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Show Page THE Six Thursday, June NEPHI, UTAH TIMES-NEW- c- - PenmieiB Humans, Trades SUGGESTIONS 1 ; I Ancient WASHINGTON. D.C. Gothic churches on the Island of d Cyprus crowd modern, buildings, which in turn are shad owed by centuries-ol- d minarets. The contrast between the old ano the new on the Briti t crown colony, 45 miles south of ttu Turkish coast and 65 miles west o! Syria in the eastern Mediterranean is emphasized by Jean and Franc Shor in a magazine article. In the bustling port city of Pama gusta, the Shors note, coppersmiths follow their ancient trade in open fronted shops next door to modern stores selling the latest In English woolens and American novelties Brightly painted native boats of designs unchanged for hundreds of years are moored next to smart motor launches. Greek People Cyprus is now British, but the half million people are mostly Greek, with a minority of some of Turkish extraction. Because of its strategic position, the island has been conquered and ruled over the centuries by the ancient Egyptians, the Romans, the Crusaders the Venetians, the Turks and others. The people, particularly In rural areas, remain unchanged by vari ations In government They till their fields and vineyards from which comes the famous Cyprus wine as their ancestors did before them. Their arts of handicraft are handed down from generation to genera- ssS':- -: It I : MEN'S SANFORIZED SHIRTS BROADCLOTH l4l2 TO SIZES SANFORIZED -- 1.49 2.98 t ROBES HEMS' 7.QQ-9.- 90 MENS' SPORT SHIRTS SHORT SLEEVE OR LONG SLEEVES to 4.98 MENS' SOCKS 4g MENS' SLACKS t DRESS OXFORDS 14.75 7.50 TO TO 11.75 7Z1Z7 WWII y'JIHME HMSW. rHHWjllWMUIttlWJII.1' WK"! ' '" "TV,4 WTi1 7 SERIAL MATINEE ONLY "PERILS OF THE DARKEST JUNGLE, No 1 Sunday and Monday DEAN MARTIN JERRY LEWIS SAILOR BEWARE ?1 out intricate designs on looms without printed patterns The mothei and teacher of one of the young weavers explained that girls have to memorize more than a score oi designs before they are allowed to touch a loom. Women Work Work of women also has made the mountain hamlet of Lefkara famous. The intricate lacework produced in this village is known throughout the world The womenfolk, from eight to eighty, ply theii needles while the men gossip and sip Turkish coffee in the open-ai- r cofee shops. The slow and easy life on Cyprus. so appealing to visitors, has prove tiresome to many of the island's young men, particularly those who traveled with the British armed services during the war. Many have emigrated to Britain, Australia, South Africa and elsewhere to find employment as farmers, cooks and waiters. of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Peterson, admitted June 7, released June 11. Mrs. Grace Jackson, June 7, June 10. Donna Jean Bowles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Bowles. June 7, June 11. Ray Burtenshaw, June June 7, 11. Dahlia Dutson (Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Dutson) daughter born on June 8. (Residents of Leaming ton) Marian Nielsen, Leamington, admitted June 10. Mrs. Trine Peterson, 7ureka, admitted June 10. Kay Ingram, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Blain M. Ingram, admit ted June 11. Carter Summers, son of Hr. and Mrs. Robert S. Summers, Provo, admitted June 11. Alfred Hansen, Ftn. Green, ad mitted June 11. Mrs. Neda Heck, Holladay, Utah admitted June 11. SUSAN HAYWARD DAVID WAYNE RORY CALHOUN WITH A Loyal Eagle The bald eagle is an exceedingly loyal and affectionate parent. It will not desert its young even if the tree on which they are nesting is in flames. SOKG IN MY HEART Friday and Saturday EDMUND O'BRIEN STERLING HAYDEN PITTS DENVER AND RIO ZAZU j GRANDE KIDS MATINEE Good Taste "Proposals by women, while permissible, are not customary, and are still regarded as an innovation. If the proposal is rejected, good taste and kindly consideration demand that the gentleman should keep it more or less of a secret "Frank Crawninshleld. 