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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22. IMS LETS, UTAH f ITT We Specialize In Gifts HBTS AND LADIES GIFT ITEMS Take Advantage of Our Convenient LAY AWAY PLAN me For The Entire Family Trading Post B Main Street "Sportsmen's Headquarters" If It's Sporting Equipment If Lehi e Hare It! ""7 Diseases in Stale Decrease During Past Week CROSS ;0.1 BED 'EHS TO MEET IH -- ML COKF. Physicians and health s, Qi delegates Cross oifip-- dicated by readership studies ol 4-- H ADVERTISING MORE clared. Receive Recreation Average readership of small town weeklies is superior to bemetropolitan newspapers cause the tempo of life in the smaller town is slower, and hometown newspapers have that homey, neighborly spirit, which cannot be achieved by the big city dailies, Mr. Schonian said. Other readership surveys were made by the Brigham Young University departments of Journalism and Marketing at Heber, Morgan and Kaysville, using local weeklies in each city as a basis for the studies. Training EFFECTIVE r be l?ear.Ulat. ack rabbits might . . . .. of. Readership of general adverhah kads from 14 a lu extent than greater i iir. Satis seven to eight times as mvene at Provo, i.ounaoie diseases to the State at other times. Hunters -- re tising readers of homej October Zora. w ra""6-latDepartment of Health for the warned that the safest procedure great among count-iJ- n . . i- - ! 1 a- e nlans for week ending October 15, 1948. That is a considerable decrease of ionization. Registration trom the 130 cases last week. from 9:00 till 10:00. It is t0 note the limately 500 members decrease interesting in diphtheria cases from onethe attend ejected to seven last week to one for the starting wuu a current week, as this is one of local Ission at 10: 15. The the preventable diseases. Imbe represented by ,r with diphtheria f 'smately 100 junior dele-- I munization toxoid is a relatively simple proleaders. adult 50 and that provides almost a L section meetis are cedure hundred percent ses-protection laled for the faternoon the disease. against Red Junior follows: Only two cases of poliomyelChairman and Committee were reported during the itis Mr. leader, discussion iuers, week as compared with eight Relations State e Thorpe, Red Cross: cases last week. Relatively reer for American cent reports from the U. S. s, Jers and I Edith Ackerman, Field Public Health Service indicate a lesentative, San Francisco decreasing poliomyelitis trend I American Junior Red for the entire country and the ?' i for this wpok is in dninr .Utah reDort ttu Mb ...... ,, J ci"8 ,bara Glade, Member Facitic inree cases ot tularemia were Junior Red Cross Advisory imittee and Louis H .Carl-- f reported during the week, bringthe total for the State to 32 Director Junior Red Cross, ing the first of January. Dursince and Elementary 'ic Area, iol Section, Mrs. Alta Miller, ing the entire year of 1947, only 33 tularemia cases were reportIrentary Supervisor Jordan Iol District. Reports will be ed. For the period, on community, ixauonai 1941 to 1945, we averaged 35 International phases of cases per year, including two ior Red Cross. The subject deaths. Most of the tularemia cases international - intercultural been reported ons will be discussed at all this year have since the first of July. The p meetings. fah County Chapter will pro-- I peak week ended September 10, and 1948, when six cases were roport-emusic, entertainment A majority of these infecheon. In charge of arrange-at- s contracted been have is Mrs. Carol Hodgkinson, tions alirman Junior Red Cross, through deer fly bites and County Chapter American through handling infected jack Cross. rabbits. This is the time "of the w ana 1 Z as I Teacher-Sponsor- ci . "" . . , u not to handle them at all; town newspapers as among readers of big city dailies, according otherwise, should be handthey le! with rubber gloves both by the hunter and the housewife who cooks them. After thorough cooking through and through, the meat is safe for consumption. n A . 11 i jeuuw convertible with a New York license plate screeched to a stop in a small Vermont town. "Hey Bub! called the flashily dressed driver, to a native standing at the curb. "Which way to Canada?" the townsman Deliberately sauntered over the car, coolly looked the occupant up and down. "Tell you what you do," he drawled. "You go find a Vermonter who likes to be called 'Bub,' and ask him." Reader's Digest. to two surveys completed by the of Marketing at Department University Young Brigham cooperating with the B. Y. U. Journalism department. The surveys were made in Springville, Using tfce Spring-vill- e Herald, and in American Fork, with the American Fork Citizen as the subject. Both were conducted under the spon sorship of the Utah State Press Association. The survey indicated, according to Roy A. Schonian, manager of the U. S. P. A., that readership of general advertising in the two weekly publications averaged 40 percent for women and 34.3 percent for men. In metropolitan dailies, the average readership of general advertising is between 4 percent and 5 percent as in- - Mr. and Mrs. S. Glenn Smith attended a family dinner in Salt Lake City, Sunday, honoring Mr. Smith's brother, Ralph Smith, who is leaving for the New England states mission. The group attended the farewell in his honor, Sunday evening. Israel Heaton, Utah State Agricultural College Extension ; Recreation Specialist, will be in Utah County October 27, 28 and 29 to give recreation training to club leaders. He will give instruction for the leadership of club games and folk dances. leaders will use the training and instruction received in their club. communities and in other leaders If there are the in county who organizations are especially interested in re creation leadership, they may participate in the classes by contacting this office before the meetings are held. Professor Heaton has just returned from the National Reat creation Congress held It was the Omaha, Nebraska, consensus of opinion at the con- 4-- tht "the family that pUys nw. loeemer stays lOKeurer, I lea ton reported upon his return to Logan. A note of anxiety over the problem of family unity and solidarity ran through the en tire conference, he said. Recreation is a way of life," commented Prof. Heaton. "It deserves equal status with public Club Leaders To ! lyrcv I V ltVyspnptl H 4-- 4-- H H sponsored programs of education, sanitation, health, fire and police protection. Leaders from the central section of the county will meet in Provo for training the evening of October 27th. An afternoon and evening meeting will be held in American Fork on the 28th for leaders in the north end of the county; An afternoon and evening meeting will be held in Spanish Fork on the 29th. De finite places and times for the meeting will be announced later. Jenniev J. Poulson, Home Demonstration Agent five-ye- ar d. "WHICH" WILL IT BE POPULARITY OR NO? Your Vote A ' I NOVEMBER ' !i ' i h 1 ft 2 Is a Vote For i a Mi NOT it a point to look your neatest 'tnn ii iiiii Phone 156-- 2 5D W . . . fresh as a daisy! Let our AYS SERVICE 2 NATION dealers two-filame- nt NEW FALL HATS FOR MANY YEARS have you and your for men clear choice as faces you arui ooy 1 Certified lamps are produced by more than 100 leading manufacturers. There are lamps for reading, sewing, bridge, study, boudoir, dresser, dressing table and walls. All wear the Certified Lamp blue tag to help you recognize them quickly. it choose between the wandering, the the Democratic dangerous has given us, and the united voica of Party two-wa- and all of us November 2. On that day you "-m-ust X INTERMOUNTAIN American people expressed by the man and he One issuo and one issue alone is yours Th' mis-rul- to risk th dangerous gamble of more Democratic years. Th'nk without passion. 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