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Show THURSDAY, MAY THE LEHI SUN, LEHI, UTAH THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1946 'Drones9 Will Fly Awards Await 4-H and FFA Club Members In Atom-Bomb Test 0Y GzoMe. youP. )T( RUSTY WILL DO M MUCH COR you- 30. io.e t . , UT V TT7'TYrTrrI7rn! foratoncesellinu IXlhlJ U yjlhlJi REMAINING STOCK LADIES' SPRING- Coats! Suits! - $ 1 5.00 A FEW BETTER GRADE $20.00 12 ONLY Girls Goats - - $8.00 7 ONLY REDUCED $10.00 SPECIALLY REDUCED DRESSES WOMEN'S SIZES 2.50 LADIES' BLOUSES SLIGHTLY SOILED GIRLS' SIZES $1.40 1.50 HANDBAGS Reduced! 6 ONLY $1.00 2.00 BARGAIN TABLES ODDS & ENDS FROM ALL DEPARTMENTS 25c - 50c - $1.00 GREASE SPOTS ON YOUR NEW WALLPAPER ! ! but no harm done if your paper has been treated with Transplastic the miracle plastic coating that makes wallpaper Grease, Dirt and Ink Proof! Simply wash it off with soap and water. Does not give paper a gloss, nor change its appearance in any way. There's a TRANSPLASTIC coating for floors and woodwork also. Just brush it on no brush marks. Clear and colors. Easy to Clean as a China Plate FOR SALE AT WALLACE BANKS APPLIANCE CO. Lehi's Exclusive Dealer 189 WEST 3IAIN PHONE 20-W Members of the 4-H and FFA Clubs throughout the State, will receive 12 live calves as special awards, contributed by outstanding outstand-ing cattlemen throughout the State, in addition to $3,000 in special awards, nearly $1,000 in cash and merchandise as extra awards and nearly $200,000 in sales money at the Intermoun-tain Intermoun-tain Junior Fat Stock Show, Manager has announced. Quality calves are being contributed con-tributed by: Bert Lusty, Duchesne; C. A. Mattson, Salina; Charles Redd, La Sal; E. S. Gardiner, St. George; Lon Hopkins, Woodruff; H. L. Allred, Roosevelt; J. A. Scorup, Moab; McKinley Morrell, Junction; Mrs. Preston Nutter, Price; Producers' Livestock Marketing Mar-keting Ass'n., North Salt Lake; and Wasatch Llvestick Loan Association, As-sociation, Salt Lake City. The calves will be awarded six each to the 4-H and FFA Clubs. The rules provide each county agent and each vocational teacher teach-er may nominate one student from the county or school respectively, re-spectively, using as the basis of selection: Good citizenship, record rec-ord as a good feeder, and prospects pros-pects as a future breeder or feeder feed-er of cattle. "- A report of 150 words will be filed concerning the qualifications. Only exhibitors exhibi-tors at the 1946 Show are eligible. The winners must agree to feed the calf according to approved standards, report every two months on progress to the donor, and exhibit the finished animal at the 1947 Show if deemed worthy. Margaret S. Potter Appointed ; "Y" Instructor Mrs. . Margaret Schow Potter, daughter of stake president and Mrs. A. C.;; Schow, has been appointed instructor in home economies at the Brigham Young University, and will assume her new duties July 1. Mrs. Potter is a graduate of the Lehi high school and the BYU, and taught in the Alpine district for five years, one year at Pleasant Grove and one. at ehi high schol. For the past five" years she has been an instructor at Davis high school at Kaysville, where she also taught adult classes during the summer. She has done graduate grad-uate work at Colorado State college col-lege and at the Utah State Agricultural Ag-ricultural college. 4 Y-i h ,Vl'. FFA Notes Prizes for the best animals ex hibited at the FFA stock show Monday are announced as follows: fol-lows: Class I, 650 to 850 lbs: Ralph Hunter, American Fork, first, $5.00. Barbara Elton, Cedar Valley, second, $4.00. Willard Clark, Lehi, third, $3.00. Ralph Hunter, American Fork, fourth, $2.00. Robert Smith, Cedar Valley, fifth, $2.00. , Class II, 850 to 1,000 lbs.: Winford Gray, Lehi, first, $5.00. Wallace Berry, Cedar Valley, second, $4.00. Bill Young, Lehi, third, $3.00. Boice Evans, Lehi, fourth, $2.00. Heber Hunt, Lehi, fifth, $2.00. Winford Gray was awarded $5.00 for the fattest steer, and Barbara Bar-bara Elton was awarded $5.00 for the best type beef. Each exhibitor ex-hibitor was given $2.00. Thirty-four head of Hereford beef cattle were entered in the show, as well as the prize Hol-stein Hol-stein dairy calf, which attracted much attention. Naval Men learn to Direct Pilotless Planes. SAN DIEGO. - Naval airmen are learning to direct pilotless planes which will fly through columns col-umns of radio-active smoke and eases in the Bikini atom-bomb tests. Pilotless Gruman fighters equipped with radio remote control will soar through the gaseous pillars pil-lars rising above the atomic bombs to determine the effect on planes flying through radio-active matter. .. m v.