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Show THURSDAY, JANUARY , SKI & ASM-GENEVA TIME3 Orem-Geneva Times Published try Thursday Oram. Utah M. NEFF SMART. Edilor nd Publisher Hollis Scott Associate Editor Entireu.ss second c1bi matter November 19. 1944 at the postoifice al Orem. Utih. under the act of March 3. 1897. MEMBER; Utah State Press Association National Editorial Association Subscription Rates: One year, in advance 1X00 LEFT ON HIS DOORSTEP MAYOR LOVELESS MOVES We have been impressed and encouraged by the energy ener-gy and earnestness which Mayor Ray E. Loveless has applied to his new job during the past few days. With bold strokes J ayor Loveless is staffing the various town boards. He wants no non-participating dead timber in the groups which serve the city It may be a page from President Eisenhower's book, but Mayor Loveless apparently believes that it takes organization, from the top all the way to the bottom, to run a country or a community. We think that it is a sound approach. In addition to his energy Mayor Loveless brings to his new office considerable experience and know-how. As a councilman since 1949 he has become intimately acquainted ac-quainted with the city's water, road and fiscal problems. prob-lems. As a pioneer fruit grower and property owner in Orem Mayor Loveless has long been devoted to the area s growth and welfare. Few could bring to the office of Mayor his maturity of judgement and devotion to this community. Mayor Loveless succeeds in of lice a strong leader. It is encouraging that he has accepted the position as a challenge and is not content to merely keep the lid on" until the next municipal election. ' , - SPEED JUST DOESN'T PAY Every time you get behind the wheel of your car and particularly if you are heading out on the highway remember that speed is costly. It is costly two ways in life, and in money. When you increase speed from 55 to 65 miles per hour you double the chance of death in case of an accident. ac-cident. , , . At the same time greater speed sharply increases vehicle operating costs. A study by the National Safety Council shows operating costs at 35 miles per hour are $ 12.95 per 1,000 miles, whereas at 65 miles per hour operating costs are $19.43. These figures are only for gas and oil consumption. There are added costs of high speed due to greater stresses on your engine, increased wear on tires, strain on wheel assemblies and other mechanical parts. And here ia the most significant .point of all: for all the increased cost in life and money, the saving in time is relatively small. Actual road tests on rural Iowa highways showed that at a 45 mile an hour cruising speed the motorist averaged 42 jmiles an hour on a particular run. At a 55-mph cruising speed he averaged 48, at 65-mph cruising speed he averaged 53. Between the safe speed of 45 miles per hour and the dangerous Bpeed of 65 miles per hour a driver saves six minutes in a 20-mile run. He gains only two minutes between 55 and 65 miles per hour, yet he doubles his death risk and adds nearly 20 percent to his gas-oil operating costs. It just doesn't pay any way you figure it to drive at excessive speeds. Tribune Friday and Saturday MATINEE AT 4 P.M. SATURDAY Rates 'or Students n. v r3 mm k an Enron . mm -CHARITON HESIDN SUSAN MORROW PETER HANSON f JOAN TAYLOR kfnmJ eOORSIIUSUU. IYDKYMEHM' Saturday Kiddies Matinee GALL OF THE KLONDIKE CARTOONS, COMEDY, SERIAL Monday and Tuesday The ' Motion Picture WITHOUT A SPOKEN WORD! Orem Women's Club . Members Hear Three-Act Play Miss June Wright read the three-act play, "Abraham Lincoln !of Illinois" by Robert Sherwood, at the Wednesday meeting of the .Orem Women's Club. Mrs. Ray Gilligan presided at the meetiing. The musical portion of the pro gram was arranged by Mrs. Rol and Tidd. Mrs. George Tucker sang two solos, " AFlag Without a Stain" and "My Hero". She was accompanied by Mariam Roun- dy. The Litany was read by Mrs. Fenton Prince. Mrs. Roland Tidd was named to serve as art chairman for the club. She selected as her commit tee Mrs. Gerald Buckley and Mrs. Merlin Finch. The club members voted to make contributions to the Red Cross, Polio, rheumatic fever and Cancer drives and to the Orem