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Show OREM-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1943 SHARON Jean MacDonald 0893-J3 The opening meeting and ned for Tuesday, September 14 The Genealogy class was ir charge of meeting last Sunday night. Mrs. Rowley and Orson Vernon were the speakers and social of the ward MIA is plan- the Davls sisters furnjshed mus. ical numbers. Rosalie played a piano solo. Josie Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brewer Brew-er and family are vacationing in southern Utah. SHOP IN ALL DEPARTMENTS DOORS OPEN DAILY AT 10 A. M. LOOK ! ABSOLUTELY .. GUARANTEED all-Swiss watch! Leather strap, all-chrome all-chrome case, unbreak able crystal, sweep second hand, luminous, lumin-ous, choice of color flials! 5.95 Tax incl. PLASTIC DRESSES For elementary, Jr. high school, high school. Black . . red., navy brown green. - 1.00 Li'l GIRLS PRINTED Handbags Unthought of styles! Cotton, full-circle skirts, petticoat skirts and ruffled bottoms-Guaranteed bottoms-Guaranteed fast color 2.79 2.29 SPECIAL GUARANTEED FOUNTAIN PENS Absolutely guaranteed guaran-teed and a choice of colors. With your name engraved. 2.00 Boys' S. S. SPORT SHIRTS MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Regular to 3.95 Regularly 4.95 1.88 2.88 MEN'S UNDERWEAR Young Boys' Briefs Shirts HOSIERY 49c- 39 c 2 9c FOR THE KINDERGARTEN AGE FOR LITTLE GIRLS Rayon and Wool SKIRTS 100 WOOL SKIRT Scotch plaid -circular bottom with ruffle Scotch Plaid Pleated all around 2.98 2.98 Joan Marie Pullover TITn,r SWEATERS JUDY B0ND BLOUSES Regular 7.50 o qk llrk 5.00 5 up oTaNTFFc FREE PARKING! oiVllMiiO SAVE MONEY - SAVE TIME Band Leg BRIEF PANTIES use our mammoth lot! Bargain Price Pair 49 c 5 p-wp, ClxK! Author of INFLUENCE PEOPLE" BE VALUE WISE .... BE SAVINGS WISE .... BY SHOPPING WISE AT -HOW TO WIN FRIENDS and COLD LOGIC SOLVES. A WORRIER'S PROBLEM pHll.OS PH Y in the following equals what Ralph Waldo Emerson has lianiel down to us. Chalmer R. Cline. 1528 Sunnymede Avenue, SoutK Bend, Ind., says that he came from a long line of worriers. But I'll quote him direct: "Although I'd been brought up on the worrying habit, early in life I decided not to carry on the family trad'tion. The more tangible tang-ible worries were easy to get rid of ; I merely refused them space in my mind or deliberately placed myself, in my imagination, in another position. That rid me of most of the little wor-J wor-J ries." D. Carnegie "But my most troublesome worry was ague intanglible: anxiety about my future. Maybe this came rom haying had to work my way through college during the Jepression. Most of my classmates seemed to have enough money to see them through comfortably. I can go even further back and recall a humiliating experience when I attended a birthday party with a gift that cost ten cents when the other fellows brought gorgeous, presents costing from twenty-five to fifty cents. You see both of these incidents were based on finances, and by and by I realized that money was at the root of my worry. If only I could have realized that I conquered finance when I worked my way through college, I might have conquered my worry right then and there! But we aren't always al-ways given to seeing clearly our own status. "Then oe evening as I sat worrying about my future, something overcame my worry, and I began looking at myself from an entirely different standpoint. I thought of the men who made this country, I went over in my mind the worries that must have beset them, and, all of a sudden, I realized how hard they must have had to work, how completely they must have had to fill their lives with their working thoughts, in order to achieve. "Then I renewed my own advantages, rny experiences, experi-ences, my education. They far surpassed what some of our most successful men had as a foundation. "I now know that if you will analyze your problems impersonallyor im-personallyor as impersonally as you can you will find that cold logic will work for you as it has worked for me. I no longer have any fear of financial security. I know that I have met difficulties and conquered them; I know that I can do it again, . . . and again and again, if necessary. So can you." A field representative of the Railroad Retirement Board will be in Provo at the offices of the Social Security Board, labor temple, from 10 a m. to 2 p m September 15 to assist railroad workers with any problems they may have in connection with unemployment, un-employment, sickness or retire ments benefits under the Rail road Retirement and Unemploy ment Insurance Acts. m ! ; ThoG. E. Homo Freezer STORE IN SEASON