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Show lOREM - GENEVA TIMES WOBD PORTRAITS By Clyde E. Weeks, Sr. TODAY I SAW a solid citizen citi-zen avidly reading a newspaper, product of the local press, announcing an-nouncing the cadidates for the forthcoming municipal elections. He was just an ordinary fellow, fel-low, dressed In working clothes pretty well soiled by the grime of honest labor. He was standing stand-ing sort of relaxed against a dcv.-.i low:: Lanjlr.s, balancing on one foot, apparently waiting for a bus. His slouch hat was tipped at an angle on the back of his head, thus setting off the features of his strong, lean face-a face-a face of character which bespoke be-spoke the fine pioneer stock of his ancestors. His eyes were dark, piercing and alive and re OREM Doors open 6:30 Friday - Saturday THE LOVES HE.KNEIflllV THE SONGS HE WROTE! Tiir rns i:r ?r: l Goodbye, My" 0 r:M UOYD BACON free4 r GEORGE Light musical comedy based on a series of incidents in the early life of a famous songwriter, the late Joseph E. Howard. Filmed in Technicolorl I S.S.S. FUN CLUB ' jj Saturday Matinee 1:30 p.m. October 18 j "GOD'S COUNTRY" j! An outdoor action picture filmed in color! p Ij and j! THREE CARTOONS IN COLOR ' :: i j Last chapter "Jack Armstrong, All American Boy" jj S : I! Mon., Tues., Wed. I Innai CAR RYM 0 Laiett in the popular "Dr. Gillespie" medical drama series ii is spiced with ginoious portions of comedy, romance and suspense! and .tWMJliA "Catch" JSNKUHS A lender drama rf n "oungEJer's life on a pre-war military mil-itary post! Filnr id nt Fori Douglas, Utah. HumiiirmiLuiHHtniiiii!inHiiiuuiij.nM,tHiiii.i,,ui iiHiiuiiiiiirrjiitiiii'.iiiiifiiniiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiniiiiiinnitiiitmiiiiiuiiiitiiitioiH Thurs.- Fri., Sat ) "k Iff , f -N. r -7 A't A suspenscful and dramatic film! Starting with its opening scene, it catches and builds attention as it tells in flashback sequences, the story of a childhood love that had he strengJh to endure through years of adversity and absence! flected the spirit of this Mr. Average Man . . . plain citizen of the U. S. A. t Ho seemed to be in sort of a quandry, lost between bewilderment bewil-derment and plain cogitation. He would read awhile and then then punctuating his' thoughts with a vicious munching on the straw which he held between be-tween his teeth. He could be heard to emit a 'hmmm' now and then, and then go on with his reading as if determined to arrive Pt a satisfactory eonclu- sio::. Finally he shook his ihcad in assent and with a look of both determination and pride he spoke aloud and said, "Yep, I'VE JUST GOTTA VOTK. I fought for the right and now I'm not going to miss it. I'm going to have a part in running run-ning this town and besides it's . UTAH First show 7:00 October 17-18 I'VAeUo, Mo p 1 ; nOf!",,w .. I . V s JESSEL Oct. 20-21-22 . lames RE C RAI Gr BREMER Oct. 23-24-25 WJ0MS01I JK1EADSS01I Mi i 1'. 7( ' V- . I t J M-O-M's revealing melodrama itarring 2 7 a duty that I cannot shirk - a job that or.ly I can do. I guess I'm an important cog in this machine of government after all." VOTING A DUTY Yes, Mr. Average American, I vou are important and you do I have a voice in civic govern ment and a 'say' about what goes on in this town. After being deluged by press and radio and public address with the claims and counterclaims counter-claims of the several candidates relative to their abilities and fitness for office it may be that you find yourself somewhat perplexed and may be inclined to conclude that you do not know any of the candidates well enough to determine their fitness for office, but it is your dute to evaluate them as best you can, make a decision, and cast your ballot with the assurance assur-ance that others doing likewise will form a concensus of opinion opin-ion that will carry to office the best of the field. We must strive str-ive to evaluate their real worth and not be misled by sophistry or wily promises. OUR GOVERNMENT Why not be guided by the principal that our local civic government belongs to us, very much like a large co-op busi ness that we are all stockholders stockhold-ers in; that our Mayor and others oth-ers who fill the various elective offices are directors of our firm; that we select them to manage our affairs? If we are to get the most out of our investments we must employ capable, experienced, trustworthy department heads -executives with ability to surround sur-round themselves with capable assistants. We must assume that all of the applicants are good and good and have merit else they would not be aDDlvim? for Hip job. It is our duty to select the wcfc, nuu ii we mil lo ao SO we have no one to blamp hut ourselves. No one is devoid of merit, but it is the exception that gets the results. SUPPORT THOSE WE ELKCT We elect those people to office of-fice with the thought that we will support them and make it possible for them to achieve their aims and fulfill theh promises. pro-mises. No one Derson in rirmn. cratic government can succeed in public office unless given backing after he attains office. nr we cannoi elect tnem and then leave them in the lurch and