OCR Text |
Show Two r.g THE EDITORIALS GJlu' North Sanpete's Home Newspaper Tl mi iv t n .m Ii J in M , i il Exceptional Service In Community Leadership" Fiom Citation Avoided By Utah State Agricultural College Jan. 1G, 1949 M i i i i Is' ued I ci) Il id IN tie Ninth S.iiipele Rub'ixhiiig Cun p,m ( Hi n e ,'it ,i 'id enleied .it lie l'u-Mt 1le.is nit, S.iiipiie county, I I. ill, as t .8 mid i la's ni.iUei iiieli i the i illlisi ( Man ul undress lid 'mi Reliel Society And Reported By fiheo Anderson M Vi h d, Itates Iajalde i IM) ( )nc Si x eai A I Adv.ime 111 N ! 7") mted States, JUKI pel Ae.cr Friday, October 21, 1949 When a citizen has to prowl the town in his automobile looking lor the trouble as Ralph Gunn recently did, or when a citizen has to protest the trouble from his sick bed as Clarence Anderson recently did, or when a group of citizens volunteer their time and talents to lick the trouble as Les Lund, Ray Nielsen, Morris Shirts and George Bittle recently did, or when the trouble infuriates all of us as it has on one occasion or another recently then, brother, it is time to go to work on the trouble. The touble is radio interference. It has become so prevalent that there remains little pleasure in listening to the radio. In order to hear a program through one must endure a series ol screeching, grinding noises, in between which one may or may not pick up bits of entertainment or Ask anyone who owns a radio. information. He'll tell you the interference is bad enough during the day and worse than that at night. What causes interference7 Motors big motors, little motors and middle-sizemotors whose owners are unintentionally ruining radio reception for themselves and their neighbors by operating these motors in a state of disrepair or without benefit of static filters. How many people are affected7 Practically everyone. A conservative estimate would go about like this. There are approximately 500 homes in town. There is at least one radio in each home. Average cost would be around $30 per radio. Conservative estimate of money invested in radios in this community, $15,000. And as long as radio interference continues at its present high level a good part of that $15,000 is wasted. None of us will ever be wealthy enough to afford that kind of waste. Here's what Les Lund and Morris Shirts and some of the others who understand radio tells us about the cussed interference. Any motor which sparks will cause radio interference. The bigger the motor, the bigger the spark and the bigger the interference. The offending motors may be on household appliances, stokers, electric shavers and the like. In some cases interference is caused because the motor is in disrepair. The obvious correction is a repair job. In other cases a motor which is mechanically perfect may be causing the trouble. The type of interference this motor causes may be corrected by the installation of an inexpensive filter ranging in price from $2.00 to $4.00, according to the size of the motor. Still other sources of radio interference are the city electricity lins which throw off sparks when limbs or other obstructions contact them. You can lick that one by reporting same to the city electrician. It has been suggested that the city empower volunteers like Les and Ray and Morris and George to seek out the offending motors and recommend to their owners the proper remedy. If the remedy is repair, it should be the responsibility of the owner to have the motor repaired. If the solution is installation of a filter, the owner should purchase a filter. These could be stocked either by the city electrician or by local hardware and radio stores. Whatever the remedial action recommended by the inspectors, the big majority of citizens will no doubt gladly d comply. Then just think. One of these days you'll be able to listen to the "Lone Ranger clear through without having to wonder what happened during most of the program when you were having your own troubles trying to get "Silver to ride through that static curtain. Pleasant; Mis I.ola Sorensen L Mis Fume Pees, Wales; Mis Stanley Jin for l h.esiei Mis Annie ( who will tesen, - Spring Ci t ; ; district North Sapn-AMi-Thelma Moioni. compile the school population Nielson, F.umew and Mil follows Burnside, before Oct. 31 are as And.