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Show J OREM-GENEVA TIMES Bites from rabid dogs and cats account for over 98 percent of the cases of human rabies in the United States. Too little roughage may be part of the cause of bloat in cattle cat-tle and sheep, according to Illinois Il-linois investigators. Exclusive Responsible DRY CLEANERS Phone 426-W Modern Cleaners & Dyers 44 South 2 West raa Gutty Cab Go OREM'S FIRST TAXI SERVICE IF you don't own a car. but like to ride in one ... IF you don't hare a chauffeur, but like one . . DICK BARNETT. Manager Aiiiweirssiry 3 BEG DA1TG FESIIBAy, GAYUEHSDATT Central Market wishes to thank the people of Orem for their support during our first year in business in Orem. We are proud to be a part of this up and coming community. Produce Dep't. GRAPES Seedless, Pound POTATOES Red or White, LEMONS Juicy. Pound LETTUCE Solid, Pound CARROTS Bunch PORK & BEANS . e. 1C$ TUNA 29c CLEARWATER VEL-DREFT 2Q? TISSUES sitroux 10? Shortening 1.09 SNOWDRIFT BABY FOODS Heinz, Gerber'a 3 FOR 220 M.C.P. pectin 9c SYRUP Flapjack. 24 ox 304 VIIIDSOR Mrs- Elizabeth Pratt has returned re-turned home after a month's visit with relatives in Idaho and Washington. Mr -and Mrs. Ferry Nielson attended the wedding recption! of Dr .and Mrs. William Kirk Friday evening in Pleasant! Grove second ward hall. This community was sadden-1 ea Dy tne aeatn oi Mrs. rranK Olsen Friday at Copperton. The Olsen family lived in the ward for many years. Mr. Olsen spent his boyhood days here . Rodney and Cecil Peterson attended at-tended the Lee Lovinfcer party at Liberty Park in Salt Lake City last week. They enjoyed the zoo and the entertainment at the park. Their mother, Mrs. Marlow Peterson accompanied them to Salt Lake. New Fiber Product A new fiber product, called keratin, kera-tin, may help utilize the 173 million pounds of chicken feathers said to go to waste each year. WHEN you're in a hurry , to get some place fast . . . 'CALL 0578-J1 0539-J1 Pound 124 .GROCERIES Across from so..er "wWWff"W :..! HIM.' vnitfaMi wwrepw- ,wii'.'iphii im n ", ft-': ' I ',7 ' S y 1 O V . Y V ' r Cookies are right any time. And happy is the hostess who keeps a batch of them on hand. A trayful of dainty cookies makes the simplest summertime refreshment service elegant. It isn't difficult, either, to have an impressive variety of cookies on hand. A single batch of today's Pattern Cookies, for example, can make many different kinds of cookies. Using an assortment of cutters to vary the shapes and topping the confectioners' sugar icing with different garnishes will make the cookies look and even taste different. Nutmeats, chocolate pellets and bits of candied fruit or sliced dates are toppings that look pretty and taste good. Pattern Cookies 114 IrUi urUkti flair M ttiipMi mlllt ! 4 ult TPlBf shtrttainf Calt UM' mil Itlaf llltl Kill 1 ii MM kalYO r illcei Sift together flour and salt. Cream together shortening and sugar. Add egg and vanilla extract and mix thoroughly. Add flour mixture to creamed mixture, mixing only enough to combine ingredients. Chill. Roll out about inch thick. Cut with fancy shaped cookie cutters. Bake on ungi eased baking sheet in moderate mod-erate oven (375F.) 10 minutes. Frost with confectioners' sugar Icing and decorate with nuts or chocolate pellets. Yield: About 30 2-inch cookies, . Sice Producers Siam, Burma and French Indochina Indo-china grow most of the world's export ex-port rice. Siam's production before World War II exceeded five million tons a year. Fresh ASST. LUNCH I.IEAT 45? WEIIIERS IK HAMBURGER 50? POT ROAST 42? VIEIIIIA SAUSAGE vcp, 17? Pineapple 27c 2 lb. sliced, crushed MILK 4T.uc., 42 SODA FOP ALL 5c DRINKS 6 FOR 2SI FURST ADE Dlinl 3 FOR 10? JELLO 7c Assorted CORN FLAKES Albers 13 ox 14? WAXED PAPER diamond 1Q AVli Scera Orem dessert Hot Potatoes Serve potatoes quick-cooked and steaming hot The longer they stand exposed to the air, the more vita-min vita-min C they lose. Meat s Sank (Dili liA IL (F LOOKING Xh AHEAD AHEAD GEORGE S. BENSON 1 PmiAnt-hitimt Ctlltit Start). jirttMiti Saddles Casper, Wyo., boasts a saddle maker who has been at the business for forty years in that city. He knows his trade, a fact not hard to prove. You see there are a great many people in his state who know a good saddle when they see one and a saddle maker has to be good to stay in business long in Wyoming. Wyo-ming. Not many days ago I dropped into his shop and got introduced. intro-duced. I was a prospective customer. We need a couple of good saddles at the Harding College stable and had shopped close to home with no success. suc-cess. To my astonishment the Casper Cas-per saddler was no better able to supply our needs than those in Memphis or Little Rock. He was able, however, to give me some facts I had not learned before from any