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Show THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, l949 OKEM -GENEVA TIMES Orem - Geneva Times Published every TL.tiday at Orem, Utah M. NEFF SMART, Editor and Publisher (Entered at tecond clasi matter November 19. 1944 at the poiloffice at Orem, Utah, under the act of March 3. 1897. MEMBER: Utah Stale Press Association Subscription Rates: One year, in advance $3-00 Loving care and understanding, in the usual sense, are not commodities that can be purchased in any market place. Yet, there are times when the need for them is great whether one may be rich or poor, or in moderate circumstances. circum-stances. With us, thoughtful service is not rationed. Our staff rcco;;:-.:-?s tV.at "Things NOT for sals" are part of our reonsibi'.ity to all families we serve. Dm III UST CENTEX PHONE 371 LOCAL STORES VS. MAIL ORDER HOUSES Where to get quality merchandise at the lowest possible poss-ible cost? That is the question which confronts residents of this community every day of the week. The owners of giant department stores in the East try to answer that question for us by sending periodically through the Orem Post Office hundreds of thick, multi-colored mail order catalogues depicting 'values' in everything from $1.98 throw rugs to $5,000 diamond-studded wrist watches- A casual inspection of the price tags attached to tne brilliantly illustrated merchandise would, in some cases, indicate that it could be bought cheaper through the catalogue than at a local store. The comparative quality qual-ity of the mail order items and the locally sold items is difficult to compare. As attractive as the catalogue pictures look, and as low as the prices appear to be, it would be well for shoppers shop-pers to take note of the following points : The catalogue price is not the actual price. The cost of placing the order, cost of the bank check or money order, postage, and freight, express, or parcel post should be added to the catalogue price. Only when this is done can a valid price comparison be made. In the local store, and only in the store, can you actually act-ually investigate the merchandise you are. buying. You can see it, feel it, taste or smell it, try it on for size and style, see it operate. No mail order house can give you this advantage. In the local store, you get youp merchandise when you need it most now, not 10 days or several weeks from now. That service is worth money to you. If the merchandise bought from the local store doesn't fit when you get it home, or if it doesn't match the color scheme as you thought it would, you simply take it back for exchange tomorrow. No cost- As easy as that! It'll cost you extra to exchange with the catalogue house, and it may take weeks to do it. . If the merchandise doesn't operate when you get home from the local store, if a screw is missing, a chair leg loose, an electric iron short-circuited, you 'go to the phone and the repair or alteration is made in a matter of hours at no cost to you. Local merchants have a right to your business in preference pre-ference to mail order houses, not only because their taxes help support the community, but because the quality of their merchandise is apparent, their prices are competitive, competit-ive, and they can serve you quicker and better. V4 Ay' YVK i FORD Bonus Built Trucks Available for Immediate Delivery Vi to 3 TON IF YOU DONT. THINK WE'LL TRADE TRY US TELLURIDE MOTOR GO. TRUCK HEADQUARTERS 57-75 West Center Provo, Utah ODORIFEROUS! fti -a A. kbfe jr m r 1- r 4 - RECUPERATING '. . . Tommy Henrieh, New York Yankees' star right fielder, lies in a Chicago hospital after sustaining Injury to his back in game at a Comiskey park. His injury is a blow to the pennant hopes of the New York American league team. Placement Campaign Starts for Handicapped A campaign to help handicapped handicap-ped workers find jobs will be carried on from October 2-u, as Utah County joins the Nation in observing National Employ the Physically Handicapped week. Chairman of local Nr.PH Week activities is Lottie M. Worthen, proiment Provo club woman. Proclamations calling for the observance have been $1409.73 For a brand new International Interna-tional pickup with all standard equipment. Immediate Delivery ANDERSON'S If yen suffer frcrn B-VITAf.llll DEFICIENCY systems like now BEXEL SPECIAL FORMULA may do wonders for you Lots of people who have no diseases, no infections ia their body, still cannot can-not seem to toe the mark, cannot pull themselves out of a nervous, over-fatigued over-fatigued "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 is 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 wonders 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 h'mej the minimum daily requirement re-quirement of Iron. Bexel is 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 TIIERAPUETIC OXYGEN DEPOT NO. 1 302 West Center PROVO. UTAH Phone 150 NO. 2 755 North State OREM. UTAH Phone 0538-J1 NO. 3 8ih South & State OREM. UTAH Phone 0791-R2 issued by President Truman. Local employers will be asked to survey their present job requirements re-quirements in order to find possible pos-sible openings for handicapped persons. Physically disabled persons per-sons not now working will be urged to register with the local office of the Utah State Employment Employ-ment Service, 171 West First North, Provo, where their qualifications qual-ifications for work can be evaluated. eval-uated. "We believe that there's a job for very handicapped worker, work-er, if employers will consider the abilities and not the disabilities disab-ilities of the handicapped," said Mrs. Worthen, chairman of NEPH Week. "When