-mKlmo Mrs. Geoige F. Petersen. Indian bum, Mis Mt Grxen. S ountain Klva Mrs. Guymon, ola; I f i? - j unkin, Caiol Me aid Lein Nmnly p!i"i,ent am. ome that the irpul i melting will be held at the Ninth N.iid chain 'JuiMiay a 2 U pm me nijm.i Mis. .'III I'IN e be lesson tie ,o. 1.1 All the iadit s aje si ii iii e i lass in pi d to mile out Ninth Gleaner (lass had I1, a iiiemtieislilp comradely 'lues day evening, Oi tube! Is, unde tindnietion ol Mis Kay Heck and Mis Kathryn Diaper Ttieie was a shoit piugiam after whirh lit shmeiits vs ei e sei ed Fern Roberson will be MI young ladies and tesses mens havi young piesidents planned a Halloween Ball to hi Moroni tub! next Tuesday, Oitobei 25, Vi 1 (1 111 v I at Static Can Be Licked Census Takers Tor School Connt Are Announced School census enumerators oiih J. risen, pm 1.1 i K7t J of the Scroll th oh of ,duiy School Teachers state of Utah at the UFA volition held in Salt Lake llasl weekend. Gee. t uii-de- I $ Mont lis Outside Itiiuiulanes of tile 1 i .lcctcd president group of women in the Pies bytenan church are meeting at i id in afu moons Monday links doi rmtoiy to study the Minor Prophets of the (j T. the leadership ol Miss Joan Bolt Any woman interested in this seminar is invited to come The Womens Missionary So il ty will meet at 4 (X) Tuesday, He 25th, in the faculty room Miss Maiaret Thompson, treas uiei, and Mrs. Roger Hansen, chan man of the finance com mince, will present a program entitled, "Our Own Shari, con ct'rned with the woik which is carried on at home and abroad by the group through its giving The president, Mrs John Sours will preside at the misting Miss Shirley Barker and Miss Mary A Coming Week's Program FRIDAY. OCTOBER PLEASANT PYRAMID . . lene MIA At North Ward Plan 1 i ut The Church Corner. i 'I MT. lie the hos uy The Richfield school high of chorus, under the direction Aiden Peterson, was featuied at ot one of the general sessions the I tah Education Association la-convention in Salt Lake Mi Peterson weekend is a former Moroni resident, having been born and reared heie and higt-sthe having taught in hool here. J949 Remember a couple of columns ago when humm National Children s we complained about this is also a Natof it. There the hall that ain't Day. Well, to a hopped-uional Kid's Day, according press release received this week from a Chicago public relations outfit. n National Children's Day, you'll recall, is the advertising promotion cooked up by the publisher of Parent's Magazine and supposedly celebated throughout the land on Sunday, October 16 Frankly, our brood never found out about it Beezie would have laughed it off as a cheap gag and since Sunday, October 16, just happened to be Laurie's first birthday, we couldn't bring ourselves to tell her on that particular day about people who play all the angles like the publisher of Parent's Magazine, for new-fangle- a d p tin-hor- o. Flist apple crop repeat which we have a record wie made Just 310 years ago oi October 10, 1039, when 10 fai pippins" we re picked from tree-oGovernor's Island in Bostoi Harbor. The trees are believed to i the first trees apple planted in the northeastern pan of what is now the Unite States. ' instance Then just as that crisis is safely passed here comes ihis breathless dispatch about National Kid's Day to be observed Saturday, November 19. We are reading the dispatch and thinking this day makes some sense because it is an appeal for help for underprivileged children when, ouch! the old pitch shows up in the form of a movie producer who announces he is going to preview a terrific new picture at Indianapolis and Hollywood in honor of Kid's Day. For copping a free ride for himself and movie on the Kid's Day wagon, Mr. Big Heart promises to fork over proceeds from the two preview performances. Fagin was a piker. Legal Notices p in , Ho It w ill In h. Id at Advisers of the LDS Girls met Ball Boom in the home