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Show -GENEVA TOSS THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1813 J 1 -f a Til IT In la II llt.il Ethyl Nielsen Half i i Tmn at our eTe3 a little . top at our h0Ue. causing more trouble than , Dlague- 1 So with vigor, then, 'hooie. (or no reason what-so- S "Dearie you need a cup of says, coffee, fee P e and 1 sian iur nnt which is within handy distancte- Automat- reacting do this. I tell myself such thing as a little t"er . . .mnn mv should- Imrt WnO Xlupa up"1 . and says "A cup of coffee disposition is very sweet," so "'eood for that tired feeling.'M had another cup of coffee. If f should know better-but I just one cup could sweeten my dis-Lnnder dis-Lnnder and wonder... position, two surely would make w . ... .. me positively gooey. By then I It all started with the notion was drooling sweetness and sun-that sun-that so much coffee wasn t good fihine. for me. I had been tanking ;up Thjs wfint on on coffee i tor Jears- x & ing momentum. And I didn't when I was so very 01, an d ten hear a chuckle out of . coffee nauseated me The mere j can hg mention of cee inad e tur- SQme other der and I iS?. Then I couldn't get to sleep .""i iSS 'toa- Then not at 11, not ical nuuuiu. . -- And I vowed when I ot weU rd never so much as touch the fUSTrS rn roffee. So I kidded myself, just have a ; teeny-weeny cup d C0"f nlv 1ov'UP that coffee. Oh heavenly oy! -that cup oi java w "?!wi ..'::;".k !ei I, tnaii n-u er as ine uy w-u. I said to myself, "Ethyl, you are truly a weak sister. And look what vou've written about alco- holies " So I spanked myself mentally, and for three days I passed up the coffee pot without even looking at it. The family shrugged their shoulders, and ience, hi, ttnyl. come over lifted arched eyebrows, know- and have a cup of coffee with jjglv. me- I don't enjoy coffee alone", and I think to myself I could My head thumped my nerves enjoy a cup of coffee, you bet I jumped. The family and neigh- could so I lie like a lady, "I'd bors were indeed out of line . . . love to, but I have to get a col-What col-What I needed was a cup of cof- Umn out deadline, you know." fee. But that was Sunday, and And on and on it goes. If my priding myself on being a good friends report that I am joining Mormon I would not touch the alcoholics anonymous, they even a child's size cup of coffee, should understand it is because I sallied forth to Sunday School 0f that little Imp who hops upon full of saintliness and orange my shoulder and teases me to juice. While there I forgot for have just a teeny weeny cup of me time Deing wai i naa aes- perately wanted my picK-me-up, and shove me along. All dayj Sunday I was strong . . . every! time that little Imp hopped up on my shoulder and coaxed or nudged, I brushed him off with vigor. I After a while he took the hint and left. Then I was happy . . . I had mastered' myself. Along t toward evening that old tired, low-down, trashy feeling return- i ft rovo Member Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit ed. Company came and demand- ed coffee and sandwiches and being one to oblige, I made a great pot of coffee. Oh Java, what aroma! Then the little Jmp snickered Jn my face x himbut he WflS gQne befQre j CQuld muster up the courage ordeal left me shakingi Come Monday morning, and a sleepless night behind me. I had my cup of coffee. The fam- lly said in whispers. "Mother has hnH hpr Plin nf nnffoa until the wee hours. "Coffee," - sajd where . Ngxt g night no sleep, and the Imp stayed close by torment- nig, Kiuaing. teasing me. coax, "Etnyl you know du well a' little old cu of coffee neyer hurt p - alcohol is something different -but coffee, never." I'll admit that Imp is a shred one. He can find more arguments for me to return to the drinking of coffee so far I have won. Two weeks have passed, and I am sleeping like a log. Every wing is line, until x get a whiff of the aroma of coffee, or my neighbor calls over the coffee, because as it says. "Cof- fee doesn't hurt anyone." The coffee habit started like any other undesirable habit. I started kidding myself. I was nursing on a 22-hour day duty, and always dead tired. This went on, off and on, for years. I drank gallons of coffee to pep me up, and sometimes I really believe I got a lift out of it for the time being anyway . . . then I wore completely out, and end- EVERYONE WHO LIVES IN UTAH COUNTY stands to gain