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Show -XT7nd Mrs. Carl Farley, M, and Mrs. Theodore Farley j,nd Mr. ana r. chner returnea wonaay pleasant trip to Snowflake, Ariz-ona Ariz-ona They attended the July 24th celebration in Snowflake and visited with old friends. . Qt your CONSOLIDATED HARDWARE J( W believe you will find here all the easiest canning job ever. Below are a supplre you need to do the be, few special values you'll be interested in. (j KEEPS lis food H FRESH FOR Bps MONTHS AT , Ur I SUB-ZERO rfffitf TEMPERATURES 1 I (rft 2'2 CUBIC FEET $169.50 5 CUBIC FEET- $259.50 CONSOLIDATED HARDWARE Co. 255 WEST CENTER )fy Jiot Qet Married? We Have Plenty of i WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS At Popular Prices Sales Circular! Office Forms 57 North First West Several friends and relatives caleld at the home of Mr. and Mrs. MerriJl Farley on Sunday when their son, Ronnie celebrated celebrat-ed his second birthday. Refreshments Refresh-ments and a birthday cake were served. Supplies at COLD PACK CANNER Stimlns MmI ktttfe with or-lain or-lain nmtl4 finish. Stain and chip Militant. Wlra Jar rack lift out. Hold po ok 7 qu.rt, , PROVO, UTAH PRINTED FORMS Letterheads Placards UTAH VALLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY Publishers of (Drm-(tttra Wxmw .Provo Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Newell and daughters returned Monday after a vacation trip to Bear Lake. Mr. and Mrs. WIerlin Christen-sen Christen-sen and family left Saturday for a week's vacation trip to Kansas Kan-sas City. I mi ILJIi m PRESSURE CANNERS A. high grade aluminum can-ner can-ner for quick, safe, easy caning can-ing of fish, meat, fowl, fruit. Heats quickly, will not leak. 21 qt. capacity .... $24.95 FOOD , CHOPPER Household 6ize chopper with 4 cutters very fine to very coarse. Cuts everything. ev-erything. Jlon rusting. $2.59 JAR WRENCH Stilt or eptM iny fruit ir cap iiilly. rinlihtd In rurt MtliHng chrom. 89c PHONE 244 Business Cards Envelopes Phone 13 LAKE V1H7 IID Gordon ZoBell -r "Lake View Night", a special recreational evening for every one to join with their tamiues and friends for a good time at the ward amusement hall will be held Friday at 8 p.m. Lake View night is sponsored by the Book of Mormon club and is de signed to provide good enter tainment and recreation. A special spec-ial program is scheduled, featur ing an original play by two members of the club- Rsnae Bunnell will play the leading role. The major portton of the evening will be devoted to dancing and instruction on square dances will be given. No charge for admission will be made, however donations will be accepted for the refreshments. If these evenings prove successful, success-ful, the club will sponsor at least two each month. The First Quorum of Elders in Lake View are meeting with a great deal of success with their motion picture project. The hall has been filled almost to apacity during past shows. Two projectors are used during each movie and the results have ben good. The quorum plans to expand present facilities and install in-stall a permanent screen. EDGEM9IIT Eva Gillii 02B-J1 Lee Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Miller of Olmstead has joined the Army Air Corp and will be stationed at San Antonio, An-tonio, Texas. Mrs. Lydia Hogan and son, Donald and Joan Holdaway left Sunday for a vacation with relatives rel-atives in Portland, Oregon and Los Angeles. California. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Wis-week's Wis-week's vacation at Denver, Colorado. Col-orado. Mr. and Mrs. William Hull and family and Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Laur-ence Bounous and family enjoyed enjoy-ed a vacation at Fish Lake this week. They were joined on Tuesday Tues-day and Wednesday by Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Gillespie and family. fam-ily. The Edgemont Literary club will meet Friday at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Cordelia Booth. Mrs. Louise Trotter will give the book review. All members are urged to be present. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Loveless Love-less and Mr. and Mrs. James J. Pinegar are vacationing in the northwest. They will return by way of the coast route and California. Cal-ifornia. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Reeve and family visited with Mrs. Reeve's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wiscombe on Sunday. They were enroute to their home in Park City after attending the Reeve family reunion at Hinck ley. Master Robert Gillespie re turned with them for a week's visit with his cousins, Richard and Naomi Reeve. All parents of Primary children child-ren are urged to attend the Primary Pri-mary graduation exercises at Scera on Sunday night. A group of relatives attended a wedding reception honoring their cousin and niece, Helen Terry of Salt Lake City. Those who attended were Mrs. Lucille Collins, Mrs. Jessie Johnson, Mrs. Carl Farley, Mr. and, Mrs. Reed, Hacking and Mr. and Mrs. Weston Farley. GENEVA WARD Belh Moon 0581-R1 Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Crosby and children attended the Cros by family reunion in Mt. Em mons on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Max Franson (Ellen Adams) and baby son of Wells, Nevada spent Monday at the Leslie Adams home. