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Show Noveinbrr l!Qi Li, Mt. I'luaMint Ur I i ,, vAr AVI 1 I I'll' i , 2,000 YEAR OLD !, (I'M ,, . 'I II i , ! i". iv i O' - SKYSCRAPER l.f i M rs. ii . l"i The spare tire mound expenyour waist is the sive one you can buy! mo--- Athen r I t i : rum' i ;Yi . It1 Ji li i 'ill'! Kaiift.ift i 'Mi .it !) Miiw.i .m r ,i- - I. m i ti i 1,11 t i i IF YOU ARE: A Laborer A Farmer A Small Businessman L ; lor CONGRESSMAN HENRY ALDOUS DIXON . TV 7; ; 7Jyy :yf Qjs' ...;L:'' r- - , LABORER: Dixon won union support of vocational education program. He fought for hike to $1 and civil service benefits, broadened Dixon is being supported by the Brotherhood Engineers. He is rated high by United Mine Weber College minimum wage social security. of Locomotive Workers. FARMER: Member of powerful House Agricultural Com mittee, worked to achieve higher sugar beet quota and liberalized farm credit. Protected western wool against foreign competition, works in close harmony with Secretary Benson. Worked 250 acres on a Utah farm. SMALL BUSINESSMAN: Worked to hike government purchases from small business, supports Small Business Administration which has loaned nearly one million dollars to Utah firms. Supports recommendations of Eisenhower' Cabinet Committee on Small Business. OR I Ufi .1? , '."-, , - Hi i , Uity v li.'Kt Sunday iiibng the of A 1 1 Stake 1 . ' i"i, h..f'i it "t Hi, i " t ,i l.i M und Keith Jot gen--- i. I'lu,. ant and Otis Nn lev. Hi , ,i, t.t weri Speakers J Q. Ada i Hi imp Hugiu ,, t Allred, Mrs. Ger Belief Society n. nt j Mu v. Kvelyn Acord, ui 1iim.tiy l.u lii.un president and M. of the ward LI'S g i is gmup u Miss Maijorie N pi e. rated U vocal solo, acc .. .cued by Mis-Hansel Ailu-Carol Madsen. ,.t the ward bishopi., , undo, ted the services and Cox d 1'o.MMrd, waid cleik, presented gim-ia- i stake and ward officers l,u uppio,ii , A,'- - . ' Long before Manhattan Island was purchased from the Indians at a time when the word had not yet been coined a magnificent twenty - story palace dominated the skyline of Yemen's capital city of San'a. This regal structure, known as the Palace of Ghamdan, was as great a tourist attraction two thousand years ago as New York's Empire State Building is today. Many historians have described the wonders of the famed palace, which had a ceiling of transparent alabaster so clear that its inhabitants reportedly could distinguish the species of different birds as they alighted on the roof or flew overhead. Because of Ghamdan and other palaces which once towered twenty to thirty stories in the air, the Yemenites can fairly claim that they were the first people to erect skyscrapers. Only traces of the palace of Ghamdan remain in present-da- y Sana, but the capital contains many seven- - and eight-storie- d buildings with the same type of original architecture. Even today the upper windows of some Yemenite palaces are made of translucent alabaster instead of glass, and the lower stained-glas- s windows beam forth at splendor. night in multi-colore- d Although Sana is situated on a flat plateau, some of its buildings are so tall that from a distance it seems as though the city is built on elevated land. The average Yemenite, accustomed to climbing his countrys rugged mountains, is undaunted by long flights of stairs and instinctively seems to prefer tall buildings. Foreign visitors have noted with amazement that the Yemenite of the plains, when unable to live on nigh ground, erects a tall house and chooses the top floor to live on! r" I i 1 , , Mis. Erma Culls.. a has been selected as "hobby director" of the ward Relief Sonet v. was hosto the Social Eervtce club members. Mrs. Vurlcen Osborne and Mrs. Vera were Sorensen special IVt-is- ANOTHER ... ... ' More than 10,000 parachute jumps have been made by instructors at the Parachute Rigger The name, "Kansas," is taken from the name of a tribe of Sioux Indians who called themselves People of the South Wind. CO-O- P d, shur-starti- ng ATTENTION, INDEPENDENT VOTERS Remember ... For ALL Your Winter OR P J Mt. Pleasant, Utah FARMER'S CO-OSERVICE Moroni, P Utah ! you prefer to vote for individual candidates simply place an X after the candidate of your choice and DO NOT place an X in the circle under any party designation. If DRIVING NEEDS 'Vuit MT. PLEASANT FU CO-O- bi'int'i home of Mr. and Mrs. Virgus Ossend is the former Belva Johnson borne were Mr. and Mrs Uonnell 'of this city. guests. Osborne and two daughters, West Jordan; Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mrs. Ray Sti.dc and family visMis Mabel Beck entertained ited recently in Spnngville and Osborne, Provo; and Keith Sor- - the Althea Club members at hei In Provo when- - Mr. Stnate is emensen, Salt Lake City. home Thursday afternoon. ployed. Mrs Dona Allred was a special Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sorensen guest. LeNae Mickel and Tommy All-re- and Mary Sorensen of Salt Lake employed m Salt Lake City, City were Sunday visitor! with at visited last week their homes their Mr. and Mrs Burns Allred Mr. and Mrs. parents, here. Tom Provo, and Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Sorensen. t Jensen and small daughter of Mrs. Thelma Madsen visited Salt Lake City viBited Sunday at last week in Salt Lake City with Visiting at the home Of Mr. the home of Mrs Anenia Allred. Mr and Mrs. Everett Strate her son and daughter-in-law- , Mr. Jensen was released from were and Mrs. Bruce Madsen. