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Show Thursday, November I, 1956 THE Watch for the Fourth Ward Relief Society Bazaar which is to be held Decmber 6. Plan to buy Christmas gifts, such as aprons, pillow cases, hankies, dish towels etc. Watch for further details. FOR SALE and pasture land acres farm Contact Mr. or Mrs. Bill Stowell. Phone 40. 80 2 bedroom modFOR RENT ern home with furnace reason- able Call 562J. Mr, Legislator HOPKIN Once in a generation a big man emerges for a big job. The man is LON HOPKIF1 and the big job is the V. S. SENATE Dean of the Utah Senate 22 Years Distinguished Service Twice Utah Senate President" Vice President Utah Cattle Growers Association His colleagues of both parties attest to his remarkable legislative record. LON HOPKIN has followed a consistent course of moderation, avoiding extremes. He stands for sound and sensible legislation as his record proves. He is not obligated to anyone except the people of Utah and their interests. He is a Utahn working for Utah. ALONZO F. Always Give Way Mrs. Winn, Club President To Siesta Time CANDIDATE United States Senate ( Paid Political -- Hostess at Recent Meet WASHINGTON For uncounted centuries the siesta has influenced government, business, international trade, war, rebellion, family life and human health across a large slice of the world. Cost Rica's short-livemilitary flare-u- p left ample time for soldiers to take their afternoon snooze along front lines, according to news pictures. In Madrid last year, proposals to abolish the siesta erupted into heated controversy. It was the Spanish who named the siesta, taking the word from the Latin sexta bora, sixth hour after dawn, noon. But the customary habit of sleeping through the head of midday was not a Spanish invention. Pharoahs napped in palaces by the Nile. Centurions of Rome snored during the blazing hours in North African and Near East Lands. Moors brought the custom to the Alhambra and Granada and found the Spaniards already doz ing. Spanish conquistadors in turn took siestas in the Aztec halls of Montezuma and the fortresses of the Inca. Today whole cities and countries shut up shop while the sun is high and hottest. From noon until four o'clock in some lands, all business stops and men sleep. From 12:15 until 1:45 in Ciudad Trujillo, capital of the Dominican Republic, a caballero could shoot a rifle up or down most of the main streets with little danger of hitting anybody. Then an electric fire siren shatters the silence to warn siesta-taker- s that it's almost time to go to work again. Mexico's capital, bursting at the seams, has largely done away with its noon-tim- e nap, partly because public transportation was not up to taking the breadwinnlng population back and forth between home and working place four times day. I . x . . 1 On Thursday, October 19, Mrs. R. E. Winn was hostess to the Kino Arts Club at her home. The meeting was conducted by Mrs. Winn, president of the club, and the club prayer was read by Mrs. Gerald Cazier. Mrs. Lynn Olpin gave a very interesting review of John A. Schindleo's book, "How to Live 365 days a Year" Mrs. Cazier, program chairman, presented the outline of the club years program. Club members presenrt were Mrs. A. L. Garbett, Mrs. Frank Brough, Mrs. Enestine Vest, Mrs. Gerald Cazier, Mrs. Lynn Olpin, Mrs. Fred Wetherell, Mrs. G. O. a growers Golden, Above: High above Mrs. V. M. Mrs. new head stand stalks of the high Ed. P. Cox and the Foote, Mrs. hostess, producing hybrid corn. Left: Ears R. E. Winn. of the corn are displayed by another successful grower. . Club been interviewed said Kaystone Delphic Literary 38 usually grew taller, had longer ears of corn, and had a good Members Enjoy Meeting balance of grain to fodder. At Home of Mrs. Ostler Heavy foilage with a darker green color showing high vitamin The Delphic Literary Club met A content denoted the better feed the home of Mrs. Marjean Ostvalue of Keystone 38, it was at ler on Thusdayr, October 25. reported. Mrs. Emma Wilson read the Club collect, after which Mrs. Evelyn Lomax gave the timely topic, "Know Your Candidates . In attendance were Iris Ferre, Jeanne Wilkey, Emma Wilson, JoAnn Tolley, DaNell Worwood, Erma Barton, Emam Jane Nel- Marjean Ostler, Jeanne LinMerle Worwood, Joyce Ellen Bowles, Donna AnEileen derson, Bailey, Berta