OCR Text |
Show THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1950 OREM-GENEVA TlflUfiS Orem - Geneva Times Published every TL.mday at Orem, Utah M. NEFF SMART. . Edilor and Publither (niered at second class matter November 19, 1944 at xha potto:!. ' at Orem, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1897. MEMBER: Utah State Press Association Subscription Rates: One year, in advance $3 00 under 1.2 otletge FRUIT MARKETING AGAIN This column has been used at intervals to express opinions opin-ions about Orem's fruit industry. Primarily we have emphasized em-phasized a need which we see for the area to improve its program of marketing so that Utah (and especially the Orem area) fruit can hold its own in the competition which goes on in the nation's Igrocery stores! (Studies have shown that while Utah fruit is among the best for flavor, it is not "asked for" even by Utah county housewives.) house-wives.) . For that reason we were vitally interested in the prospectus pros-pectus of the annual convention of the Utah State Horticultural Horti-cultural society which cnme to our desk this week. It looks like the Utah fruit growers mean to do things. The society has lined up the best talent available for Friday and Saturday, Jan. 13-14, and a good share of the speakers are programmed to discuss marketing. "Selling the Utah Anple," "The Farm Bureau Fruit Program to Assist in Fruit Marketing," "What Growers Can Do to Sell More Fruit Through the Local Markets," "Getting Tree-ripe Peaches to Midwest Consumers," "What Utah Growers Must do to Sell Peaches to the Midwest Market," "What Growers Can do to Sell More Fruit Through the Local Markets." These are the problems pro-blems which must be solved if local fruit growers are to maintain the area as Utah's top fruit center and operate with profit. We hope something can be done to reverse the present trend of shrinking acreage in Utah orchards. IF A MORAL FITS If it wasn't so obvious, we should be tempted to point a moral of global proprtions in retelling the etory of four shodawy figures moving with stealthy purpose in the dim lamplight of a St. Paul alley the other night. They could be Russia, the United States, and some other countries. They could be a labor representative, a representative repres-entative of industry, and but you hew to your favorite subject and let the symbols fall where they may. The Associated Press tells it. Two detectives were called call-ed out to see what a suspicious looking man was up to. They found him at one end of an alley. Questioned, he told them he was a watchman in a nearby building and was watching a suspicious looking man at the other end of the alley. They circled round and came upon the other man from behind. He informed them he was a watchman in another nearby building, and at that moment he was watching that suspicious looking fellow at the opposite end of the f MoW HAPPY COWUp Jtfll A3J .r- ViTliCQ MrAS J V.IV my " if ivv ,rfjJ& (1 S Sir A. L. Duckett Shows 1950 Chrysler Cars The 1950 Chrysler, described as having completely new and distinctive styling inside and out, went on display today in the showromg of A. L. Duckett Sales and Service, 312 South Univer sity, Prove A. L. Duckett is the Chrysler-Plymouth dealer the Provo-Orem area. for Mr. and Mrs. John Houston Houst-on and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. Leland Cunliffe in Midvale during the holidays. Dr. Jones has returned home from a hospital in Salt Lake City and is reported to be improving from injuries received receiv-ed from a fall. Mrs. Simpson Day recently returned from Salt Lake City, where she went to attend the Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Allred spent part of last week in Bear Lake visiting with Mrs. Allred's mother, Mrs. Emma Porter. alley. We congratulate the AP reporter on his self-restraint which made it possible for him to tell the story unadorned unadorn-ed by a moral. Shall we leave it that way? J-CSM OF.EM FlaST WARD Blanch Chrlstensen 0854 Jl The speaker for the Sunday evening meeting will be Elder Herbert Patten, a returned missionary miss-ionary of Vermont ward. Special Spec-ial musical numbers will be given. giv-en. Meeting will start at 8 p.m-in p.m-in the new chapel. Joan Muhlestein, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Muhlestein, had the misfortune to break her arm. She is reported report-ed to be getting along fine. The new Chrysler has entire1 ly new upholstery in virtually j funeral of a relative all modelsjan entirely new body style available in both the six and eight cylinder lines; improvements im-provements in the instrument panel, larger brakes on the six cylinder models and an improved improv-ed booster on the brakes of the