THIS CANNING SEASON Your home Freezer can be used for storing ice creams and leftovers ; and for freezing fresh foods, pies, cakes, sandwiches, etc. It can be used as a home auxiliary to locker plant service, and for many other purposes that will fit your particular par-ticular needs. The General Electric Home Freezer brings to your home the opportunity of enjoying an entirely entire-ly new type of living. Your Home Freezer should not be looked upon as a "safe," where foods are placed for the summer for use in the winter, but rather as a means for enjoying added food service every day of the year. Its real value and pleasure will come through' making it a part of your everyday every-day life, whether you live in the city, on the farm, or in a suburban area. . Texans Plan to Construct World's Tallest Building HOUSTON, TEX. Houston may be on its way to boasting the world's tallest building, taller by 101 feet than New York's Empire State building. Plans are being considered by the United Building Supply Company, Com-pany, for erecting a 140-story structure, says Murel Goodell, general gen-eral manager. The out-scrapingest skyscraper of them all would cost "in the neighborhood neigh-borhood of 25 million dollars," Goodell said. Floor space, Goodell said, would bt about 1,500,000 square feet. The building would stand one foot taller than the unfinished Palace of the Soviets in Moscow. Fire Fan, 8, Hurled in Air By Water Stream From Hose MEDFORD, MASS. A small boy watching a fire at 17-19 Lawrence road was seriously hurt when a fire hose slipped off a hydrant and powerful stream of water struck him In the chest, literally lifting him off his feet and hurling him under a parked car on the other side of the street. Dana Whlttemore, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger D. Whittemore of 133 Ashcroft road, was at Lawrence Memorial hospital with a brain concussion con-cussion and a possible skull fracture. NOTICE OF INTENTION i Notice is hereby given by the City Council of Orem City, Utah of the intention of such City Council to make the following foll-owing improvements in Sewer District No. 9, to-wit: in stall sanitary sewer lines with 6-inch and 8-inch concrete sew er pipe with necessary manholes and appurtenances as follows: (a) Extend the sewer main a-long a-long 800 South street beginning at a point which is 400 feet East of the center of Section 23, Township 6 South, Range i &ast, bait Lake case and Meridian, Mer-idian, which is also a Doint 400 feet East of 400 East street and running thence East along the South side of 800 South Street a distance of 2250 feet to a point in the intersection of 800 South Street and 800 East Street. Said sewer line to be constructed construct-ed of 8 inch concrete sewer pipe with necessary manholes and appurtenances. The total estimate estim-ate cost is $7350 00 or $3 27 per front foot. (b) Construct a sewer line a-long a-long 800 South Street beginning at a point which is the East quarter corner of Section 23, Township 6 South, Range 2 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian, Merid-ian, which is also a point where 800 South Street intersects 800 East Street; thence running East along the South side of 800 South Street a distance of 1030 feet; said sewer line to be constructed con-structed of 6-inch concrete sewer sew-er pipe with necessary manholes man-holes and appurtenances. The total estimate cost is $2910 00 or $2 83 per front foot- (c) Construct a sewer line a-long a-long 500 East street beginning at a point which is 635 feet East and 250 feet South of the center cen-ter of Section 23, Township 6 South, Range 2 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian; thence running run-ning South along the West side of 5th East street a distance of 1017 feet; said sewer line to be constructed of 6-inch concrete sewer pipe with necessary manholes man-holes and appurtenances- The total stimate cost is $2500.00 or $2-46 per front foot. All protests or objections to such improvements or to the carrying out of such intention must be in writing, signed by the owners of the DroDertv af fected or benefited describing th same, together with the number num-ber of front feet and must be, filed with the city recorder on1 or before 5:00 o'clock p.m. on! the 4th day of October. 1948. ! The City Council at its first reg- J ular meeting thereafter, to-wit; 8:00 p.m. on the 4th day of October. 