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Show i WEEKLY REFLEX-DAV- NEWS JOURNAL, SEPTEMBER 2, 1976 IS inligEi TiSuie. T ir a Sun long Air Force Reserve Airman William F. Arguello, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Arguello of 382 West 1225 North Layton, has graduated at Lackland AFB, Tex., from Air Force basic training. THE airman, who studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special instruction in human relations, now goes to Lowry AFB, Colo , for specialized training in the munitions and weapons maintenance field. Airman Arguello attended Ogden High School and attended Weber State College, in 1956. HE received a Masters Degree in business admims- - McClellan AFB, Calif. A man once told me in his opinion if there are any grounds for suicide, it would be when one individual has a canker sore, a hangnail and a paper cut all at the same time. His professional military education includes Squadrons Officers School in 1962, Air Command and Staff College in 1966 and the NATO Defense College in 1973. be WILLIAM AKC.l'LLLO and Kelly. typewriter TRANSPORTATION WAS poor and each communiiv found it advisable to raise most of their own food Farming methods were likewise poor and most of the farms didnt produce too much. Today, however, hybrid seed and fertilizer are used farm freely; heavy machinery is bought and used and now the farm population has dropped from 80 percent down to 4 percent. has improved until an average American family can sit down to a breakfast consisting of oranges from from Florida, grapes California, breakfast cereal from Battle Creek, bacon from Chicago and eggs from Arkansas. Partly as a result of a better diet the average length of life has increased from about 45 years to 78 years. The farm population has always been a stabilizing influence in America. $1 of the can inherit one-haestate but she must pay an inheritance tax at the national level and also at the state level on the other $500,000 with other very limited deductions lf t Be When some scientists dont like the weather, they can simply make their own. OF the Energy Research and Development Administrations (ERDA) national laboratories have TWO weather-creatin- special g equipment that helps tists study coal-fire- scien- energy-relate- d pollution and its effects on plants. Dave Shriner is known as the rainmaker around Oak Ridge (Tennessee) National Laboratory, operated for ERDA by Union Carbide Corporation.. He, is the designer and operator of a fully automatic sprinkling device that can be programmed to control the size, intensity, and d raindrops, making rain some parts of the U.S. almost as acidic as tomato juice. Shnners preliminary studies with plants have shown that simulated acid rain may significantly affect plant and crop processes. While Shriner makes rain in Tennessee, scientists in Idaho are making rain, wind, and ol Layton Area Ages 5 3-- A Fun Learning Experience For Your Child Phone hour, per and humidity from cent. relative 10 to 100 per- weather chamber allows scientists to study how energy-relate- of pollutants and d & Garden Center 1815 W. Gentile, Layton 2 miles west on Gentile Open 8 A.M. to 7 P.M. Locals Peaches & Pears Storage and Canning Potatoes BIOS PICK' OP PEUNERY ' preserving Ml our ' farm families. The nation' needs, . the stability that .this group, is yO providing. r bag SII 25 Local Cantaloupes Watermelons and Cransltaw Melons FARMERS!! seed grain, wheat and barley COATINGS 58r6M. to 60" wide full bolts ? xarues,$a.D02;0a hett an'df cqmel blends in. . tweeds britehed plaids and more! j4". to 60. wide. '7 Includes JQp mens- herringbones, plaids, worsteds, wear patterns and brushed wools, too. -- , luxurious-wool -- TAILORING AIDS FOR WOOLS SALE 5.21 Reg 3 50 Pattern Altering SALE 2.63 49 4 , Pounding Block SALE 1.8 SALE 3.37 special purchase! CORDUROY PRINTS Pinwale corduroy is a perennial fashion favorite for fall. Pick 100 cotton and cottonpolyester prints in the zingiest new color combinations. Easy-carmachine washable. Values to 3.50Lyd, 45 widths e . BRUSHED COTTON PRINTS The newest fashion look in 100 cotton. Soft brushed finish in stripes, florals, patchwork prints. 1 98 YARD Values to 2.29 yd. 45 widths Sale Prices Good thru Sat., Sept. 4th OPEN MON.-FR- I. 9:30-- 9 Granger Murray Town SHRIIBS1RLANTS Discount prices. 77 wardrobe with these wools wool blends. Choose and great from handsome classic tweeds, Point Presser Yellow Onions Bolt aftor bolt of new, Urst quality Fall fabrics, all at Build your Fall Tailors Ham & Country Centerville Orem SAT. 9:30-- P.M SUN. 12-- 6 P.M. FREE PARKING 4179 S. Redwood, Meadowbrook Plaza 5650 South 900 East. P.M. 6 12566East30Q South " OPEN: MON.-SA- T. done. ' IN AMERICA we would do well to think sourly about values to $6.00 Reg. 2 49 little pieces of stiff OUR LIVES are surrounded with minor irritations. Perhaps the reason they do irritate is because so many of the big things are so well leaving the small farms and moving into the cities. They are doing everything they can to stabilize the farm population. ' Herringbones, menswear looks SALE 4.46 plastic They are concerned about the large number of people that are Tweeds, plaids, worsteds, Reg 6 95 many agriculture. WOOLENS Reg Canning Supplies Just in time for canning Certified fall and (formerly) straight pins I remove, there remain a few to snag me on. New Arrivals" Reg 5 95 choice and get a shirt home, then comes the fun. The countrys next concern has been the development of educators, the most famous of whom of course, was Confucius. This was a good choice because knowledge is power. A nations educators Seam Roll theoretically you pull and off comes the top of the can, only half the time you cant pull it at all or you pull it half way and it breaks. BUYING clothing for teenagers isnt the most rewarding experience in a mothers life at best, but when you finally arrive at a Zambia a great nation. First among these was the 54 plastic strips embedded around the edge which building the kind .'of' character that can. make civilization had divided its people