of Mrs Venice An STATEMENT OF THE OWNERthe Queen City wlii'ii' tlieie will he g, lines and derson Tuesday afternoon tea SHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC., REQUIRED BY (lane g Piles will tie Riven plan for the stake union meet THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF lm the two best eustuin, s K'v ing which is scheduled to he m held November 6. The i AUGUST 24, 1912, AS AMENDis excited to come lynne meeting i osi ume, officers said will he held in the Fast Ward ED BY THE ACTS OF MARCH A Imission is fiee to MI mem chapel in Moroni at 3 p. m 3, 1933, AND JULY 2, 1946 Inis Advisers of the LDS Girls OI Mt. Pleasant Pyramid pub thioughout the Stake are ex- lished weekly at Mt. Pleasant for Oct. 1, 1919. Tull Schedule Planned pected to he present ) State Of Utah the union meeting Planning At Presbyterian Church were: Mrs. Anderson, Mrs An County of Sanpete ) ss. nn Robeitson, Mrs. Izola Black Before me, a notary public u. Dumip the n pillar 10 a m Mrs. Nonna Black-ham- and for the State and county .siinday Si bool penod at the ham and ,s (ill 1 TOMFOOLERY c c 2 . Bust Pieshy i tan ehurih, the Piimaiy department will piesent a special piogram on "Noahs K " with hand diawn pictures to tcdl the stoiy, group songs, and tlnee pianu solos "Build mg the Aik by Norme Gunn. Animals March ol the by The Ch.itlyn Bynum, and Mm tn" by Tammy Mads n I believe in A seinum titled the Holy Spirit will be deliver ed at 11 o'clock morning worship sei vice by the Rev Gregory t i , The Moroni Stake Relief So ietv union meeting will he held November G in Moroni, according to Mrs. Anna Robertson, stake president. The meeting will be held at 2 p m. in the Fast Ward chapel. c Fairview aforesaid, personally appeared Thomas G. Judd, who, having Life's Little Ironies Dept.: The scene is Wednesday evening's deer hunter's ball. Drawing for prizes is under- way. Grant Johansen says he'll bet four bits his number will be one of the lucky ones to win a prize. We bet him it won't be Grant's number is drawn. He wins a prize. He wins the bet. The prize that wins the bet? So help us, a subscription to the Pyramid. tc been duly sworn according law, deposes and says that he is the Manager and Editor ol the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid and that the follow ing is, to the best a of his knowledge and belief, true statement of the ownership, management (and if a oi daily, weekly, semiweekly triweekly newspaper, the circu lation, etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the act of August 21, 1912, as amended by the acts of March New otficeis were sustained in the Fairview North Ward Junior Sunday School superintendency, Ik id. pastor Laura Tucker, Ruth Erickson The Westminster Fellowship and Alice Christiansen. They will serve a chili supper Sunday Deamie Nordstrom, 3, 1933, and July 2, 1946 (sec7 IN m pi. lee of the replaced at evening Christiansen Laura and tion 537, Postal Laws and Regu Gladys iegul.it meeting Vance. Vance will re- lations), printed on the reThe Wasatch Guild presented main as Laura verse of this form, to wit: secretary. an oiigmul clrajjm, One World and ad 1. That the names on Halstead Street Tuesday-nighdresses of the publisher, editor, m Craighead auditorium FOUNTAIN GBEIN and business Based on a stoiy in the hook. Speakers at Sacrament meet- managing editor, editoi In the Hneetion of Dreams, ing Sunday evening were Clif- managers are: Managing Mt. Pleasant, G. Judd, Thomas was of ford Moroni Blaekham the the diainatie version d by members of the local Stake and Ernest Utah. presidency is: (If 2. That the owner Bailey of ihe High Council and group its The east featured the follow- Peter Jacobsen of the Young owned by a corporation, he must address name and MaxMaxine Mens Stocks; Miss Header, organization. ing immediately Jewel ine Collard of the correlation stated and also Pat Taylor, Alexander, Rev. group sang "The Lords Prayer thereunder the names and ad Marline Fran, Turner, dresses of stockholders owning Jones, Chari Langei; Clyde with Mrs. Verda A Lund' as or holding one percent or