of the saddle stores visited earlier. Saddletrees Scarce. A good saddle is built on a wood en frame called a tree, much as a shoe is built on a wooden last, except ex-cept that the tree Is built into the saddle and becomes a permanent part of it Saddletrees are made by men of a highly specialized craft Trees have to be shaped right no bulkier and no heavier than strength and design require. Men able to do such things with wood are by no means common. During the war Uncle. Sam needed need-ed skillful saddletree .men in the construction of gliders.,. '"The government gov-ernment employed most of them at about $160 a week," the saddler declared. de-clared. Good saddles', not being made any more, might have sky. rocketed in price but the Office of Price Administration fixed a ceiling to stop it Stocks of new saddles soon were bought up by users at ceiling prices. ; But the War Is Over Now the glider business is slack. Wonders have been done with glid- ers and they are not being forgot ten, but fewer are being built Unemployed Un-employed saddletree men would like to start building saddletrees again there's quite a demand. Living Liv-ing costs have built up, however, and they think they ought to have $120 a week. That's $6,000 a year and 25 under their defense-plant scale of pay. Saddle manufacturers, like the one in Casper, want trees because no trees, no saddles. They are willing to pay tree builders $120 a week and wouldn't kick a bit if saddles might be sold at prices they would easily bring. I guess there are thousands of customers besides me who are ready to pay more for a saddle than it would have cost in the months immediately before the war. Ceiling Lingers On "If today I engaged a good tree builder," said the Wyoming saddler, "paid him $120 a week in return for his best services and most competent com-petent work, and then sold the total product at ceiling prices, it would pay about three-fourths of the wages of the man who made the tree." Obviouslv it IS out ot bat- , . ance. Craftsmen, manufacturers, dealers and users are all waiting for ceilings to lift, The saddle business is not large -when you contrast it to automobiles and railroads, but it is no isolated case. Many smaU business men are smothering for sales that are tied up by O.P.A. SmaU plants, employing less than 1,000 men, provide pro-vide jobs for 78 of industrial work-rs. work-rs. Carried too far, this price policy pol-icy can bring panic and poverty. Liquidating some war-year bureaus would help balance the national budget and help clear the way for new and much needed productid WELCOME A. F. L. MEMBERS ; TUNE IN 0 KOVO FOR THE FINEST IN RADIO ENTERTAINMENT SPOTLIGHTING UTAH Monument Attracts Visitors A major sight-seeing attraction attrac-tion tt S.nlt T.nkp CMv is thp "This Is the Place" monument ! on the citys east bench. During the cool of the evening hundreds hund-reds of tourists and Utahns flock to the area. As the crowds walk around the huge monument reading the inscriptions and studying the figures, a refreshing breeze comes out of Emigration canyon. Utahns visiting the monument monu-ment for the first time admit they are deeply moved by the majesty of the scene and the manner in which a significant historical story is told. Tourists from out-of-tsate photograph pho-tograph the monument from several se-veral angles; they admire it, they like it, and they declare they are thrilled to be able to visit the place where western history is told in such an engaging engag-ing manner. Admitting that the first year and a half operation of the Og-den Og-den Snow Basin has been a pay ing proposition ,the Ogden City commission is now contemnlat ing the possibility of extending the Snow Basin Ski lift to the top of Mount Ogden. The present pres-ent lift is one mile long and constitutes con-stitutes a spectacular ride. To extend this lift another mile would undoubtedly make Snow Basin the most important skiing area in Utah. Utahns Love Ice Cream The consumption of ice cream in Utah during 1946 was one million gallons more than in 1945, says the U. S. Department of Agriculture. All in all, 3,147,-000 3,147,-000 gallons of ice cream was manufactured in Utah during last year whirfh topped the rec ord for several years Dast. Limburger cheese was produced produ-ced in 1946 for the first time in Utah and totaled 1.000 Dounds Utah cheese production increas ed slightly from 9,352,000 lbs to 10,085,000 lbs- during 1946. Temple Attendance Highest All existing records for visitors visit-ors to the Salt Lake Temple Square was broken in July when more than 183,000 persons entered ent-ered the gates of this famous place. High Turkey Prices With Utah's fall turkey croD 25 percent below 1946 and pric es on tne upgrade, Utahns mav have to pay better than 55 cents per pound for their Thanksgiv ing bird this fall, says the Nor bert Turkey Growers's associa tion. Archers Get Souvenirs More than 400 archers from 28 states, Washington, D- C, and Canada in Salt Lake City participating part-icipating in the National Field Archery Championships have been presented with delicately molded models of buffalo skulls. The models, four inches long, were inscribed "N F A A Archery, Arch-ery, Utah Centennial 1947." A UUh clay product, the models , hape fa fc k " , . . nave a yui ceiain texture. . ! 