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Show Dear Dolly. I like dogs, but I hate to clean up after them. Mine, I keep tied up so he isn't too bad to clean up after. My problem is rey neighbors neigh-bors dogs. They don't keep them tied up and they are aiways at my place and leaving their messes for me. Kow can I tell my neighbors to keep their dogs home? Signed, One Dog Lover Dear One: It's illegai to let dogs run loose. You cat remind them of that ... hand them a shovel or call the dog catcher. Dear Dolly: I'm fourteen and I go to A.F. Junior High Sd il. There's a cute boy that !. been really nice to me and I like him a lot. Suddenly this week he started treating me awful . . . like dirt. I don't know what happened except ex-cept he's been talking to my best friend a lot and I think she must have been telling him things about me. It makes me feel bad. I don't know what I've done to be treated like this. How can I find out what she's said? How can 1 let him know that I still feel the same. Signed, Sad Girl Dear Sad: What's wrong with using the English language and just ask him what you want to know? A'k your girl friend too; though it probably won't do any good if she is guilty, If a girl is disloyal, she will also lie. And, any boy that believes stories without checking them out, can't be worth all your worry. Don't let them tell you how to act. Just go on being nice to both of them, but don't share secrets they can use against you. Make friends of o:her boys end girls. Build friendships not romance . . , it pays off and is more fun that way. You' oe loyal and give them time to learn how from you. Dear Dolly: I have always loved Christmas, Christ-mas, but this year it's nothing CHRISTMAS BOHUS Starts Sat., Dec. 21 CLEARANCE n a Tr n a eld HURRY! Buy now at the BIGGEST SAVINGS EVER! r o PAIR SETS Re&io 22.99 s10.$15 HANDBAGS Ret to '8.00 3050 0 OFF SUEPWEAIt Reg. to 7.99 $3,$4 mode G.u 61 West Wain mm l Mil iff A fir but a headache. My husband comes from a large family and they all give us gifts. I can't keep up. Other years I've sewed and made things for them, but now I have four little children and it's all I can do to make and sew things for them. How can I make them understand? How can I tel! them we don't want their gifts . it's too hard to keep up? Signed, Mother of Four Dear Mother: Christmas is a time when everyone should have the right to give and do what Ihey want for other people. It shouldn't be a time of social pressure. If your husband's family wants to give to you, have the courtesy to be grateful, and allow them the right to do what they want to do for those they love. If you can't afford anything for them, then tell them you are confining gift giving to your own family this year. You might invite them over for an evening of stories, games and refreshments as your gift to them. Anything goes if your attitude is right. Dear Dolly: My daughter is smoking "pot". She says she isn't, but I have plenty of evidence. What can I do to help her? Nothing like this has ever happened in our family before. I'm just sick about it. She's always been such a good girl. I can't understand why she's doing this. What can I do to stop her? Signed, Distressed Mother Dear Distressed: Are you worried about your daughter or the social pressure of her disgrace? There's only one way to stop anybody from doing anything and that is to create a desire within them to do something else. Pot is more dangerous than most people realize. I refer you to Dr. D. Harvey Powelson; article in the December issue of the Reader's Digest on Marijuana: "More Dangerous Than You Know." Hint: It's important that you understand why your daughter iLaftdi Jatfif AO? 0 x4j'i I COATS Reg. to '50.00 30-50orr SWEATERS Res. '9.00 I PANTYHOSE Reg. 93 i 5197 0 PAIR I 114 o'day Am. Fork V Sherma E. Bierhaus flew Supt. at Tinip Cave Llonunient Sherma E. Bierhaus has learned the secret of combining a career with raising a family. Mrs. Bierhaus has just been appointed as superintendent at Timpanogos Cave National Monument - the first woman to hold a monument supeririten-dency- in the Rocky