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Show L : i l 1 9 ft Is ! i OEEM-GENEVA TIMES Mrs. Eugene Armstrong and children of Brigham were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ferry L. Nielsen, Thursday, March 22. The United States produces about 40 per cent of the world's minerals. FIELD SEED ! lb. ALFALFA, Utah . Al Common, Grimm, Ladec SWEET CLOVER .25n Annual, Hubane SWEET CLOVER M White or Yellow Blossom RED CLOVER .44 Strawberry CLOVER 1.25 SMOOTH BROME .20 'j TIMOTHY .11 ORCHARD GRASS 46 Seed Grains cleaned and, treated, 19c per 100 lbs. On Tues, Thura, and Sat Call us for prices on certified Bliss, Cobbler and Russett Potatoes SUNDER FARMS Business Hours; Daily ex cept Sundays 8 a. in. to 6 p. m thdneProvoOliR-S "Geneva Steal I Across From Us." 3 FERTILIZER , ' Sulphate of Ammonia 20.8NHrogen Content $2.43 cwt. Palivart In 803 lb. or larger lots Utah Valley Distributors Prove? Utah Phone 1829-J (After 6 p. in.) ; KITCHEN CRAFT Heavy Aluminum Ware NOW AVAILABLE Shown by Appointment Write or Phone 067R5 Provo R. D. 2. Box 29. Oram. Utah RICHARD A, BREWER ELITE BEAUTY SHOP It's Time For Your Spring Permanent Now Personality Hair Styling No, 1 Christeele Acres Phone 093-R4 Orem Electric Water Heaters JUST ARRIVED Immediate Installation and Delivery For Details Phone 053JS YOUR WINKLER STOKER DEALER GENEVA SUPPLY COMPANY Complete Electric Service Orem, Utah New Shoe Shop v OREM SHOE REPAIRING "Open For Business " Shoes Neatly Repaired rlSV, .While You Wait. J",. Located North State in Orem by , -1 i prestwich Lumber Company LESTER RIDING. Prop. Auction Sale Swells Geneva Building Fund The Geneva ward auction sale held in Timpanogos ward hall Friday evening was a profitable success. The Elders and Seventy of the ward are to be complimented on the fine job they did in working out the details which made the affair a gala success- In addition to the many items contributed by ward members, Orem city business establishments establish-ments were represented one hundred per cent with donations dona-tions of their merchandise. When the stage was set for the sale it resembled a country store, showing everything from butter and eggs - to hardware and livestock. Bishop C. Wilford Larsen, as auctioneer created much merriment merri-ment as the bidding proceeded. Between three and four hundred hun-dred dollars was realized from the sale to benefit the ward building fund. The Sunday school officers and teachers did a fine business at their lunch counter while the sale progressed. Appreciation is expressed by the committees in charge to all those who so generously contributed con-tributed and purchased the goods to make the sale such an outstanding success. BIRTHS Girl, to Nathan H. and Mary Birk Johnson, Wednesday night, Boy, to C. Elvon and Marjorie Bennion Bitter, Friday, Girl, to Cecil and Ruby Bartholomew Barth-olomew Bargeron, Saturday, Boy, to Harold and Afton Skinner Barger, Saturday, Boy, to Rulon I. and Zella Cotterell Johnson, Monday, Boy, to Richard and Eva Stars. Loveridge, Sunday, Girl, to Charles W. and Lucile Brown Baker, Tuesday, Boy, to Edmond L. and Alma Hansen Conroy, Tuesday, Boy, to John L. and Evelyn Wagers Prichett, Tuesday, Girl, to Reed and Stella Mad-sen Mad-sen Smoot, Tuesday, Boy, to Dee V. and Fern Frandson Anderson, Monday, Girl, to James Morris and Margaret Tanner Bird, Tuesday, Tues-day, Girl, to Leland and Maxine chiles Cook, Wednesday, Boy, to Henry t). and Ana I Hansen Taylor, Wednesday, Girl, te Sylvester and Flor ence Carrick Allen, Wednesday, all at Utah Valley hospital. Girl, to Vergene and Ola Johnson Ford, Sunday at the home. BURPEE PRESSURE COOKERS Your Kitchen Craft Dealer Richard A. Brewer Now Available. Get Yours Before Canning Tim Rt. 2 Box 28 Ortn. Ph. 087R5 Wanted To Buy Old model truck or car, good or damaged. 191 North 11 West Provo. Ut. ShoeRepairing Louis Kclsch & Sent Rr of Bootcrto tM West Geatow iNfKflR UKUaUn Mrs- Harriet Varley is eiated over receiving the word that she is a great-greatgrandmother, to a winsom little daughter, born to . r. a d Mrs. Wm. Thorton, at the American Fork hospital, the past week. The five generations are comprised com-prised of Mrs. Harriet Varley, grea -gn a grandmother; Mrs Irene Varley Wright, great-granrfmo' great-granrfmo' V r and her daughter Zella the grandmother, the mr 1 r ' ' '- baby The Pleasant Grove Seminar" Semin-ar" 'fu'"n of the Windsor ward preted a very enjoyable enjoy-able program in Sacrament meeting Sunday night, under 'he d'rw'ion of William C. cmi'h. w"h Wlford Harris in charge. The following students 'aMm? rart : prayer, Garn Hooley a duet by Barbara Jar-man Jar-man and Carina Lee Whitely; -olo hv Carol Stark .and a song ny the