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Show THOSE BEAUTIFUL GREEN PASTURES This 'N That ! Ethyl Nielsen Hsi "7n order-that they may be placed under treatment and cured then the White Plague may be stamped out made as uncommon as small pox has become. It isn't likely that there are many persons with TB in Orem. This isn't the kind of a place where the disease thrives; however, chest x-ray examinations are now considered a routine helath procedure for all persons 15 years of- age and over, and such examinations have been made so easy that it is almost unpatriotic and unsocial to, ndglect the exam. Starting Friday the chest X-Ray machine of the Utah Tuberculosis association will begin its stand in Orem. It'll be here from next Saturday until June 29, and will be set up at convenient points throughout the city. Check the schedule e'sewhere in todny's paper, then plan to. take care of it. The exam takes only a minute or two, does not require the removal of your clothing, and it's all paid for in advance. Those Christmas Seals you purchased took care of that. mi. t j, i lllii. ill F . 1 llllfillM.,,... ' M vV" ' dZrT' V , IS-Tr J 1 T M;, 1,1 Nf . S mi ft n in ft i f f m m IT fhwtsTK I 1. . 1.1 III If XV ,N Writers' Conference Set at Utah U The third annual Writers' , Conference at the University of ; Utah will begin Monday, June i 19, on campus under the direct- ; ion of Prof. Brewster Ghiselin ' of the department of English. ! Seven leaders have been signed sign-ed for lectures and workshops to be held as part of the conference. con-ference. In addition to Prof. Ghiselin the two week sessions will feature Louise Bogan, poetess poet-ess and short ostry writer; Allen Al-len Tate, poet critic and educator; educat-or; Irwin Shaw, novelist and dramatist; Marjnrie Flack, author auth-or and illustrator of children's books; Harry L. Shaw, general editor for Harper Bros, publish- )ne company, and Walter Van Tilburg Clark, novelist and short story writer. Hobnobbing High The father of our country was a lover of ice cream. During the summer of 1790 George Washington bought $200 worth of ice cream on Chatham street in New York. This was the site of many of the first ice cream shops. General Washington Wash-ington brought home from Philadelphia Phila-delphia a "cream machine for mrking ice" and owned "two pewter pew-ter Cl .praam nrtts ' N 1 i Top dollar style Never before could you get o much car beauty for so little money . . . only Ford has been selected for the Fashion Academy Award for two successive years. Top dollar "Go" Only Ford in its field offers you a choice of "Go" power . . . either the smooth precision-built 100-h.p. V-8 or its companion-in-quality, a. - j i n c u e: i Independence Bond Drive Still Lags After Three Weeks After three weeks of the seven-week Independence Bond Drive for the sale of United States Savings Bonds, Utah still had purchased only $439. 872 out of iis quota of $2,316,- 000, Cera S. Schramm, state i director for U. S- bond sales I announced. There is one saving factor, however, according to Mr. .Schramm. The mechanics of reporting re-porting the funds is such that a number of known high totals did not show up on the third week report, nor did the report include any post office sales, which will be included in the next summation of the accomplishments accom-plishments of the drive. Mrs. Arvella DeLange had as her house guest last week her sister, Mrs. Ted Thomas and two children from Price. Henry D. Jones of Pleasant View and F. H. Keith of Orem were honored last week by officials off-icials of the Wasatch Southern Gasoline company when they were presented with wrist watches for superior cleanliness rating in the operation of their service stations. Mr. and Mrs. E. Carlyle Bunker spent last week vacationing. vacat-ioning. in Kanab, Utah. Kit The Spot In behind-the-scenes areas of factories, stores and service shops, a white-painted corner frequently promotes better housekeeping. Indicating In-dicating the location of a trash receptacle, re-ceptacle, such a white spot -suggests subconsciously that workers take good aim and reveals the presence of dirt that should be removed. I MUST REMEMBER TO FORGET FOR-GET Hi, i The very hardest thing I have to do is to remember to I forget. Life with its reverses I its complexities, is a constant j reminder of things that should ; be foreotten. and everyday in some way we are reminded of some thing that we should forget. for-get. It takes a heap of trying I'll admit, yet if we are to find true happiness and success, we will definitely have to learn to forget. As far back as I can re- member my parents and teach ers stressed tne vaiue oi remembering re-membering remembering this 'n that but not once have -the know-hows said a thing about remembering to forget, nor do the most enlightening books written by noted authors give hints on how to remember to forget ... Hate is an emotion that is. wrecking the world peace and prosperity. Greed greed for power and prestige for money to buy things that' cannot make for health or happiness. Lie and . Deceit are two things that shake man's faith in humanity. . . . Warped, twisted thinking instead of thinkng in a,,straight line, for a thing is either right or wrong, life is just that simple, sim-ple, that easy to figure out'. There's only today and tomorrow to-morrow to be lived, the