Mountains and the 1 Jth in the history of the National Park Service. Coming here from Denver, Colorado, she grew up in the Park service and decided it was the place for her. Her father was a ranger at Grand Canyon and although she says she is a native of Arizona, the family spent a lot of lime on both the Arizona and (he Utah rims of the canyon. She attended high school at Wasatch Academy at Mt.Plea-sant, Mt.Plea-sant, Utah, and joined the Park Service as a cierk typist in administration ad-ministration at Grand Canyon. She left the service for a time, working in private industry and then spending three years with the U.S. Frorest Service. She says she got her current position "the hard way", working work-ing up through the ranks, "one toe hold at a time." Prior to her current appointment, appoint-ment, she served as personnel assistant at Glen Canyon Dam and at the Southern Utah Group Office of the National Park Service Ser-vice which oversees activities at Zions Canyon, Bryce Canyon, Cedar Breaks National Monument, Monu-ment, Capital Reef National Monument and at Pipes Springs National Monument. She also served as Personnel Management Specialist at the Mid-West Regional Office at Omaha, Nebraska and at the Rocky Mountain Regional Office Of-fice in Denver. She completed the Mid-Level Management Development; Training program which is a course in all phases of management manage-ment training which is offered by the Parks Service. is smoking pot . . . if she is. Dear Reader: Share a problem? We all learn from others experiences. Write to "Dear Dolly", Box 500, American Amer-ican Fork, Utah. Family Outing Cut Your Own Christmas Tree Custom Flocking 12 E. 300 N. Alpine Sherm Bennett 756-6268 Reversable Coats Goose Down Reverse to Blaze Orange Regular $40.00 Now $24.95 A 5 and 6 1 ; 1 t J I sAynhs SUA--' SHFRMA E. BIERHAUS She said she enjoys her employment em-ployment because she "just' feels that the country has a lot of beautiful places that should be preserved for future enjoyment. enjoy-ment. ' "I enjoy being in the parks natural areas and feel that these areas have historical significance sig-nificance and need to be preserved." v Mrs. Bierhaus said she enjoys working with the Park Service because the "agency is small enough to be like a large family. You are constantly running into someone vou have worked with '4 I ' Good Only from Dec. 22 to Dec. 28 Ray Buys, Catch Santa sneaking. Capture '.he tree-trimmers. Picture the big wrap-up Shoot the pajarna game on Christmas eve. . And snap away at ail the merry gentlemen and ladies on tha big dav Then leave iur hodarerfir film with us " Kodacolor Film Processing 12 Exposure Roll ..$1-99 20 Exposure Roil $2.79 El ill ? p a t - n i lin tit l MU Vim nv;7ii rJ Americon Fork IP TKI3 MERCHANDISE IS NOT SOLD BY THE END OF THE YEAH -FORCE US TO CLOSE! MAJOR ITEMS REDUCED TO CLEAR - BUY SNORKLE PARKA lb. Dacron Reg Levi Blanket Lined Donim Coats $188 DOOR CRASHERS - LIMITED QUANTITY FIRST COME FIRST SERVE !l PANASONIC PORTABLE RADIO Reg. $13.95 MITCHELL '300' SPINNING REEL Reg. $18.95 CAMEL 2 MAN NYLON MOUNTAIN TENT Reg. $27.95 SNOW GOGGLES - 3 INTERCHANGEABLE LENSES CH Rl STM AS ALBU MS STEREO Tech College Obtains Vmi Equipment One hundred thousand dollars worth of new and modern electronic elec-tronic equipment for $1,400. That's the bargain the Electrical Elec-trical Automation Division of Utah Technical College at Provo recently got from the government at Tooele Army Depot, according to Division Chairman, Rulon Weils; but it's real worth, he emphasized, is what it can do for Utah Tech students. The new equipment consists of 14 new motor control centers, obtained new from Tooele when the program for which they were intended apparently never developed, Mr. Wells said. Worth $100,000, Utah Tech obtained ob-tained them as surplus for one percent of their value. Extra incidental costs made it about before or who knows someone you do." When relaxing at home, she does a lot of handwork, including includ-ing crocheting,- sewing, : and knitting, and she loves to go hiking and fishing with her family. She and her