girls' chorus. Original talks wre Riven by Chris Hrien-on, Hrien-on, Rav Louder. Ina Wnlett, Beth Baxter and the closing prayer was offered by Lee Marshbank. Jr. Dora June Whlteley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theron White-ley White-ley has been nominated as the delegate for .Queen from this ward at the Sharon stake Gold and Green ball, to be held at the Joseph Smith building Tuesday Tues-day night, March 26. The daughters of the Jim Pioneers of the Windsor Camp are urged to be present at the county convention to be held at the College Hall, Saturday March 30, at 10 o'clock a.m. Mrs. Harriet Varley and Mr. and Mrs- Lowel Varley attended the birthday anniversary social for three members of the family Saturday evening at the Horace Prestwich home in Provo. The honored guests were Mrs. Vanza Ashe of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Irene Wright of American Fork and Mrs. Zepporah Prestwich Prest-wich of Provo. An enjoyable time and delicious refreshments were enioyed w all present. Mr. Clara Krk visited with l r y's'sr Mrs. Elizabeth Ashe of Lehi, Sunday afternoon. Mr. Ben Gitmed of Rondont Per-'-., CM'fornia, wa3 the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Long Saturday, March 23. Mr. Git med and Wesley ffrst met while serving in the U. S- Army. Mrs. Harriet Varley has been visiting the past week in Salt Lake City. Brast:!:::::::?;:::rt:!Tr?!!!!;:B!::r!:!;!:::!::::rt::::K: Mil PAYEES V2ED3 . o . Families and Friends of Servicemen of Utah County $14,000,000.00 of YOUR Money . . . . . . was spent by the U. S. Army in the construction construc-tion of the finest hospital in Utah. BUSHNELL GENERAL HOSPITAL During the war and op to the present time it has served thousands upon thousands of our Service Men, giving them the very best of care, performing miraculous surgical restorations and medical recoveries. It has proven a model of efficiency and comfort, its ideal equipment equip-ment and surroundings have been praised by all its patients. BUSHNELL Hospital is NEEDED . . . . . . and should be used for service to these G.I.'s who have been wounded while preserving our freedom. free-dom. Our obligation to them is not fulfilled, and the State of Utah needs Bushnell. The Veterans Administration is being urged to take over this tine, modern installation and continue it in operation oper-ation in the Veterans' program, for the benefit of your sons. YOU CAN HELP ... by Writing your senators (Sei.a.or Elbert D. Thomas. Senator Abe Murdock, Washington, 0. C.) urging that some use be made of BUSHNELL. Do it today, before you forget! BOX ELDER CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BRIGHAM CITY and friends of Bushnell General Hospital A f ull College VJlTll EXPENSES PAID rr , . .;. 103 W, Center lrovo 'Assembly Plant For Planes Xt Airport The first carload of planes to be assembled in Provo arrived Monday. Provo is now the distributor dis-tributor of the famous Ercoup Airplanes for Utah, Idaho and Nevada. More than 200 planes have been sold, including 12 in Utah county, and Merrill Christopher-son, Christopher-son, manager at the airport has converted one of the hangers at the airport into a sub-assembly plant. The planes are being shipped, six to a car, from the Ercoup plant at Rlverdale, Md-, near Washington, D. C. The six planes now being assembled as-sembled will go to Salt Lake City, Nephi and Logan, in Utah; Preston and Burley, Idaho; and Reno, Nevada. EDGEMONT . Mrs. Joseph Price of Vernal is here visiting with her daughters, daugh-ters, Mrs. Burch Boyce and Miss Mary Price, who is convalescing I at the Boyce home following a ; serious oneration three weeks ago at Utah Valley hospital Mrs. Price and her daughter plan to return to Vernal in another an-other week. , j Mr- and Mrs. C. E. Conrad i and family have moved to their summer home in South For of Provo Canyon. Mr. and Mrs. W, O. Mecham have sold their home and have moved to the Watkins apartment apart-ment in Orem for the present. A California family has purchased pur-chased the Mecham property. Fast meeting will be held im mediately following Sunday school at 11:30 a m., owing to "eneral conference in Salt Lake i Citv nn th first Sunrfav In April. Primary conference will be held at the 7:00 o'clock session. ses-sion. Priesthood meeting Mon day evenings at 7:30 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. J. Nelson Perk- ins and family have moved intr the wtscombe home. The family fam-ily came to Provo from Arizona some time ago and Mr. Perkins is employed at Cluff s Feed Mill. We welcome them into the ward. Miss Diane Faulkner left Wednesday for Spokane, Wash ington. her former home, where he will visit with friends for two weeks. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Faulkner, accompanied ac-companied her to Salt Lake City where she took the bus. o o o CORPORATION , 1 Course for yoir Here's important news for youn men 18 and over (17 with par-enta par-enta consent). Under the GI Bill of Rights, if you enlist in the U. S. Army before October 6, 1946, for 3 years, upon your discharge dis-charge yoa will be entitled to 43 months of college, trade or busi. nesa school education. Tuition up to $500 per ordinary school year will be paid. And you will receive $65 monthly living al-lowance-$90 if you are mar. tied. Get the facts at yonr nearest U. & Army Becruitiac Station. LOOKING AHEAD m GEORGE & BENSON ttaUntHuiii fflhgt Scire. JLtkusu Mud-Daubers Down here in the Mississippi Valley Val-ley we are all acquainted with a species of wasps called mud-daubers. They are relatively harmless, build little adobe huts in high, protected pro-tected spots and look out for their own interests. By instinct they are engineers and diplomats but. like so many insects, they know very little about modern industry. Some of their mistakes are costly. An aristocratic family named Sceliphron Cementarius (common mud-daubers) got busy one summer and built a fort inside the vent pipe on top of a big steel tank of heating oil. The tank had been filled in the Spring for Fall marketing and stood quiet for months. Finally came an order tor a barge load of heating oil and the plant owner started pumping it out of storage. Suddenly Sudden-ly the big tank collapsed. Toe Much Authority The oil man's motor-powered pump silently pulled out the liquid and built up vacuum inside the tank. Being in a position to plug up a vent-line and call down the forces of nature to destroy property and waste merchandise is too much authority for a mud-dauber. To ae perfectly frank, the more I observe the workings of the OPA. the surer I am that such authority is too much tor anybody. Right now our governmental price fixers have the vent-line closed on some exceptionally tight structures and the pump has already started. "People who buy machines shall not pay mora tor them." says government, govern-ment, but (with government consent) people who manufacture machines must pay more, much more, for every ev-ery hour of effective labor, and tor every -pound of processed material. Strong for Service I am in favor of workers getting high wages. The more take-home pay America's factory workers earn and get, the more food and teed stuff our farmers will sell. It means prosperity. Just the same, nature's laws are inexorable. If wages keep going up, lomebody'd better uncork that price line or business is sure to, collapse. Some firms already have folded up and more are in Jeopardy. America's big manufacturing concerns con-cerns have some strength; of course the; have. They need financial strength to navigate economic storms, race with competition and meet . payrolls on schedule. The more strength they have the more useful they are. That oil man's tank had a great deal of strength too; was useful because it was strong, but it buckled because a mud-dauber asked it to hold a vacuum. Sublime Vandalism Big corporations have to be efficient. ef-ficient. If they grow extravagant, a lot of small concerns with lower overhead stand ready to undersell them and take their trade. Accordingly, Ac-cordingly, big firms must operate on thin margins 'of profit. Figuratively, Figurative-ly, they are tight. They can be "pumped down" by holding their prices and boosting their costs. Ford declares a $27 net loss on every ev-ery new car sold at prices fixed by government Nearly everybody knows that America's advantage over foreign lands is based on mass production and volume sales, things we have that they don't have. We have nothing noth-ing to gain and much to lose by wrecking big industries. Theodore Roosevelt said, "It . . . ought to be evident to everybody that business has to prosper before anybody can get any benefit from it." An Invitation to Join the thousands of users of White Fawn Flour. "While Fawn Leads Them All" Carried by leading Merchants. SPEAR LUMBER COMPANY PHONE 34 See Us For 195 W. 3rd Soulh PROVO Jilt" "-Ttmt i.""ii ASPHALT ROOFING STAKE PKIMARY NEWS ITEMS The stake board meeting will be held Thursday evening, April 4. at the home of President Olive Burningham. Plans for the Sunday evening meeting at Scera on May 5 will be discussed. discuss-ed. It is planned to have a member of the Primary general board as guest speaker for the evening. The program will be announced later. The Primary union and activity activ-ity meeting for all stake and) ward officers and classleaders will be held Friday, April 12 at 3:30 p. m. in Pleasant View