Brough, and Iona Sperry. If you have any lean cotton rags, please box them and set them on your front porch by 3:30 p.m. Nov. 12 when the Third Ward MIA workers will be around to pick them up. If we miss you. please call 416W. Proceeds from the sale of the rags will go toward the Third Ward Building son, ton, f ri A: it nitr Hi i ty--- Tl A grout) of Utah corn farmers this season earned some $140,000 more than they hadl expected by planting nearly 5,000 acres to a new hybrid suage seed corn. This figure is based on the ex perience of Horace Jex of Lake Shore, Utah county, wno averag ed 4.5 tons of silage more per acre than he harvested from oth er well-knohybrids planted in the same area. Calculating the value of silage at $8.00 per ton, the estimated 350 farmers using the new hy this year realized $140,000 brid not Sub Calif. BURBANK, extra income from their 5,000 sighted, sank same." plantings. This message may one day come acre The new corn hybrid is Keyfrom a U. S. Navy Neptune air- stone 38, tested for the past six plane equipped with new "divining vears by Utah State rods" to locate submarines biding al College. During the Agricultur latter four beneath the sea. The long, pointed years of testing, according to Rex on tail which appeared recently F. Nielson ot the college s expert' the Neptune has a special appara- ment station, Keystone 38 has tus which can spot underwater yielded highest of all hybrid corn vessels. varieties tested. Cooperating farmers who have MAD Called the "MAD-bir- d deairborne for magnetic standing tector the Neptune does its aerial Eskimo Seal Hunters detective work by registering disBothered by Walrus turbances in the earth's magnetic Eskimo field. FAIRBANKS. Alaska n Based on physiseal hunters at Point Barrow on cal principles, similar equipment the northern tip of North America was used in military operations have been having walrus trouble. An Eskimo correspondent of the during World War II and in oil and other mineral explorations Fairbanks News-Minreported since. New refinements in the it this way: MAD-bir- d permit its incorporation "Today Ernest Kignak and a few within airplanes. Formerly the others saw a walrus. Day after magnetic device was towed tax day men would go out and most behind the airplane. every man would come home empty. Walrus is an enemy to seals, that's why the seals don't hang around, no matter how good the ice could be. "The people here wish to see this walrus go away or be killed. A very same thing had happened to this village one time in 1939. People would be short of seals then, too." fc1 'III high-yieldi- Mem-mot- t, -- Fund. Device on Planes CAKE SALE Saturday, Nov ember o, at Bailey McCune, start ing at 10:30 a. m. Buy a cake for Sunday save Mom's time and effort. Spots Submarines Paid Political Adv. by Gilbert Hafen FOB RENT OR SALE 2 bed room modern home excellent location Contact Milton Shaw at 3002 Beechwood, Las Vegas, Nevada. 7!4e Paniif, yau-natjulttl- W. C. Me . . A Allan of Dependability the fourth in a series of short articles written by group of close associates of W. C. (Cec) Tate who is a candidate on the Republican Ticket for State Senator from The 13th district, comprising Juab and Tooele Counties. This is We hope we have been able to impress the people of Tooele and Juab Counties of the real and outstanding qualifications your Republican candidate possesses. We feel it is all important at this time to elect a man that can and will work for the type of Legislation our counties need. The fourth outtrait of character that is part of "Cec" Tate is standing DEPEDABILITY. If "Cec" is elected you can depend on him to represent both counties efficiently and effectively, regardless of party affiliations. If elected to office he will do the things that will benefit the most and show no preference where principal and justice is an issue. He will accept this honor with the same humility, honesty, integrity and dependability that he has always shown. Investigate your candidates to know them and we sincerely believe that you will feei as we do, that it is time that we elect a man that is young, capable, and that we could to say "He is the Senator from District 13." Paid Political Advertisement by Barton Employees Association, care ot Ada tlder, looele, Utah. lew-- ie ! well-know- hopkn DEMOCRATIC Page Five