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Show THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 9. I95a OREM-GENEVA TIMES ' M. Orem - Geneva Times Published Try TL-iradar ! Orem, Utah NEFF SMART, Editor and PublUhar (Entered at i.eond class matter Novembar 19. 1944 ai the polo:L.' ai Orem. Utah, under lhe act of March 3. 1897. MEMBER: Utah State Presi Association - Subscription Ralesi One year, in advance $3-00 LINCOLN SPEAKS AGAIN WHERE YOUR TREASURE IS, THERE WILL YOUR HEART BE ALSO. , In most quarters Senator Brien McMahon's proposal in Congress last Thursday, that the United States spend $50,000,000,000 (yes that's 50 billions) on a peace crusade, cru-sade, is being met with sneers of impractability or with dignifed silence; but the Senator's proposal and his impassioned im-passioned plea for a stand for a peace program and a-gainst a-gainst an atomic arms race, may be one of the most important im-portant speeches of our time. In case your paper was one of tho.se which saw no news value in the Senator's proposal, he is asking that we "move heaven and earth" to stop an armaments race which may destroy us. He said that "at almost any cost, we must assure that the Russian people act as part of the world jury which brings in a verdict covering . the issue of atomic warfare." His proposal asks that the money, to be spent over a five year period, be administered by the United Nations. He proposed that the Kremlin be asked to permit a meeting meet-ing of the United Nations in Moscow; that a world-wide circulation be made of leaflets explaining a new United States proposal for atomic peace. He said that "we must assure that the Russian people have opportunity to consider, con-sider, side by side, the atomic proposals of their own rulers and our proposals." Then the Senator underlined his program by warning that in Russian hands the projected hydrogen super bomb "might incinerate 50,000,000 Americans in the space of minutes." For our money, the Senator's proposal makes sense. If there are fields where Americans claim distinction the fields are 'selling' and public relations. Perhaps our resources should be channeled down or own alley. Let's "sell" some ideas about survival, and if we determine to do it, we can sell them to the Russians. If we spend billions on the H-bomb, perhaps it would be equally profitable to spend some billions on a real "crusade" for peace. Besides, it will show where our heart is. 1 1 l1 0 1 1 if IV ;t ft .If f II M ' " r" HILL CRESl Vaneese Woffindcn 0553-R1 Three little girls were blessed in Fast meeting on Sunday. They were Carol, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Johnson; Vickey Lynne, the baby of Mr. and Mrs. Don Ivie; and Laurie June, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Hugh Leonard. The home of Mr. and Mrs-Tom Mrs-Tom S. Lamb was the scene of a cottage meeting Sunday evening. even-ing. Clinton Hills was in charge and Richard Rowley gave the lesson. Mrs. Merl Anderson, ward chorister, urges all singers in the ward to meet at choir practice every Monday evening at 8,30-Plans 8,30-Plans are being made for an Easter program to be given by the choir. Bishop and Mrs. 'Orvil B. Davis and Mr. and Mrs. A. Royal Roy-al Hunter spent Saturday in Salt Lake City. GQVE Fri-, Sat. Feb. 10 11 "THE RED DANUBE" Sun., Mon. Feb. 12 13 "THE STORY OF SEABISCUIT" Malinee on Sunday 3 p-m. Tues., 15 Wed. Feb. 14 TWO BIG HITS The Cisco Kid" "The Kid from Cleveland" Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown are here from Burley, Idaho visiting with their daughter and son-in law. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Anderson and other relatives. EDGEI.10IIT Maxine Davis 0125 Jl The reorganization of the YMMIA took place this week with the release of J. Robert Gillespie, superintendent and his counselors, Melvin Stott and Jack Conder. The new officers are Melvin Stott, superintendent, Jack Conder and Penrod Glacier counselors, Ottis Hamilton, secretary; sec-retary; Howard Ferguson, M Men leader; J. Robert Gillespie, Senior Scout leader; Phil Conder, Con-der, Vern Ferguson and Martin Jackson, Junior Scout leaders. I Fae Conder has been released as counselor to Annie Ivers, YWMIA president, and Bernice Stubbs was sustained- The son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Larsen was named Ted Dean Larsen by his father at meet ing on Sunday and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Tun-bridge Tun-bridge was named Hazel by her grandfather, Ralph Meldrum. Set apart as teachers in the Junior Sunday School were Mrs. Russell Jones, Mrs. William Jackson, Miss Ruth Reynolds and Miss Leone Reynolds. Praise goes to Miss Irene Han- : I ! I f ' ) SAVED FROM STARVATION ... Vincema Scbiclio, 4, was saved from starvation by New York S.P.C.C. Investigators. Her little lit-tle brother starved to death. A third child of Mary and Guy Schieuw was well-fed. sen for the writing of the Edge- mont ward road show "Time Machine Capers." The cast in cluded Robert Farrer, Berry Blackburn, Paul Conrad, Mari lyn Carter, Carol Johnson, Von Long, Barbara Farrer, Colleen Grimmett, Joe Wright, Grant Brereton and Joyce Jeppson. The sacrament gem was given on Sunday morning by Janet Ivers. The two and one half min ute talk was given by Barbara Farrer. The Elders quorum has plan ned an evening of entertainment for February 17 at 8 