments re-freshments served. Mrs. Humphrey Humph-rey celebrated her 91 birthday December 1Q. " '' , The "Book of Mormon" group who recently -finished a two years study of the book held a get together and banquet at Virginia Vir-ginia Manor Saturday evening. Desmond Larsen acted as master of ceremonies and an interesting program was carried out. Barbara Bar-bara Anderson was president of the group and Edna Gillman was their class instructor. Others Oth-ers attending were, Bishop and Mrs. Taylor Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Max Blake, Mr. and Mrs-Wilson Mrs-Wilson Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. David Da-vid Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Alton Morrill, Rex Blake, Grace Gam p 4p- m- If) U iT WS ARE THE WORLD'S MOST INVIMTIYS RAC5 AND YET WE HAVGm '. FOUN3 A KCM WAY C? SAYING "MCSRY CHft.'T WAS." CAYTE ITS J'.CT A3 .a WELLI in any Pfixx, we can WRASE NO BETTER MIS- SA6E FOR THIS JOYOUS SEASON THAN THAT AN- . CIENTWCi UTAH VALLEY Furniture Company' 210 West Center Proro II' 11 i " - & - I AT CHRISTMAS TI.'.!E ll 111 VI W lliyil 01 BUT VIIIWI UWII people feel friendly. It's in the very air. In this spirit, then, we offer you our best wishes for a very Merry Christmas. B & H Pharmacy i it 1 s ,6j( Vj. t, A, Wv. 16- Yj. t t! mon L;: : Ing, ,Le : and Cerili i; ; . Ver.'Cu--' - i " J o1J--r 1 r." ' , . i Allen, l lr. i. l : , . v mond Lu...i. . Mrs. Florence C" " ' C ".- Ietta, Calr-'-j, 1j ' - latives here, the r . x end with JZr. t. I - 1 .a Iloldawzy. . ,, . : Mr. and Mrs. .icr " I -i Will leave atury i ,r Lv Grande, Orern 1; l t wl I spend the holidays wi'Ji t. 'i x ,r-ents, ,r-ents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. L: :n. The ' Relief Socl'y i r.l Christmas Tarty. . will I s I old Tuesday at the love'y ne" ' h--ne of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyla 1 .r ;r. Gifts are to be exchan;i iud a program presented. All women of the ward are invite i. Saturday evening st the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Hsrertjon the Sunday School oi.icers and teachers will hold a preperat'an meeting followed rv t? amr-al Christmas party. V, - f :ve cent gifts are t3 te ( anC i. The Junior Sir ';y I jl officers of-ficers and tr- ' rs 1 have charge of the ies all ifre.h-ments ifre.h-ments and .11 c icers ati teachers tea-chers and partners are invited to attend. These are the i 71 j--i wizi to shop cajel-I'.y, I; i nomically, and j:y nl: '7. You can't fully r z?i:zz7.3 uca ra w j t-.i a aivanta-s of our n.ir r-victt. r-victt. We sell feeds, sesls 1 1 a complete line of ctockLi. $408-100 B.Nt.yt. 18 Frcljia jjonrjNnj r.ioor: II fouloaio !1 West c-- rr ii :::::::::i:.'-:i:::!:K::::a::K:!K:::K!:::i:!a:::::j::: ' i U i ! U u u f t, i t u u u I 1 1 1,1 u u i i I i i I i i , i : a - ' njm K um k njtf |