Club News . Business and Wars d UTAH'S NEPHI. UTAH TIMES-NEW- Advertisement Hopkin Committee) t'! er $I00.00 Reword for information leading to arrest and Water Pistol Used To Test Steam Pipes con- viction of person or persons destoying either or all of three Signal Oil Company signs south BILLINGS, Mont. If you should visit a $17,000,000 refinery here and see a guy walking around with toy water pistol, he isn't crazy, nor a misplaced cowboy. He's working checking on steam pipes. The refinery Is laced with miles, of pipe, including team pipes with temperatures up to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. That's hot enough to cook a roast. It is often necessary to know if a steam line or trap contains live steam. At first, refinerymen touched these lines and got burnt. Some spit on the pipes. But now one squirt from a water pistol and the water et explodes Into steam and gives the answer. URS. I V'-- V GERALD JUNE CAZIER. KENDALL DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE for State for . County Representative Commissioner Experienced legislator who "knows her way around" in the Legislature . . . active in church and womens' organizations . . understands the problems of all sections of Juab Stake President . . . eduCounty . . . former Relief Society cated at B.Y.U and U. of U-- ; former LDS Seminary instructor . . . mother of fine family. Term ar ; V; y i timdmmm He has had the experience . . . and has the desire and TIME to serve you. . high-pressur- e' of Levan on Highway 91. LARSEN at Signal Service Contact - Phone 526 PAUL . 11 Rom where I sit Jy Joe Marsh Idaho Pine poles Jersey milk cow and Jersev heifer, both to freshen FOR SALE ft long. 18 soon Fastest "News Service" in Town! Had a frantic wire from Washthat the ington yeaUrday-eayi- ng local Congressman wm making a surprise visit and a ahort speech. Could I get Ue word around No time for a special edition of th Clarion, ao I turned to the fastest "news service" in town . . Windy Taylor. He spent an hour mobilizing his Lodge and Court pretty fair House cronies-a- ll talker -- and the rest la history. Biggest turnout ever. I hat Am a newspaperman, facta are facta. to admit It-- but The Windys of thia world aren't latt than our paper . . . they've even got better circulation. From where I sit, some of as would rather talk than eat, while . . . just d others are as some of ns like coffee and others prefer a glass of beer. There's a lot to be said for both attitudes. But if yon go in for gab don't talk sgainst someone just because 70a don't happen to agree with him on some question of personal choice. Use your own "good censorship." close-mouthe- only quicker news spreaders CopyTht, 1956, United States Brwer$ Foundatum R. ELGIN SOL 1 GARDNER DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE SELYIN RT.V. Nparlv new Oil Pimilflfinir hontpr with tank and Also other furniture tubing See at 833 South Highway ai in Provo. NEEDED by Second Ward Rel Servicable old chairs ief Society Call to be used while quilting Mrs. Roy W. Greenhalgh. room all floor coverings electric range and refrigerator Kendall Phone 344 or 413J FOR DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE for RENT 2 bed Commissioner State Senator Term rut n People of Tooele say about Sol: "They may come bigger, but not better.". He has an enviable record in civic affairs and also in legislative circles. Has served as Mayor of Tooele, State Representative; State Senator representing Tooele and Juab Counties; and many other important offices. He fights for benefits of all people: Labor, farmers, small business, and mainly for the "underdog". A very conscientious sees it through. worker- - Mrs. W. Lee Bailey. Vote Democratic Straight! Paid Political Advertisement by Jft ' the Juab County Democratic Committee t A nr n'l -- TTH hen he starts a job, he A young business man who knows County served as Juab County Assessor and Juab with an enviable record in each office- - He and can arrange his time as is required of County Commissioner. apartment aoartments. Five room modFOR RENT ern home with furnace. Not fur nished, but could supply refrigCall 21 or 74 erator and stove I." ' County ar ASK about our generous trade in offer on your old watch Nephl Jewelry. r, for G. E. Wilkey. FY"R I ' affairs. Has County Clerk is to do the job |