- The pUotless "drones" will be controlled by "mother planes ' equipped with radio control Pilots in training here are learning the complex technique of controlling the pilotless planes In flight The "drones" will be launched from the 27,000-ton aircraft carrier Rhnrri-L,a. Rear Adm. C. A. F. Sprague, who commands the. special spe-cial naval groups participating in v, taeta antri (t would be the first time the navy ever has attempted to launch pilotless fighters from a carrier. After the pilots of the control planes perfect the takeoff, he said, the Shangri-La will make several trial runs oft the southern California coast. The "drones" will be controlled in taking off by the mother planes working in conjunction with radio rperators aboard the carrier. . - u - Snratrue said that for the first time in naval operations, helicopters helicop-ters would play an important role. They will be used both as observation observa-tion planes and as camera and courier cour-ier aircraft They will hover over the bomb blasts and will fly the negatives back to the flagship for development. The photographic planes will make a complete mosaic picture of the Bikini target area immediately immediate-ly before the bombing and as soon afterward as possible, Sprague said. This will enable naval experts to determine the effect on target ships and the general surface of the ocean as well, he said. Find Trace of Ancient Moon Worshipping Cult WASHINGTON. - Existence of a civilization of moon worshippers, who lived in southern Arabia just before the Christian era, has been revealed by Dr. Carleton S. Coon of Harvard university Dr. Coon told of the discovery of the moon worshippers in a report published by the Smithsonian institution. insti-tution. . ,, . ; The worshippers composed four highly civilized kingdoms which were the principal trading link between the east and the west But of what were once "splendid temples and lofty skyscrapers," Dr. Coon said, only scattered fragments frag-ments remain. Their moon religion took many strange forms. Dr. Coon said that in reconstructing the religion from ancient inscriptions, it was found that the people believed "the sun was a woman, and the moon her husband the stars their children, and of these the most important was Venus. "These stars eventually became angels; people and animals also were the children of the gods," said Dr. Coon. This new discovery opens vast new fields for archaeological exploration, explor-ation, the Harvard expert said. An entire new civilization is now expected ex-pected to be uncovered in the near future. Plant Investment During the decade of the twenties, 20 billion dollars of new capital was invested in our manufacturing plants and equipment; in the thirties, thir-ties, 14 billions; while in the short period of June, 1940, to June, 1942, a total cf 16 billions was reached greater than the total during the whole previous decade. Wash Back A good substitute for a back brush is a clean towel rung out in warm, sudsy water, and twisted into a long rope. Hold each end and j alternately push and pull, working the ropelike sudsy towel back and forth, up and down over the back rea from shoulders to waist Millions Lying Here and There in Treasury Notes MILWAUKEE, WIS. Almost anybody anywhere might very easily eas-ily "happen" onto some money he had forgotten existed, just by looking look-ing around the house and in deposit de-posit boxes and other similar places, the treasury department stated. Somewhere, treasury records show, there are $23,000,000 worth of government savings bonds which matured and thus quit drawing interest four months to more than a year ago. The same Is true for approximately approximate-ly $13,300,000 worth of Liberty bonds and victory notes bought during the First World war but, years after maturity, never have been present-ed present-ed for payment, the Associated Press reported. The $23,000,000 worth are Series A bonds ancestors of the defense and war bond.?-which were sold throughout 1935.: The last of them reached maturity December 1, 1945 The government's ready to pay 03 any time, and it's patient about waiting. For instance, some $1 094 -000 worth of the old Liberty bonds and victory notes have been cashed in the period since last June 30. Plane Clips Vz Hours OS Flight to Hawaii SAN FRANCISCO. - A new Hawaii to San Francisco flight record of nine hours and nine minutes was credited to a Pan American Airways clipper. The huge plane flew the 2,402 statute miles at an average speed of 264 miles per hour, clipping 7 hours and 30 minutes oS the previous time of flying boats. " 'Jl'fl 11 n 'v x - tu. ;i , i LEHI AUTO CLINIC NOW OPEN Complete Auto, Pieseland Tractor Service . . . . Acetylene Welding, Wheel Alignment Reboringi Painting Watch for the Grand Opening of the Service Station. Just back from the U. S. Navy So give me a chance. RUSTY ROGERS Owner and Operator . Former Owner City Limits Garage & Service, A. F. 480 EAST STATE ROAD - - LEHI Complete Information At 108 WEST CENTER STREET PROVO, UTAH PHOENIX AND SALT LAKE CITY LV. SALT LAKE 4p.m.and11:l5Pnl LV PHOENIX 4:30 p.m. and 100 Dgunnison . - I UUHAQ ; t 1 OtlCHFIEU) I CBCUVU! Q I -QfAMOWCH , HATCH Q Ootoovui KAHAQ UMcortua jlj OCAMacM . immcLJi to S y . . . : M,mi. r",r!! SANTA FE BUS DEPOT STATE STREET DRUG CO. Phone: 145, Lent |