OCR Text |
Show THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1949 OREM-GENEVA TIMES ALTERATIONS ! I tailor men'i suits over for women. Expert men and women's wo-men's alteration, make dresses, tormals, ' trousseaus, children'! cothing. Men's shirts and slacks See or call Mrs. Cuyler, 447 N. 2nd West PrOTO. Phone 2276R TF CARTER'S SAW SERVICE All types of Saws Sharpened LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED West on 4th North GENEVA ROAD Poultry School Set at Logan The sixteenth annual Utah Flock-Selecting and Pullorum Testing School and Poultry Conference is to be held August 22, 23, and 24, 1949, at the Utah State Agricultural College, Log' an. Utah. The general theme of the HELP WANTED FEMALE Christmas cards with name, 50 for $1, sell fast! Make up to 100 percent on $1 "Leader" Christmas, Plastic sensation, Everyday, others. Assortments on approval, FREE imprint samples. STYLART, 1310 San-tee, San-tee, Dept. 40, Los Angeles 55, California. "Electric Wiring With Safety" Residential and Commercial Contracting CALL Howard Egan Electric PHONE 0756 J2 I 73 East 4th North, Orem Utah County Mattress Factory COMPLETE-MATTRESS COMPLETE-MATTRESS and BATT SERVICE Only Factory iu Utah County We are not represented by any transient mattress workers, but will call for and deliTer with out extra charge. JUST PHONE 345 Or drop us a card 661 West 2nd North PROVO UTAH WANTED TO BUY Good, clean used cars or pickups. pick-ups. Top caih prices paid. No waiting. See Lynn Bullock. BULLOCK AUTO SALES Phone G669-J3 Orem. 1 , J. '." i, The Eett la STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTO INSURANCE N. C. Hicks, Local Aent Our new low rates offer you the most economic car insurance in-surance available. In ten years of selling I have never had a claim rejected. Phone 12 19 Nr University Ave., Provo CEMENT WOXX Cement Septic Tanks and cesspools built All kinds of cement work done. 1010 N 1st West, Provo. Phone 1350. tt WASHER REPAIRING Ralph's Radio & Appliance 65 No. University Ave. PROVO Phone 619 ATHLETES FOOT GERM KILL IT IN ONE HOUR. YOUR 40c BACK, if not pleased. The germ grows DEEPLY. To kill it, you must REACH it. Get T-4-L at any orug store. A STRONG fungicide, made with 90 percent alcohol, it PENETRATES. Reaches more germs. Today at GENEVA PHARMACY A25 KELSCH'S COMPLETE SHOE, FOOT SERVICE 155 West Center Telephone 707 AT BOOTERIE Provo, Utah FOR SALE One black, six-year- old riding mare. Very gentle. Bred to purebred Arabian. $85. Phone Austin, No. 4, Evenings, No. 6. All r innnA II Ha l!3l!i U I 3 TT E3 WW Vn.V" mm AH over the country, thousands of leaders of ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE pay J 5c copy 4.00 1 fear for it. XPHk tbit coupon yon may have a 6-monlb subscription for only Si m clear saving of a dollar. Your $1 covers onlv out postage and handling costs. We make this offer to acquaint you with ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE, MAGA-ZINE, the outstanding magazine of its kind in America today, edited by Ellery Queen famous on the air, in moving pictures, in stories, and in books. In ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE you read the world's best detective stories new and old, selected by Ellery Queen himself. You read exciting short stories by the mystery masters of today Agatha Christie, John Dickson Carr, Dashiell Hammett, Rex Stout, and many others. But you also read the superb, little-known crime classics of authors who have earned fame in other literary fields writers like W. Somerset Maugham, Christopher Motley, Mark Twain, William Faulkner, T. S. Stribling, H. G. Wells, and G. K. Chesterton. Yes, you'll find hours upon hours of swift-paced, hair-raising, wit-challenging wit-challenging reading in your 6 months of EQMM. Take advantage advan-tage of this bargain offer today. It is made for a limited time only. Simply fill in your name and address below, tear out, and mail with 1 bill. Money refunded if not delighted. High Praise from Noted Fans.' "I hive seen and enjoyed miny copies of ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE. It seemi to me juit ibout the best farm of escapism." Jdmri Hilton "For topnotch entertainment. ELLERY QUEEN S MYSTERY MAGAZINE is i regular feature on my reading list." Xtritr Cm&a "A ropy of ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE i always on my bedside table ; it makes an ideal traveling companion, com-panion, too." Ratft BtlUmy Among the many notables