eights; increased visibility thru a rear window that has 27 percent per-cent more glass area; a slight increase in height, width and length, a wider rear tread on the sixes and numerous refinements of features on the 1949 models. Nineteen body styles are listed Different styling features have been incorporated in the sixes and in the eights, so that one is readily distinguishable from the other. LINCOLN WARD PRIMARY SETS FIRST MEETING Mrs. Delia Aiken, president of the Lincoln ward Primary announced an-nounced that meetings of that organization will start next Monday, Mon-day, January 9 at 3:15 and will be held each week. All children of the ward are urged to attend- Working with Mrs. Aiken are Merle Stubbs and Lucy Rowley as counselors, Hilda Park, secretary sec-retary and a group of excellent teachers. Edythe Trotter left Sunday for Logan where she will enter the USAC. This 'N That Ethyl Nielsen Hair mrrmrmnmnninnmitniiMimimmHifiMinmimimmHimmHitiiimnm A Request: TAKE WHAT YOU READ WITH A GRAIN OF SALT. HI Folks, The New Year is well on its way and I am back to writing this column and am swamped with requests. First I want to thank my many fans and friends for the fan letters and phone calls to say nothing of the many favorable comments I get on this column. So I any always pleased to write a request column, and I surely hope I don't dissappoint my readers too much. After all they can take what I have to say with a grain of salt. . . . While reading theReader's Digest, Di-gest, Dec. '49 issue (I hope by now you have read it) There's an article "Your Mind Can Keep You Well". At the top it says "Half the people in hospitals have thought themselves into their illness." What nasty disgusting dis-gusting thoughts some of us have still there's something to it. But again I suggest you take what you read with a grain of salt- We've about overdone this psycho business. Of course, the psychiatrists would differ with me greatly. I know a woman who had a terrific fever. . . her doctor said, "I can't find a thing wrong with you, lady your illness is in your mind." "I know it is," replied re-plied the lady, " my head is splitting1." Long, long after after too much expense and many doctors, it was proved that she had undulant fever, a disease dis-ease acquired by drinking unpasteurized un-pasteurized milk. On the other hand I have a relative who has a terrible headache head-ache every time life gets her down. Her house work piles up, or she doesn't get to go to an entertainment she has had her heart set on. These headaches have been going on for a long time ever since she was a child, she says. Now she has found a doctor who understands her headaches and she is fast be coming a dope fiend. Again I am reading "Psycho somatic Medicine," by Weisa and English. On page 42 there is a chart you might be interested in reading- There is listed the personality per-sonality traits that make for a normal personality, for neurosis and psychosis. I suggest To Shed Light on the World This Week ,4 THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY: "We feel the time is ripe here in New Hampshire to consider an amendment of .the law to permit voluntary euthanasia (legalizing mercy killing) for incurable sufferers upon their petition and with the recommendation recommend-ation of a medical committee and approval of the courts." Mrs. ROBERTSON JONES, executive vice president of Euthanasia Society of America. "Our foreign relations are greatly improved over what they were a year ago. There seems no prospect whatever on an armed conflict." TOM CONNALT, chairman of the senate foreign relations committee on Saturday. "The Soviet military court .... by sentencing 12 former for-mer Japanese army officers on charges of experimenting experiment-ing with germ (warfare) struck a blow at Anglo-American imperialists." IZVESTIA, Russian newspaper. "Such a step (protecting the island of Formosa against the Chinese Reds) would help erect a wall against communism com-munism in the Pacific and offer a continued hope of some time turning China in the paths of freedom again." HERBERT HOOVER. "I appeal to every member of the AFL and to all the friends of labor to ... . register and to vote in 1950. We are confident that we can elect labor's friends and defeat labor's enemies. It will be possible to repeal the shame-.f shame-.f ul Taft-Hartley act. . . ." WILLIAM GREEN, president presid-ent of AFL. "Nothing has occurred or will occur to change what I said the day after election last year. Nothing could arise now or in the future, that would lead me to be the nominee for our party in 1952. .