ambulance fund. Mrs. William A. Cox gave a legislative report and asked the group to support legislation for new build ings at the state hospital. uuesis at the meeting were Mrs. Glen E. Johnson, Mrs. Gor don Bililngs, Mrs. Doyle Robert son, Mrs. Zelda Wall, Mrs. E. O. Bylund, Mrs. J. V. Taylor, Mrs. M. D. Wallace, Mrs. LeRoy Lov-eridge, Lov-eridge, Mrs. M. Thatcher, Delia Lunceford and Neva Booth. Members present were Mrs. Clyde Weeks, Mrs. Brent Nay,- Mrs. Farrell Smith, Mrs. Ray Ol-sen, Ol-sen, Mrs. Ray Loveless, Mrs. George Boyce, Mrs. J. T. Smith, Mrs. James T. Farley, Mrs. Leo Rowley, Mrs. L. B. Bennett, Mrs. William A. Cox, Mrs. Ollie Johnson, John-son, Mrs. Lionel Fairbanks, Mrs. Ed. Wickman, Mrs. Boyd Asay, Mrs. Karl Taylor, Mrs. Frank Woff inden, Mrs. Roland Tidd, Mrs Donald Stubbs, Mrs. Ray Gilli gan, Mrs. Gerald Buckley, Mrs. Robert Blaylock, Mrs. Clarence Bliss, Mrs. Fenton Prince, Mrs. Ray Johnson, Mrs. Mont Burr, Mrs. Raymond Willoughby, Mrs. Thomas Biggs, Mrs. William Jac-obson, Jac-obson, Mrs. Ronald Adams. Mrs. Andrew Cooper, Mrs. Allen Al-len Winterton, Mrs. Rulon Mansfield, Mans-field, Mrs. W. G. Yergensen, Mrs. D. Orlo Allen, Mrs H. S. Howard, How-ard, Mrs. Neldon Marshall, Mrs. Merlin Finch, Mrs. Neal Bunnell, Mrs. Max Pedersen, Mrs. Howard Hall, Mrs. Victor C. Anderson, VnmriT ww. f-x . wpilllllf ANNOUNCING RE-OPENING Of the Newly Renovated and Redecorated Crown Cafe 5 NORTH STATE OREM Complete Catering to BANQUETS PARTIES DINNERS SELLING SPREE FOR 1953 BIG DISCOUNT SALE ON USED CARS! We Need All Models Of CHEVROLET LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE ON NEW '53 CHE VHOLETS P. E. ASHTON Utah Nat'l Guard Praised by Army Chief of Staff Commendation of units of the Utah National Guard -was made in a letter from General J. Law- ton Collins, the Chief of Staff, United States Army, received th is week by Governor J. Bracken Lee. General Collins' letter stated that the response of Utah Guard Units called into active military service since June 1950 "has magnificent." He said, "I am confident that when the complete story of their heroic accomplishments is known to all, another brilliant chapter in the history ., of our National Guard will have been written: Governor Lfee in his reply to uenerai Collins stated, ." . . we are equally proud of the record they have achieved particularly by those units that saw duty in Korea." This 'N That BY ETHYL N. HAIR Hi Folks, While vacationing in Arizona I met a song writer of note, Bur-oie Bur-oie Williams, who composed "Some One Stole My Gal", "Pen-nys "Pen-nys From Heaven" and about 70 other song hits. He also writes poetry that talks to the soul and improves the personality. Here is a copy of his poem "Be Careful Whit You Say". He autographed it and gave me permission to pass it on to my readers. Let me suggest you add it to your ten commandments, and for goodness sakes don't steal my copy, for it is the one thing I acquired on the Arizona visit that I can pass along to my grandchildren kn owing that many a person will be spared the heartbreak of crit-ism crit-ism while my family will be weeding out their own faults. Let me get busy on my own hsortcomings. Here it is for you: "Be Careful What You Say" In speaking of a person's faults, pray don't forget your own. Remember those with homes of glass, should never throw a stone. If we have nothing else to do, but talk of those who sin, Tis better to commence at home, and from that point begin. We have no right to judge a man until he's fairly tried, Should we not like his company, we know the world is wide. We all have faults, and who has not. The young and old a-non, Perhaps we may for all we know, have fifty to their one. I'll tell you of a better plan, and find it works full well, To try my own defects to cure, before of others tell. And tho I sometimes hope to be, no worse than some I know, my own snortcomings bid me let, the faults of others go. Then let us all when we commence, com-mence, to slander friend or foe, Think of the harm, one word may do, to those we little know. A . . n. caretess worn couia Kill a man, or overthrow a throne. It's wise and best, to let faults rest, till we correct our own Bernie Williams Published by