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Show Two THE AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN, Thursday, September 22, 1955 - - yjjj, AMERICAN FORK" CITIZEN i - .;..'.. t - Published Every Thursday at American Fork, Utah, , by the ALPINE PUBLISHING CO. Entered as Second Class Matter, at the Postoffice at American Fork, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. ONAl I0ITOIIAI Subscription Rate $2.50 Per Year Fall Beforehand Everything comes to him who waits, but to whomever waits for fall, that season comes sooner than do others. September brings a leal on the wing, as April brought a bird flying. The-browning meadow, onxa late summer day turned brisk and gray, takes on a sudden momentary look of Novem ber fields. " A piece of newspaper will blow across a city street in just ascertain way, turning over and overhand the observer will sniff the sharpened breeze and glance at the sky for a sign of seasonal change. A few more children on suburban streets forecast droves of them schoolward bound a short time hence. Someone who cannot wait for fall has lighted some logs in a livingroom fireplace, and you can smell the smoke lying on the cool air of a late summer night as fragrantly as when beclouding October stars. V ' i, A "summer visitor" in the town calls to say good-by. A suburban market window lights up before closing time, Someone at the club mentions it is too late in the year to mend his tennis racket: Ready?" and the first service of the fall season zips over three weeks faster than you expected Bobby is still intent on baseball, but last night he asked "Mom" if she had seen his football anywhere about '- 4 And whoever waits for fall knows at such moments that it has come just to leave its card, hut will soon be back to stay. . v A aV VrfffMtMlf V, A Rom where I sit... Joe Marsh - ofj : --'V ...Makes a Man Healthy, VVcalthy-and Tired! Sandy Peterson's aephew Pete kaa f one back to eoller. He "varkeo! on Sandy's farm a couple" f Months last summer to get kardened op for football" Ha seemed to enjoy farm life aJI right bat like most city kids It took him some time to get used to a farmer's schedule. Sandy claima that when he went in to wake Pete on the first morning the boy looked up startled and asked what lime was. Sandy replied it was four-fifteen. four-fifteen. "Gee," Pete murmured, "if we're going to do a day's work tomorrow you'd better get to bed ! From where I sit, we most hsre hesrd a million stories like that. But they show how some people assume their customs are the only proper ones. To most city folks getting np at 4:15 seems odd. became be-came theg dont do it Just like some people dont think enjoying a glass of beer is "right" . . . because be-cause theg happen to prefer another an-other beverage and haven't waked np to the fact that everyone has a right to his own choice, Copyright, 19SS, United Stale Brewers Foundation Back-Log From Citizen News Columns 10 TEARS AGO The American Fork Lions Club members discussed the posslblll ties of erecting and operating public swimming pool for Am' erican Fork at their Thursday night meeting. The Major Pro ject Committee, made up of Leo O. Meredith, Vern Faddls, Lloyd Ohran and Leo Nelson, will adopt the project as the number one club project for the year II fur ther investigations prove that it is feasible. Sunday. September 30, has been designated "War Fund Sunday" in Utah, according' to word received from fund headquarters head-quarters in Salt Lake City. On that day speakers and pastors of all churches will be asked to de vote at least a part of their discourses dis-courses to a campaign of the United Un-ited War Fund which opens Oct ober 1. 