20lh Century Fox Eyes Utah iwemietn century Fox has applied to the Utah Department tf Publicity and Industrial Development De-velopment for complete data on Utah. They need, they said, an intimate knowledge of the state. They have asked for a general weather report covering the last ten years, including the months of rain, a report on the seasons and the mouths in which sunshine sun-shine may be expected and how much sunshine. They also want maps, pictures charts, pamphlets and outlines on every pliase of Utah, its industrial, in-dustrial, cultural, and educational educa-tional life, along with a list of towns .cities, populations, etc. They also point oui. that within with-in the last year they have sent more companies to Utah on location loca-tion than any other studio in Hollywood and that the data they have requested will be helpful in bringing additional motion picture companies to Utah. Needless to say, the data is being be-ing prepared for forwarding to Hollywood. WELCOME A.F. L. v TO PROVO Hotel Roberts A Home-like Place to Stay I'M lltLIMIU Millicent Wells. 01J1 Bishop Taylor Alien of Vine- ward announced this week that three new officers of the MIA were sustained by ward members last Sunday. Alta Morrill, Mor-rill, replaced Lena Clegg, who was released as second counselor counsel-or to the president of the YWMIA. George Jenkins is the new president of YWMIA, and Ross Holdaway and Earl Farns-worth Farns-worth are his counselors. Har. od Holdaway and Grant Zabris- kie were released. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Anderson Mrs. James Nuttall and children and Mrs- Eldred Lewis of Idaho Falls spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vic tor Anderson. A family reunion was held Sunday and a group picture taken. Plans have been completed for the annual ward outing to be held Thursday, Aug. 21 at Canyon Glen. Marcel Young is general chairman and a day filled fil-led with gala events has been outlined- All ward members and former members are cordially cordi-ally invited to attend. Mr .and Mrs. Wilson Jenkins and daughter, Joselyn have been vacationing in Soda Spring and Sun Valley, Idaho . Mrs. Lei and J. Wells and daughters, Edith Ann and Shar-ren Shar-ren accompanied her father, J. D. Wadley and her sisters, Joan and Dorothy Wadley to Yellowstone Yellow-stone Park where they spentthe week. Mrs. Clinton Wakefield of Huntington is spending the week here with her aged parents, Mr. and Mrs- Thomas Wells-Mr. Wells-Mr. and Mrs- Afton Stout of Berkeley, Calif- are vacationing here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Madsen. The T. C. Hebertson family are home after spending the summer in Washington state. Major Hebertson returned with the family and will visit here for a month before returning to Fort Lewis, Washington. Potato ilclila Up In the past 50 years potato yields have increased a bushel an acre a year. LOANS and REAL ESTATE SEE FRED E. RAY INSURANCE Office 70 South Second West ?-Y:- J3 nil PLOW, DISC & HARROW IN ONE OPERATION DO THEM ALL BETTER WITH ONE MACHINE Phone 742 for FREE DEMONSTRATION See them at you Kaiser Frazer Dealer Dick Romney Motors PROVO, UTAH Thursday, August 14 ,1347 Incapacitate 200,000 Arteriosclerosis and high blood pressure alone incapacitate more than 200,000 men and women. Richard's Twin Pines Cafe A Place for the . Discriminating Excellent Cusine Breakfast Lunch Dinner Orem - Phone 0109-J2 WICK SWAIN Your Friendly Barber sara. DROP IH F03 A tllXVZ. HAIRCUT. OR SHAI.00 69 North 1st West Pianos, Accordions, 0J-tars. 0J-tars. Pkont SiCS, Pre S. W. Wffliarai, SC3 E. 3 Souti. Prov. I buy, sell, rent, AND T5ACL Try Some of Our Quality Products This Week's Special: GLAZED POTATO DO-NUTS 42 Cents a Dozen Home-Made Bread 10 Cents Dajebout's Bakery i 306 West Center. Ph. 65 j SWITCH TO Or.EI.1 HEAL ESTATE For All Your Insurance and lo Orem business houses for ereryihing else you need. We are now members of the Multiple Listing Board. When you list with us it puts about 57 men to work on your property. Lei's stay in Orem all we can. OREM IM ESTATE Phones: 048-J3 082-R2, COON'S FURNITURE & APPLIANCE 150 No. University Ave. PROVO, UTAH Coleman Oil Floor Circulators Circula-tors now Available. A small Down Payment and It's Yours for the Cold Season Now Coming Up. Also Coleman Oil Water Heaters |