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Show THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1951 I l OREMGENEVA TIMES TIMPAIIOGOS 'inducted by Lucy Poulson 1 A Mrs. Poulion j Timpanogos residents are Invited to call 0645-J1 with persona' items and oth er news. Modern Generation Gifted With Medical Knowledge HOBOKEN, N. J.-The new genpration never ceases to ;i m ; zo ! Two 11 year old boys found s H2 calibre bullet and manager' o somehow fire it in a to.v pi "tol. When the bullet lodged in the lei; of Joseph Lawless, he calmly calm-ly di'c it out with a penknife and walked to a nearby hospital. As an intern began to prob the wo.md in search of the bullet Joe polite!' informed him: "Yoi ,'on't have to go digging in there (Joe I already d f it out Jusi out some penicillin in it." k: Kent Bccth. recently returned missionary, wes the speaker at the church services Sunday evening. ev-ening. He told of his experiences in the Northern California mission. mis-sion. Douglas Rowley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Rowely, was confirmed a member of the LDS church, h:v!ng been baptized earlier in the day. The prcjrriin .n Sunday school was under hs direction of the Jun cr Sunday School officers. Mrs. Emma Chittock was in charge-. The sacrament gem was given by Mary Margaret Bishop and talks were given by Linda .crry and Douglas Rowley- Songs were led by Mrs. Melda Hacking. Amy Hanks, daughter of Bishop and Mrs. Ray Hanks, unveiled a picture of Christ blessing the children. Amy was chosen because she has the best at endance record in the Junior Zunday School. j No MIA mee'ing will be held :n Tuesday, Sept. 4, according to Mrs. Bernice Cox, president. All MIA members are expected '.o participate in the ward carnival carn-ival en Sept. 7. Regular mutual will be held Sept. 11 at 7:3U. 01 INSURANCE NUMBER ON AIL CHECKS OR MONEY orders wrrw WHICH VOU PAY PREMIUMS TO V A For full Information tontart your nearelt VtltltANS ADMINISTUATION allic WANTED TO RENT 2-Bedroom house in Orem, unfurnished. Thone 0684-J1 cr contact office of Orem-Gencva Orem-Gencva Time:. A30 ,7 t t - . - . "Vn. A. 1 i - rv il & U Ml' .j i 8 I 4 - m! ! '7!L: I i 4 . t I , S t- i 1 I s s? V "r , Li r ; " "!. ' ; S" 'i CI OT f R A Vour Campus Favorite JFrom 4 he Classroom of Style In ihe East It's nubby rich tweed or soft, silky flannel superbly tailored in the easy wearing 3 button Jacket with natural shoulders. In the West It's mixture gabardine a suit with a lustre fine all wool silky texture smartly styled in the single breasted Patch Pocket Jacket with fine needled edges. And from Coast to Coast It's CLOTHCRAFT'S . Swagger Tw ted Topcoats America's Campus Favorite. Provo's Finest Store for Men, PROVO, UTAH Mc?r.churian Fields n2 for Ceramics' ; 'r rc Bui'd-up Try (NGTPN, D.C. What lies "hini North Korea's border with M'jn;.'hiiria, along which U.S. and Red plfines have been clashing in the bk"est jet battles of aviation history? From the borders of Soviet Si-ber Si-ber a southwest in a mighty are perofs Manchuria and around the Yellow Sea lie more major airfields than In all the rest of China pu' together. Mao Tse-tung's so-called "priv lle?d sanctuary" is criss-crossed with runways laid down by Japan's Kwantung Army in long years when the banners of the Rising Sun floated float-ed over puppet Manehukuo. What condition these fields might be in to receive a reported 3,000-plane buildup build-up of Chinese air power Is uncertain. uncer-tain. But for months Indications have come from Korea that Red China is hard at work improving such bases and building new airfields air-fields in Manchuria. Events have made plain that at least some of these installations are operational for jet aircraft. North Korea's airfields what few the Japanese built among the tumbled tum-bled mountains have been founded found-ed by United Nations planes since the Korean fighting began. North of the ridges which pile to 8,000-foot peaks along the Man-churian Man-churian border, however, is the Cat, broad valley of the Sungari River, one of the richest agricultural areas on earth, rising gradually to the treeless plateau of western Manchuria. Man-churia. Westward across the Yellow Sea from Korea and south of China's Great Wall stretches another plain along the East China coast, through which wander the Yellow and Yangtze Yang-tze Rivers. There, too, the