p.m. at the ward chapel. The ladies will bring basket lunches and eat with the gentleman who draws her number. An enjoyable program pro-gram has been planned and dancing danc-ing will be enjoyed. Youth leadership was held on Wednesday night at the church with Bishop Orvil B. Davis in charge. A large group attended- Scout master Martin Jackson was in charge of the Scout program pro-gram presented Sunday night-The night-The following boys were given first, second and third class Scout awards: Kay Dusenbury, Darrell Conrad, Eugene Davis, Brant Johnson, Gerald Carter, Douglas Stubbs, Wayne Tripp- PLEASANT VIEW Edna Hansen 2028 M The Boy Scouts presented the program at a special meeting Sunday evening. David Nielson, Scout leader, was in charge. Speakers were Rell Reynolds, who spoke on "What Scouting Means to Me"; Jack McLaren, representing the fathers of the Scouts; and Mrs. La Von Roberts, representing the mothers. Don Meldrum and Lowell Lowry sang and Rollo Jones led the Scouts in repeating the Scout Oath. David McLaren was in charge of the flag ceremony-Next ceremony-Next Sunday evening at sacrament sac-rament meeting a testimonial will be held honoring Elder Rollo Jones. Elder Jones left Monday morning for the LDS lett, Kenneth Cluff, Virgil Ivie, Ronald Brereton and Larry Messick. Edgemont ward welcomes the iollowing1 inew members: Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Casley Kenner, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Schow, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jex, Mr. and Mrs- Carl Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nicholes. t::::::::::s::::::::i:::::iu::i.'::::!:::u::::::sm:::::::iti!:i:: This 'N That Ethyl N!elsen Hair u::::i::::::::::n:i:":::!""""""'":.':!',:::I:",:!::n A Request ADULT INFANTILISM Hi Folks, Every so often 1 am requested to write about something that is I beyond by knowledge so I dig 'in for the material and quote. We were having lunch at China City Cafe The little lady said to me, "Why does a brilliant brill-iant man marry a girl who is a mental infant?" she indicates with her head. There set ont of Utah's leading business men with his pretty wife. It was plain to see she bored him, intellectually intellect-ually speaking she is not his equal- "Why," continued my friend, do men do that sort of thing?" I added, "I have known women who have married men , mentally beneath them. In such cases women take mental grow th with life's problems- . . So in the years to follow the wife leaves her husband far behind, in time they have nothing in common, and so goes such situations." situ-ations." While reading from "The Doctor Doc-tor Looks at Love and Life", by Collins, I ran across a paragraph and I quote: "In young women, adult infantilism takes on an attractive aspect and appeals to man's sense of protection. The girl who lisps, coos, and twitters like a sparrow, 'is too cute for words', who plays at being a child, who is helpless, a poor clinging vine, she is a child when she is old enough to have a child of her own. She is the gal who looks so appealingly to men for assistance and comfort, com-fort, she is the one from whom men should fly as they would from a plague. But they don't The woman-infant attracts them. Some men rail and theorize against the girl who is not afraid mission home in Salt Lake City and expects to leave Salt Lake City next week for the Western States mission field. The annual ward reunion is being planned for the later' part of February. Larry Dean Nuttall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Nuttall was confirmed a member of the LDS church on Sunday at sacrament meeting. Glade Montgomery Mont-gomery and Ray Hamblin had charge of the sacrament with the following deacons assisting: Stanley Roberts, Larry Lee, Lowell Lowry, Don Meldrum,' David McLaren and Larry Baum. To Shed Light on the World This Week --THESE --THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY: "One who prizes the principles of liberty upon which this government rests may well fear any threat of encroachment en-croachment on the fundamental liberty of speech, press, or religion, but there is certainly nothing to fear from critics who merely attempt to undermine those liberties by words." Supreme Court associate justice HUGO L. BLACK, before annual conference of American Jewish Committee. "There is no forseeable reason for expecting that the factors contributing to national confidence will be any less stronlg during the second half of1950 than they are today." Secretary of the Treasury JOHN SNYDER, before be-fore Phoenix Real Estate board. "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone." COLLEEN COLL-EEN TOWNSEND, in response to. questions on the In- grid Bergman-Rosselini development. "Let me warn, with all the solemnity at my command, that building hydrogen bombs does not promise positive security for the United States. It only promises the negative neg-ative result of averting for a few months or years, well-nigh well-nigh certain catastophe. How is it possible for free institutions instit-utions to flourish or even to maintain themselves in a situation where defenses, civil and military, must be ceaselessly poised to meet an attack that might incinerate inciner-ate 50,000,000 Americans " Sen. BRIEN MCMAHON D, Conn., chairman of the joint congressional atomic committee, before Senate. "This (hydrogen) bomb is no longer a weapon of war, but a means of extermination of whole populations. Its use would be a betrayal of all standards of morality. . . . In the case of the atomic bomb the Russians required four years to parallel our development. In the case of the hydrogen bomb they will probably need a shorter time." Dr. HANS A. BETHE, professor of physics at Cornell, at meeting of the American Physical society. "There are people besides the' Russians who are upsetting upset-ting the rhythm of American life and who are destroying its basic structure businessmen who insist profits are the primary objective, who seek government intervention inter-vention by excessive tariffs, and who connive at monopoly." mono-poly." Dr. HENRY M. WRISTON, president of Brown University, before Traffic Club of Pittsburgh. "As a people we are politically immature and in international inter-national relations we are frequently not astute. We must do a better job of educating our children and ourselves to face the political challengs of our time." Dr. Thomas C. POLLOCK, dean of New York university's Square College. M. D. Wallace returned Sat urday from a five-day business trip to southern Utah and Nevada. Mrs. Carlos D. Miller is receiving treatment at the Utah Valley hospital for acute inflam-atory inflam-atory rheumatism. to look after herself, who has neither liesure nor inclination to camouflage her personality that it may please the other sex, and who scorns artifices of conduct as much as she laothes affectation. affectat-ion. I have seen a few girls of education and discernment who pretend they have neither that may excite man's "protective urge" and thus promote attention and facilicate matrimony. When, those are accomplished they hoist their true colors." The remarkable thing about individuals who remain infantile in the effective fields is that they often have a distinctive social talent; women enjoy a repute for being "sweet" and "nice" and men are considered "good mixers" and "go-getters" etc. Often they are emotionally a mama's boy or girl. Boil it down to one word and they are not mentally mature enough to be "an individual". Yes, I can understand un-derstand why so many men choose the adult infant for a wife, but for the life of me I cannot understand why a woman would want to marry a man who is a mental infant. OK, Lady, next time we have lunch together, we will go into that one. . . . Chevrolet alone in the low-price field gives you highest dollar value . . . famous Fisher Body . . . lower cost motoring! From where I sit ... ly Joe Marsh M7 "Left-Handed Compliment" s V.1!... ..rZt The SMeline D .m 'V:v., ,e. -we..... . . .ajw it 11 J k lUHVmwMBnmn i 5 jr FIRST... and Finest . at Lowest Cost! luxe 4-Door Sedan See where a bank in Denver is patting in left-handed checkbooks. They figure their southpaw depositors depos-itors deserve just as much consideration consid-eration as the right handers. Time -was when it was believed that left-handed people had no right to exist at all. If a youngster showed signs of using his left ' hand, his parents were supposed to break him of the habit to force him to use his right But today most doctors will tell you that changing a child's natural natu-ral left-handed tendency usually causes more harm than good. Stammering and other nervous disorders dis-orders often get their start that way with children. From where I sit, if a man wants to use his left hand that's his business. It's not such a good idea to make anyone do things our way, just because ire think it's right. Personally, I think a mellow glass of beer is the finest beverage on earth. If you happen to prefer a Coke why, go to it! Only leave mt the same freedom of choice, won't n u , r AMERICA'S BEST SELLER . . . AMERICA'S BEST BUY! for all the things you want in a the new Chevrolet with Style- Here's your buy for 1950 motor car at lowest cost Star Body by Fisher! It's the one and only low-priced car that offers you a choice of automatic or standard drive . . . with the thrilling new Powerglide Automatic Transmission and new 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine for finest automatic drive results . . and with a highly improved, more powerful Valve-in-Head engine and the famous Silent Synchro-Mesh Transmission for finest standard drive results at lowest cost. Chevrolet and Cfievroer olone brings you oil these advantages or lowest totlt NEW STYLE-STAR BODIES BY FISHER . . . NEW TWO-TONE TWO-TONE FISHER INTERIORS . . . CENTER-POINT STEERING AND UNITIZED KNEE-ACTION RIDE . . . CURVED WINDSHIELD WITH PANORAMIC VISIBILITY . . . BIGGEST OF ALL LOW-PRICED CARS . . . PROVED CERTI-SAFE HYDRAULIC BRAKES . . . fXTM-ECONOMCAl TO OWN OPERATE AND MAINTAIN. POWER fe AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION Combination of Powerglide Transmission and 105-h.p. Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost. Copy right, 1950, United States Brewers Foundation P. E. Ashton Co. I 35-pc. Treasure Chest WM. ROGERS Silvervvcre Value 024.95 with the purchase of any N JP UP 7m Get Details and SAVE LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS 175 NORTH 1st WEST. PROVO ICS cstm, mssk r Pvf "Copper may become a big crop-booster for farmers. Tests made last summer show that in some Utah soils, better and bigger crops have come from mixing copper with fertilizers." PHONE 155 |