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Show November Thursday, 6, 1952 1 THE V . - . vac if' v - "- !- NEPHI. UTAH S. Page Seven OF THE FUTURE ZIP-TRA- IN j i TIMES-NEW- " 4 V'i ' I 1 - .1 inYnu fosttcn 'tii uJiii rxc-- r ' , over 89 of them Yt .A 1 i it 4; ,4 V " "I f i f i 'it Pray "Cute" carrying too standard metropolitan areas. Females Increasing The ratio of females to males is increasing and is higher than ever in American history. WEEKLY CROSSWORD the Here's On the Air Waves HORIZONTAL A Sun god 5 Solar disk 1,7 Pictured 6 Darling TV master of ceremonies 7 12 Oleic acid salt dry fruit a!3 oisjs; 30i n ed 8 Any 9 Snare 10 Storehouses 20 Disquiet 22 Vegetable 23 Sandarac 25 Employers 27 Doleful 28 Disordered 29 Symbol for 16 Compass point 18 Facile . 20 He experience plays on television1 35 Posture 36 21 Somersaults Long seat f 37 Mineral 24 Physician rocks (comb, form) tellurium SO Board 31 Twenty Pry bars Poet (ab.) i I 42 Seized 43 Ibidem (ab.) 44 Fewer 45 Compositor 26 Car 31 Cicatrix 32 Beaters 33 Trying 13 IH 13 17 lb 15 (coll.) 48 Sainte (ab.) 50 Ventilate 52 Id est (ab.) 54 Chinese weight AGENT TO GIVE GIFT CLUB ' ' 28 46 Consumed 47 Scottish sheepfolds Submit to Social insects Proportion Interweave Unctuous 3i il 34 133 ? , qr ""SI party VERTICAL IMore frigid S Oxidizing enzyme Seine f" I'JIl' 'IJ 5i lii 3b (3? - , hi jsi w 35 ir""T7 45 5i 5J David Tew of Ne- was chosen as one of the candidates for Founders Day King as named by the Associated Wo- men Students of Snow Branch col- lege. Vying for honors as king i a ji fcjcuLt tt xidnben, I V T miUmbi.mt (3Sw .. iimi within 5 I I .. ..i ; v 'S'"' , Made better. lVl t - 1 VSq y--.. t hi - cinar trm at ir'i't- Cancer Aim The big aim of cancer control is to find a chemical agent capable of controlling cancer that has spread so far that it cannot be removed by years A' Last Sewing G Does perfect -- ; I i t' .- . ! ! I ' , y f ' ' 4 , I I I ' i ;v- 1-j j Generous trade-in- . Dependable service at J CHAPMAN FUBN1TU1E PHONE 300 rJFPHi "" I I Akir AINU fxwr- oAVt ui P .onvr A Natural v.r-- r. lacKununeui narp tius and Polio Scientists are trying hard to discover if there is a connection between diet and polio. While they cannot yet tell you what to eat to avoid it, they are beginning to hope that diet may possibly provide a future weapon against the disease. i Transparent Window Mate- rials. Keep Out Cold, Wind, & Raid, Snow! I Thii porci was enclosed by the owner and hii wife in I - " ., ,: Longer Z? Branded on the Edge Meant A. : k.l iSamt Porch-Late- ., JnA, Satisfacti on Guaranteed I k, 1 lo-.elSsaGnf- 1733111 u , 111- k inmwi www, 3i m ww m m r. H -. mm. m" Pa ? VA 1 .L .IQU " ' - TV. Make Low-CoStorm Doors, Storm Windows & Porch Enclosures with one of Warp s Top Quality Window Materials Alto Ideal for Look for Poultry, Hog Housn This Dispenser at and Barn Windows Your Local Dealer vAkRP st Let in Sunthlne Vitamin "0 GENUINE CRYSTAL Glass YrS- ' w y - - IZ"-- " IIAN0IO I tm Tf ' 1 Materials Glass-OWe- U i'l i7.st -- J a Li lniCflOM ir y c i iVi.. 11 for games and recreation A room t iDl lUlaM-J- 111 J VyrOGlass OVAKANTIID f A'tit's Tip 0''n!lY ir) g n sound-deadenin- Plastiglass IOOfMlM c CLEAN Flex-0-Glas- s j1)Vyr-0-6las- s 1 ON IMI ui.'nnw Imagine a room like this for winter fun in which the whole family can share! There's a ping-pontable for the young folks a cozy corner where Mom and Dad can view television or listen to the radio . . . and a place where Sis can curl up with a book. Best of all, it's like an extra room finding because it's otherwise wasted space in the basement. The walls can be made from knotty pine or other woods, or handsome new wood-graisheetrock . . . the roof is acoustic tile . . the floor is beautiful asphalt tile. 50 All complete, the cost is only momh No Down Payment Needed ... maiirwsui Windi-.- 1 creeh-Glas- s V")0 f Mii'i .77 Ar Mnl Py Mail OrHor Kon f '"" For television, radio and music 'uL;Jj:Qi ti A Id i j 11A . JNtKNl !IN Diet One of our favorite stories con cerns an admirable little horticultural volume, The GrafWs Hand book, which, by some strange (or perhaps not so strange) mischance got into the current Oxford Uni versity Press catalog under the gen eral heading, "Government." iitam Just two hours for only $11.50 and ia easily converted back 10 ecreen porch in summer. i1 You can do the same with one of Warp's Top Quality Window Materials. ' & I' ' " 'ii 1 4s " i ' I . s r1' & Your Home HOW! I :& I " T.J" j Winter-Pro- of Ml v: ANKER DESK ' for the tiime or aour lei4 ' surgery I , Materials flexible.shatterproof 7 inn rntk(KlMtm,Slna Dun ui Wlpii: ... M Divorces Cheaper Window ZIG-ZA- straight sewing tool "Don't burn those leaves" is the advice given by County Agent Ray Burtenshaw. Leaves are an excel- lent fertilizer, as well as adding humus to yoir soil. Many home owners will make