Shantung peninsula points like an outstretched tongue straight at Korea, closer to Seoul than any U.S. airfield to Japan. A new National Geographic Society So-ciety map of Asia, published in March, shows principal airports at 28 Manchurian and Chinese cities, all of which are closer to the heart of Korea than Tokyo. Among them are Shanghai, Nanking, Tsingtao, Tientsin and Peiping itself. At the end of World War II, there were more than 40 military airfields in Manchuria alone. New Style U.S. Currency Baffles Eank President HIWATHA, Kas. Roy Ruth, bank president In the near-by community of Everest, found that counting money can become a problem. Recently he broke open a bundle of $5 bills and carefully counted them. They totaled $500. As a check, he turned them over to recount This time he got a total of $530. Checking, re checking and turning over each crisp bill carefully, he made a startling discovery: Six of the notes, fresh from government presses, were $5 denominations de-nominations on one side, $10 on the opposite. Lincoln Gets Three Tennis Courts In Summer Improvement Program LHS Class of '38 Holds Reunion Members of Lincoln high tent ol's class of '38 gathered at She Flumingo club on Saturday evening for their first reunion since graduation. Sixty-seven persons attended, including 38 actual members of the class. Following a smorgasbord dinner din-ner the address of welcome was given by J. Norman Smith, student prexy at Lincoln during 1937-38. Mas'er of ceremonies was Kent Fielding. Each class member was asked to tell about his activities during the past 13 years. Musical numbers were presented as follows: vocal solo, Harold Brereton; trombone solo, Mr. Riddle: Diano solo. Mrs. Riddle. Ivan Kocherhans was elected chairman of the group to plan the next reunion. Naomi Davis Warwood was named secretary. The group voted to hold a reunion re-union every third year. Members of the reunion committee com-mittee included Frank Jex, chairman; Kent Fielding, program; pro-gram; Wallace Robert Anderson, Ander-son, publicity; Velma Bunnell Fronk, secretary; and Eva Bunnell Bun-nell Taylor, Maxine Warwood Davis, Grant Rowley and Ivan Kocherhans. Those in attendance were the following: Mr, and Mrs. Jack Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd (Leona Selman) Allen; Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Robert Anderson; Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Brereton; Brere-ton; Mrs. Maxine Loveless Bullock, Bull-ock, Mr and Mrs. Lamar (Lorna Stubbs) Bunnell, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Burr, Mr. and Mrs Orvil (Maxine Warwood) Davis Mr and Mrs. Don (Mary Conder) Edwards, Ed-wards, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ferre, Mr. and Mrs. Kent Fielding, Field-ing, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ford, Mr. and Mrs. Julian (Velma Bunnell) Fronk. Mr. and Mrs. Reed Gillespie, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Handley, Mr and Mrs. Robert Hills, Mr and Mrs. Ralph Jacob, Mrs. Helen Hel-en Wentz Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Ford (Susie Gordon) Jepperson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jex, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Kocherhans, Miss Gladys Madsen, Mrs. Marjorie Elder Nelson, Miss Lucille 01-sen, 01-sen, Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Nita Bone) Park, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Ly-man Penrod, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Penrod. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Rowley, Mr. and Mrs. Toffie G. Sawaya, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shepherd, Mr and Mrs J. Norman Smith, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy (Willmetta Spaugy) Smith, Mr and Mrs. Jay (Eva Bunnell) Taylor, Mrs. Iris Colings Tope and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Platte Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon (Naomi Davis) Warwood. "JOE BEAVER" A battery of three tennis courts comprising an expenditure expendit-ure of approximately S6500 s the principal improvement to the Lincoln high school plant during the summer months, according ac-cording to Frank Woffinden, superin'endent of buildings for the Alpine school district. Concrete has already been poured for the tennis courts which are situated directly east of the Scera swimming pool. Screens