who are regular readers and boosters of EQMM: Raymond Swing. Ilka Chase, Sammy Kaye, Helen irpson, James Melton, fclsa laxwell, Joseph Wood Knirch, James M. Cain and many others. TJs Ccvpsn Vcrth $t . . . lcil Ihiv! ELLERY QUEEN'S MYSTERY MAGAZINE 570 Lexington Avhnub, New i owe 22, New York I enclose 1 which, with this coupon, entitles me to t''e next 6 months of Eilery Queen's Mystery Magazine. You will return my dollar if I am not delighted after reading the first two issues. Name Address Cay and State - school this year is to be "Better Hatchability", with emphasis on nutrition, breeding and the ph-siology of fertility. Other subjects of interest to the poult-ryman poult-ryman of the state will also be discussed. Well trained authorities author-ities from California, Oregon and Utah, will be prepared to discuss these matters thoroughly thorough-ly and intelligently. i Those expecting to attend the school are asked to notify their agricultural agents so that arrangements ar-rangements can be made. Cost of sleeping accomodations for the three day school will be $1 or $1.50 per person. Students will be housed in the rural arts building. Alexander Hamilton was kill ed by Aaron Burr on the same duelling ground where Hamil- Trench Silo For Corn If properly constructed and filled, the trench silo can be used us-ed for corn silage as effectively as the upright type, accoiuing to Glen Baird, Utah State Agricultural Agri-cultural College extension agronomist. agro-nomist. Usually unsatisfactory results come when the trench silo is poorly made and improperly filled. The following points should be considered in the use of the trench silo: (1) Locate where seepage and runoff water won't enter silo. (2) Sidewalls should be sloped one foot inward for each four feet of depth. If this is done, Queuing gruuiiu wises e xiuiisaa- - . - , , ton's son fell in a duel three ' Packmg is made easier because years earlier- Pianos and Accordians FOR SALE OR RENT Pianos $75 00 and up. Accor. dians $25.00 and up. Small down payment. Easy terms-New terms-New and used. Lessons-Williams Lessons-Williams Music Co. 308 Sast 3rd South Phone 940 R 'airmen ii I ' mi the tractor, truck or other implement imple-ment used for packing can get closer to the edge. There is also less chance for the walls to cave in. (3) Permanent wall lining with concrete is desirable if the silo is to be used over a period of years. (4) Proper packing cannot be over-emphasised. In upright silos the great depth gives use to considerable pressure which effectively ef-fectively packs the contents. In the trench silo packing must be done with heavy equipment such as tractors. (5) Air can be more readily ex cluded from finely cut corn than from coarsely cut- (6- Center of silo should be rounded up three to four feet high and then sealed with wet straw, green hay or roofing pap er. Magnesium is being used in' electroplating to protect metal against corrosion. LET SINGER EXPERTS repair, recondition your tawing machine. mach-ine. Genuine Singer parts. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 399 for estimate without obligation- Singer Sewing Machine Co.. 268 West Center, Proyo. If yea frcn B-mmn DEFICIENCY new DEXEL SPECIAL FORMULA may do wonders for you Lot of people who have no diseases, no infections in their body, still cannot can-not seem to toe the mark, cannot pull themselves out of a nervous, over-faligned over-faligned "out-on-your-feet" slump. Is this your trouble? Your condition may be due to the simple fact that you do not get enough B-vitamins and Iron in your food. Of course, your condition may be due to some other cause, so it M wise to consult your doctor. But if mild Vitamin B and Iron deficiencies deficien-cies are the origin of your miseries, then Bexel Special Formula may do uvnders for you! Everybody knows the importance of B Vitamins. Everybody Every-body knows the importance of Iron in your diet to help your body maintain rich, red blood. Well, just one capsule of Bexel Special Formula a day (that's all you take) gives you not only the important B vitamins, but also 5 times the minimum daily requirement re-quirement of Iron. Bexel la a scientific product and is offered with a money-back guarantee! Take Bexel Special Formula for 30 days and if you don't feel definitely better, you may return the bottle and we will refund your money. B &H PHARMACY THERAPUETIC OXYGEN DEPOT Watkins Asks For ! Military Academy Candidates j Senator Artnur V. Watkins