a trip to the mountains to get black dirt from under trees to plant potted plants or make a hotbed or cold frame and to add to flower plots around the home. This is not necessary. You can have better materials for this purpose by saving the leaves and refuse from your own Jot. Simply make a compost heap in your back yard and put the leav--, es there to decay. If you don't want to go to this effort spread the leaves over your garden spot and plow them under to add hu- mas to the soil. These leaves, weeds, flowers, etc., are worth money to you if you will use them in either of the ways mentioned. Directions for makine a compost obtained by calling at heap can nat-men- reAmericans Eight million ceived divorce decrees in the last 10 years. Three of every four now divorced persons remarry J Quality ANKER OF COMPOST HEAP MEL1BERS The Ladies Literary Club met Monday evening at Mrs. Lester B. Belliston's home for an evening devoted to travel. Mrs. Allen Bel-en- t, iston was guest speaker and gave on entrancing traveogue of her vacation in Denmark and Nor. way. This was made more enter- by many colored slides taken by her on her trip, Mrs. Belliston, a charming and most interesting speaker left each 0f the club members feeling that 's they had visited her Mother's ive land with her. Present were guests: Mrs.Wil-EPHRAIford Belliston, Mrs. W. H. BeUis-pton' Mrs- - Eizabeth Hassell and the lowing members: Mrs. A. H. Mrs. Ralph Belliston, Belliston, Mrs- John Robertson, Mrs. J. R. taney. Mrs. L M. Fetty. Mrs. J. I. Roiiictn Mia T.nia MPhorcnn ' Than Glass stitches with the sensational : W. W Ntfnhpncnn Mrc TvTnrvin . .... r t7.ji r,.l. ijiiiauu anu niri miss tleiiure uuhg, Mrs Udell R. Anderson, Jensen, Allred, Spring City, are candidBottom Carries Load Mrs. Frank Greenhalgh, Mrs. Rob- ates for queen. In a round wood tank it Is the ert Winn, Mrs. Jos. G. Irons, Mrs. E. Alton Ellertson, Mrs. A. V. bottom which carries the load, not Onion Juice Mrs. the staves. Gadd, Mrs. W. F. To obtain onion juice, cut an Lester Asher, and theBrough, Mrs. hostess, onion in half, crosswise. With a Lcstor B. Belliston. No Civilization knife scrape the cut side of the Without wood, civilization would will onion and the juice flow. have been utterly impossible. ... mnnmm " i VUalA r ". IE sew 89 different tvDes of LEAVES FORM BASIS ENJOY TRAVELOG HERE SUGGESTI0I1S ?urraatJThe1S. id" .3f you .si actually Machinel LADIES LITERARY . III III. la ed 1 I0 i7 ib i5 is birds Evening 14 tachment,, 1 hs DEMONSTRATION ! ' ed 3 34 Cowboy's rope 38 Christmas song 39 Come in 40 Too 41 Long-legg- 49 50 61 53 65 66 VriKtX'A KT 13 Coalesce 14 Fruit decay 15 Direction 17 Church part 19 Girl's name 11 14 aa,"i,si high-spe- A at- - le mas decorations and presents will be given by Verlyn Stevens, Utah County Home Demonstration Ag- at the First and Second Wards on Tuesday, November 11 at 2 p. m. according to Ray Burtenshaw, county agent. All ladies are invited to tend. The program is being spon- sored by the Juab Stake and Ward Relief Societies through rec- comendations made by those Jad- ies who attended the recent Wo- leadership school at Logan, Answer ISSU n & oo: Full-sca- Suggestions for making Christ- -' PUZZLE the monorail superllner seen at left above may of the airplane. Built near Cologne, Germany, for test normal size, travels 100 miles per hour. Backed by Swedish millionaire Axel Wenner-Gre- n, the new train was kept secret by the Rail Transportation Research Society until this year. At right is the unique monorail track at a switching point which Is set to curve right. Electric power is fed to the engine through metal bands on the rails. Rollers, built into a deep slot on the engine's underside, ride on the one rail which is six feet above ground. models are expected to travel 210 miles per hour. two-fift- times used to mean clever, shrewd and sharp-witteWebster's Collegiate Dictionary defines "cute" as meaning, "Attractive by reason of daintiness or picturesqueness, as a child." Too often we hear such expressions as "the cutest house," "the cutest boy friend" and "the cutest handbag." It would be a good idea to give "cute" a long rest. Metropolitan Dwellers More than one half of the American population lives in the 168 Hard-shell- ihill Whizzing over tomorrow's landscape, be the railroad's answer to challenge runs only, the model car is another word that is big a load. It is some- is 7 X without Yes, Not Sc Cute Pray as though no work would help, and work as though no prayGerman proverb er would help. W r : BOYS ON OLD BALDY GJ.'s taking time out to rest on top of bloody Old Baldy, smoke and think about home. Relaxed around their bunker entrance, left to right, are: CpL Norman Greene of Long Prairie, Minn.; MSgt. Vernon King of Dalton, Ga.; Pfe. DooaJd Penner of Floydada, Tex., and Ohio men, Pfc. Robert Cox ftV 1 1r.if.n1 Zmt fiiumttlt |