ward. A full attendance is desired. de-sired. V . I I I a 1 I m Mm . Thank goodness, we live in a free country, where a man may say what he thinks providing that he isn't afraid of his wife, the neighbors, or the boss and if he is sure he won't hurt his business or his reputation or injure his standing at the club. Will this age be recorded by future historians as the "Age of the Pistol Packin Mamma in Overalls"? Mrs. Twedt of Colo rado Springs, comments: "No wonder man cannot find work clothes when they are being worn by high school girls who think they should wear men's shirts and overalls two sizes too large for them.' If I were on the City council I would enact en-act an ordinance fining any woman or girl at least $5.00 for masquerading in men's clothing." cloth-ing." -Bravo, Mrs. Twedt! May your tribe increase! The militarists in Washington Washing-ton who are seeking to militarize militar-ize and Hitlerize America by passing a Compulsory Military Training law, got a hot potato on their plate recently in the shape of a returned soldier, Geo. Mark, of Cleveland, O., testifying before a Congressional Congression-al committee, the soldier said: He was opposed to universal military training, because he felt certain that voluntary enlistment en-listment would meet all needs., But the volunteer play may fail because the Pentago (army headquarters head-quarters building) Boy Scouts have been undermining voluntary volun-tary enlistment. These aristocratic aristo-cratic phoneys are determined to keep their high rank by putting put-ting over a system ox compulsory compul-sory service. They have practically prac-tically atomized members of congress from individual thinking think-ing these bemedaled fourflush-ef fourflush-ef s who pass out decorations with one hand and doctor reports re-ports on demobilization with the other- They say mat. a voluntary volun-tary enlistment program is expensive. ex-pensive. Ha! Ain't that a joke? In the Pacific area, we are dumping so-called surplus jeeps into the ocean. In the Philips pines we destroy food before the eyes of starving people. Since DR. ARTHUR VANCE VETERINARIAN 15ft West 3rd North Phone 653-J Provo. Utah PROVO LOAN & JEWELRY CO. LOANS ON Watches, Guns, Jewelry, Etc., We Sell New and Used WATCHES. GUNS. CAMERAS ETC. ETC. 51 N. Univ. Ave- Phone 573 PROVO HAVEYOURTIRES .LOST THEIR VITALITY?. tee 1U! iiuun mil ia,iilHingri??7i CM Mr when has the army become economy-minded? They Just want a large army to retain the officers, and you congressmen better be careful about the elec I tion of brass hats to congress. It will lead to militaristic con :.H Of COSt j 1 t. .1 i No matter how much or how little the family may have at their disposal, dis-posal, there is always available a complete and appropriate Berg service, priced within, their means. Regardless of the cost of the service, serv-ice, we provide every facility of our completely equipped mortuary as well as the benefit of our 76 years of experience in helping Provo families. 1 1 imiJw4Mii . .7 M PS- ' How much does a Berg funeral cost? We will gladly provide free information in-formation on costs and procedure without obligation. Phone or visit us today. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTISTS. OF SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH Cordially invites you and your friends to attend a Free Lecture On Christian Science SUBJECT "Christian Science: The Revelation of God's Healing Spiritual Ideas" LECTURER Harry C. Browne, C. S., of New York City, New York. Member of the board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientists, Scien-tists, in Boston, Massachusetts- PLACE Edifice - First Church of Christ, Scientists, 352 E. 3rd South St., Salt Lake City. TIME Thursday Evening, April 4th, 1946, at 8 o'clock-This o'clock-This Lecture will be Broadcast from Salt Lake City over Station KNAK (1400 Kilocycles). wniiuimmmiunuiiimiiiMiiiM ... nil u 111 hi 111 in m 1 li Ull iniif p IP.U.IH1I . fP- U 'Jf v "m CM tijj Girls' Print chUdWs Dresses Rayon Panties Size 7 to 12 Elastic Tops Wrap-Around Me"'8 J?- Dresses Work Shirts Just in-14 to 20 $i59 $3.98 7 Childs' Sweaters Pinafore Aprons Button Front- 200 va,ue $1.49 Values $i49 1,00 r v Men's Close Out Hit-em-Hard Work Hats Work Pants WM)I Fe,ts Covert Cloth . $150 7 Polo Shirts Men's Work $1.00 Values 5 1 Men's Heavy and Light Boys' Jackets Weight Ages 2, 4, 6. $2.98 values Union Suits $150 SoHed. $1.50 Values No Exchanges $10S) 368 W. Center St. Thursday, Marcli28, 1945 trol of the government?" Tnere were mutterinaS rumblings from .the uniw1 officers bv this tim. v. . ""IC Urn mittee members appeared tnT Joy the testimony as mu Private Mark. m PROVO 432 W. Center phone 164 T |