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Rowley and children are elated over the are elated over the arrival of a baby girl on Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wells. former members of the ward were visitors at the home of Bishop and Mrs. Wilford Lar- sen on Sunday. They are now living in Albuqueque, New Mexico. Buddy Miller and Paul Neser of Venice, California visited with Clarence Moon on Thursday. Thurs-day. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Baker. Colleen and Kay Baker, Lavina and Hermina Rowley and Don Harvey' spent the weekend camping at Aspen Grove. Betty, Nadine, Shirley and Gweneth Adams and Xenna Johnson spent several days last week at Bryce Canyon. Isabelle Gappmayer has returned re-turned from a trip to San Francisco. Fran-cisco. Mrs. Harley Johnson (Belle Pulsipher) and son, Edward of Portersville, California were guests last week at the Chester Graff home. Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Graff have been friends since childhood. Publishers Say Xrbo Ccir.:cs' Arc fcrAd-Its NEW YORK. - Controversy between be-tween the Detroit Police department, which recently banned "crime" comic books, five of which have since been banned by the Indianapolis Indianap-olis police, and the publiihers of these books rages with undiminished fury. Both sides are standing firm in their convictions. Interviewed Individually, these comic book publishers, without exception, ex-ception, claimed that their particular particu-lar books were less objectionable than others banned. None denied that there are comic books that are "obscene." "Inflammatory." "vulgar," "vul-gar," "inartistic" or all four. Several, basing their self-defense on "freedom of the press," declared that because their books dealt with "true" crimes they are harmless, that they are written for adults and that the publisher Is not responsible for the welfare of children who hap. pen to read his books. ' Crime comic books, publishers said, have been brought out in quan. tity only in the last two years simply sim-ply to satisfy the appetites of ex-GIs. ex-GIs. "We do it by formula, not malice," one said bluntly. "A cop, a killer, a gun and a girl" Cause of Investigation Prosecutor James N. McNally of Detroit, Interviewed by telephone, said that his comic book investigation investiga-tion began when the police were seeking to stop the sale of a toy gun used in fake hold-ups. "We found," he said, "that the manufacturer manu-facturer advertised In comic books. We began looking into 350 of these books and ended up banning the 38 our censor bureau found most objectionable. ob-jectionable. The two distributing companies handling them willingly agreed that these books would no longer be sold. We therefore plan no criminal action against the publishers." pub-lishers." The day after McNally's action, Mayor Al Feeney of Indianapolis banned 5 of 260 books his special investigator had rounded up. He received the promise of cooperation from local distributors. One Asks for Hearing "So far," Mr. McNally said, "onty one publisher has asked for a hearing. hear-ing. That is the National Comics group, publishers of Gangbuster Comics, which is temporarily removed re-moved from the banned list pending a hearing. As for the public, we've had nothing but praise from hundreds hun-dreds of citizens all over the country." coun-try." In New York the American Civil Liberties union announced that it had communicated with Detroit's police commissioner, Harry S. Toy. objecting to "the police office setting set-ting itself up as censor and guardian guar-dian of public morals." "We're glad," Jade Liebowitz, of the National Comics group, which publishes 30 other books, said, "thai something is being done to apprise those publishers who are not cog nlzant of their responsibility thai things can't go on unchecked. But we feel that our book was mistak enly banned in Detroit as it is in Indianapolis, although we're willing to make changes." John Byrne, editor of "Wings Comics." "Jumbo Comics" and "Fight Comics," which have been banned, felt that his books "represent "repre-sent in 1948 what Nick Carter and Tom Swift used to represent," but added, "We don't edit our magazines maga-zines for children.'" Utah has more than 6000 retail re-tail establishments. Hill CRES1 Vaneese Woffinden 0551-R1 Helen and George Woffinden left Tuesday for Yellowstone Park where they will be employed employ-ed for the remainder of the summer. sum-mer. Mrs. Mary Kirkham of Salt Lake City was a weekend visit- LaNole Carroll and Mont Burr took the Scouts Softball team to Lagoon Friday evening. The team members who went were Arthur Shepherd, Rex Adams, Gregg Farley, Jan Peterson, Pet-erson, Gary Littlefield, Emery Patten, Jack Burr, Evan Buvr, Merlin Rowley, Darrell Jensen, Carl Rowley and Leland De-J Lange. Girls from the ward will go to the MIA canyon home from August 3 to 7. Those who wish to go should register with Margaret Mar-garet Johnson. The annual trip for the t.TJS girls and boys is scheduled for August 9. The program for Sacrament meeting was