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Show reSM-GENEVA TIMES Orem Women's Club r-tertained at Annual Garden Tea The Orem Women's club be-I be-I the fall season on Friday sl J they held their annual t il Tea in the gardens at ftme of Mrs. D- Orlo Allen. Mrs Horace Snyder, club JLiHpnt welcomed 31 mem- nd four guests, Mrs W. nnvle Cranney, Mrs. Charles ken Mrs. M. D- Wallace and Sa Ruth McCella. Mrs. E. D-Lmons, D-Lmons, program chairman, Sributed program booklets for the cminS year. Entertainment of the arter-noon arter-noon included dramatic readings m Mrs- Maj Sylvester and piano Sections by Craig NcNeil. Hostesses at the tea were the dub officers. Refreshments were served from a lace covered table, centered by a bouquet of colorful color-ful fall flowers. Slogan Contest Deadline Oct. 1 Slogans are still being submitted sub-mitted for the advertising program pro-gram of greater Utah Valley, Incorporated, In-corporated, according to Sterling I price, president of the corporation. corpor-ation. Many excellent slogans have been received and a great many more are expected before the deadline date of October 1. The slogan contest was Initiated Init-iated to enlist the cooperation of the residents of Utah Valley in discovering a succdnqt phrase that can be used as a 'spearhead' or Tattle cry' for the campaign which the organization is undertaking under-taking to increase the awareness of Utah Valley residents of the virtues of Utah Valley as a place to work and live, as well as to encourage tourist trade and new industry to recognize the unusual opportunities offered offer-ed by the valley. $100 in Prizes A prize of $50 00 is to be given giv-en for the best slogan as judged judg-ed by the directors of the corporation. cor-poration. Other prizes are one 1 $20.00 prize, three $5.00 prizes, 1 and six prizes of $2.50. . j Slogans are to be judged according ac-cording to their accuracy in re-, uecung me virtues or Utan Valley Val-ley and their power in com eying ey-ing the desired impressions. All slogans are to be mailed to "Utah Valley, Incorporated", Provo, Utah, according to Mr. Price. Strength of Umber strength of a timber can be determined more accurately by vuual inspection than can that of m other technically determinate nructural material. Disease Transmission fears that dust particles in the tit might spread the foot-and-mouth tfsease virus from Mexico to the United States seem to be unfounded, un-founded, in the light of recent vet-finary vet-finary medical research in Swit-wland. Swit-wland. Failure to transmit the dims- to experimental calves through dust and air from Infected quarters led to this conclusion. FOR SALE Motorola Spinet Radio-phonograph comb. Purchased new within last six months for $150. Leaving for Calif, to attend school. Will sacrifice for $100. Kennion Anderson, across street north from Scera Theatre, Phone 0750 J2. ANSWERS J-nly standard make type-J type-J &re sold. Dependable ff8 reliable firm w do tnwineaex with; all typewriters " atisfaction guaranteed ; 22 yf of experience; and llb-w! llb-w! terms and trade-in allowance, allow-ance, -"No Down Payment" O'Neill we owner and msrr. of the -l Typewriter Co. Mick-named iJch became of his Jsng contracts with no down "WWnt asked. S X'n T b . iit ... Welled backwards. tT- ''No Diwn Paywnf y1' has a complete staff wtactery trained men vho m typewriter kw and service. J-"No Down Payment" O'Niell very flexible plan ea-Hy ea-Hy for students. For ex-" ex-" conditioned grfcxan- l2fto!WritOT fW " HtUe -Jt maa a penny post-5? post-5? for particulars and "O Diwn Payment" O'Niell rj on of Ms field men T !!., and how .11 oetaUs of hla no down rment policy PhSSf aX4" Center St P""0 Typewriter Co. has I Parts for aB rtaodard f typewrit mmDaia -TwiM at long half of 1 -..-u.. t.,."""