expect ex-pect them to accomplish miracles. mir-acles. The success of any candidate can-didate will be predicated . upon the support and cooperation of the citizens who Dlace hi m in office. We don't vpst thfco of fice-holders with arbitrary or dictatorial powers. WE SELECT IAUJSIJSHIP. Many citizens ponder "My one vote won't make any difference in the results of the election." what if everyone felt the same way? VOTING IS THE AMERICAN WAY. IT DISTINGUISHES US AS FREE MEN TNSTfAn ni- VASSALS OF DICTATORSHIP. wc r UUUHT FOR THIS PRIVILEGE. PRIVI-LEGE. KEFP IT AT.TVir t don't you must be prepared to mie me consequences of indifference. indif-ference. ELECT THE BEST - and then support them and help them do the job! J WEDDING ANNO UNCEMENTS At Popular Prices Sales Circulars Office Forms UTAH 67 North First West Electric Controls Put Many Farm Chcring Jobs On Automatic Basis By IRA MILLER Farm Electrification Bureau There was a time when self-control was the only type of control to be found on most farms, and often farm era found it hard to keep a tight rein on that when the wind died down and the pump handle broke. PT AUTOMATIC CONTROLS w.tch ver the farmer's water pressure system. On today's modern, electrlfledtarms, automatic controls perform a multitude multi-tude of chores, and they sever lose their tempers. They are the "mechanical "mechan-ical watch dogs" which operate day and night to hold temperatures hot or cold at desired levels, protect motors, keep water flowing, turn poultry lights on and of! at stated intervals, guard against frozen stock tanks and water pipes, and perform many other amazing Jobs automatically. automati-cally. Automatic controls are used in con-Junction con-Junction with such electrically operated oper-ated farm equipment as ensilage cutters, cut-ters, corn shelters, elevators, feed grinders, milk coolers, grain driers, hay hoists, mow hay curing equip Plan to Finance Hospital With Farmers' Whsat Gifts GARRISON, N. D. This small city in the heart of one of the best wheat growing districts has hit on a unique plan for raising money to build a community hospital a "wheat campaign." Instead of soliciting cash contributions contri-butions from farmers in the Garrison Garri-son trade area, officials in charge of the drive asked farmers during the peak of the wheat harvest, to donate a hopper or two of wheat. The wheat will be sold and the money used to help build up a $75,000 fund. IT IS A FUNNV THING HOW EVtRVONt 1UIMKS -tu' other mans Jo WO "CT I'i 'f ,llou can enjoy quality products III m 'I I - FEED. SEEDS. GROCERIES Phone Orem 0551-R3 Geneva Steel is across from us Ihku Jiot Set ii Wc Have Plenty of PRINTED FORMS Letterheads Placards , VALLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY Publishers of ,Provo ment, milking machines, ventilation equipment, refrigeration units, water systems and irrigation pumps. They act in several ways to save the farmer time and money. Proper controls will increase the efficient operation of his equipment and enable en-able him to put many of his choring Jobs on an automatic basis. Motors can be started by remote control switches located at some distance from the equipment, as well as by switches mounted adjacent to the machine. Concern over the continuous continu-ous operation of such equipment as bay curing fans, pressure and time switches, pumps, thermostats and compressors is considerably lessened when a magnetic "line starter" is standing by to re-start all necessary motors - immediately after the cause of temporary interruption has been corrected. In cases where automatic re-starting of motors is hazardous, controls which provide for under-voltage protection, see that this does not happen. This feature prevents possible injury to workmen if a saw, for example, starts up without warning after it has been stopped for some reason. Controls,! with built-in overload protection, guard motors against damage caused by handling loads larger than those for which they are designed. In the home, controls lend equally valuable assistance to the farm wife. They eliminate the drudgery of pumping water by hand and bring to the entire family the comfort of auto matic heating. Thermostatic devices control the electricity so that she can operate her range, roaster and water heater efficiently and economically. They keep her refrigerator and freezer functioning at the proper temperature. It would be practically impossible on electrified farms to enjoy many of the advantages which electrical equipment can provide without the tireless service rendered by auto-, matio controls. Wee Wood Kitty Lets Odor Motor Run Post Mortem SUPERIOR, WIS.-Skunks have no respect for a policeman's uniform, uni-form, it was learned by Policemen Marcus Erickson and Willard Nelson. Nel-son. One of the striped kittles fell into a deep hole near the Ambrose J. Lunch residence, promptly halting a construction job going on there. All attempts at rescue failing, the officers shot the skunk, figuring that would disrupt the animal's protective protec-tive device. In this respect, both officers of-ficers admit they were wrong. They are now wearing their spare uniforms. uni-forms. J Rtro reed KunKers f!nMm Oil Laying Mash 20 protein $4.35 -100 lb. Net from your chickens by feeding arriecl Business Cards Envelopes Phone 13 Refugee Girls find Happiness in Canada Many of Them Are Employed In Rayon Spinning Mill. ST. GEORGES, QUE.