directly by the proposed expansion of the Utah Valley Hospital. The April campaign for funds gives you opportunity to show-how show-how you feel about your community. com-munity. Your contribution will help to make the Valley a safer, pleas-anter pleas-anter place in which to live. We all have an interest in this. Farmers and Merchants Bank THAT FRIENDLY HOME OWKED v 1 2' T SIZES SIZES v"T T No. 2876 Is cut In sixes 13, 14, 16, 18, 30, 36, 38, 40, 43, 44 and 46. Size 36 requires 4 yd. 38-in. fabric No. JOM ta cut in sixes 2, 4. and 8. Bias 4 requires 1 yds. K-in. fabric Send 39c for EACH pattern with name, address, style namber and ssk to AUDUT 1AMC BUREAU, Box 339, Madison Square Stactao, Mew York, H. T. Winter Fashion Seek shows 16 attar style, SSe extra. ed up in the hospital. It seems there is always a reckoning day. You can push yourself just so far, and then there's no push left. That's when coffee fails you. If one can take a cup of coffee and quit well and good. Bad habits grow like weeds in a flower garden. But there is the Imp again to cope with. Imps use every kidding device to lure their victims. I should know . . . BANK ZltaA Xaauxanca Corporation Veteran Employees ! To Be Honored Six men of the Orem.Geneva area will be hononer at the Utah Ut-ah Power and Light Company's annual Veterans club party on April 11. James H. Bean, line man and Reed T. Harvey, shin foreman at the Orem steam plant, will be presented with 20-year service pin and inducted into the Veterans club-Paul club-Paul E. Lotz, maintenance fore man, Olmstead, and Robert L. Powell, Orem lineman, will re ceive 25-year buttons and George W. Nourse, dam attendant at Olmstead, will receive a 30-year award. Claude C. Conder, operating oper-ating maintenance man at Olm stead- will receive a 40-year pin. Mr. Bean, Mr- Harvey and George M. Gadsby, president and general manager of the power pow-er company for the past 20 years, will be among the 52 new members to be inducted into the Veterans club at the party- The induction of these new members will bring the organizations organiz-ations membership to 505, more than one-third of the company's employees will have been on the job for Utah Power and Light Company for 20 years or more. To be honored at this year's fete will be 123 employees, 71 of whom will receive diamond studded buttons representing 25 to 30 years service. County Committee Reports on 1948 Weed Control An active county committee of 20 members was, comprised of all government, state and county officials who were int erested in weed control. The committee was headed by S. W Clark, county commissioner of Lehi. Th cultivation program and tlve tax reduction program which had been in existance for 10 years were abandoned in favor fav-or of low pressure, low gallon. age spraying with the chemical known as 2,4 D. Utah county operated two spray machines under the direction of super visors Hyrum Anderson and Reed Bird. "The county comrrtisionelrs shared 25 percent of the cost of weed chemicals used by tann ers who applied it. There were seven commercial spray outfits also, who did work in cooperation with the two county weed supervisors Through the office of the district agricultural inspector, H. V. Swenson, the following activities were carried on: Tomato " and ' celery plants shipped into the county were inspected and checked for any noxious weed plants. Alfalfa seed grown in the district was sampled for noxious weeds be fore being released for sale. Al so hay grown in infested areas was inspected and either quar antined or released for sale depending de-pending upon no infestation or infested with noxious weeas. 1,808 gallons of 2,4-D weed spray was purchased and dist-ribnted dist-ribnted to farmers and coop- erators throughout the county during the year 1948. Two patches of Russian nap weed were observed during the year and an experimnt was conducted con-ducted on one of them. Folowing is a summary of acres of weeds sprayed. White top 242 acires Morning glory 2550 acres 45 acres 138 acres 125 acres 1 acre 1-2 acre 217 acres 55 acres 25 acres 4 acres 110 acres 192 acres Wilows Sow thistle Red root Punture vine Tea vine Dwarf mustard Filarie Cockle burr Wild lettuce Other weeds County roads which included Provo canyon, the sheep trail through the north end of the county, and a number of county roads in the north end of the county. Mr. and Mrs. Victor M Anderson. Mrs. Antoine Bunker