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Show THURSDAY, MAY 25, Of-M-GENEVA times Orem - Geneva Times Publikhed ry Tbmdaj Orem, Uih M. NEFF SMART, Editor and Publiiher (Entered ai feeond class mailer NoTembar 19. 1944 al the po!otL. at Oram, Utah, under lie act ef March 3, 1897. MEMfcER: Utah State Press Association . Subscription Rates: One year, in advance THE RISIIIG RED TIDE NEHEMIAH: A STORY FOR POLITICIANS The prophet Nehemiah had some good advice for his followers upon one occasion, and the same advice is better bet-ter than average now: he told his people to hold their swords in one hand while they built their city with the other, pointing out that without the building the swords would shortly be useless; and that with the building the swords, in the long run, would become unnecessary. It does appear true that we have enemies without, which we must prevent from gaining a foothold within. with-in. However, the way to protect our country is to contribute con-tribute to its growth. Our building can become, through its strength and vitality, through its ability to serve people the finest protection possible against ideologies ideolog-ies or violence which would seek to destroy it. It is for us to add to our nation's strength and well-being. well-being. We must gain a vision of constant improvement, constant growth. The danger we confront is the danger of believing that we have arrived at the ultimate the danger of dogmatizing dogmat-izing our vision, until not the vision but the dogma preoccupies pre-occupies us. Thus we become pacifists and ..militarists, rightists and leftists, and not Americans. And thus we lose the richness which comes of having access to the contributions of all, and miss the moral of Nehemiah's story. n II vibt I I If M Qi. jw . vacuum i ATTEMPT lb t TOP n , mms wi(iaTS f To Tramcs. ! THANKS, SCERA We never cease to be impressed at the effective job which is accomplished year after ycr through the Scera-Comrr.unity recreation program- It'll be 'jetting under full steam early in June. pearly 100 softbail teams! Think of it. Where else does supervised play reach such a proportion of the population? pop-ulation? And that is not to mention the hundreds who will h3ve supervised recreation opportunities in playground play-ground activities, dancing, swimming, music and arts and crafts. We commend the program and urge that your young people gear their summer activities to that program. We commend the leaders of the program, and particularly partic-ularly we commend and are grateful for the fine theater which makes the program possible. It is no wonder that residents of this community are loyal to Scera. fM:V, f.wr:. iM:JHr1:trir I r i 1 i n n r n n PLEASANT VIEW Edna Hansen 2023 M v The Primary will conduct a talent show of Wednesday, Mayj 31 at 3:30 p.m. All children in. the ward are urged to partici-l pate and parents and friends are invited to attend. Following the show there will be home-made t candy ani ice cream for sale, j Primary will be held eachj Wednesday at 10:30 a m. at the ; chapel through the summer! months. President Grace Lowry and her co-workers are anxious to have all children fa the ward attend. Women of the Relief Society met at the home of Mrs. Judick Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Davis, Bishop and Mrs. Orvil B. Davis and son Richard, and Kieth Salisbury went to Salt Lake City Wednesday to see Elder Lloyd K. Davis as he left for the Canadian mission. Bone Tuesday and quilted a lovely quilt. Ronald Hill led the sacrament gem in Sunday School. Brigham Young's Daughter at Statue Rites child, Mrs. Mabel Young San-corn, San-corn, has been selected for the honor of unveiling her father's s'-atue in the rotunda of the nat ional capitol in Washington, D. C, when the state of Utah pres ents the marble heroic sized sculpture to the U- S- Govern ment. ' Announcement of the selection select-ion of Mrs. Sanborn was made by Mrs. C L. Jack, chairman of the Brigham Young Monument commission, named by the Utah legislature to provide the mar ble piece of Utah's founder for placement in Statuary Hall at the national capitol, the nation's unofficial hall of fame. Mrs. Sanborn is the 54th of 56 children sired by Utah's pion eer founder. She is the daughter of Brigham Young and Lucy Bigelow Young, and was born in the Lion House, Salt Lake City, cn February 22, 1863, and has just passed her 87th birth day. Her mother's family came to Utah from Massachusetts. Assisting Mrs. Sanborn in unveiling un-veiling the statue will be Mah-onri Mah-onri Young, the sculptor of the piece, who is himself a grandson grand-son of the Utah founder. Governor Gover-nor J. Bracken Lee will present the statue to the government The Brigham Young statue is the 40th to be placed in Statu ary hall, only one of which is a woman. " The provision f oi the unofficial "hall of fame" was made by an act of congress in 1864 , which allows each state to place two statues in the hall. Brigham Young is Utah's first Many states have yet to name their first candidate. The ceremony will take place at 2:30 p.m. on June 1, the 149th anniversary of the birth of Pres- ident Young. To Shed Light on the World This Week .. THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY: "Defense and foreign aid are the real causes of d r financing a!on with the (1948) cut in taxes bv r gress- It is due to inadvertent circumstances and r any plan." Secretary of the Treasury SNYDER 10 y I: 161 WEST CENTER STREET IN PROVO from where 1 sit ... Joe Marsh Vhy oose" Changed His Mind )Va Last week, parents were railing Moose Jackso.i on the phor.e and kids were hooting at him in the treela. AH because Moose fenced in his field near the depot, where the kids like to play bull. Moose