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Townsend of the U. S. Army September 20 Visiting last weekend at the Long Beach, Calif. Mrs. Town- - He was last stationed at Arling- - Got the battery that ready to go when YOU are, winter mornings. You can end even on zero-col- d winter battery failures with a CO-O- P Merit 70 Why pay the high cost of towing charges for dead cars when only $7.95 exchange buys you a dependable battery. Don't chance winter. You cant afford them. this battery failures CO-O- P Merit 70". You CAN afford makes of most fit will 70" popular A Merit battery automobiles. quality-guarantee- V. tin , v, tint In ,il' i i Hu a , Tb'i .in i, i , ulus ut quilt i mil iH"i in i I, - nil'll mi in 1, "I 1 Indian- i , , I in-- .Ui ,i, t ,n 1"- i ,n t mouth I mlidim" t but the 1 , , ii.ii. milTin-- , p a fnt ly unit'll ,i;,i'it her ml wilt Milking tunge .sail water, u.iliium they .stme U oils ami tuts bn the grounds, louiney to the do not eat il'ii mg v. iii, h Ui, - Ills wife, the former ton, Va Shernui Allied, tuui baby were there with him. Mr and Mrs Wallace E All- led and children, Mr and Mrs. Provo; Jerry Ray Johansen of Mr and Mrs Lawrence Larsen and family ot Kmrview Bpent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs Reid H Allred. Mr and Mrs Isiuis Allred in Provo one (luy last week. Carpet Cleaning Discovery Hailed Easy ca WINTER BATTERY FAILURES T mm- il,- h l. iii i long tess Wednesday evening P SHUR-STAR- in-- twen-ty-elg- el-.- , Mrs. Mildred De- EPJD With A Five j ii, ' t ti Pyramid iu N 1 i Heed Lusson, btui Kmrview; and n Stake High C'ou gBtnes ! il H King spite the fact that it rarely cornel Hearts ) out for the player, Pyramid Turn up cards from the hand widely played and la the subject of singly, placing unplayable cards face up on a single wastepile. The elaborate top card of this pile and the card on in hand are available Note that a the part of card turned up from the hand may be matched with a card on ttie its devoted followers. wastepile. To win the game, both the pyramid and the wastepile must To play be cleared away and discarded this game, There U a way of playing Pyradeal mid egalnst "par or another player. A match Is !x games. In each card In game two redeals are permitted. If tha form of a pyramid (aee diagram). Thla la tire player clears away the pyramid composed of aucceaslve rows of one on the flrat deal, he score fifty to aeven cards. Each card it over- less the number of cards remaining lapped by two cardfc of the row In th hand, and he may use the redeal to deplete this number. If below. the pyramid is cleared away In the A card In the pyramid la available If not covered by eny other. second deal, the score Is thirty-fiv- e, At the start, the seven cards of the lesa remainder of the hand sftar bottom row ere available. The play the third deal. If the pyramid Is of two adjacent cards releasee one cleared away In the third deal, the core is twenty less the cards In card In the sixth row, and o on. From tha available cards, re- hand. If the pyramid Is not clearedIs way In three deals, the scoro move and discard all kings singly, and all other cards In pair that minus the total of cards left In toUl thirteen. (In the diagram, the pyramid and hand. Spimg u ,m Solitaire may be of Diamonds, 6 of Diamonds and 7 of Hearts, Ace of Spades and Queen of Spade;,, 8 and 6 of Spades; King of Spudes. 9 of Diamonds and 4 of School, Naval Air Station, Lake-hurs- t, N.J., since the founding of the school. OF A LABORER, FARMER OR SMALL BUSINESSMAN. THE WIFE ONE GOOD TERM DESERVES . "sky-sciape- Here's Why You Should Vole V k; i m following PYRAMID J. sj One of the moit popular mem- ber of the klmple addition family ' r li - w I bn' n iii 'bnln tii 'll"! v wii j O'.borrn- t I' h t i.' 1. d v Phon - iii - I h- ' i: i I'ae ,, I) ' ' - (Tiai.i lv raiiiiij What Is said to be the sasiest and "cleanlngest home nig cleaner, known as Blue Lustre, is now available after years of research. Blue Lustre leaves no foreign residue to cause rapid resolllng. The pile Is left open and fluffy as the colors spring out like magic. So easy to apply with long handle bruBh (like playing shuf fleboard) and 1s safe for all types of carpets. Use Blue Lustre to clean the entire carpet or remove spots and traffic lanes. It's economical to use as V4 gallon of concentrate cleans three 9 x 12 BaiLyWcC, |