and Barbara Anderson spent the nast week visiting in Idaho Falls with Mrs. James Nuttall. Lester Anderson and Mrs- Eluon Lewis and families. r - - T . nUW tilt", A V&a r man reel after lg he paqs his income ux r PAY WCOME TAX I RELIEVED Foundation Report Says Utah's Outlay Tops Income rxpenaitures of the state ot ances aiso will be depleted in Utah for all purposes during the the aeronautics, department of next biennum will exceed esti- publicity, public health and sch-matod sch-matod revenues by $3,685,000 ool iunch funds, ln addition the and the excess of expenditures ' working capital fund of the more than income for the current cur-rent biennium will be $7,500,-000, $7,500,-000, the Utah Foundation esti- mated in a report released this general fund obligations, week. Analyzing the general fund Foundation analysts who madePlcture for tne 1950-51 biennium the study pointed out thai the the foundati0n uses $12,160,000 estimated expenditures for the as anticipated revenue. However next biennium are predicated I the legislature transferred $4,-upon $4,-upon departmental stimates 0oo,000 from sales tax and $54,-and $54,-and approved appropriations. 1 00(j from other sources to the Any economies effected will re- general fund xhis with a carrv. duce by a like amount the gapover balance of about $1,500,000 between outgo and income. win make available for general t our Year renoa fund expenditures approximate- On a basis of the foundation s jy $17,714,000. Legislative ap-figures. ap-figures. the state's over-all propriations from the fund totai. expenditures will exceed income! ed $18,731,269, or slightly n.ore by $11, 185,000 for a four-year period. The difference, the report re-port stated, will be met by depleting de-pleting fund balances or reserves. reserv-es. The study covers not only the lunus appropriate uy uie icsis- lature out au sucn income as state school funds and federal aid. The estimated total expend iture for the current bieiuJum is $127,800,000, the figure being based upon a compilation orwnicn $b,buu,uuu win oe teaer-budget teaer-budget and expenditure ostl- al aid. And tihs total, it is point-mates point-mates of the various administ- ed out, is $3,600,000 less than rative estimates. Estimated rev- the welfare expenditures for the enue is $120,300,000. For the next biennum the est- touted expenditure for all tate',tate funds durlng the next bi-functions, bi-functions, plus grants to local, . . ,..!. ah i i i9dnnnnn i ennium for education are $46,- 6Ucl.u..c..vo, . ""'", Revenue for the same pend is estimated at $124,700,000. . Building Reserve "These figures," the report,. . , -, . , - .MAnnA 4.1 1. 7 .'. r L..M J win De iransierrea to ine uuuu ing reserve from sales tax fund, $2,000,000 of which will cime frorm the carry-over baiunce. Balances in the motor vehicle registration, public health, mot- or vehicle control and aeronaut- ics funds all will be depleven to meet commitments for the next biennum. "The gap between income ann expenditures for the bSnnium enning June 30, 1949 wnl be from motor fuel taxes and $9,-met $9,-met by depleting fund balances- 200,000 from federal aid-The aid-The highway department began ,, the biennium with a balance of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nos-$2,063,000, Nos-$2,063,000, all of which will be ack are the parents of a son. spent by the end of the period, born ast week at the Utah Val- The general fund balance al the close of the current biennium will be $100,000 less than at the beginning of the period, July 1, 1947. The welfare department starts the bienium with a carry- over of $1,177,000, none of, which will remain at the close of the 1949 fiscal year. The sales tax fund had a balance July 1, 1947 of $8,205,000 from which the legislature in 1947 provided for transfer to the building re- SPARKLING! Always count on having Clean. Well - Press, ed Clothe when you ' send them to Orem's Modern Cleaners 8lh North and State Street 0537 K PHONE .MODERN :- f serve fund of amounts exceeding exceed-ing a $5,000,000 reserve. Prove Accurate "If departmental estimates nrnv nrriirnte rnrrv-nvpr rial Centennial commission which was returned to the general fund ha hfwn pxnpndpd tf meet than $1,000,000 in excess of the anticipated amount in the fund But Gov. J- Bracken Lee reduc ed the appropriations by $2,- 892,000 by line item vetoes, leaving approved appropriations totaling $15,839,269. Welfare