2:30 P. Tot's Food M. SILVER city: BONANZA Children learn to like some foods that have a strong flavor onions, for example but they usually prefei to eat food only one strong-flavore- d meal. So turnips and peas are at a better dinner partners than turnips and cabbage. Most children like foods that are not highly seasoned or spiced or very sour. Weather Path Cabbage White' Two to six miles above the earth One of the most familiar oi all are the pathways where weather moves and is made. To foretell the Virginia butterflies is the European unfolding seasons and their vagaries cabbage white, introduced from Europe after the middle of the last over the United States, weathermen now chart condition of the atmoscentury, which has thoroughly taken phere over the entire northern over its new home. This is due partly hemisphere, high Intft the strato- to the fact that it is extremely prolific, producing as many as eight sphere. broods a year where cabbages are Nice Base of- Greens .plentiful. It will eat almost anyLettuce, chicory and watercress thing, but on other plants than cabiorm a nice base of greens to serve bage seldom produces more than vith cottage cheese. four or five broods. - well-seaone- d GIFT SUGGESTIONS SOX. . TIES Van Heusen Several Styles! SHIRTS . - SPORT AND DRESS Large Variety cf Colors IIATS 49Ctoi.2 Cjgc to i.49 . . . STRAWS . .. . SLACKS DRESS SHOES t f.QfJ S.fJS i.QO fi.QQ to to 3Jg 14 JO SM to 1JL90 . . GIFT WRAPPED IF DESIRED London Fare If you forget about beef steak and think in terms of game, chicken, turkey and fish, London can offer some of the finest meals in the world. Scottish salmon, oysters, lobster and pheasant, are favorite London fare and the prices are by no means unreasonahle. I'i.Husliion Make yourself a pincushion and stuff it with fine steel wool. The steel wool will keep your needles and pins clean and sharp. Two Big Quakes The two strongest earth shocks recorded, since the use of seismographs for measuring them became general about 50 years ago, were the Assam-Tibearthquate of August 15, 1950, and the Colombia tremor of 1906. Hot Weather Salad cabbage salad is excellent for hot weather appetites. Season with onion and parsley, then toss with sugar dissolved in vinegar and a bit of oil to make the cabbage shreds glisten. Saving Lemons To prevent lemons becoming withered and hard, put in a fruit Jar, fill with cold water, screw top on lightly, and they will keep for weeks. fir It's a Spectacular h' ' Mw, Wort rWrfof on tnginml convenience appreciate. j j.m.t. 'ij-i- , - r u -- . . . If you travel to your favorite stream, to the M I A convention, or just for a little drive, remember to watch the car behind the one in front of you. Saw Mack Wilkey last night . . . it's great to see our guard Boys returning home. The exchange of greetings is about the same with each. The home folks say "It's good to see you back and the reply usually is 'It's good to be back" And you just know it comes from the bottom of their heart. Come in, Mr. Fisherman, for your license and sweeten up the tackle box with some fresh supplies . . . Happy fishing to all, from BAILEY McQUHE COMPANY Four Friendlv Stores In Foui Friendly Communities USE TI4-- L FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT BECAUS- E- It peels off the outer skin and exposes fungi to kill it on contact. If not pleased IN ONE HOUR with instant lrying your 40c back at any drug store. Today at NEPHI T-4--L, DRUG CO. Prospectors kid Performer! Dual-Ilan- ae v -- paxes stepping along nimbly in Traffic Range or gliding over the miles in Cruising e perRange. You'll find this former gives you wonderful new fun in every mile and wonderful new mileage Dual-Rang- "M link ' from every gallon of gasoline you boy. You'll find that Pontiac gives you everything you want most in a car distinctive g beauty; Body by Fisher: big-cride; wonderful dependability. And remember, Pontiac is a great value-o- ne of the lowest priced cars you can buy. Come on in and get the facts and figures. OpHonal at artra out. Equipment, acctttoriat end trim or tubj met la chtmf without nortec easy-goin- Minnnfhinnn that members MUi? Tomorrow, the big red letter oday on the fisherman's calendar . . . Milt Boswell