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Show na OL ' Moa- 'es. Bit visited 1 Mrs, S the 'olsoia, at the is this G of all Sav. n will )et 10, iter in elect 3ROW sident. 3RS ate of id. resent he unit un-it the , on ' Nov- ark. tator on hat i 'ANY )f the Fifth h, on 1950, )se of mend )f Irr s that ,sse J i CELL 5. 13. orem-geneva times r jimpanogos Motor ' THE SUPERIOR ..rvlll THEATRE Phon Orem 0776 Rl Oct. 6 - 7 Gregory Peck Hugh Marlowe in -i9 O'CLOCK HIGH" Plus George Montgomery in -THE LAST OF THE DUANES" rr(,m the Zane Grey Novel ,3011.1 9 Mon. Oct. B Clifton Webb Shirley Temple in MR. ' BELVEDERE. GOES TO COLLEGE" Plus Mark Stevens Colleen Gray in Will James "SAND" tes.. Wed-. Thurs Oct.' 10 - .11 - 12 Liada Darnelle :- Paul Douglas in A LETTER TO THREE WIVES" Plus . Fred MecMurray Maureen O'Hara in FATHER WAS A FULLBACK" iing Fine Leaps Up,' Up Driver Spouts $5 Words 1ELWAUKEE - A Milwaukee wrist talked himself into a fine -:: 15 sentence. .'Series Olecik was charged with feding 40 miles an hour across a pet. He argued that "the patrol- ra who arrested him couldn't b clocked him properly.- -ie judge heard both sides and tepted the patrolman's testimony. ,"a dollars and cost," he ruled. X judge," Olecik said. "The Peer was too far back to clock Fifteen dollars and costs." said judge. Bat, jour honor," said Olecik, raited a long time at a stop-before stop-before the officer came along." Iwnty dollars and costs," said p judge. 1 still say that he was too far V said Olecik. Plenty-five dollars and costs," - the judge. Iik still argued, but the juftee pt raise the fine. He had reached f maximum. Bovine Mastitis wne mastitis develops in a percentage -of bruised teats iEe injured tissues are more si to the growth of masW.is than healthy tissues. Earning Xrash 5i burning winter trash be ' to lay the fire in an open e on bare ground so that trees ; shrubs will not be scorched by given off. Maim Street r i , rr 11 i n&. IB r v U4J h If I THE MILDEST OCCUPATIONAL HAZARD COMMANDS HIS FULL RESPECT. . 4 Apple Growers Trying To Help Themselves Utah is not the only state that has trouble keeping poor quality fruit out of the bottom of he box. But probably Utah growers have done less in an or ganized way to insure the pur chaser of an honest pack than many other states. For this reas on it is interesting to see that "c appie growers are trying to do something about it this vear in an organized way. Last year the aDDle erowers requested and received thi co operation of local dealers in marketing Utah apples. But dealers received some nnnle packs that were not as good as the label said they were. As a result the dealers are not too anxious to co-operate this year Trankrt Safety SrWc he '.1 With Scalping Knife v""- .YCP.E A resident of a Brooklyn apartment house XM the Flatbush court an Indian- work'jng as an elevator operator in the building build-ing has some rights, but she doesn't believe they include wearing a "scalping' knife" and hanging a modified war club in his elevator. Mrs. George Hagopian,. ore of ft? 12 tenants in the building, said that it had taken a little time to get u?d to Chief Reindeer, otherwise known as "Joe", when ha went to work as superintendent and elevator operatornot opera-tornot that 'his strangeness was entirely distasteful. She thought his custom of wearing wear-ing his hair in a braid was novel and ' when he occasionally stuck .a gay feather into his coiffure, it lent a romantic touch that brightened bright-ened ail of Flatbush. However, ' she said the elevator service was poor." You could "ring and ring" before the car came and it did not do much good to com-, plain. Once, she added, when she did complain, Chief Reindeer replied: re-plied: "This is 'my country, you leave." Mrs. Hagopian reminded him of a real estate transaction involving Manhattan island and $24 worth of trinkets. Neither was calm enough at the time to speculate on how 'Brooklyn was included in the parcel. par-cel. In any event, the Indian directed direct-ed her attention to a knife in his-belt, his-belt, which terminated the- argument, argu-ment, 'she said. Mrs. Hasopian sa-d that she was afraid . of being sailped. .She said that other tenants had been insulted in-sulted and that several had signed a petition to the landlord for the chief's removal. The bunding" s owner was ad--vised to keep the chief under wraps. 