Show : 2 - THE HERALD JOURNAL OCTOBin ST lSil Lucan (CnuaaAnmty tun FRIDAY m bought s and Things — ! He Raises Crickets For ! A Living Children And Colds THE AMERICAN FOUNDATION for the Blind sends along little story about "1 million unseen crickets g a under one roof” 7 a reporter was out in Indiana Interviewing a man about ’ life’s problems the intricacies of the Job and about the future The tape recorder whirred softly as the two talked I Inadvertency the man being interviewed bumped the board on which the microphone was standing The little thumping noise produced a startling result more than 1000000 crickets FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Miner E Bruner Pastor 9:45 a m Sunday Church School 9:45 a m and 11 a m Worship Service Message by Mr Bruner: "Foundation of Faith — heart-warmin- I Jumped into hidiug "What was that?" asked the inquiring reporter "Crickets are like sheep" said Donald Cleland "When one Jumps they all Jump” ’Die interview made in Kimmel Indi 1 ¥ ana in a building fifty by eighty feet at a temperature of ninety degrees was somewhat unusual in that it was conducted in the presence of 1000000 healthy robust crickets waiting for their owner to ship them out to fishermen ! BACK IN THE LATE FIFTIES Don waf a telegrapher on the B A O railroad Being the father of four young children I necessitated an extra Job Moonshining for Don Cleland I masculine attractive with a gentle voice consisted of work ing-foa tree service company ! Indirectly Don became a victim of the dread Dutch elm ' disease scourge of shade tree lovers He was removing dead elm stumps A premature dynamite explosion sent him to the hospital with a punctured lung and two dead eyes ! TWo weeks and he was out—totally blind In his struggle to adjust himself to his new life he began to sell insurance Accustomed to two Jobs he remembered that when he worked his way through high school clerking in a hardware store live bait for fishing was a big seller The best live bait was crickets— often hard to come by Why not raise them? r In the garage of his lovely new house on the edge of the village Don experimented with hatching cricket eggs that a friend had supplied He built a metal tank for the hatched t youngsters learned that they ate chicken feed liked to live in layerSpCl corrugated paper that created tiny caves liked to Jump around in straw- He learned how to sift them for size end howto transport them in perforated cans He gave up selling insurance No time He hired help-t- he joined family including father-in-lain Today in the cricket house there are ten tanks ten feet V by six feet with an average population of 250000 crickets each They get shipped out as soon as they are too large to fall through the sieve and younger ones take their place si - w "I HAVE NO SECRETS” said Cleland in the interview "When I went blind I had to do something And I was never one to sit around Now I’m too busy to think much about my ' blindness The worst enemy of a blind person is inaction Next to that comes the Ignorance of sighted people who think that he V I ‘different’ He isn’t All ha wants is a chance to carry on” As a blind man in his early thirties Don the prejudice of many sighted employ- Cleland has ere who still do not believe that blind people can be found in more than 7000 Jobs Cleland who has raised uncounted mflHana of cricket completely by touch and sound (he can tell by the chirp the approximate age of the crickets) certainly has proved that there is no limit to human ingenuity Ingenuity seems to care little whether a man is sighted or blind little Kimmel Indiana sitting peacefully below the Alichi-ga- n border1 pays Don Cleland the biggest compliment of alL His fellow citizens keep forgetting that he is blind And the crickets don’t seem to care either sans DROP-SID- ship 