will be erected shortly and asphalt back courts will be laid to complete the project within the next few weeks. Other improvements at the high school include the installation installa-tion of circulating blower type heaters in the gymnasium, along with removal of the steam radiators. rad-iators. The new system will provide pro-vide adequate air condition for the gym. A new drafting room has been added to the mechanical arts building and two new physical education classrooms have been made by constructing a partition in the activity room west of the gymnasium. Mr. Woffinden also reports lhat the buildings have been painted and redecorated through out and that all the desks have been refinished. New linoleum has been laid in the band room and a new concrete approach has been installed at the front of the main building. In addition addit-ion the outside woodwork has received a coat of paint. At the Page school Mr. Woff-inden's Woff-inden's crews have constructed a new classroom from the present pres-ent library and hallway, and have installed new curtains for the stage. At the Union school the construction con-struction crew is rebuilding the nearby recreation hall which will give that school a lunch room, auditorium and gym. The building is to have complete new heating, lighting and kitchen kitch-en utilities and is expected to be ready early next year. Acoustical tile on the ceiling of the lunch room and kitchen j at the Geneva school, plus redecorating, re-decorating, have been the sum-j raer projects mere, ramung ana decorating have also been completed com-pleted at the Lindon and Spencer Spen-cer schools. Mr. Woffinden reports that construction is going ahead on Orem's new $500,000 Westmore school and that it will be ready for occupancy a year from now. Contractors are Groneman and Co. Members of the school district's dis-trict's structural crew are A. L. (Pat) Dickerson. foreman, Max Thome, Edward Pyne, W. W-Dickerson W-Dickerson and Lloyd Swenson. On the painting and decorating crew are Carl Swenson, Marvin Allen, Ivan Perry and Reed Moss. Forest Service, U. S. Department 0f Agriculture "Campers caused fewer forest fires in 1950 than the year before but 'firebugs' increased." , ' PLUMBING HEATING MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS Installation Sales Service Engineering - Complete Boiler Service PHONE 2960 THE P. L. LARSEN CO, 335 West Center Lad In 'Hoppy' Sweater Is Youngest Volunteer PHOENIXVILLE, Pa. The husky militarv noliceman blinked as the little boy, dressed in jeans and a j Hopalong tassiay sweater saumerea up to the entrance to the Valley Forge Army Hospital and said politely: po-litely: "I've come to read for blind patients." The soldier took the lad to the commanding officer. Eddie Dwor-chek, Dwor-chek, 11 years old, had hitchhiked from Paoli, 10 miles away, although friends had laughed at his idea of volunteering as a "reader." The officer didn't laugh. Neither did the blind patients as Eddie reaj .1 . l - 1 1. 1 Vn . to mem irotii iwu uuuita uc unu brought under his arm: biographies of Lou Gehrig and Joe Di Maggio. Army Rescuers Hold Marine Pilot Until Ransom Paid WITH THE FIRST MARINE AIR WING IN KOREA Pilots of a Leatherneck "Devilcat" squadron paid a rare price for the return of one of their comrades. The "ransom" was 100 pounds of steak. And it was paid not to the Reds, but to a hungry and prankish prank-ish U.S. Army helicopter outfit. Marine Captain Russell G. Patterson, Pat-terson, shot down behind enemy lines In central Korea, was rescued by an Army helicopter. The 'copter men refused to return re-turn him to his home carrier until Captain Fatterson's squadron mates came through with the "chow." Senator Thinks Rainmakers Partly to Blame for Floods WASHINGTON - Senator Case (R., S. D.) believes that the opera tions of "rain makers" might have had something to do with the disastrous dis-astrous floods in Kansas and Missouri. Mis-souri. Case reported that articifial rain makers operating in Oregon, Nebraska, Neb-raska, Colorado, and the Daktoas "seeded enormous areas with sheer todide." The Dakota senator said there is immediate need for a scientific ap praisal of rain making in order to "find out who Is doing what, and how." Other sections of the country might walsome the efforts (limited of course) of the rain men. 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