-One hundred hun-dred European girls, who were transported from displaced persons camps in Germany to this little French-speaking town in Quebec, seem happy In their work in a rayon ray-on spinning mill here. Socially they stick pretty much to themselves. Reaction to importation of the girls, who began work at 25 cents an hour, has been heard In Canada and elsewhere. Some labor leaders criticized the organizer of the scheme, Ludger Dionne, owner of the spinning mill and liberal member mem-ber of parliament for Beauce, for the low wage being paid the girls. At the same time, criticism of the government, as having no uniform immigration policy, was beard. Dionne, however, has said that the girls flown here from Frankfort at a cost of about $500 each were being be-ing lodged and fed at an unusually low rate of $6 a week. The girls. who are under a not too rigid two-year two-year contract recently received their first raise to 30 cents an hour. All the girls are Roman Catholics and Polish except for a few Yugoslavs, Yugo-slavs, two Russians and a Lithu anian. A few speak good English, an additional few can make them selves understood, while two speak passable French. The language difficulty dif-ficulty was seen as the major reason they mix little with the people of this town of 10,000, which is about 65 miles south of Quebec city. Anne Gaizutyte commented: "I have no time for boy friends. I like to stay home and read I have so much to learn." She is 22 and a former university chemistry student. The girls, although lacking in industrial in-dustrial experience, are found to be "good workers and quick to learn." Dionne said they were not throwing other girls out of work he could still take an additional 50 girls in his plant if he could get them. There has been no great comment from other employers. Although at first townsfolk weren't too keen about arrival of the group. Mayor Kenneth Pozer of St. Georges West said: "The girls are received here sympathetically just as well as any family. They are well liked." Submarine Spots Flier, Saves Him After Crash NEW LONDON, CONN.-Ris-ing to the surface as soon as its periscope had shown a pilot, who had dropped into the sea, the submarine sub-marine Finback rescued the flier and aided in the salvaging of his small plane. The pilot, Godfrey J. Lapalme, was picked up on Long Island sound, about 10 miles south of Saybrook, and transported to the submarine base here, where his condition was reported as good. The plane was hoisted aboard the auxiliary mine layer Spig, which had answered the submarine's subma-rine's radio giving the aircraft's position. Federal Revenue Is Set , At 39 Billion Dollars WASHINGTON. Complete data issued by the bureau of internal revenue rev-enue disclosed that federal revenues for the 1947 fiscal year ending last June 30 totaled $39,108,385,742. This was a drop of $1,563,711,256 from the $40,672,096,998 in the previous previ-ous 12 months, principally reflecting repeal of the excess profits tax. Corporation income taxes collected collect-ed for the 1947 fiscal period totaled $6,055,095,929, a rise of 30.5 per cent over the 1946 figure of $4,639,949,184. Excess profits collections, however, fell oil more than 55 per cent from $7,913,617,921 in the 1946 fiscal year to $3,621,362,751 in the latest period. They're Not Gold Bricks But They Bring $1 Each MARION, ALA Fire blackened bricks are selling for $1 each in Marion. Lightning caused a fire recently which destroyed Jewitt hall on the campus of the Judson Baptist College Col-lege for Girls here. The fire had no sooner cooled than alumnae of Judson were busy selling bricks from the razed building at $1 each. The money will go to replace the destroyed building. Judson girls throughout the South are purchasing purchas-ing bricks. The bricks were hand molded in 1888 when another fire had destroyed the previous Jewitt hall. Many Judson Jud-son girls helped make the bricks. Dry Ice 'Brings' Rainfall, But Wrong City Gets Benefit ANADARKO, OKLA. Dry Chick-ash Chick-ash a, Okla., residents pondered the wayward ways of Oklahoma weather weath-er after rain which had been "intended" "in-tended" for them fell in nearby Anadarko. Three Chickasha men, Son King, Gordon Jones and Claude Welch, ) dumped 105 pounds of dry ice into a cloud 13,500 feet over Chickasha, hoping to make it rain in that city. It rained all right, but by the time the dry ice had "worked," the cloud was over Anadarko, 19 miles west, and Anadarko enjoyed a half inch shower. Chickasha stayed dry. Resembles Beefsteak Beefsteak mushroom gets Its name because of its resemblance to a pleoa of rare and juicy beefsteak. NOTICE STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, OWNER-SHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION. CIRCU-LATION. ETC., REQUIRED BY THE ACTS OF CONGRESS OF AUG. 24, 1912, AND MARCH 3, 1933 Of the Orem-Geneva Times published weekly