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Show .PEM-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1943 I Orem - Qeneva Society lam Saollh. Editor. Phone 19 Wedding Reception Compliments Worthen Newlyweds Qallee Hawkins and Richard wnrthen were united in mar- v. mv..,i.c!iv ovpninff in a ria Oil i. 11 Ll-l auuj z j riarfmony performed by Bishop I ceremony Orvil Davis at the nomeoi xne Y. prandnarents JET Robert Elliott The, wed-A wed-A ng was witnessed by a few rinse friends and relatives- Mrs. Aenes Hawkins played musical numbers before the ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Ray Hawkins of idgemont and her husband is ,e son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Worthen of Vanadium, New Mexico. A reception in the Edgemont ward hall was given the same evening. The hall was decorated with fall flowers. The bride was attended by Mrs. June Stein of Lehi, matron of honor, and Susan StuDbs, Nan Nilsson, Gayle Gammon, jane Johnson and Alene Cord-ner, Cord-ner, bridesmaids Douglas Hawkins Haw-kins stood with the groom as best man. Dorothy Hawkins acted as the flower girl and Craig Hawkins and Mary Jo Stein carried the bride's train. Mrs- Hawkins wore light blue crepe and a yellow rose corsage. The groom's mother wore a black and luscia aress and a Tose corsage. The bride's attendl ants wore pastel formals. Frank B. Newman was mas ter of ceremonies during the program. Elva Elliott .sang "Yours is My Heart Alone", ac companied by Ethel Taylor and "Wanting You" was sung by E. B. Terry and daughter, Birdene, EAT AT Harold's Cafe and Billards Where prices Are Right Curt & Marge, Managers 440 WEST CENTER All Work guaranteed. Priced right"! TAYLOR'S DEPT. STORE 250 West Center Ptoyo wm Get a cash loan here on the friendly bajii that made Tersonal' the choice of war one million persons last year. Simple To Get ou can repay small monthly Instal. nents which you select you should lot hesitate to see Personal's YES MAN 'or loan, Come in or phone today. Leans $25 te K. Tetttrmtd J J 1M COSMSrl t&toonal 2nd Floor, Knight Block Building. 13 East Center St.. Provo Phone 621 Manager: T. H. Copus ROOM-LOT BUNDLES regular quality stocks stylish colors and patterns greatest wallpaper opportunity in years! cfutzrhcx t'AZ'iSKSVWSrl SIMMONS LUMBER and HARDWARE (YOUR TRADING CENTER) phone 0538-R1 Orem, Utah Personal Shower Honors Bride-Elect Nan Nilsson entertained at a personal shower complimenting Sallee Hawkins, who was mar nea to n ried to Kicnara v. worthen on Thursday. The bride-elect received lov ely gifts from the fifteen friends prsent at the shower. Games and refreshments were enjoyed during the pleasant evening. COTTON OF THE MONTH Mo IkHiii NitlinU OrttSn Council. It eombtnet twe ef the daroy 4' J qfiited calico, in ft Stf". Ji f9 hloui "J quiiwd oiuigo skirt. accompanied by Raquel Lenn-ett. Lenn-ett. John Lewis gave a toast to the bride and Dean Prior, a toast to the groom. Nola Niison sang "Its Magic," accompanied by Nan Nilsson. Mary Lou Hawkins was in charge of the guest book. Gifts were received at the door by Linda Kay Stein and Cornelia Nelson and were arranged by Mrs. Blanche Nelson and Mrs. Bertha Angus. Mrs. Merle Han sen, Mrs." "Elizabeth Hawkins and Mrs. Sylvia Smith were in charge of refreshments. Tour Watch from becoming be-coming old before its lime. Come in today and have it cleaned and repaired. re-paired. WESTON J. SMITH Expert Watchmaker jot seasonal shopping to pay up old bills HOW TO REDUCE MONTHLY PAYMENTS By "lumping" all your credit account! into cms plan, you can usually cut way down tha total of your monthly payments. $250 or mere is fit 111 wm?mj V'v . ?J " flif Ill f t "TM COMUNrl tHAT UKtS tO tAf XK" FINANCE CO SHARON STAKE MISSIONARIES TO MEET The regular class meetisg if Sharon Stake missionaries will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday in ihe Sharon seminary building. All Sharon and Orem stake missionaries are urged to attend a special missionary conference to be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Joseph Smith Building. Cattle Buyer, 9, Claims Title of Youngest Trader MOSCOW, TENN. Nine-year-old Corbett-Yeager Jr., son of a farmer, farm-er, strikes a hard bargain as a cattle buyer. He's making money, too, for a youngster, because he knows a good calf when he sees one. Corbett started In business for himself when he was five years old. His father gave him a patch of cottonhalf cot-tonhalf an acre to be exact. Corbett was too young to plant his own cotton the first year. But he watched over his crop. When he marketed his first bale he got $75. His father helped him buy two heifers. Two years later he swapped one heifer for a saddle horse. He sold the other for $116.42. Corbett has been buying and selling sell-ing ever since. Now he grows an acre of cotton which nets him around $190. Some time ago young