announced today that he vill have four vacancies to fill at the .Unitpd States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md-, for the 1950 school year and applicants will be designated on the basis of Civil Service Examinations to be conducted on November 15. He said that persons desiring an appointment to the academy should make application to him at 348 Senate Office Building, Washington, D- C No applications applicat-ions will be received after October Oct-ober 26th. In making application for the Civil Service examination, ap-Dlicants ap-Dlicants should state their names in full, names of parents, age of applicant, schooling and residence resid-ence city, county and statt. The Civil Service examination ions, the Senator pointed out, will not qualify the candidates for Annapolis. Those appointed by the Senator still must pass regular academy tests. "This method of desigating candidates," Senator Watkins said, "was undertaken by me to insure the selection of the best qualified candidates and elimin ate political appointments which in many instances are not in the best interest of our military establishment" In addition to the mental qualifications required of academy acad-emy appointmentees, each must be a bona fide resident of the state of Utah and a citizen of the United States. Federal law prohibits appointment of any but legal residents of the state represented by the Senator. Further, Fur-ther, applicants should ascertain beforehand by-, undergoing a strict physical examination, that they are qualified to meet the physical requirements at the Naval Na-val Academy. In addition, candidates for the academy "must be not less an 17 years of age nor more than 21 years of age on April 1st of the calendar year in which they enter the academy," ac. cording to military regulations. Only exception to this age rule applies to candidates who have served honorably not less than one year in the armed forces. Such candidates may be admitted between, the ages of 17 and 23. On the basis of the above mentioned Civil Service examln-atons, examln-atons, Senator Watkins will appoint ap-point a principal and three alternates al-ternates for each of the four va cancies at the academy. Should the principal fail to qualify, the appointment will fall to the first alternate, then the second and finally the third alternate. AH applicants will subsequently subse-quently be notified of the places where examinations will be held. GRAND VIEW Mm. Calvin Cordner 048-J4 A Fireside chat held in the ward chapel, . under the direction direct-ion of Jeanine Dean, was greatly enjoyed by ward members. Ray 'Wilcox, former Tahitian missionary, miss-ionary, spoke on the people of l Tahiti, their customs and family life. His taiK was tuustraiea with slides. The girls from Grand View who stayed at the MIA canyon home last week enjoyed the outing out-ing very much. Those participating particip-ating were Cleo Baum, Jolene Williams, DeAnne Burningham, Donna Lou Wilde, Pat Welsh, Mignon Sheerif, Marie Griffiths, Barbara Carter and Valene Cam-enish. Cam-enish. " A group of Boy Scouts enjoyed enjoy-ed an outing at the Scout camp in Payson canyon last week, under, un-der, the supervision of Scoutmaster Scout-master Gail Young and his assistants, Calvin Cardner and Arthur Day. Scouts who went on the trip were Norman Eatough, Keith and Dean Mason, Robert Carleton, Gene Maagf John Nic-ols, Nic-ols, Niel Snow, John Welsh, Darrell Waters, John Syme, David Da-vid Williams, Charles Tucker, Lawrence Harding, Jack Carter, Gerald Wilde, Kent Olsen and Mark Smith. Transportation was provided by Willard Olsen. Two and one-half minute talks were given by Mrs. Margaret Mar-garet Nicols and Arthur Day on Sunday morning. Marion Carle-ton Carle-ton led the congregation in the sacrament gem. The Grand View ward Primary Pri-mary Cubs baseball team, under the direction of Mrs. Alma Anderson, An-derson, won the league championship champ-ionship when they defeated Hill Crest in the final game of the series on Friday. Members of the team are Elmo Syme, Don Riggs, Robert Carter; Stephen Jones. Michael Jones, Larry Sherriff, Raymond Welsh, Carmen Car-men Ivie, Th'ell Day, Rodney Kimball, Ted Harward, Dean Buckner and Verl Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Johnson and daughter, Marilyn and sons, Bobert and Bert, have returned from a vacation trip to the Pacific Pac-ific Northwest where they visited visit-ed with relatives. liy () i) .7 HILL CUES I Vaneese