consent of author. Mrs. W. H. Thompson, Mrs. W. A. Sbwards, Mrs James Kirk- man, Mrs. Robert Bingham, Mrs. O. S. Allen, Mrs. Clayton Bisjiop and Mrs. Clyde William?. CARTER'S SAW SERVICE 9V 1 WMt 41b Worth Act oh from Silver Star U Dull 'Em IH Sharpen Sawsand Lawnmowers b machine. SPRING'S LITTLE TOP-OVER . . . The loppy textured, sofdy feminine short coat makes a predfe-hon predfe-hon of compUmenU to come! Beneath the omtle, shawl collar, a dark contrast; below it, a big honey-comb button. Trim slit pockets, strsaUU adjustable stem cuffs. Four constant COM' ponton . . . from now on. Pink, blue, or gold. Sites 8-16. Exclusively ours. t $26-9$ To Shed light on the World This Week THESE MEN HAD THIS TO SAY "As to the charges that some professors hold unpopular un-popular political opinions, the answer is, of course they do. It would be a sad day for the United States if the tradition of dissent were driven out of the universities. For it is the freedom to disagree, to quarrel with authority auth-ority on intellcectual matters, to think otherwise, that has made this nation what it is today. Indeed, I would go farther and say that our industrial society was pioneered by men who were dissenters, who challenged orthodoxy in some field and challenged it successfully. The global struggle with communism turns on this very point." Dr. JAMES BRYANT CONANT, president of Harvard University and recently High Commissioned to Germany. "The point I want to emphasize is that the heart of a successful foreign policy is our national conduct and example, and that is a matter for every individual and not just the diplomats. So far as your government im concerned, you may be sure that it will not be intimidated, intimid-ated, subverted, or conquered." JOHN FOSTER DULLES, DUL-LES, Secretary of State. "That (American) woolgrowers should require an import duty of 42 cents a pound on Australian wool . . . . . . suggests that the American industry is grieviou-ly grieviou-ly inefficient. It may be wondered whether such an industry in-dustry will be saved by any degree of tariff protection that does not utterly yield the field to synthetics . . ." Editorial in Sydney, Australia MORNING HERALD. "The population of thex United States has increased an average of 2 1-2 million in each of the last three years. This means that the factories of the U. S. have a continuously increasing outlet for their goods. It means a great extension of all public facilities, highways, phones, transportation, schools, churches. It means a demand for enormous amounts of capital." ROBERT E. WOOD, chairman of Sears, Roebuck and Co. "Without a doubt Russia has all the information needed to make an atomic bomb. But whether it has the technical knowledge and the industrial technology to put a workable A-bomb together is highly problematical." problematic-al." Dr. ARTHUR H. COMPTON, top Manhattan project pro-ject physicist. "Unity of the American and British peoples is the main obstacle in the path of freedom's enemies." WALTER WALT-ER S. GIFFORD, retiring American ambassador to England. Wie President's declaration regarding Formosa represents rep-resents the first concrete application of what he himself him-self defined in his message as a new and positive foreign for-eign policy. This is a recognition that the policy of containment con-tainment which served a good purpose during our military mil-itary build-up is no longer adequate. . ." NEW YORK TIMES. "If Chiang now attempts to raid the mainland will we furnish his transportation? Will we supply him if he lands in China? Will we go to his rescue if a landing; attempt fails? And what will we do if China attacks Formosa with its modern jet planes? Will we retaliate? We hope Mr. Eisenhower has calculated the risks carefully." care-fully." CHARLOTTE (N. C NEWS. i w sm u ir m . .-.5 w1 Vii WE SERVE RURAL FAMILIES without extra charge OUR SERVICE AND INTEGRITY IS AVAILABLE TO ALL FUNERALS AS LOW AS 9100 HAVE ALWAYS BERN A FAST OF OUR SERVICES. BERG MORTUARY M EAST CENTER a PHONE V9 NOW OPEN To our Phillip 66 Patrons TOWN HALL SERVICE Just South of City Hall NEW MANAGER NEW SERVICE We specialize in Good Work PETE CALLAHAN, Mgr. "ASHTON BLOCK" wove WTAM Provo Phone 155 UJJ |