properly placed, disabled workers as a rule are enthusiastic, hard work- Turkey Crop Normal Says P.G. Official This year appears to be about normal as far as turkey production produc-tion is concerned, J. Ezra Adams, Pleasant Grove, president of the Utah Turkey Federation, has announced. Percentage of increase in turkeys tur-keys in 1949 is smaller than earl-lier earl-lier predicted, said Mr. Adams, who pointed out that some reports re-ports have indicated that there would be as high as 40 percent increase in turkey numbers ov er the past year. "There seems to be some misleading mis-leading information about the turkey industry and the huge crop of 1949," said Mr. Adams. "Since the government support program was announced, there have been reports that there would be as high as 40 percent increase in production over the past year. "I think the turkey growers, as a whole, feel that the government govern-ment was very fair in its support price of 90 percent of parity. This price will not make the producers and money but it does put a floor under the turkeys to assure the grower against a heavy loss through manipulation of the market," he added. Mr. Adams said that there were fewer breeder hens on farms on January 1, this year, than there had been for the past ten years, with the excepion of 1948, He said that lower proifuc-tion proifuc-tion of eggs along with low fertility fert-ility and hatchability followed the hard winter suffered by gg producing states. This put fewer turkeys into the brooder houses this year. Cold storage holdings on turkeys tur-keys are down this year as of August 1 to 21,209,000, Mr. Adams said. The average holdings hold-ings for a comparable periou for the past 13 years have been 24,-252,000, 24,-252,000, he added, and predated that there would not be an over-supply over-supply of turkeys on the market. Mr. and Mrs. Max Frand-sen Frand-sen (Ellen Adams) and son, Jay, visited this week at the Leslie Adams home. ing, and satisfactory workers. Their accident record is low, and their production record high. "This is not a charity drive. When an employer calls the State Employment Service for a handicapped worker, he can be sure that any applicant sent to him will be just as well qualified qual-ified for the job as an unimpaired unimpair-ed worker." Count the EXTRA VALUES TO ENLIGHTEN THE WORLD THIS WEEK THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY: "Utah is better off (economically) than the nation as a whole, having less unemployment and a larger percent-age percent-age of increase in individual income." Secretary of Commerce Com-merce CHARLES SAWYER, speakinfe before Utah Re. tail Grocers on Sunday. "We know that five percent of our drivers arounsafe. But we don't know whether the five percent are unsafe all the time or whether 100 percent of us are unsafe five percent of the time." THOMAS H. MacDONALD, commissioner com-missioner of public roads in Washington on Monday. "I would like the road (Timpanogos Loop) improved as much as the people (of Utah County) but there are many highways in Utah that need improvement and we will do what we can." Gov. J. BRACKEN LEE, following trip around the loop last Friday. "Hating war will not stop another war. What will stop it is the knowledge that the English speaking democracies democrac-ies are standing together." Rt. Hon. CYRIL F. GAK-BETT, GAK-BETT, archbishop of York and member of British house of lords, at Salt Lake City tabernacle Friday night. "If Russia and her satelites in this (peace) sho.wdown are not willing to cooperate, are not willing to agree to disarmament, then we can decide whether to go on with our present policy or to take advantage of the strength that is ours before Russia and her allies can reach the same stage of preparation." Sen. A. V. Watkins, in Sunday Sun-day night radio address. "No people in the history of man have come so far on the road to understanding, citizenship and culture in 85 years as has the Negro race." Gen. DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER, EISEN-HOWER, at dedication of Harlem YMCA on Sunday. . "The fault lies with the Soviet union, who have refused to consider any plan but one based on their own inadequate inade-quate proposals. If they had been willing to come out of their shell, to raise their curtain and to open the way to the system of control approved by the general assembly there might well have been effective prohibition today." British Foreign Secretary ERNEST BEVIN in U.N. General Assembly speech. "I am amazed at the work the people are doing here-One here-One often finds the women of a church working for their church. Not so often the men. The men of the LDS church follow the example of their leader, Pres. George Albert Smith, when he stresses that no 'gain can w made without hard work." Secy, of Commerce CHARLES SAWYER on Monday following a trip through Welfare Square in Salt Lake City. "The USSR is not thinking of threatening anyone and all the more of attacking anyone. We stand for peace and are defending the cause of peace. But we are not afraid of threats and are ready to answer the warmongers war-mongers blow for blow." Soviet Foreign Minister ANDREI Y. yiSHINSKY in a major policy speech before the United Nations assembly last Friday. FISHER BODY STYLING AND LUXURY and you'll choose FT I scon i! J FISHER UNISTEEL BODY CONSTRUCTION S-INCH WIDE-BASE WHEELS pluf LOW-PRESSURE LOW-PRESSURE TIRES EXTRA Values are exclusively yours at lowest cost in Chevrolet! CERTI-SAFE BRAKES with DUBL-LIFE RIVETLESS BRAKE LININGS The Fisetliiw D luu 4 -Door Sedan iv d i i .it v BBS. ft M ' mut. I 3 .'A V e V -c.-.. 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