1!, m m Makes Barnacles mum Jis!uuu Bishop and Mrs. Freeman Cooley and Mr. and Mrs. Rosel Cooley of Gilbert, Arizona visited vis-ited in Vineyard for two days enroute to their homes after at tending general conference in Salt Lake City. MUSIC TO YOUR EARS! J" '! f YES, THE PRICE WE'LL CHARGE FOR PUTTING YOUR CAR IN TIP-TOP RUNNING ORDER WILL BE MUSIC TO YOUR EARS. LA JOLI.A. Calif. Henry T B.irl'ey. an inventor, has developed a -shocking device which causes mussels and barnacles to commit , suicide. It may someday save ship owners and seashore industries millions a year. THe apparatus is essentially a series of Vacuum tubes which generate gen-erate timed, electrical pulses in water. The pulses, too weak to electrocute elec-trocute the sea creatures, forces them, to- suicide. . In the case of the bivalve mussels, mus-sels, the current causes their -shells to snap shut. Continuing- pulses cause a muscular reaction which keeps, them shut.. Death occurs when the mussel either starves' or . is unable to eliminate wastes, suc-. suc-. cumbs to auto-intoxication. In a test all .of a group of 100 mussels exposed to the pulses died wilHhv two weeks. Seventy died within one week. Applies for .Patents ' The 'single-shelled barnacles, sa's Barkey, are equally vulnerable. They eat by fishing about in the water with tiny feelers. Preliminary tests .indicate that the pulses par- .ah'ze these feelers. Millions of dollars are spent an-nnally an-nnally to scrape barnacles from the hulls, of vessels .ranging in s'ze from battleships to rowboats. Bur-key Bur-key says his apparatus can be rigged so it will not only kill barnacles bar-nacles already present but prevent . further accumulations. He has already applied for pat ents on, an adaptation of the device designed to clear underwater pipelines. pipe-lines. Bower plants, oil refineries and other industrial plan's near ihe oceans use sea water for cooling machinery. The huge pipes through which the water is drawn quickly become lined with elogging mussels. mus-sels. ' A New England power station, he says, removes 300 tons of shells annually from its intake lines. A San Diego plant with fopr-by-eight-foot intake tunnels found after an inspection that the intake" line was coated with two feet of mussels. This reduced its arnount of salable electricity by $25,000 yearly-. Present Methods Expensive i Systems using watpr hot enough to kill the bivalves, or slaughtering them by heavy chlorination, have proved, to be extremely costly, he says. The microscopic mussel eggs, which are fertilized while they float in tne water, attach themselves to some solid object after 44 hours. If they find no such object, they die. They cling by means of sticky threads and a single "foot," which must be protruded. One of tha many effects, of the jolts of current is to make it impossible impos-sible for the mussels to stick this 'neckline foot. out. FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS' . FACTORY-BUILT PARTS ANDEElSON'e When you buy fertilizers, be sure you know what you are paying for. How much fertilizer j is there in that 100 lb., bag?, What kind is it? It is what your j crops need? Look at the analyst analy-st label. It will tell you what is in the bag. j 1 West Center Provo Whether fertilizers are applied appli-ed in the fall or in the spring makes little difference. But if your crops need them, be sure you apply them. in marketing Utah apples. They believe they can do better by purchasing apples from other areas. This condition lead to the growers becoming interested in a program that would assure the dealer that every Utah apple pack he buys will be just what it is lab. led. Growers are at. tempting at the present time to nave a Mate Marketing Agreement Agree-ment made effective to help assure as-sure dealers of a good, pack. Before a marketing agreement agree-ment can be put into operation, a large majority of growers and handlers must indicate that they want an agreement. Under the terms of a State Marketing A- greement, the growers and han dles elect a committee from among their members to deter mine the marketing policies. The committee can sDectfv the size and grade of apples to be offered for sale. After they have come to an agreement on these points, the State Department of Agriculture will enforce the! terms of the agreement by inspecting in-specting all lots of apples offered offer-ed for sale. And only those packs meeting the terms of the agreement can be sold. Briefly this is what the apple grower is attempting to do. They bel'eve this will assure the dealers that Dacks will be as good as the label and that poor quality packs will not be on the market in competition with the approved ones. There is nothing in such a program to hurt any grower honestly interested in the welfare of the fruit industry. indust-ry. We should give this program our full support. THURSDAY, OCTOrZH 8, l" s- The happiest conversation is that of which nothing is distin-! ctly remembered, but a cener-l al effect of pleasing impression. 1 Johnson TANK UNIT , . . The caption that (crampmnlei) thii phots-), distributed by the Soviet-licensed eaat Germu news geacj' ADH, read i follows: "A tank unit of the North Korean poo: Us" aJTay." t i i U L r n in fol If ui W U voir iil TO BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER WITHOUT LIMIT OR RESERVE ' BUY NOV - AT YOUR OWN PRICE! DIAMONDS - WATCHES - LAMPS - SILVERWARE FURNITURE GIFTWARE - RUGS CARPETS LINOLEUM - HARDWARE - SPORTING GOODS : WHEN .THIS INVENTORY IS COMPLETELY SOLD WE WILL SAY o o o OPEN- WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY III6HTS AUCTION SALE STARTS PROMPTLY AT 7 P.M. FREE PARKING 111 Atari FREE PARKING NO FANCY FIXTURES NO SALES CLERKS BUT ALWAYS BIG VALUES EVEFTY ITEM GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK 670 NORTH STATE STREET OREM |