Woffinden 0553-R1 Boys winning special awards in the Aaronic Priesthood quorum quor-um during the past year are having hav-ing an outing in the southern part of the state. They left Monday Mon-day morning for Moab, where they spent the first night. Tuesday Tues-day they visited the natural bridges and on Wednesday they tried their skill at fishing in the Colorado River. They are spending spend-ing Thursday at Fish Lake and plan to return home Friday. Supervisors Su-pervisors accompanying the boys are Bishop Milton Jameson, Cr.IATE3 KU?Y KEL'CRIEJ JJERFS A LITTLE itory for parents, since at thnea all parents are likely to overlook a youngster's point of view, and the reactions of a child while young may hav far-reaching effect Look back to your own childhood and yuu wui inau uuwuwa wueii Ometilinff cut deeplyand the hurt has remained with you, buried in your sub-conscious. You win recall, too, things that made you happy, and you are happier today for thinking of those things. Our story comes from Alfred Hoffsomer Darby, Pa., who was caught in the rain one day, caught in a veritable down-pour which followed a long period of drought in his D. Carnegie secuon. This great relief came one day when, along with thousands of other Philadelphians, he was caught without with-out rain protection at his office. He managed to get through the Concourse to the suburban station and on to the underground under-ground railway without so much as dampening his clothes. But when he got off at the station, he had to dash across a space of some 15 or 20 feet to get under a canopy, So far, not so bad. There he waited, watch-. watch-. ing others being met by members of their families with an umbrella. He hoped someone would come for him, but when no one did, he finally went out into the hard rain. When he had gone far enough to get pretty well dampened, damp-ened, he saw his little six-year-old son standing on a corner under a bright street light, where he was sure he would be seen. He had on his raincoat and hat and carried a big umbrella. um-brella. Under his arm was Mr. Hoffsomer's own raincoat Mr. Hoffsomer's first thought was "Why, you ninny, why didn't you come on to the station?" A second thought came, and he didn't utter those words. He realized that the little fellow was doing his best, and that he had stopped where he knew his father would pass and be sure to see him. So he said, instead, "Hello, Alan, I was hoping you would meet me." The little chap held the umbrella as high as he could over his father, who struggled into the raincoat As they . walked along, that father kept saying how wet he would have been if the boy hadn't met him. He could feel the lad wiggling wig-gling with pleasure all the way home and his feeling of cooperation co-operation and helpfulness lasted all the evening. Yes, and that probably will turn out to be for that boy one of the memories that will make him happier in the years to come and warm his heart toward his father. Roy Rowland, Howard Gordon and Ellis Ashdown, The boys making the trip are Dan Bates, George Woffinden, Sherman Harward, Norman Oliphantj Bob Hatfield, Dean Rowland, Kirk Jameson, Glen Dalley, Haynes Thomas, Donald Marumuto. Bob Dalley, Bobby Oliphant, Peter and LeRoy Davis, Jackie and Glade Gordon, Ed Hill, Leo Smith, Paul Dalebout, Bruce and Acel Bown. The Second Intermediate class of the Sunday School had a swimming party on Wednesday at Scera. Annie McQuivey, their teacher, acted as chape rone. After Af-ter the swim the group met at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Floyd Johnson for a water melon bust Floyd Johnson entertained the class members by showing some local slides. The Junior Girls and Senior Scouts held a fireside chat on Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Hills. Missionary experiences were related re-lated by Floyd Johnson. NO. I 302 West Center PROVO, UTAH Phone 150 NO. 2 755 North State OREM. UTAH Phone 0538-J1 NO. 3 8th South & State OREM. UTAH Phone 0791-R2 by the month in your own home or by the hour in our sewing room, ."....c SINGER SEWING CENTER 268 WEST CENTER PROVO PHONE 399 1 "IT HAPPENS EVERYDAY" -(hit A LOOK AfrA'SVZtV- 601H' fORTV P12 IU A 6CH001 CHi: - fJFTY PER M WE tlUElU WIFE ffiSSWiW SOME COOKIZ$ " r mm v PLOTNER oLt str-o ABlt To TRUST m SPtSWMETSU If M MAD IT" OifCI&D AMD ADJUSTED fGSTl PVGUtl swum CQtfst IN tovav. MOTOR 87-71 HiSTCiMWe PBOVO, ufAH mo aeoe . !! it i inna 00 V A UTAH POWER & LIGHT COMPANY M6SSA5 |