! no down I J "J v ?f ... .... Miss Gwen Gwen Jacobs Sets Wedding Date October 6 is; the date set by Miss Gwen Jacobs for her marriage to Paul F. Roundy. Miss Jacobs is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Jacobs-Mr. Jacobs-Mr. Roundy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Heber; L. Roundy of Pleasant Grove. The couple will be married in the Salt Lake LDS Temple SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP INSTRUCTOR NAMED Elon Smith, has been named class leader of the special interest inter-est group of the Sharon ward MIA and will conduct a class on Conversation at the coming Tuesday evening meeting, according ac-cording to ward MIA officers. Meeting time is 7:30 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Philo T. Edwards Ed-wards and Mrs. Letha Gurr enjoyed en-joyed a trip to Salt Lake City last Thursday on their wedding anniversary. Also in the group were Mr. and Mrs. Max Edwards. Ed-wards. Max was celebrating his birthday anniversary. They enjoyed en-joyed the afternoon at the Salt Lake LDS Temple and spent the evening at the State Fair. Weston Kofford and his daughter, Peggy Ann, have both been ill with the flu during the past week. . TRUCKS - TRUCKS TRUCKS WE ARE LOADED (with trucks we mean) Immediate delivery on all sizes. ANDERSON'S 241 West Center Phone 343 Provo Large Large IH- iio ILo bailee flic olMjijH 312 South University Ave. Provo PHONE 13S Jacobs and will be honored at a wed' ding reception on October 12. They will make their home in Pleasant Grove. Miss Jacobs, a graduate of the Lincoln high school and Sharon seminary, is a senior student at BYU. Her fiance graduated from the Pleasant Grove high school and served for three years in the navy. He attended Weber college for one year and is now attending BYU. BEAUTY RAISES PUEEBREDS . . . Carol Lninpe, University of Nevada co-ed entry In Mlsi America contest at Atlantic City, N. J., ays her talent Is raisins; purebred steers. Here, she says goodbye to a Hereford heifer before leaving for the oe bottle storage shelf pj i Handy meat drawer Automatic interior light frozen food compartment '. VUrODie, long-ius""!! n"i Low operating cost B5)lEJESSnr qsmH 03i?vu(3G Next to Utah Power Orem PHONE 0767 Rl OremQeineva Society Ins Smith. Editor Phone 0684 Jl Colleen Knight Becomes Bride of F. Clent Lewis in Temple Ceremony Honeymooning in Las Vegas and Mrs. F. Clent Lewis The couple were married on September Septem-ber 21 at the Salt Lake LDS Temple, with President D. Robert Young performing the ceremony. Mrs Lewis is the former Colleen Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knight and her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd R. Lewis. The couple were accompanied through the temple by the bride's mother and her grandmother, Mrs. Joseph Young J n 4ltA rr t-rvtTi,a me groom s pmcuu, w - TV.ti. mire I :iar- I ence Wright; and Mr. and Mrs-Leo Mrs-Leo J. Knight. They group enjoyed en-joyed a wedding dinner at the Hotel Temple Square following the ceremony". A wedding reception on Thursday Thurs-day evening in the Windsor ward hall honored the newlyweds. Wedding Reception To Honor Newlyweds A reception to be given tonight, to-night, Thursday, will honor Mr. and Mrs. Warren Delos Peay. Mrs. Peay is the former Alene Burningham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burningham. The couple were married on Thursday evening at the home of the bride's parents. Bishop C. Wilford Larsen performed the ceremony in the presence of immediate family members. The bride is a graduate of the Lincoln high school and Sharon seminary. Mr. Peay is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Peay and is also a graduate of Lincoln high and the seminary. He is employed in Orem and they will make their home here. Orem Miss Makes Wedding Plans Joining the group of young ladips who are busy making wedding plans this fall is Niss Evelyn Gordon, daughter of Mrs. Sarah Gardon. She Is engaged to marry Fred Barney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Barney of Randlett, Utah. The couple plan to be married sometime in November in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Miss Gordon is a graduate of the Lincoln high school and the Sharon seminary. Her fiance attended school in Randlett and is employed there at the present pres-ent time. PTA MEMBERSHIP WEEK SCHEDULED Mrs. W. G. Yergensen, Alpine District PTA president announced announc-ed this week that the annual PTA Membership Week is set for October 9-15. H Pfl U L"L f7 m ' LJ this week were newlyweds Mr. - 1 1 - . - ;GrPPtinff tht guests with the - bride and groom and their parents par-ents Mrs. Ray Knight, matron of honor, and Ruth Moss, Rhea Lowry, LaRee Hales, Carrie Campbell and Norma Cook, bridesmaids. The lovely bride wore traditional trad-itional white satin. Her gown was fashioned ith a lace yoke and long sleeves. A sheer veil was held by a crown of orange blossoms. Her heart-shaped bou quet was of orchids and