past is gone forever and we cannot live backwards. No matter what the yesterdays were, we can build a strong future and a happy tomorrow to-morrow if we remember to forget for-get the sordidness of the past and my advice, for what it is worth, is "to remember to forget." for-get." Today that more secure future can be started if you remember re-member Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poem: So many Gods, so many creeds, So. many ways that- Wind and wind When just the art of being kind Is all this old world needs. If we could master these four lines there would be no need to remember to forget. Gweneth Adams returned Sunday from a two week vacation vacat-ion with. Betty Eastman in American Am-erican Fork.' fin V Ift n Tin . long dollar mileage Not only do miles seem shorter in a Ford, but they cost you less. A Ford is economical to buy, economical economi-cal to run and, because of its long-lived quality, high in value at resale tune. t) A f Top dollar value Ford brings you big-car features at small-car cost . . . features like Ford's 35 easier-acting brakes, Sofa-Wide seats, smooth "Mid Ship" Ride in a sound-conditioned sound-conditioned "Lifeguard" Body a body that's built and finished to "live outdoors." Come in and "Test Drive" a '50 Ford Today! A NEW AND BETTER ; 'RENT DAY' When you buy or build a home with the aid of an FHA Mortgage Loan from Farmers and Merchants Bank, the payments on your mortgage are made each month, very much like rent. The difference is this: You have the satis-your satis-your loan, thereby increasing your interest every payment is applied to the principal of faction of knowing that a substantial part of in the property. In reality you are saving money instead of paying it out. t The Mortgage Loan Department of the Farmers and Merchants Bank is now prepared prepar-ed to put your Mortgage Loan through promptly and without needless red tape. kv provo : j UTAH THURSDAY To Shed Light on the World This Week THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY- "Nonpromotion is an admission of aniimi school program and has no place in a school wherein ren are properly motivated and work to the level fa capacities. What is looked on as a pupil failure m a teacher, supervisor, or administrator f f CLYDE V. WINKLER, Carbondale,- 111. suDeri? '? of schools. -"Penntenden; 1 "Fight the new deal and its socialistic plan v what's right and what's wrong and be prepared to t by your principles." Gov. J. Bracken Lee, at GOP inating convention. r "Money is the sole American standard of value n nations are heading for hell and it is Amerira v v leading us there." CYRIL JOAD, professor of Jhi& at London University. pmJMI "May the United States continue to keep itself m1' arily strong and cooperate fully with the other countries of the world in a united effort to prevent future that, without such cooperation will assiLi bring either Russian domination of the world with T ery of all peoples, or an unthinkable war that 'will W in its wake- complete chaos for the human race " ' w J. L. BLAIR, retiring president of the General W tion of Women's clubs in keynote address at annual! vention in Boston. uai "I am ashtonished at the reluctance of the aclminV . tion to embrace the idea of a trans-Atlantic federate of democracies. What is ultimately needed is a ml wide union including as many nations as can be incore ated within it in the near future. . . ; ." Senator m "When the final results of the U. S. Census for IM are in I predict you will find that Orem City has exwr ienced a higher rate of growth in. the past 10 vew man jiis exuy inner city in me siace. Mayor J. w GILL MAN, following announcement of Orem's tentative m ulation figure on Monday. . w itr . r . . yur program ior peace ana treedom is necessary uesigneu ai present to Duna a strong community of free nations which can resist Communist er that aggression takes the form of internal subversion or external attack." President TRUMAN at. University Thorit C Hebertson, principal prin-cipal of the Geneva elementary school, will leave this week for Berkeley, California wnere he will attend summer school at the University of California. ua,- jicMie warns as Mike returned' Sunday from two week . vacation with ft Max Fransbns in Wendova. Egg Quality Tv plbumen of the egg which is secreted by the glands of the oviduct ovi-duct is germicidal and retards the development of most bacteria. As a result, most . eggs are aseptic when first laid, however, subsequent subse-quent methods of handling of the eggs frequently result . ia . contamination contami-nation and thus lowered quality. . Shipping Fever Carrien An animal which .recovers h: an attack of -shipping fever is &' ly to remain a carrier of fc disease, yet it is .impossible to tect carriers just hy looking i them. This explains some o! lis outbreaks that occur after a be' ber of animals from dllewt sources are brought together , after new individuals with uninou histories are added to a herd. a chaih, and. . . . VfStTD HZ PCKED VP. SAMAIti tmMED mi club mrm , PLANNED A PiCNIO . . ', !W0 m SIS BEMCCM SUITE . . . UMNtU AMU! WJKMH Htn enu How did th do it? By telephone, of course. No wonder she says, "I always feel my telephone is worth more than it costs." The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph C Paul D. Vincent, Gen'l- Mgr- Hume 1000 Provo |