20 YEARS AGO . Over a thousand students ans wered the summons of the school bell Monday morning and filed back to duty in the schools of American Fork. The enroll ment to date averages higher than for the opening week last year, which Indicates that the enlarged enrollment in the schools will be held. The city council convened in special session, Saturday even ing and discussed the lnforma tion x received from the State Board "of Health relative .to new WPA project which contem plated a state-wide sanitation program. The Adams and the American Fork Camps of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers plan to erect monument in American Fork, commemorating the First Pub lic School In the State of Utah. 30 YEARS AOO The latest . modes 'in hats, dresses, coats, etc., were display' ed on living models Wednesday night to the citizens of Amert can Fork in the large windows of the American Fork Coop Inst. The fashion show, the first to-be given by this firm, was viewed by a crowd of from 200 to 300. The American Fork display for the Utah County Annual Fair promises to be of a size and na ture "that win do justice to our fair city if plans of the recently appointed committees are fol lowed out. - . , j . .. .. ,. The American Fork Flower Show will be held in the Alpine Stake Tabernacle Sunday, September Sept-ember 20th. Doors will be open at 9 a. m. to receive the flowers. in i mat It W-.Un t:iy Yey l fltsa Yeer CctjtU! L MUSH IN VACUUM .OUT" " ferWeetSvt cottc:j-c:i:::j far Cettea mi Svsifcetk riser Hove cteoner, brighter, more sanitary floor covering with very little effort. Just brush in lug-Sheen or Cotton-Sheen (there's no mttiy mixing necessary!) then la a short while vacuum out,-Just follow simple directions and the re-.; re-.; stIU ore' amazing Economical, tool V Gallon cleans average f 1 2 'area. M ONE-HAIP , CAUON ECONOMY CAUOW MUSH AmJCATOt $2.39 , $3.89 $1.25 PU1I33 - DflTEnifllS - FL3fl9Ii8: For New Homes - Remodeling - Additions . , ;,. . . , ' ; V GfiaDflTT DUILC2Q3 SUPPLY GO". ' ' "Everything in Building Materials" T. A. BARRATT Cr SONS . PHONE 704 - AMERICAN FORK, UTAH Salt Lake Choir Warmly? Praised In West Germany To show the wide publicity re celved by the Mormon Taberna cle Choir, the following story Is copied from the Christian Sci ence Monitor, who In turn re celved It through Reuters, Ger man press agency, from Wlesba den, West Germany. The newspaper Wlesbadener Kurier warmly praised a con cert Sept. 8 by the Salt Lake City Mormon Choir as a "great and unforgettable experience . - The paper said that "this en thusiastic group sings as their fathers sang: without experiments experi-ments and where the piano accompanied ac-companied the choir. . . The In-terplaylng In-terplaylng Tolces and instru ments flowed together again In the end into big and rich com binations. We shall not uckly forget the irresistable of the combined voices choir". The concert was the oaly one given by the choir in West Germany Ger-many during its European tour. The newspaper praised X Spencer Cornwall, the conductor, for giving an outstanding evam- ple of quiet and dignified conducting. con-ducting. "He had the choir in such good discipline that it needed need-ed only scant movement to bring out powerful fortes and soft sweet pianos", it said. The newspaper concluded that "the unison and even flow of the singing, the sureness and purity of declamation, the sub tleness with which the great lines of motive were brought out In the songs worked together to produce an example of finest choral singing." Smokey Says: OREU55NESS-LETV) -J A lot of forest fires are caused by well meaning but careless peoplel Time to Apply For Service Academy Exams Qualification examinations for young Utahns interested in. appointment ap-pointment to United States services ser-vices academies will be conducted conduct-ed at 17 post offices In Utah on Monday, Nov. 14, it was an nounced today by Senators Ar thur V. Watkins and Wallace F. Bennett. Both. Utah Senators use the annual Civic Service examination examina-tion to assist them in selecting candidates for appointment to the U. S. Military, Naval and Air Force Acaremles. Candidates will be enrolled in the Academies' class of 1950, upon satisfactory completion of the final qualify lng examination and other en trance requirements of the res pective academy ? Utah young men Interested are invited to apply for the necessary nec-essary application forms at the Washington office of either Sen ator. The completed forms must be returned not later than Oct. Candidates must be citizens. single, and not less than 17 years of age or more than 