step- hanotis with white satin stream ers- The bride's attendants wore pink and blue formals and carried car-ried nosegays of pink carnations and camclias. Mrs. Knight wore black crepe and the groom's mother wore black lace. Both mothers wore corsages of pink carnation and gardenias. Melvin Briggs acted as master of ceremonies during the program. pro-gram. Mrs. Bill Lewis was in charge of the guest book. Gifts were arranged by Mrs. Clyde Thomas and Mrs. Jack Adams. Mrs. Fawn Whitney was in charge of the refreshment table. Nearly 500 guests were served by Joan Adams, Gay and Robin Turscanskl and Phyllis McDaniel. Dr. Garff to Speak Before Club Women "Americanism" will be the subject of a speech given by Dr. Royal L. Garff, professor of speech at th University of Utah, when he addresses members mem-bers of the Women's Legislative Council of Utah county at 9:30 a.m. In the Women's Club House in Provo, according to Mrs. J. D-Pyne, D-Pyne, Orem representative. Delegates to the council and presidents of women's clubs in the county are expected to be in attendance. Men's Dept. ' Street Floor I'; "V. it J If- X I f ,1 ,'. h- it Mr. and Mrs. F. Clent Lewii, who were married recently at the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mrs. Lewis Is the former Colleen Knight daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knight and her husband Is ihe son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd R. Lewis. Eldora Carter Ward from Idahj Falls, Idaho is visiting this week with relatives and friends here. She is staying at the home of her mother, Mrs. Hettie Carter. t ft i! - " In 7 -4- v. 7f Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Vroman and three children of Grass Valley, Val-ley, California are visiting here with Mrs. Vroman's mother, Mrs. Margaret Wilkinson and other friends and relatives. Ctrl ALTERATIOM3 EXTRA 100 purt wool gabrlat Cahfornia styled with oKtliitou T waistband! Neatly pkatod frontal ltT r'.i, " 24" kn! Sturdy hand -picked ft I Perfect for Mkool; prft 1st business! Parfeet for tportx! Off th-am pookei! Sizes 28 to 40! Blue, Grtwit, Grey, Beige, Brown! ii II it THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1949 Historical Group Offers New Powell Journal The Utah State Hisorical Kocirt hns btrun distribution to its members the largest and in many respects the most im portant volumes it has ever pub lished: the Quarterly for the years 1948 and 1949 having been combined into a single 540-page volume to present the original Journals describing Major J. W. Powell's explorations of the Colorado River and the High Pateaus of Utah in 1871-72. The nation's foremost author ities on Powell have collaborat ed to edit these Journals, it is pointed out by Dr. Joel E. Ricks, president of the society. Dr. Herbert Her-bert E. Gregory, world-famous geologist long interested in the Powell explorations, has edited the journal of Stephen Vandiver Jones, topographer for the edition. edit-ion. William Culp Darrah, industrial indus-trial engineer of Medford, Mass., and Powell's biographer, has edited the journal of John F. Steward, who wrote a vivid account ac-count of the turbulent voyage down the Green and Colorado rivers in 1871. Charles Kelly, an outstanding authority on Utah's red-rock country, has edited ed-ited the journal of W. C. (Clem) Powell, the Major's nenhew. which is the most superbly entertaining en-tertaining of all the diaries, fihe combined volumes 16 and 17 which print there diaries have been edited for the society by Dale L. Morgan, well-knnwn Utah historian. In conjunction with volumo IS of the Utah Historical Ouartpr. ly, which was itself the largest printed by the Society to that time, and which was devoted to the initial Powell exDloration down the Coloradd in 1869, the new book comnletelv covpra one of the creat American fpata of exploration and discovery. Fruit In Boll To make a wonderful desserts roll out your favorite biscuit dough and spread It with a thick fruit sauce rhubarb, strawberry, peach or any of your favorite summer time fruits. Then roll it up Jelly roll style and cut the roll into two-inch two-inch slices and bake. The clever dessert slices can be topped with more of the fruit sauce or with sweetened whipped cream. eoop eq tna qof torpneni rtu t mun r)93(ood inued at sejoq je&o AjpI) os -eda; eutqdonM jo uonBonddB ub mjM Aijunap uj tnd w n! uiaq paddjj y n n i i 1. 0 " |