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Show People, Spots In The News ARCTIC scene only 40 miles up the Hudson river from New York --City --City as icebreaker rescues icebound ice-bound oil barge and tugs. XT oag? lUMXt1' "W ft A r V "li- JJ DAZZLING the daisies with f which she's wreathed is starkly Clara Heidt of J Cypress Gardens. Fla.'" FT "A- !! WHAT TO DO about rail XTmf , TV. problem is set forth in mass ?1V of federal stud 3f David I. Mackie, chairman of Eastern Railroad Presi- dents Conference, who urges end of rails 'economic -slavery." - 4 g TRUNK LINE: Contrast to frozen Hudson scene at top is u r - ' - f - i 1 1 : . : : mis saiari 01 circus eiepnanis nmig aciuss miauu-iu-Miami Beach causeway. They refused to go by barge. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO WATER USERS The following applications have been filed with the State Engineer to appropriate water in Utah County, State of Utah, unless otherwise designated. All locations are in SLB&M. 32510 - Nathan Johnson, Rt. No. 1. Box 373 C. Provo, Ut. .1 sec.-ft. iiom a 4-in. well, 110 ft. deep at a point S. 820 ft. and W. 3215 ft. from NE Cor. Sec! 28, T6S, K2E. The water is to be used for domestic require ments of one family, for the watering of 30 cattle and one horse, and from Apr. 1 to Oct. 31 to irrigate 1 acre, all uses in NWy4 said Sec. 28. 32694 - West Union Canal Co., 230 East 2050 So., Orem, Ut. 8 sec.-ft. from either one or both of two 16-in. wells, bet. 200 and 800 ft. deep at the following points: (1) N. 300 ft. and W. 450 ft. from SE Cor. Sec. 26, (2) S. 600 ft. and E. 1420 ft. from WV4 Cor. Sec. 24, both in T6S, R2E. The water is to be used from Apr. 1 to Nov. 1, as a supplemental supply, sup-ply, to irrigate 1420 acres in Sees. 5 to 8incl., 16,17,21,27,34, 35, T6S, R2E. Protests resisting the grant ing of any foregoing applications applicat-ions with reasons therefor, must be filed in duplicate with the State Engineer, 403 State Capitol, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before April 8, 1961. Wayne D. Criddle STATE ENGINEER Published in the Orem-Gen-eva ,Time3, Orem, Utah, from February 23 to March 9, 4961. EGGS ! SEASONINGS i:nz2 Whip lmli Ti Board Appoints New Teachers And Principals The Alpine School District Board of Education recently accepted the resignation of Beverly Buss, Lehi Eelement-ary Eelement-ary School, and Margaret Hic-ken, Hic-ken, Geneva Elementary School, as teachers New teachers employed in-lude in-lude Carol B. Mortenson, Orem High School; Dorothy Moon, Greenwood Elementary School. Robert Emal, who has been serving as Alpine School principal, prin-cipal, has been transferred to Union Elementary School where he will serve as principal. prin-cipal. Penrod Glazier, sixth grade teacher at Edgemont Elementary Elemen-tary School, was appointed Drincipal of the Cedar Valley Elementary School for the -chool year 1961-62. Parlell G. Peterson, president-elect of the Utah Associ- 350 Children's Books Received At Orem Library Approximately 350 new books have been received by Orem City Library this month. There are books for all ages of readers, but this recent purchase pur-chase has been mainly for the Children's Department. Parents of First, Second and Third grade students will be especially pleased with the numerous supplementary readers read-ers for the primary grade children. In the adult department, current popular non-fiction books available are: "The Rise and Fall ,of the Third Reich"-William Reich"-William L. Shirer; "The Waste Makers - Vance Packard; "The Public Years," - Bernard Baruch; "Profile of Courage" by President Kennedy; "Masters "Mast-ers of Deceit" - J. Edgar Hoover; Hoo-ver; "The Naked Communist" - Cleon Skousen; "Exodus Revisited" Re-visited" - Leon Uris; "Hidden Persuaders" - Vance Packard; "Third Eye" - by Rampa T. Lobsang; "Realm of Numbers" and "Realm of Measure" by Asinor; R. L. Wright, Rebel in Concrete" by Aylesa For-see; For-see; "Arthritis and Folk Medicine" Med-icine" - Dr. D.C. Jargis; "101 Alphabets," - Ed. Hunt; "The Snake ha3 all the Lines", by Jean Kerr; and several current cur-rent biographies. ' Current best sellers available avail-able are: "Hawaii" - James Michener; "Advise and Consent" Con-sent" - Allen Drury; "Decision "Decis-ion at Delphi" - Helen Mac Innes; "To Kill a Mockingbird" Mocking-bird" - Harper Lee; "The Dean's Watch" - Elizabeth Goudge; "The Lovely Ambition" Ambit-ion" - Mary Ellen Chase; "Sermons and Soda Water" -John O'Hara; "Mistress of Mel- lyn" - Victoria Holt; "The Listener" - Taylor Caldwell; "Pomp and Circumstance" -Noel Coward; "The Child Buyer" Buy-er" - John Hersey; and "Diamond "Dia-mond Head" by Peter Gilman. Other new popular fiction selections on the rental shelf at 10 cents per week are: "Roses In December" - Frances Parkinson Keyes; "Epidemic" - Frank Slaughter; "The Doctor's Doc-tor's Bride" - Elizabeth Sei-fert; Sei-fert; "Gillian" - Frank Yearby; "The Secret of the Kingdom" - Mile Waltari; "The Doomed Oasis" - Hammond Innes; "Midcentury" - John Dos.Pas-sos; Dos.Pas-sos; "Mountains Ahead" -Martha MeKeown; "The Chess Players" - Frances P. Keyes; "The Morningside of the Hill" - Jac. Reed; "Peaceable Lane" - Keith Wheeler; "The Strange One" - Fred Bodsworth and "Sand? of Palahari" - William Mulvihill. ation for Health, Physical Education Ed-ucation and Recreation, was given permission to attend the Southwest