8:00 p m College Fellowship "Mormonism and fpr "Versus”? ) 'Protestantism' Reverend M E Bruner speaker MAID OF MILK-Bar- 19 of To Present Study On Cattle Industry m Father William J Hannifn Vicar 99 398 Sturdy wooden crib with drop lido Visit Toyland Today Reg - school amunday’ am— Morning worship Sermon subject "The Purpose of the Church" ' 6:00 'pm— Training union Fully lined LADIES' COTTON DRESSES WEDGE OXFORDS 99 Agency Leader SALT LAKE CITY (UPD Values to CREASE 7 to 14 ' RESISTANT ' yards 59c Associational ence on stewardship at Ben Lomond Baptist church Ogden V The public is cordially invited to attend all services JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES St Logan Utah Weekly Meeting Schedule: Sunday — 3:00 pm Public talk 4:15 pm Watchtower Bible Study Class Tuesday — 8:00 pm Bible Study Friday — 7:30 pm Ministry 43 S Main SALT LAKE CITY (CPU -Salt Lakers will be able to dance on New Year’s Eve That was the ruling of the city commission which Thursday passed an ordinance allowing dancing from midnight Sunday to 4 am Monday when New Year's Eve falls on Sunday night 149 Whita Rag cot-to- n woffle knit Sizes Bettor quality cottons in fancy prints 4 to 16 SMB GREASELESS DOTS' FRY PAN POLO SHIRTS 99 4! Dance Ruling 5— 7:J0 p m worker’s confer- crept solo 3V(5k o)(o)c Reg Cushion UNDERWEAR - study Rag 798 Glove loathar upper Throe colors Broken sizes BOYS' THERMAL COTTON PRINTS -- Hie Cooperating Agencies for pm— Evangelistic Schools Thursday namPublic vice— Sermon subject “The Bible Answers Great Ques- ed Paul S Rose Salt Lake City as its chairman tions" of the Rose is president-elec- t Tuesday Oct 31—11:00 am AssociaSchool Boards Utah 201 room of BSU meeting in tion and a member of the Murthe UB at USU Board of Education 1—7:00 Nov: Wednesday p ray m—Prayer meeting and bible 398 Fancy plaid or plain colors Easy care cottons Sixes ser- Friday Nov overshoes 4 buckle dross weight Reinforced buckles December Dr Osmond Ilarline will be Sunday School in the Parish one of the principal speakers House r at the 43rd annual convention of the Utah Cattlemen’s AsFIRST BAPTIST CHURCH sociation 71 West Third North ' on The report will touch J A Strom Pastor the from of economy expansion Sunday Oct 29 beef sales employment in 8:15 am—Broadcast of the related industry and return on KLGN Gospel— ranch investments 7:00 9 ar Sunday October 29 22nd Sunday after Trinity 9 am Morning Prayer 9:45 11:00 OVERSHOES GIRLS’ -SALT LAKE CITY The director of the Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University of Utah will report on a two-yestudy of the battle industry in ST JOHN’S EPISCOPAL 85 Eqst 1st North MEN'S DOLL CRIB E w Jo bara Mountain Grove Mo uses the lactic lucre her Eight Jerseys produce to pay for her education at Drury College She's milking a Holstein at Missouri Agriculture College where she was chosen Missouri's Maid of Milk Finley PRESTON COMMUNITY CHURCH Donald Coleman Intern Pastor 945 a m: Sunday Church School 11:00 a m Worship Service Message by Mr Coleman 5:00 p m Westminster I ' SHOP FRIDAY NITE S TIL 9 PM Fragile or Forceful?" Message in music by soloist Mrs Murray Danielson 1:00 p m Senior High Fellow- - Cleland crickets are wanted wherever fishermen want live bait Donald raises millions of them annually and sells them for $5 a thousand He may not be the only cricket farmer Ray Nelson in the nation but he is perhaps the most unique He is blind- -l has been for five years In fact it was his blindness that steer- ' ed him into cricket fanning BIS SAVINGS ARE IN STORE FOR KEITH O'BRIEN SHOPPERS THIS WEEKEND Teflon lining prevents sticking Free spatula SCREEN PRINT Rag 169 Famous brand Sizos 4 to 14 fancy craw neck JUVENILE WOOL BLANKETS CASUAL SLACKS School: 8:30 pm Ministry Development Class Hie public is invited to