at Orem, Utah for October 1, 1947 State of Utah, County of Utah. Before, me a notary public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Clyde E-Weeks, who having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he Is the business mgr. of the Orem-Geneva Times and that the following to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management, the circulation, cir-culation, etc, of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, as amended by the Act of March 3, 1933, embodied in section 537, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit: 1. That the names and address of the publisher, editor, managing manag-ing editor, and business managers mana-gers are: Publisher, M. Neff Smart, Provo, Utah; Managing Editor, M. Neff Smart, Provo,, Utah. Clyde E. Weeks, Business manager. man-ager. 2- That the owner is: (If owned own-ed by a corporation, its name, also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders stock-holders owning or holding one percent or more of total amount of stock. If owned by a corporation, corpora-tion, the names and addresses of the individual owners must be given. If owned by a firm, company, com-pany, or other unincorporated concern, its name an , addresses, as well as those of each individual individ-ual members, must be given.) Utah ''alley Publishing Co., Prove Utah; Til. Neff Smary Provo, Utah; A. V. Watkins, Orem Utah. 3. That the known bondholders, bondhold-ers, '-iort!Tnseps, aid other security secur-ity hjicc : or holding 1 percent or more of total amount of bonds mortgages, or other securities: sec-urities: 4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear ap-pear upon the books of the company com-pany but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corpora- "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiniiiH i mini Choice of G.E. The Finest Electric Blanket Made! niiiiiiiHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiMitiittiitttiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiir G. E FULLY AUTOMATIC FOOT WARMER . ...$7.95 llli:illimiliiIlllillllilllllll!!lllltl!llllllliMllltlllt Three Heat Automatic Heating Pads UMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiumiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnnumimiiumi, NOW IN STOCK Genuine Lionel Electric Trains $39.95 Roller Skates Telephones Dishes JiiiiiiiiitiitiimiitiitiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiittMiiiitiiiiiiiimr CHRISTMAS LIGHTS imiiiniiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiinmimimmitmmmm New 1947 G. E. Wake To Music Radios ELECTRIC CLOCKS from $4.15 up Commercial Clocks IRENE'S GIFT SHOP Next Door North of Utah Power nad Light Co; OREM 7t,mitniiiitiiMHiiiiiiiiimniiHiimHimmtmrmi! Thursday October 10, 1947 HUNTERS CVAUTIONED Warning has been issued by officials of the Uinta National Forest, against carelessness resulting re-sulting in fires occurring on national na-tional forest lands during the deer season. In the past years several disastrous dis-astrous fires have been started by careless deer hunters- All of these fires have been on valuable valu-able watershed lands whichO were destroyed to such an extent ex-tent that serious floods resulted from the burned over areas. The fires also destroyed some of the best winter and summer deer ranges. Ranges are very-dry very-dry and unless we get some good rains before the hunting season the fire hazard will be extremely ex-tremely high. All deer hunters are urged to cooperate with for est service officials in preventing prevent-ing range fires this year. If possible pos-sible put out any fire which may occur and report it to the nearest forest officer or game warden. If four simple rules are followed these will be no range fires this year. They are: 1- Crush out your cigaret. cigar of pipe ashes. 2. Break your matches in two. 3. Drown or bury your camp fire or warming fire. 4. If you must build a fire be sure it is in a safe place. Kill every spark before leaving If possible put out any fire that may occur and report it promptly prompt-ly tion for whom such trustee is acting, is given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under stockholders and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities securi-ties in a capacity other than that of a. bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, associa-tion, or corporation has any n-terest n-terest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities secur-ities than as so stated by him. 5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication publi-cation sol dor distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the twelve months preceding the date shown above is 375. CLYDE E. WEEKS, business manager. Sworn to and subscribed before be-fore me this 10th day of October, 1947. 7, M. Neff Smart, notary public 1 (My commission expires 9-27, 1950, (Seal) iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiinii iiiiiiiiiiinii iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini'j Several Colors iMvtii;!!!rmin!ii!iiii(tiiitirttiH(iiiiimMnu!iitiiiuiiMiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiMfiiiiiiiiMiiif(!imifti!ia H |