District Convention of the AAHPER at Albuquerque Albuquer-que N.W., on April 19-22. The board approved the issuing is-suing of a quit claim , deed to Helen Stoddard on a narrow strip of property west of the Hillcrest School in Orem. MIRACLE WHIP i :...AUYOUNEiDroaj : cjiat divilid rocs? It's No Mystery Sell We G foo Less ami February Extra Specials G.M. Christiansen Furniture 1008 South State Street, Orem, Phone AC 51921 Needlecraf t News 3 -! - hy 'Nniiy Baxter Too many people, nowadays, are in a hurry to cast off the traditional. If it's been done for a long time by a lot of peopleit's peo-pleit's out of date and ready to be discarded. But we don't agree with that True, progress must be made. And some old things must go to make way for the new. But there's one thing that stays with us, as perennial as lemonade in the summer, and that is the love of working with our hands. As any needleworker knows, one of the most satisfying things you can do with your hands is to knit, and we chose today's design with this thought particularly in mind. TWU SKILLS tUH 1UI This buffet set is one of the delicacies that experienced experi-enced needleworkers love so much : knitted lace. And it's edged in crochet! The centerpiece and both end pieces repeat the same pattern of graceful center leaf, working out to a wispy body and delicate loop edges. Its end effect is well worth the extra bit of time it maytake you to make the set. For remember, knitted lace is like the post-graduate course in knitting; and not really intended for the beginner. But for the needleworker who knows what she's doing or for the woman who wants a challenge this is The Design: an elegant set that's never out of style. EXPERIMENT WITH COLORS Though white is usually the favored color for buffet and dresser sets, why not experiment with pastels and with the brighter colors on this one? See what looks the most striking over a dark mahogany table or the finest, covering a blond wood buffet. Write to the Needlecraft Department of 'this newspaper for free directions. Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope and ask for KNITTED DRESSER SET Leaflet No. PK-1803. Gl Insurance Dividends Slated OREM-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, FEB. 23, 1961 5 Nearly 25,000 Utah veterans will receive a total of $1,250, 000 in GI Insurance dividends under the speeded up payment pay-ment program ordered by the President to assist the national economy, according to Elmer J. Smith, manager of the Salt Lake Regional Office. The manager pointed out that the dividends would go to those veterans holding participating VA Llle insurance policies and that he had just received word from John S. Gleason, Jr., new Administ rator of Veterans Affairs, that all payments should be com pleted by April 1. This new target date is some three months earlier than VA's original or-iginal estimate as to how soon the gigantic job of paying more than five million veterans could be completed. The Ad ministrator announced that the new deadline was the result of the use of overtime and the 1 cooperation of other government govern-ment egencies in loaning spec ial equipment. OIIS Grad Named Dormitory Officer At Univ. of Utah John Clemens, son of Mr. and Mrs. E.G. Clemens, 883 West 4th North, Orem, has been elected to the position of vice president at Wasatch Hall. Wasatch Hall is one of the two residence halls for men on the University of Utah campus. Mr. Clemens is a 1959 graduate grad-uate of Orem High School, where he participated in band, and the Civil Air Patrol. He is majoring in chemical en gineering at the University of Utah. Mil Autoglass Installation JTteaier Quick 14 Infliinni Claim Service Installation THE ONLY AUTO GLASS SHOP IN THE AREA TO DISPLAY THIS EMBLEM I cFULLER '0N PAINTS W. 1 FULLER & CO. 70 E. 1st North, FR 4-1860 WORLD'S LARGEST MOST TRUSTED MOVERS BAILEYS MOVING AND STORAGE Representing ALLIED VAN LINES 4580 South State, Orem Ph. AC 5-4543 REMODEL with Aluminum Siding Aluminum Shingles Aluminum Doors Aluminum Windows from U.S. ROCK WOOL SALES CO. 1698 South State Orem Ph. AC 5-3420 I s wj-" iEAM ItJL 1 a bmt'i, lw wi IN 1 L3nP World's iSI Finest m BSURSDH WHISKEY WWMIMWII I v hoi i sines '1 (yl" I ISl 17QR 18 LwMMmMuum. " " 1 , ' I I ONE TOO j ! sS583 u uitla uuuuou 000 What might be called a one-way street is in the making at Kennecott's Utah Smelter. It is actually an extensive exten-sive conveyor belt system designed to improve operations at the smelter. The belts will always move in one direction. But, by contributing to successful copper production, they will be part of an opposite movement move-ment -the return of benefits' to Utah. The conveyor system is the first big step in a multi-million dollar improvement program needed to in Utah. This program is part of a vast, continuing effort at Kennecott to meet the problem of producing copper and selling it profitably in a highly competitive market. Figuratively speaking, when tho. copper is sold, the new traffic pattern' develops. A return trip gets under' way. (' Dollars come back to Utah to develop the improvements that help maintain successful copper produc tion. And successful copper produc- modernize the 55-year-old smelter as tion results in benefits that flow into a link in the copper production cycle the lifcblood of our tiatf economy. -jAssimju, HOW TO Bl FAR? OF A CSVt 0 C7AO a 11 .-)!? I if.. |