into five distinct classes. YARD break off instead of opening the can. Other brands have encounter a stiff piece of cardboard. The adjoining pages wont do anything but stand up straight, so the first thing you have to do when a new magazine arrives is go through and rip out all that cardboard, but still whenver you pick up the magazine it flips open to those pages. Perhaps the clincher there is timing. Orange juice cans little individuality charming ' are most often opened first which only the manufacturer thing in the morning and if we understands. Again, I say need anything to start off the conspiracy. If theres anything more . day with that little subtle note, its a strong willed can. useless than an empty &nd unfillable stapler, you can OF LATE magazines have ,haveit. The solution is go buy a new stapler'. A full one. joined the march toward in ' voduce 25-l- b. read nor.write but they were men of .integrity and jonor. They were thfe group that gave.stability to the country. tion. Some brauus nave little lifters cleverly designed to -- them could neither prominent official, placing great store .in education the right kind of .education, said to fne: The Crhistian religion offers our only 'hope cans. Every single morning 1 open a frozen orange juice can. It matters not the brand, they are all designed with permanence in mind. That juice is inside and inside its going to stay. sanity. Almost any magazine has little pieces of cardboard bound into the pages. Open the magazine and at once you Before it can be worn, washed or pressed, it must be undressed, and no matter how the weatherman can order. All this is done in an environmental growth chamber at ERDAs Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL) near Idaho Falls, in which temperature can be varied from 32 to 100 degrees F., wind speed from 2 to 15 miles THE 766-11- 08 ' Mo6t of ONE OF the little things is adding to the grand total which is going to tip me over one day is orange juice that OH WELL. You get the idea and anyhow, youve tried to open orange juice cans . . - just about anything Pre-Scho- SECOND class, however, was the farmecs. These were the men who fed the nation and China valued them very highly. . YEARS AGO when I was in China I found that ancient the environment of the experiment 24 hours a day. in THE This Bill should be passed. You might like to encourage your Congressman to favor it. The preservation of our fram families is important to the stability of the nation and the well-bin- g of us all. under different weather conditions and how they affect plants growing in the chamber. Its the cowards approach to environmental research, said INEL scientist Dr. Joseph Alvarez, I dont have to wait for the wind to blow or the rain to stop. I can control remain sturdily 'WHATS MORE, no two staplers can be filled in the same manner. Each has its are very valuable to the nation and certainly influential. WHEN I WAS in .Zambia, Africa a few years ago, Tt potential pollutants move through the atmosphere chemical composition of its raindrops. INSIDE AN environmentally controlled greenhouse, Shriner spends most of his time simulating and studying acid rain. Acid rain is caused by sulfur and nitrogen oxide particles released into the air power plants and by some industrial processes. become The pollutants oxidized and get into staplers THERE IS not a Bill in Congress to improve this situation. It would decrease the inheritance tax and would allow for a larger amount to be passed on, free of tax, from ade To Order? TAKE STAPLERS stance. independent Consequently, they would be foreced to sell part of the farm or the whole of it. It would probably be bought by a large corporate farming concern and a farm family would disappear. million. Suppose the husband dies. His wife tion, of Weaker aim fin CONSEQUENTLY, THE federal estate tax alone would probably be about $340,000 which the family would probably not have. TODAY, HOWEVER, the farm family is threatened. Inheritance taxes have gone so high and inflation has become1 so serious that when a farmer dies his family is often times unable to keep the family farm Suppose, for instance, a family farm with a value, according to current infla- THE nation is better fed than ever before. In fact, transportation typewriter ribbons. think typewriters are cute. Next subject. I LOVE for inThere are infinite varieties of staplers and excessive inner turmoil. The unending sizes. The staples for one variety will not fit any problem is they gang up. other stapler. Take typewriter ribbons, Of course its a conspi racy for instanct. On second, thought, dont take typewriter . because if just any old staple would fit just dhy old stapler, ribbons. This machine can why buy Mr. Xs brand? Theyve been able to standardize all kinds of little things like hardware and plumbing and electrical supplies, but Fa Is cer- tainly read what I write on it, and Im doing all I can to stay friends with Typewriter. I I ribbons, read minds and it can NONE OF these problems are of a magnitude to turn the tide of civilization from its predestined channel. Any one of them can be faced without go bananas,' it will because of staplers, When : mm by any mechanic. THAT MIGHT be just a tinch onto the extreme side, but his point is valid. Its the little things thatll getcha. COLONEL Moore and his wife Patricia have three daughters, Michele, Becky i--f a' gerprints on the refrigerator, windows I wash just in time fur a mud storm, an ominous sound in the car that wont go away and cant be identified By FLORENCE BITTNER OTHER assignments include duty m Thailand, Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, a faculty member at the Air University and a tour in Turkey NEVERTHELESS, : MG Fte ; tration in 1966 He completed pilot school in 1957 and was assigned to the 552nd Airborne Early Warning and Control Wing, B When the Delcaration of Independence was signed 200 years ago more than 80 percent of all American people lived on farms. . 9:30-- 9 P.M. ... 290E. Pages Lane 55 South State Street , aToico 8Art-5P- zs8 M. mMw. 0co m uuct |