Program The foundation estimates viiat the total available for welfare programs during the next bicn- mum will be $22,810,000, of current biennium. Vi!mataf1 avnAnrl tiif.oa ffrtm 500,000. Of this amount $16,100,- 000 will be spent by Junior and senior-eolleges. This Is $300,000 . , fho I lllia mil VA1V.IIU h V X.V i biennium Other high lights of the re- port include: Federal cranta in aid, which amounted to $14,091,000 in 1946 and 1947 and $21,200,000 ln 1948-49, will increase to $23, 200,000 in the next biennium: The amount available for highways during the next bien nium will be $23,100,000, of which $13,900,000 will come ley hospital. Word has been received of the birth of twin boys to Mr- and Mrs. Leo Pierce of Stock- ton, California. The twins have two sisters. Mrs- Florence Wilson of Salt Lake City visited in Orem on Friday and Saturday. She came to attend funeral services for Mrs. Frieda Cordner. That's how my clothes always look when they come back from MODERN CLEANERS CLEANERS V Modern t7S ' Cleaners JJ i ' do it;,;.,. . ?et Lx 1 ' Exclusive a I If t i'j Prosperize ' J 1 i - 1 Cleaning -r"va :iin FOREIGN TOUCH Now when you yearn for a different, delicious treat at dinner, try an Americanized version of a foreign food or two. Chow Mein comes to us from the Chinese who are long recognized masters of cooking vegetable and meat combinations. Give this one a try served with a delicious hot beef bouillon, whole wheat bread and buttermilk and fresh or home canned fruit for dessert. It can be easily converted to Chop Suey by serving over freshly steamed hot rice and thus used for two occasions. Inexpensive, tool CHOW MEIN 1. Browm lowly. .1 Ih. pork w thkkw at la lata atrtpa (raw) .1 th. ail 1 t aalt S. Add mtd took lor M mlnut. . (Kwp corned) S. Add and took ovvrad for ( mhratai . t-l a. dlnd takrj t a. dind anloaa 1 Mad. frara pappar, dicad .1 th. almUata, alrad 1 raa Moth room,, dralnad I ran aaa iproatm, dralaed IH chlrkaa Itora 4. Add and ht through f Bin.. I. Mix taxnthor, tdd and eook until dfUM .3 th. cornstarch I th. ahora aaaea Jaira ail tha bn proata f. Arranga on fried noodlea and garnish with parale and strained hard oooked asff yolk a? toasted shredded almonds. T, Berva with shorn aauoo (eoy saute) Note! Ready to aat aereal may replace noodlea. Shish-Ka-Bob and Pilaff were originally Armenian dishes and come from the days when soldiers slaughtered animals in the battlefield battle-field cooked the cubes of meat on their swords over an open camp fire. Lamb was used exclusively, but our Americanised version of this dish has brought it forth with beef also. ROSE BUSHES - SHADE TREES Latham and Red June Raspberry Plants FLOWERING SHRUBS Fruit Trees Wildwood Hollow Farm Nursery Route 1 Provo, Utah Phone 011-R1 HERE V FREQUENT HAZARDS TO CA!2 SAFETY v-' ' ' Tirsx w ftaarlna tamaat-aut lights W IJ I j Horn nat warkaag Law Sraka Peetal sr "PwHIni' Era as LET INSPECT YO'JP. Would your car pass i safety features? You can just a few minutes. We'll be glad to m' to keep your car in u Drive a SAFE C. Completely UNITED Y0UR Equipped , o i i r Q I II fl CADILLAC- Garage and wALloAIIU TONTIAC Repair Service SERVICE DEALES 470 WEST 1st NORTH, PROVO PHONE CSS Hi - 0 ' r. 1 S1IISH-KA-BOB I. feme all fat and ariatla and cut Into 1H inch eubaa t Ih. laait ihaaldar at t la. alrtata tip t. Soak t-t hours In.. 1 a. aalad ail t a. win vtaatar 1 rlo t arlic. nunead 1 L dr aastard 1 U waretatarahira I. Arranra altar-nately altar-nately on aoawar with 1 laraa can whole saashreema 4. Broil 10 minutes on eaeo side. 6. Snson to taste with Bait and sepper . Serve with Pilaff. T. Serve 4. riLAFF Tomp.i sno' Timet 4S mltu L. haute ..i.., 1 small chopped enloa in I lb. setter t. Saute. I a. krawn rira In 4 th. hatter 5. Combine In a j baking dish and -t t can beef boolllon (I enp) 4. Corer and bake. If you want to make it really easy on yourself, cook the Pilaff beforehand and set the meat cubes in the sauce to marinate. When cooking time comes place Pilaff in bottom of the broiler pan, meat on grill above. Juices from the meat drip down over the Pilaff seasoning it as it warms through. Bingo! Dinner is ready. Serve with a green vegetable, baking powder biscuits and butter, red cabbage slaw, milk and a fresh baked pear. Evergreens ARE 3. Faulty WlnsUMaM Wlaars US tSSl TODAY! police test on these five check them yourself in rir'',er tests and repairs Jriving condition. v . 2 |