got sore tho way folks acted refused to budge. Then Doc Sherman, who likes to play center-field center-field himself sometimes, decided to "use a little psychology." Over a friendly glass of beer at Andy's Garden Tavern, Doc says, "Sorry this came up, Moose. Wa were thinking of asking you to um-P'w um-P'w what with your professional experience and all." (Moose used to play a little semi-pro ball.) That did it! Next day Moose put up n stile over his fence. In return, the kids promised not to cause any damage. From where I sit, when you try to understand the other fellow's fel-low's point of riew like his personal per-sonal preference for beer or coffee and then take into consideration the will of the majority, why, things seem to go better all around. "Vrou won't be the first to say - that not by a long shot. One of the first things you notice, when you step from another make of car into Buick, is the wonderful difference in the Buick ride. There are good technical reasons, rea-sons, if they interest you... Soft coil springs all around, the gentlest type pf spring man knows how to make. A stout torque-tube, acting like the husky keel of a battleship to , steady the whole carriage. Low-pressure tires on wide, Safety-Ride rims, that stop heel-over heel-over and sway on curves. Firm, sure, quick-acting shock ab3orbers, promptly snubbing the after-bounce of the bigger bumps,. The important thing is what these all add up to. Freedom at last from jounce and jiggle. A level, floating, road-free passage over almost any kind of road, with even the worst of them tamed and gentled as never before. Add Fireball power to all this the roominess of wide, deep seats the lightness of Buick controls con-trols and the liquid silkiness of Dynaflow Drive and you have a car just too good to miss. Come try one, won't you? Your Buick dealer will be delighted to demonstrate without obligation delighted to show you that if you can afford a new car, you probably can afford a Buick. Standard on Roadmastkr. optional at txbra cos on Spscial and Svpmb model. ONLY DUICR HAS &ynaflou ASH WITS XT GOZSl HfGHEft-COMmSSION Fir. bo (J volva-ai-fwad power m ihna ngi'nej. (Utw F-263 ngint in SUPlt mooei) NEW-PATTERN STYLING, wHh MUlTf-GUAftD hnfmnt, laptr through lender,, "daubh bubUt" taitighlt WDE-ANGtf VISIBILITY, doM-vp toad new both forward and back TRAFFIC-HANDf SIZt, ha over-oil length for eau'er parting and Garaging, norf fuming rodiu . IXTRA-WIDE SEATS cradled between the axles SOFT BUICK RIDE, from oB-coi'i springing, Safery-Kide rim, low-preuure fires, ride steadying forque-fube . WIDE ARRAY OF MODELS with Body by Finr. Mil Time In HENRY J. TAYLOR. ABC N.fworl. every Monday evening. IPo IS i Copyright, KS0, United States Brewers Foundation 175 NORTH 1st WEST PROVO WHIN ICTTtt AUTOMOIIUS All 1UIIT BUICK WIU 1UILO THEM o PHONE 155" "Legally, all we have to do is pay back the number of dollars people entrust us with. also interested in the quality of those dollars most imtx)rtant problems facing our nation u tv, u,t ity of adopting a balanced budget so that xe can jr tain the integrity of our money and the purchasing' er of the dollar." DIETRICH SCHJIITZ, vmE:l Washington Mutual Savings Bank. mi m "Citizenship training should guard wisely again mere flag saluting and loyalty pledges empty 0f mea! ing. . . Such rigamaroles substitute trivia" for f undame als, verbalism for patterns of control and behiv Dr. WILLIAM H. BURTON, of school of education t Harvard, at midcentury conference on citizenship eda cation- "A Republican congress would return to the princiok of thrift and sound fiscal policy. ... it would promote better education, better health,, better housing, better security for pur people and better equality of opportun. ity for our children. We believe that hardship and pov erty can be eliminated without undertaking to extend government welfare service and regimentation Senator ROBERT A. TAFT, in answering Trur speeches- "I have been received in a most friendly way, and the exchanges of views and ideas have been of a' positive kind. I have no reasons to be dissatisfied with my con versations in Moscow." TRIGVE LIE, secretary w -i r t'm.j xt4.: v.- . 6C'rc'- ai ui Ljmteu iauuiia uyun ma reiurn irom talks with josei aiann m Aioscow. l wish to protest most categorically . . . against the methods which are being applied in eastern European countries contrary to the interests of their population under the pressure . . . cf the Soviet Union. This is the greatest and most tragic disappointment of my life" Dr- VLADIMIR HOUDEK, former chief Czech delegate 10 ine umrea isanons, wno resigned May 16 and asylum in the United States. mere are some industries such as steel, in which government persecution and I mean persecution-ij a red flag to risk capital. I spend a lot of time trying to figure out what the government wants us to do. The industry is investigated because it has not and then because it is too big." C. M. W7HITE, president oi itepuDiic ateei corporation m address at National industrial uonierence board. Punch Treats for Memorial Day Outings IMITATION 6RAK nAVOt - eJ teL ' i I Y FRUZOLA and PERK-ADE SERVE WITH MEALS AND AT PICNICS And . . LIK-M-ADE FOR HEALTH Better jlhan Candy Jo the kids to eat or drink. LOTS OF SEnVICE-(or SEnVICE-(or so little money! "What a lot of service for so little money!" That's what hundreds of farmers in this territory say after making greater usef electrical "hired hands." The more electricity you use, you know, the lower the rate. And hundreds of wise and thrifty farmers are taking advantage of electric "hired hands" wfl0 reduce work and increase farm profits. UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. Home Ownership - A TAX PAYING COMPANY - tool Cod |