Corbett bought a 250-pound calf for $65. Later Lat-er he sold it for $251.12. "Now I think I'm coina to eet ma heifer to raise as a grand cham- ) plon," he said. Sailors and Marines Swim Underwater in Arctic Ice SAN DIEGO. Marine corps and navy underwater swimmers trained during the war have penetrated Arctic Ice and slush in below-sur-face forays in recent Alaskan maneuvers, ma-neuvers, Vice Adm. George D. Murray, commander of the first task fleet, disclosed. Operating from submarines off Kedlak island, the rubber-suited swimmers knifed through slush six inches deep and brushed against four-inch ice to carry out assignments. assign-ments. They were able to remain in water estimated at four degrees below freezing for periods of more than an hour. . Adm. Murray said that not even during the war did swimmers operate oper-ate so far north. Underwater scouting scout-ing teams were developed by the marine corps and the navy during World War II to blast obstacles from enemy beaches In pre-lnvasion missions. mis-sions. Pilot Receives a Ticket for 'Parking' Over White House WASHINGTON. A helicopter pilot received a ticket for "parking" too close to the White House. The piece of aerial history was made by Roland Roelofs of the Rotowing air service. He kept the White House police force In a dither for about 20 minutes with his windmill. They complained that he flew down to within 200 feet of the executive execu-tive mansion and hovered motionless motion-less In the air while his passenger, Luis Marden, snapped their pictures. pic-tures. A similar complaint came from capital police. They telephoned the civil aeronautics administration for some advice on how to shoo off a helicopter. CAA Inspector Robert E. Bell promptly drew up a whole string of charges against Roelofs, all of which added up to illegal air parking. park-ing. Douglas Patten celebrated his fourth birthday on Friday. His guests were Merrll Gappmayer, Jay Brown, Ilene Davis, Lee and Robert Guymon and Brent Patten. HUNTERS INVITED TO USE RANGE Orem deer hunters are invit ed to use the Orem Rifle Club's range located across the Provo river from Christmas City rafe on Sunday, according to Fred Fielding, secretary-treasurer of the club. BARGAIN DAYS IN FEEDS ARE HERE AT BUNKERS Golden Laying Mash " $3.80 CwL (Pellets 10c cwt over) Corn.base 20 percent Protein. 100 lbs. net weight. Rich "in animal protein factor. A finest gTade of whole fish meal is used in its manufacture. NOW IS THE TIME TO FEED IT TO THOSE VALUABLE PULLETS IT'S TRULY A BETTER BUY ON ANY MARKET. Feed BUNKERS FEEDS and Save! Phone Provo 0551-R3 Scientists Manufacture New Chemical to Aid Heartbeat ' RENSSELAER, N. Y. Scientists Scien-tists here are making a chemical believed to be identical with one involved in transmitting nerve impulses im-pulses to the heart Their man-made chemical is levc-artercnol, levc-artercnol, obtained from the breakdown break-down of the synthetic drug artere-nol. artere-nol. It was isolated by Dr. Maurice L. Tainter, director, and Dr. Froilan Luduena and Benjamin Tullaf of the Sterling-Winthrop Research institute. in-stitute. Apparently Dr. Tainter said, the chemical Is the same as sympathin E one of the natural go-between chemicals in the control of automatic auto-matic nervous activities, such as the heartbeat, breathing, and blood pressure. The man-made chemical is only one-fifth as toxic as adrenalin, ' a powerful heart stimulant. It is expected ex-pected to be of great aid In research re-search on human body functions, Dr. Tainter said. Hit by Streamliner, Motorists Suffer Only Miior JBtf3?r KANKAKEE, ILL. Two motorists motor-ists were riding in a semi-trailer truck which was struck by a streamlined train traveling at 60 miles an hour and lived to tell about it The lucky two, Theodore Martin and 14-year-old Rodney Smith, had started across a railroad crossing near here when they saw the Santa Fe Super Chief bearing down on them. It was too late to back up, too late to get across. The train smashed into the center of the trailer and started dragging the truck down the tracks. ' But the cab, in which Martin and Smith were riding, caught jpn steel beams protecting the flasher lights at the crossing, and remained there while the streamliner demolished demol-ished the trailer. Martin and Smith emerged with only minor cuts and bruises. Switchman Loses Both Leg While Hurrying to Work . 4 MOLINE, ILL. Kenneth R. Shields, 28-year-old switchman, overslept and missed his bus; to work. i Hurrying to the Rock Island lines yards, he decided to save time by catching a freight train, passing near his home. He slipped as he ran to grab it. . 