22 years of age by July 1, 1956. They must be able to pass an exacting physical phy-sical examination. The qualifying qualify-ing examination consists of problems pro-blems in mathematics, English, spatial relations, and other sub Jects. Examinations will be conducted conduct-ed at the post office in Ameri can Fork. ' TRILOBITES RETURN? " Tiny, shrimplike creatures springing up in a recently flooded flood-ed dry lake have brought a trio of natural scientists to Camp Ir win," caur., to search zor eggs that may be 100 years-old. The leader of the group, Dr. James P.' Welsh, Los Angeles State College zoologist,, already has about 40 of the small sped' mens, which thrive only In hot water and look like a throwback to the triloblte, an extinct prehistoric pre-historic crustacean. As far back as anyone can remember, re-member, and that's roughly 100 years, the lake was dry until last August 23, when desert thunderstorms thunder-storms suddenly deposited a foot of water. BELGIUM The Soviet Union has nald $10,000 to the Belgian widow of an airlines pilot shot down by a Soviet Mia lighter over Austria last year. . '- ... L(i)ift5ifiv:40fij "" C - e'CZef Stake Sponsors Temple Seating Exclusion Sponsored by Alpine Stake Genealogical Committee, a sealing seal-ing excursion was conducted at the Salt Lake LDS Temple Friday Fri-day evening. Third, Fourth, Sixth and Eighth Wards participated. Those going were President and Mrs. Homer F. Royle, Mr. and Mrs. David E. Wagstaff, Mr. and Mrs. Clark K. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Glen E. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Keith T. Dal ton, Mr. and Mrs. Leo T. Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell G. Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Loyal R. Merkley, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Lot Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ray Ellison, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dan-iel Limb, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Adams, Ad-ams, Mr. and Mrs. Max J. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Conder, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Tuckett, Bishop and Mrs. Wayne R. McTague, Mr. and Mrs. .Alvin E. Monson, Mr. and Mrs. Rodney D. Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman D. Huntsman, Anna J. Gray, Clara W. Rhodes, Relva Booth - Ross, James A. Gray, Ned R. Veater and James ' T. Miller. , I II . . ll . Let Electricity .: .Trim Winter's IP&7 Work and ES Worry! J Electricity can really be a farmer's friend when cold weather comes . . . by providing plenty of hot water and heat for the milk house ... or by keeping winter water warm and avoid freezing for cattle and chickens. A few pennies for electricity can save many hours of work and really step up production, produc-tion, too. ' " , - Be Modem VMitA ELECTRICALLY i u ! Vmm tight : Co. p il I ' NOTHING IN ITS FIELD CAN MATCH ; j-. : irnimisin ii-"1lb-j ,.i iiilii bis mt mat iMii 1 --"'-''x"""-r tn"trttnntKisiriiniif ifiiwwiriwilsnaiii'iiiinj.issi a-tr MtriT-ff iSyji.ti, -srru.iuLTiniii nWn n'n iia-iasejiiawsaJAaa"sittsaM Crest Features beck op Chevrolet Performance: Anti-Div Braking Boll-Race Steringr-Out rigger Roar SpringiBody by Fuktr12-Volt EUctrical SytttmNiiM Engine-Drive Utoicea. Vyhen you need a quick sprint for safer passing, this VI delivers! It's pure dynamite, and you have to (0 way, way up the price ladder before you over find Its equal. The proof was burned into the sands of Daytona Beach, at the NASCAR trials earlier this year. In acceleration tests, Chevrolet walked away from everything else in its field. Plus all the high-priced cars except one! It's the big reason Chevrolet's been taking tak-ing all comers in short track stock car events this season. Sizzling acceleration along with handling ease and cornering ability things that mean safer, happier highway driving. Come on in and let a acw Chevrolet show you what we mean. , , NoftwHrf Auaclofwl hr tUck Car Aote lacMf K0VTS THE TIKE TO BUY! LCW PrJCEJ-BIG DEALS I ENJOY A KEW CKEYROUT Drive Kk tars . . . IVEIYWHEIt! K?o-- poimgs Corner Main and Center U r. Telephone 93 |