-. . . My decision on this matter is as certain and final as death and the staggering stagger-ing New Deal taxes." THOMAS A. DEWEY, governor of New York and GOP candidate in 1948. "The survival of Totalitaria depends primarily on bad relations with Western democracies. There is a smell of the jungle about these dense growths of words which smother old conceptions. . . . Part of our species is being conducted by sedulous apes back to the tree-tops. tree-tops. . . . ," Lord VANSITTART, British career diplomat. read this book and again I sug gest you take the book with a grain of salt because there are some disgustingly healthy phys ical specimens who will spend the rest of their lives in a mental hospital. And that is a fact that cannot be ignored or explained away with a 64 dollar word. And let me add: If there be one among you wno nasn i thought to himself, "I'm going nuts" when life gets to the point that you feel that you can't wade through reverses that just pile up. . . - let him speak up, and all I have to say is nuts to you, you 'darling. Mr. and Mrs. David Mac-kay, Mac-kay, Leonard and Mi's. Mary Mackay spent the weekend in Salt Lake City with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mackay and family. Leah Taylor, who teaches at a Salt Lake City grade school, was home for the holiday and re- j turned to her teaching on Tues- f day. I' Miss Betty Foster has re-; turned to Orderville where she) teaches school after spending the ; holidays here with family and friends. i 95 TI:o Oonoafilonafl Blew fopv SLEE Elder Paul 'Washburn is home again after filling an mission miss-ion in Canada. Blanche Christensen and Mrs-Dodge. Mrs-Dodge. Mrs. Selman announced Mrs. Miriam Bradshaw of the int nexi tuesaay wui be the Relief Society stake board gave I work and business meeting at 2 the teachers topic at the Re- P m- with claf lea Edith lief Society meeting on Tuesday. Kitchen in charge. The ladies Blanche Christensen gave the wi wrk on quilt blocks and leson on The Life of Jesus, His S last Winter." Testimonies were The Relief Society ladies are given by President Zina Selman, planning a bazaar for sometime Ella Washburn, Eliza Anderson, in March. Front end styling features an entirely new die-east grille, com prising three heavy horizontal bars, topped by a fourth bar that curves down at the ends. In the sixes, a new rectangular parking light is located below each headlight head-light between the top and bottom bot-tom bars of the grille. These bars extend out to wrap around the fender. Mrs. Lucy Tippetts was a Salt Lake City visitor last Saturday. FOR SALE Grocery store closing out. Reduced Re-duced prices on groceries and equipment. Ralph's Market, 273 N. State St., Orem. nounnnBEsnano Salle Girls Dresses Fast color prints and percales. Values to $3.00. Nylon Hose First Quality 5- Gauge, 20 Denier. $1.49 regular. .1 NOW $1.00 SPECIAL $1.00 Men's Dress Shirts Real specials on Close-outs of values to $3.00. White SWEATERS and colors. Close-outs of values do $4.00 SPECIAL $i.ca I N0W $i.5o ' MEN'S and BOYS' Anklets Flannel Shirts . , . . A Values to $2.00. Odds and ends of values to 39c SPECIAL $1'C3 SPECIAL pr. Ladies House Dresses ladies and children's Fast Color prints and percales. Rayon Panties $3.00 Values. Values to 69c. NOW CLOSE-OUTS PIL Nineteen body styles offered in the Royal, Windsor, New Yorker,- Saratoga and Crown Imperial series Entirely new upholstery uphol-stery in all models. Larger brakes on six-cylinder six-cylinder models. 27 percent more glass area in, rear window. If The Chrysler 1950 New Yorker four-door sedan, with restyled longer rear fenders, more massive bumpers, . new radiator grille, better visibility from the larger rear window and powered by the 135-hp. Spitfire engine. Eight brand body colors. new O Brilliant new grill. O Exciting new rear fender treatment. I . I A J 7 ''IXi i r Rear view of the Chrysler Windsor series Newport, new steel top "convertible" with distinctive styling around the rear window and no window or door posts to obstruct the view when windows are down. Interior of the 1950 Chrysler New Yorker four-door sedan, showing the new arm rest on the doors, a waffle pattern In the door panel upholstery and the center arm rest in the rear seat Front hampers tw inches wider than preceding model and new style bumper guards to compliment deep-section; bumper. Improved instrument panel. Servicing of Presto-matic Presto-matic Fluid Drive Transmission made easier. Different styling features in sixes aid eights. New artistic ttl light grouping. " Oil DISPLAY THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY AT YOUR PROVO-OREM CHRYSLER DEALER OPEII UNTIL 9 P. M. A. L , DUCK TT All sales final No exchanges or refunds U fl" o tt o Zz c r 1 c 368 WEST CENTER PKOVO, UTAH SALES & SERVICE PROVO 312 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVE. PHONE 135 |