1 What Shields didn't know as he was carried to the hospital, where both legs were amputated, was that his boss had Joeen trying to call him at home. He wanted to tell Shields not to report to work.' Your Own Peace "Acquaint new thyself with him and be at peace' (Job 22:21) Turmoil, insecurity, self-J pity, pessimism, discourage ment, defeatism, criticism and fatigue give way to peace of mind resulting from the study and application of Christian Science. To learn more about this! practical mental method of healing come to A FREE LECTURE Entitled "Christian Science: The Science of God's Oneness" by Margaret Morrison, C. S-, of Boston, Massachusetts Member of the Board of Lecturship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. First Church of Christ Scien-j tist, 352 East 3rd South Street SALT LAKE CITY Monday, Oct. 11. at 8 p.m. Attend This Lecture or Tune to KNAK, 1400 k.c. Oregon Men Try To Prove They Are Better Than Horses LEBANON, ORE. The men in this part of the country keep insisting in-sisting they are better than horses. Their trouble is they can't prove it. There was Diet Fitzgerald, the 220-pound poolroom strong man, who told everyone that no horse could move him in a tug of war-that war-that is, If he were allowed to lie flat on the ground and brace his feet against a timber. Everyone got bets down. Chet took his position and a horse took the other end of a 100-yard rope. Chet went flying head over heels and half the countryside was broke for days. Since then, three other men similarly simi-larly have been put in their place by the same horse, Old Baldy of Waterloo, Ore. Now comes Paul Smith, 63, of Mill Citv. convinced no horse can outdo him. His specialty Is walk- ' ing. He has challenged any horse even one from Waterloo to a walking contest. "I can outwalk any horse. A horse has to stop for grass and water. wa-ter. I eat as I go. And I get there first," he asserted. Well, they found a horse Just three miles from Waterloo to take up the challenge. A 10-year-old ex-cowhorse ex-cowhorse named Larry. The match will be conducted over a 100-mile course to be determined later. Smith said he would stick to walking, but for all he cared the horse could gallop or even run. A $500 wager between Smith and Larry's owner and rider, Jess Moss of Lebanon, rests on the outcome. Calf Hurtles Throufh Windshield of New Auto CHARLESTOWN, W. VA. Farmer Eben Trussell considered consid-ered himself lucky when he received re-ceived delivery on his new model car until he drove it home, that Is. He parked the automobile in the barn lot. There a bull saw his reflection in the windshield, took a running leap, crashed through the glass and bounced back on the hood. The car's windshield was shattered. shat-tered. The calf was worse off, requiring a veterinarian's services serv-ices to stitch him together. Doctor Claims Men Should Not Retire at Age of 65 SAN FRANCISCO. Are you through at 65? Listen to Dr. Edward L. Bortz and get back on the Job. Society, said Dr. Bortz, president of American Medical association, literally is killing men by making them retire too early. For many, the years between 50 and 70 are the most useful. Yet society, he lamented, insists on pinning pin-ning the "antique" label on men at 65. "The whole system is pernicious," said Dr. Bortz. "I am against all present retirement retire-ment programs. "Men should be retired, not on the basis of their chronological age, but on the basis of their physical and mental- age." Medical science now is making it possible for persons to live longer' lives. The present life expectancy of 68 probably will be increased still further by new medical advances, he laid. Lovelorn Camel Rejects Attentions of New Mate DALLAS, TEX. A one-sided love affair is going on at the Mars alls park 100 in Dallas. It could be a reciprocal proposition if only Pun-kin, Pun-kin, the lonesome dromedary, would quit biting his lady fair on the nose. For nine years, Punkin lived a life of solitary discontent staring back at the hundreds who dally gawk at him In his pen. The people of Dallas, especially those who spend their Sunday afternoons walking walk-ing in the zoo, finally took pity on the camel. Josephine, a three-and-one-half-year-old member of the opposite ex, was turned Into his pen. She gave him the cold shoulder, and kept her distance after Punkin Took several love nips at her nose. The zoo superintendent, Walton Carlton, explained, however, that love should blossom eventually. Heroic Motorman Who Lost Loss Is Told of Amputation BOSTON, MASS. Alphonse J. McDonald, Mc-Donald, 31, heroic motorman who lost both legs trying to stop a runaway run-away trolley car, has been told for the first time about the amputations. The Rev. Lawrence Brock made his daily visit to the hospital and just as he was leaving he grasped McDonald's hand and said: "There's one more thing I want to tell you before I leave until tomorrow. to-morrow. We all believe you have won your fight for life you're that kind of a man but to save your life surgeons were forced to amputate your legs." I Bravely, McDonald tried to smile. Ea paused: "I'm glad you told me, Father. Yes, Tm glad you told me and thank God, Father, that I'm alive. The wife and children are depending on me to get well now. I still have to take care of them." Pfc Ramon Blboa is here In a furlough from San Antonio, visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Blboa. HILL GRES1 Vaneese Woffindea 053 Mil Mr. and Mrs. Leland Nielsen and children returned the first of the week from a visit in Los Angeles. They met many old friends and were entertained by the former mission president under un-der whom they served. A welcome home will be given giv-en for Darr Harward Sunday at 5:30 p.m. Elder Harward will be the main speaker. Special musical mus-ical numbers will be furnished by Hawaiian students attending 11 Tl.TTT ' me Dxu. Mr. and Mrs. Davd Martin are in Salt Lake City, where Mr. Martin is under doctor's care. They wil remain there fir several weeks. Kate Wagstaff has come to live with her sister and family, Mrs. Lyman Madsen. Kate and her sister Josephine are both attending at-tending the BYU. Mrs. Lina Gerber and her daughter, Marie and son, Arthur left Monday for California. They came from Victoria, British Col umbia and have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Johnson. Another son, Wililard Gerber, remained here and is attending school at the BYU. The opening social of the Re lief Society was held Tuesday at two o'clock. Meetings will be held every Tuesday from now on through the winter months. Mrs. Myrling Clyde read some of her original poems and Maud Tidd gave a retold story. Spec ial music was furnished by Bes sie Keetch and Merl Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Afton Harward have returned from a. trip to California, where they went to meet their son, Elder Darr Harward Har-ward who has lust been reieas ed from a two year mission in the Hawaiian Islands. Darr Harward attended the Hawaiian Mission reunion in DTR IS HAVING A DUTCH n SUNDAY SHARON STAKE t HIL CREST WARD A welcome home service will be held at 5:30 p m. in the Grand View ward chapel in honor hon-or of Darr Harward who has just returned home from a mission mis-sion in the Central Pacific. OAK HILLS ... A missionary farewell testimonial testi-monial will honor John Taylor. VERMONT The deacons will have charge of the program, under the direc tion of their leader, H. H. Bur- meister. The meeting begins at 6:30 p. m. Salt Lake City on Friday. M. and Mrs. Stanley Elliott and daughters, Janice and Pat ricia Ann are visiting here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Elliott. Stanley is working at price and they come to lave there baby blessed here. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christen, who have been living in Provo for several years, have moved back to Orem. Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson have been visiting at the home of Mr. Peterson's mother, Mrs- Louise Peterson during the past week- They left Monday for Duchesne where they both will teach school during the coming year. -The new son of Bishop and Mrs. Milton Jameson was given the name Kent Lee Jameson on Sunday at Fast meeting. Eunice Harris from Verden, New Mexico was a visitor at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Lex ia Harris. Mona Rolph from Oak City has returned after a vacation in her home town. Now at the conclusion of our 27th Anniversary Sale, we find that we still have some wonderful won-derful bargains left on the sales floors of our eight stores. To taake sure that you DO get in on the sarings, and pick up fine home furnishings at the sobm time, ail Hems cctrrying tptsdL ale tags wEl be nerved. J Off EACH DAY umsoiD! Kxmf otekmng ewaMpCM ml be bargains ottered wEl be en deploy in the windows of cO. DIXON - TAYLOR - RUSSELL lores. Come in now, make sure of getting the things you need at tremendously reduced prices. SERVICES OREM STAKE OREM STAKE 2 p. m. Stake priesthood leadership lead-ership meeting in the Scera auditorium. EDGEMONT WARD Stanley Stubbs of the ward bishopric will be in charge of the meeting LAKE VIEW Gordon ZoBell and Ronald Madsen will be honored at a missionary farewell. SHARON WARD A testimonial meeting will honor Cleve MacDonald, who will leave for the mission home on Oct. 11 and will fill a mission mis-sion in the Southern States. EDGEMONT Dora Davis, recently returned return-ed from the Eastern States mission, mis-sion, will be the speaker at Sacrament Sac-rament meeting scheduled for 7:30 p. m. PLEASANT VIEW WARD A farewell testimonial will honor Victor Hansen, who is leaving for the New England States mission. GENEVA WARD Senator A. V. Watkins is ex pected to speak at meeting, ac cording to Bishop C Wilford Larsen. A musical program will also be enjoyed. Meeting will begin at 6 p.m. TIMPANOGOS WARD ' Meeting wil be under tha direction dir-ection of the missionary class of the Sunday School. . , 5. |