presented by . the Deacons. Ronald Hatch conducted conduct-ed the meeting a"nd talks were given by Helen Foster and Joan Adams of the LDS girls organization. organ-ization. Richard Gaonmaver, Lj- land DeLange, Robert Brereton and Darrell Jensen. The boys chorus san2 two numbers with Leland DeLange directing and Ronald Hatch at the piano. Hilda Knudsen at AC Clothing Class New and faster ways of making mak-ing clothing are being learned this week by Hilda Knudsen, homemaking teacher at Lincoln High School, who is attending the annual conference of Utah Homemaking teachers at Utah State Agricultural College. Beginning Monday evening and continuing through Friday noon, 69 homemaking teachers from senior and junior high schools throughout the state have been learning new 'devel opment in methods of clothing construction from Miss Josephine Joseph-ine Ferris, head of the clothing department at Seton Hill college, col-lege, Greensburg, Pa- The conference is sponsored jointly by the Utah Department of Public Instruction and the USAC. Among the locals who hiked to the top of Mt. Timpanogos on the annual pilgrimage last weekend week-end were Perry Fen;'., Jr., formerly of San Antonio, Tex., J. H- Biebel and Robert Biebel, formerly of Long Island, N. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Johnson, formerly of Oakland. All are representatives rep-resentatives of Fishback and Moore of California, a Los Angeles An-geles firm which is doing electrical elect-rical work on the Geneva Steel plant addition. The group started start-ed up the peak at 4:30 a.m. and reached the top well before noon. Thy came down the American Amer-ican Fork side. They report an enjoyable trip, although unfavorable unfav-orable weather made the view from the top disappointing. Two Texas Youths Draw Pay For Staying Away From Home JAMESTOWN, N. Y. - A couple of Texas youths with an eye for a fast buck and a yen for a novel holiday were first in line for the jugglers' national convention. The Kosanke brothers, Les, 16, and Steve, 14, of Dallas, are collecting col-lecting a dollar a day each for just sitting around. "Uncle Al said we didn't have the nerve to leave home on our own," said Les. "He'll pay us a dollar a day for every day we make good." Uncle Al is Alfred W. Kosanke of Hammond, Ind. All the boys have to do is send him a postcard every day proving they're not in Dallas Les, an amateur juggler, is spending spend-ing the week practicing up for the convention. teve came along lor the pay off." Navy Helicopter Captures Antarctic Penguins for Zoo SCHENECTADY, N. Y. A tech nique for capturing Antarctic pen guins that involves a helicopter and football tactics was described by a bird curator. Malcolm Davis of the national zoological park In Washington told of a recent navy expedition to col lect live penguins for the zoo. It was the first time a helicopter had been used to hunt- the large birds he said In General Eltctrla science forum broadcast "The pilot would fly hit whirli gig aircraft clot to the penguins and the big birds would head In land," Davis said. "The pilot then would land the plana and the two-man two-man crew would tackle the birds. It offered a chance for some rough- and-tumble fun." or at the home of her daughter and son-in-law, Bishop and Mrss. Milton Jameson. A cottage meeting was held on Sunday by the Adult Aaron- is priesthood members and their wives at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rowley. Nita Doman, Max Hill, Arth ur Woffinden, Norman Oliphanl and Sherman Harward went to Salt Lake City with the Lincoln high band and marched in the Pioneer day parade. The Bee Hive girls will leave on Friday for the MIA home in Provo Canyon. The Camp Grand View DUP gave the program at Sacrament meeting on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gordon acted as host and hostess to the Bee Hive girls and Boy bcouts at a fireside chat after Sacrament Sacra-ment meeting on Sunday. Rich ard Smith showed them some slides showing places of interest inter-est in Canada. The Adult Aaronic Priesthood members have a canyon party planned for Friday evening at Canyon Glen. They are taking a pot luck lunch. The Sunday School officers are having their monthly facult-y facult-y meeting and social on Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rowley. The Junior Girls and Senior Scouts held a fireside chat at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Frank Woffinden. Fred Lewis was the speaker and he recounted experiences ex-periences as a missionary in France. He also taught the groups a French song. k 1 .1 eL need to go on riding a saddle you're ashamed for folks to see. There's a new HEREFORD Saddle waiting for you exactly, the style you want created bv men who ril A I 1 know what a saddle should last word m correct design and uniformly high quality. They are Skillcrafted by TexTan of Yoakum, Texas, com-bining com-bining modern precision construction with the highest degree de-gree of ancient craftsmanship. We're ready to show vou i..,. e. - ..jji uinc unci aauuies now. 7k "SAN ANN" Straight cantle. Regular double rigging with Magalum Dees. Square, wool lined skirts. 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