husband, Gary, are the parents of three children: chil-dren: Glen, 17; Karen, 13; and Duane.9. - ' J - AMERICAN-MADE FIELD JACKETS LINED $1T83 REG. $21 UNLINED REG. $16.95 NAVY PEA COATS 1 Bm YOU MUST TO BEUSiVEl'-' 100 PRIME GOOSE DOWN FILL ARCTIC WOLF TRIM GUARANTEED TO 40 BELOW '0 GO Fill Ovor Size Sleeping Dogs 39 x $29.95 $43 $103 J109 $1,43(1 the school paid for them. The 14 pew units will be added to two similar ones ob:ained about four years ago, said Mr. Wells, and will greatly expand the facilities for training in this field at the college. The motor control centers are just what their name implies, according to the division chairman. chair-man. They control motors -speed, reversal and in other ways - used in industry, from steel mills to much smaller plants. And possession of them by Utah Tech will allow the college to simulate conditions m industry in-dustry for its students, giving them the same experiences they would have as electrical motor control and maintenance men or. the job. They will be used by second-year second-year electrical automation students, Mr, Weils said, to train maintenance electricians for work in industry. Utah Tech this vear has 130 GOOOOOCOOO0O0OOO0000O0G0CQOOOGC09 eve Says: o o we re not m fr a t Making q Any Money Playing g Santa Claus . . . o Out We're Surely g Having Lots of Fun! ; g a8 flew! 2 On These aluei ?! CL gTurnbler With Tank Fill Up S Value to 40 FREE SUCKERS Value? Only Santa Claus Knows! o o G O O" 2 Excellent cittenes... Q 4 131 J A o - vwe S4TQ 0 q Steve Mrdcck - Great Wiliismscn g "We're Mr ver Satisfied Until You Are" o O 103 East State Lehi 763-C034 O cioooooooooooooooooeooeeoeaooGncoo - OUR CREDITORS WILL NOV CHEAP! ' fT WE STILL HAVE 'SEAFARERS' r ; HURRY THFY WONT I ART I flWf? All Remaining .95 1 i Snowmobile Boo W!y V. STCCEJ A COKPIETE m 0? V.OZJ CLOVtS SPECIAL! LEATHER GLOVES 2s3 Mow $ SHOP FOR XMAS 3 500 WEST STATE ROAD AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN students in its electrical automation auto-mation division 80 first-year and 50 second-year. Twelve years ago it had two. - Last year the division had 43 graduates, of '.vhich are now working in industry at excellent pay. said Mr. Wells. They have jobs with firms like Peabody Coal Company in Arizona, a huge strip-mining operation, and the FMC Company in Wyoming, engaged in.Trona mining. The graduates are maintaining and repairing the eiectrica! machinery that runs huge shovels, mills, conveyor belts, and other equipment. Twelve years ago the division had a faculty of two, Mr. Wells and Rex Losee. Today those two are still there, but have been joined by four more. Ken Foster, Fos-ter, Jay Bennion, Raman Wat-kins, Wat-kins, and Larey Lawrence. In two out of the last three t ft I s ' FREE Cm Wash vifh Full Service Fill fi Value f UP $1.00 ' : n ear Stock cf Winter Snow : Tires uw g il A A ..I I. awl Mn Muuioniuu jiuiu & s 9:30 to 7:30 Mond. thru Wed. 9:30 to 9:00 Thurs., Fri.f Sat. Open Sunday 9:30 to 5 p.m. HURRY THEY WONT LAST LONG ATTHIS PRICE C0WBAT JIUIGLE NOT IMPORTS! MADE TO MEET GOV'T. SPECS. NEWI STEEL. SHANK BEST BUY IN WORK BOOT LINE. 95 AND SAVE HONEY AT THE SAME TOE THURSDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1974 years, Utah Tech at Prove electrical elec-trical atuomation students have won first place honors in this category in the national skj'Js ccntests sponsored by VI CA (Vocational Industrial Clubs of America). A harried mother says that at Christmas her kids hang up their stockings - and then it's a full year before they hang up anything again. Then there's the iittie boy from Texas who walked up to Santa Claus and said, "What can 1 do for you?" A large department store hires seven men to act as Santa Clauses. One man was put in charge; the other six were given the joint title of "subordinate "subor-dinate Clauses." O O o o ARVASHg with o elf Service FsilS l O o X 5 - W Up 504 o Value equal to $!. To All Kids A 1 a o 0 o ! O ....lt. w is o J O o o - Pal f'tursbeR o W .....Only $5.83 BOOTS BOOTS 79 I WE ACCEPT CHECKS ALL BANK CARDS & CASH 1 4 1) AMERICAN FORK UTAH 756-4423 $059 V,,,, gf-. |