at-tend all of the meetings No collections will be taken H 99 by-pass- - KELLY'S MM gives the need for Winter Driving! ' frequent colds ’s you KN8KN ' live ' om IfBv Wi llJMMriaB BATU oopOaoaaoo 798 Satooir cotton with warm quilt wool lining Sizas 36 to 46 Reg Sizes 36 MRM MEN’S COTTON BRIEFS 2 pair Qc HH 59c Combed ton Sizes 5 to 8 Reg 070-1- Plus tea an4 aU Nra a cot- LADIES' NYLONS I f fc 3 aar fBUY HOW PAY LATER Buy your Rally Explorers now Start : low low weakly budget pdymants Hill AFB Fund November 15 Values to 100 in popular shades Sizas 814 to II pair Reg 49c pair White cotton cushion solo top Sizes 10 to 13 Ward's Tire and Battery Shop ta mm i Full washionod 698 Fancy or plain tapered tc 391 Mooses to Match Reg 398 fancy non-tarni- aluminum 1 14 Ovenproof glass insert COTTON KNIT PANTS Values m 299 INFANT SEAT 99 Rag 798 Moulded plastic baby ' seat with adjustable positions Easy to use clean and store away 211 North Mein YaarTka Bar P i Lega O— It BWalf Tiraa la Trask fawf M a Car aal ikiypti VahWa Elastic 9 LADIES' Values to structing family housing airUj field lighting guided missile radiographic lab liquid fuel US storage and standard calibra" li W tion lab Sttotc CASSEROLE 4J'99 SALT LAKE OTV -The Air Force has released $5370000 for its military construction program ist Hill Air Force Bate according to Sen Wallace F Bennett The Utah Republican said the funds will be used for con- SOX E ALUMINUM ' -- CUSHION-SOL- IBM EXCLVS1VI POtfBUTAMOtf AKMOMJBIEX NOT TREAD D8SWN FMMtptk ItmS Blacks Ml W tar trail Data kita laaata lata -- — b Bug aaH anal aaa mn aiesei smvm eta imv ee buM wit taMaawar tractiaa Palyte-Mimm trial ivaa hainaal in n PUBLISHER Audit Buraau oHJIreulitlna united Praa totemtienel djirfif 1 0 99 Values fo 1498 brushed wool pullovers 38 end 40 : The Herald JobHhI fabric SWEATERS LADIES’ have him examined by a doctor Keep children home when they have a fresh cold Do your best to keep them away from the other youngsters in the family too When a child under 5 has a cold it’s a good idea to keep him in bed a couple of days Never minimize the importance of a cold Serious secondary infections such as sinusitis tonsillitis bronchitis ear infections even pneumonia or meningitis may develop when a cold lowers the child's usual resistance to these germs Be alert for complications like high fever or earache Rag- - 298 Famous brand Scotwist cotton Assorted colors Sizss 3 to 7 MEN'S TANKER JACKETS TREAD Worry-fre- e If none of the above factors seems to offer a reason for your grade-schooler- LADIES' BITE IF ONE OF YOUR children seems to have more colds than the others or more than normal his age may be a factor Youngsters from 1 to 6 years have on the average more colds than older children If he’s past 6 years of age the cause may be more serious Sudden chilling and exposure to sharp weather changes make a child more susceptible to colds So can lack of sleep fatigue improper diet tenseness and worry Some suggestions for cold prevention are given in the November Better Homes A Gardens magazine Encourage the youngster when he is free of a cold to walk or play outdoors for several hours a day in winter This builds up his resistance to cold weather Make sure he Isn’t overdressed either indoors or out or too heavily covered in bed This causes perspiring with more chance of subsequent chil- ling Check his diet to determine whether he's getting sufficient vitamin C in the form of citrus fruit or juice tomato juice or some type of supplementary C vitamin Also make sure he is eating enough of the vitamin Aupplying foods: milk butter fortified margarine eggs vegetables and that he is getting at least the minimum daily requirement of vitamin D blue or Pink Rag '1298 when perfect 72 x 90 yellow screen prints PLENTY OF FREE TWO HOUR CUSTOMER PARKING quart H |