tells us that all space has been reserved at Burrastons so he is going South. You can bet Milt will come back with the biggest fish or fish story . . o new Pontiac itself, waiting for you to take OWv Hydra-Mat- it Now Duof-HoOhft row lh Mght Poww of ff tight Vanmt Mow Kfoft rWfomonco fconoffly Axi vofoffont par AUfW fuwm inghf CHATTER lf the wheel and drive it yourself! We want you to put this car through its COf&SIHATION! HHfHC The uranium search has attracted hundreds of lone-woToo Bright Sun prospectors, Excessive exposure to bright sun- some amateur, some professional. light reduces resistance to glare for However, modern prospecting for as much as 36 hours and may be the most part requires a consideraan important factor In night auto- ble bankroll, irrespective of whether Uncle Sam picks up part of the mobile accidents. check. Best equipped to do this type of job of course are the mineral inICtti.Tling Cream or ecru curtains can be dustries firms which long have retinted by dipping the curtains In maintained exploration and devela tea or coffee solution. opment programs. w. have la our showrooms the greatest n Pontiac salesman in America the great ONLY PONT1AC CIYES YOU THIS it's the EXTRA ral Joseph P. Harof Gonzales, Tex., believes Com munist artillerymen have a personal grudge against him. The corporal arrived here and went through seven months of fighting unscathed. Then, In two weeks, he was injured thrice each time by enemy artillery. Shrapnel first got him, and he was evacuated. About a week later he returned to his company, only to be injured again when the bunker he was in received a direct hit. He was evacuated again. But Cpl. Harris figured It would take more than that to keep a good man down, and soon returned to the front. A few days later, he was on his way back down the hill, the victim of another wound. "It got so I knew all the medical corpsmen down at the aid station," observed Cpl. Harris as he trudged back to the lines a third time, "I'm beginning to think the Reds have something against me personaSj-.KOREA-Corpo- " DUAL-RAN- "home town" a ris Yr7i Til 7 roa-m- ' JJLU' 1 savings and Is Do Reds Have Special Grudge Against G.I.? il h$ mm service, "Divorce disease like alcoholism, and we ought to treat it that way," a Duke university law professor declared. "We've got to stop looking at divorce cases as If they were a moral wrong if anything Is to be done about the alarming rise in divorces," he warned. Dr. John S. Bradway, chairman of the research committee of the national Interprofessional commission on marriage and divorce laws and director of Duke's legal aid clinic, suggested that one of the reasons for thinking divorces are morally wrong is that our divorce court procedure Is descended from trial by battle." "First the couple decides to separate. Then they take each other into court, and the battle begins with little or no hope for any solution other than the death of the marriage. In this type of procedure bad feeling Is bound to spring up," he said. We must progress by giving divorce cases the same kind of treatment we give to juvenile cases, he said. For instance, when family unrest brings a couple into court, the judge might appoint a team of psychk atrists and marriage counselors who could study the problem from all angles, with the lawyer of the couple, and perhaps prevent the divorce. THELMA RITTER In the town of Phiti the Shors saw a good example of the ancient art; of the Cypriotes. There girls worked 1.08 2.30 3'98f 1.QQT03.QC 15$ - P. M. Henry Aldrichf ' Boy Scout tion. MEN'S STRAW HATS MEN HANDKECHIEFS LAST MUSKETEER 0 PAJAMAS 17 2.93 TIES. . . 98c BROADCLOTH June June 5, Mona, June 10. James Peterson son REX ALLEN and KOKO 2:30 5, 9. Sidney Rowe, N.C. DURHAM. June 5. Hal L. Mickelsen, June WILD STALLION KIDS MATINEE NOTES" Shirlene Whiting, admitted June 5, released June 6. Mrs. Kate Brough, admitted ? Friday and Saturday BEN JOHNSON EDGAR BUCHANAN Ancient and New hi : d fmthi! v glass-bricke- : Divorce Classed As A Disease by Lawyer JUAB COUNTY HOSPITAL FATHER'S DAY: 12, 1952 MELPLEIII MdPTOM NEPUI, UTAH (CCD, ar |