1948 will consider the! proposed levy, and hear and con-1 sider such protests and object-j ions to said improvements as shall have been made. By order of the City Council of Orem City, Utah. Dated August 30, 1943 Orland E. Pyne City Recorder Published September 10, 17, 24, 1948 and October 1, 1948 NOTICE 1 OF ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of Sharon's Shar-on's Cooperative Educational Recreational Association will be held Monday evening, September Septem-ber 20, 1948 at 8 p.m. in the west room of the Sharon Seminary Sem-inary building. The purpose ot' the meeting is to elect three new trustees for a term of three years: one trustee from the Lake View District, one trustee from Pleasant View-Oak Hills District and one trustee from the Sharon-Vermont district- The annual financial report -will also be presented and any other bus iness that pertains to the wel fare of the organization. Clorene Lamb.' Secretary Pub. Sept. 10, 17. SACRIFICE New hydraulic manure-spreader. Tractor canopy, fits any Iractor. Phone 0889 R4. W. B. Jarvis S9 Uncle Sam Says Any day soon you may be faced by tome real bugaboos if you are not salting away a part of your wages every pay day. Bugaboos can pop np unexpectedly and now is the time to prepare for them. They can hit you in many ways money needed need-ed for your children's education, enough money to retire, or suppose your wife or your children should become sick? The best attack on these bugaboos is to buy U.S. Savings Sav-ings Bonds, week after week, month after month, year after year. So sign up today for the Payroll Savings Sav-ings Plan where you work, or. if self-employed, for the Bona-a-Monlh Plan at your bank. U.S. Treasury Dlpartmtnt WHEN A MAN GETS TOO OLD TO SET A BAD EX- AMPU He STARTS GIVING VOONGSTERS GOOD ADVICE j llICATKl When a car gels too old it will set more bad examples lhan lions are. taken. We can nip many a breakdown in the bud in ihe course of an ordinary check up. r--?r .1 I I 470 ITESTFrcSTr.-CSTH 'PHOKE 666 CAYCB KITE ' e I u Yirst Show at 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY - SATURDAY SEPT. 10 - 11 mj i m aTTa- immm''! "".j-, w-"-irrr yh.ii.iji im : c "Freeze With Ease" with the GENERAL ELECTRIC HOME FREEZER 3rd SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVE PROVO PHONE 135 NEXT TO UTAH POWER & LIGHT OREM PHONE 0767 Rl "Your Complete One Stop Service" HARVEST GALE! NEW 1948 FIRESTONE OUTBOARD MOTORS SINGLE CYLINDER 3.6 HORSEPOWER OUTBOARDS Reg. 104.95. Sale 89.95 Reg. 119.95. Sale 99 95 Two models to choose from. New improved 1948 models. Quicker starting and smoother performance. The de luxe model has automatic recoil starter. 7Va Horsepower TWIN CYLINDER OUTBOARD Faster up to 20 M.P.H. maximum speed I Alternate Alter-nate firing cylinders. Has automatic recoil starter and push-type choke. Streamlined too. With storage rack. Reg. 169.93 Sale 139.93 FIRESTONE STORE 223 WEST CENTER PROVO TELEPHONE 39 Barbara Stanwyck Van Heflin An exceptionally good drama! The story concerns Ihe mar riage of the daughter of an immensely wealthy industrialist and a penniless school teacher. She refuses to live on hpr father's money. Picture rated excellent. This should be seen from the beginning if possible. imttHiiutt iiiiiiitmiM uiiiiiit iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiMiiiiiiM iiiiiuiiciliii uiiiciiiililiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiniiMllltliair S.S.S. Fun Matinee Saturday at 1;30 THREE WISE FOOLS A delightful story of a little Irish girl, starring Margaret O'Brien! "Superman" serial Cartoons (A picture of the kiddies will be taken as they leave ihe show) Picture to be published in an eastern magazine as well as in local papers. .1 LU 1 1 IIMIllllEMKIIItlMI III! 1X11 lltll 111 II M1MIIJ11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II II M 1 1 L 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ri I ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II f I M 1 1 Mil IIIMIirilX. MONDAY - TUESDAY SEPT. 13 - 14 PLACE YOUR BETS, GENTLEMEN! i'j" GO &P&Y-.--y.x.WVX0&NlL.- - ... ..... 9 nramoiraf Brtstnti " wv MMD-CAREY Frid CLARK fanlm riFUFMTt Frank FAVLEN Moxii R0SENIL00M - . Produced by MSI EPSTEIN Dirtcttd by 63!GE MMSrlAU A combination of farce, comedy and romance, the story deals with a young lady trying to escape payment of a bad debt and a detective sent to get herl ' If you need a good laugh- come and get it. AND "SPEED TO SPARE" An action story featuring Richard Arlen and Jean Rogers! A good story telling of ihe perils of truck drivers. WEDNESDAY ONLY SEPT. 15 Concert presented on stage by ricndclccohn Chcrziz (There will be no picture show program) Notice of New time Schedule: Starting Sept 13th, next Monday, the doors will open at 6:30 p.m.; first ihow as 7:00 and second show at 8:30. (Matinee prices from 6:30 to 7:00 14c. 25c. 35c) I |