moreIt Turner, Boh C'ritrhlow; Annie, accompanist. of total amount of stock. Me I. od; Rent Collcctorf Marline a corpoiation, the Don Reigley Special guest speaker for Oct. not owned by Seminary student. in South American 23 Sacrament meeting will he names and addresses of the Dale Beigley must be given nurse, Elder Allen Nielson of Moroni, dividual owners educator, Don Stocks; If owmed by a firm, company, oi Quoda Mantle; Nisei optome-tiisf- recently returned missionary, other unincorporated concern Bob Haishman; girls, Dai Cook Scott Bishop reports. its name and address, as well individual each as those of The Moroni Teacher Honored member, must be given). Noith Sanpete Publishing ComAt U.E.A. Session of Utah pany, Mt. Pleasant, stockholdElden Westenskow was elect- which the principal ed vice president of the voca- ers are Thomas G. Judd, Mt tional agicultuie section of the Pleasant, Utah, and the Art Utah Education Association at Publishing company ot the annual convention in Salt City which the principal stockholdLake city last weekend. ers are Harrison Conover and The honor came to Mr. Wes- F. C. Packard, Springville, Utah Mayor George A. Collard of tenskow in an election held by and C. G. Salisbury, Salt Lak- Provo, Snow Alumnus, will be the vocational agriculture teach- City, Utah. the guest speaker at the Home ers from all over the state. 3. That the known bondholdMi. Westenskow is also cur- ers, mortgagees, and other secoming and Founders Day on 29 at Eph- rently serving as president of Satuiday, October holders owning or holdArea Five; of the vocational ag curity1 percent or more of total raim. ing The event is scheduled foi teacheis, Young Farmers and amount of bonds, mortgages, oi so that students, Veterans. Saturday other secuiities are: None. He has served as president of paragraphs 4. That the two teuclnrs, all alumni and will he able to attend the central area vocational ag- next above, giving the names of and without interference with work riculture teachers and has serv- the owners, stockholders, ed on the State Poultry Im- security holders, if any, contain and classes, it was explained. not only the list of stockholders The program outlined for th. provement committee. He has also served on the and security holders as they apday is as follows; 10 00 tradi- state of the tional morning program, 12:00 agriculture committee, the pear upon the books cases in Young Farmers committee and company but also, Fellowship banquet, 2 30 Snow the committee. where the stockholder or securBadgers vs Ricks Vikings, 7 30 He State Farmers also has had "Hovvdv, charge of the ity holder appears upon the College plav, Stiangei, state 9 30 Found'd s Day Ball books ot the company as trustee poultry judging contest. Mr. Westenskow has been the or in any other fiduciary relavocational agriculture teacher tion, the name of the person oi t pie-par- . ; ; , Provo Mayor To Speak At Snow SETS THE PACE FOR PLEASURE! to-- Homecoming town-citten- & m -- s Moroni number high school for '' ftiooV. the whiskey that's KENTUCKY a WHISKEY- -A BLEND of years. NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROD. C0RP..N.Y. 86 PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Mo-ron- "Utah stood in sev- enth place among the states in zinc output last year. The 82,-980,0- 00 pounds she produced would rustor galvanize, enough chicken wire proof, fencing, six feet high, times around to go the world!" 16 Is clvays THOMAS when you rc a member of Utah's largest farm ... - ctober 1919. Tv .... flall aai WVN MINING ASSOCIATION Notary Public. expires Nov. 4 1952). ASDUEITG . . . twometal Good condition horse ti.uler Fairview. See Venule Stewart, O 21 pd Utah Qruftoi Ofat DM be O- burke mcarthur iSeaD (Mv commission FOR few G. JUDD Sworn to and subscribed for.- me this 17th day of co-o- Experts are at your call any time to solve ANY problem. UTAH Actually, Larro is one of the bulkiest feeds in the cow's rumen -- where it counts. Inside the Cow, Larro absorbs considerably more moisture than ordinary feeds . . . gives your cows bulk where they need it for proper digestion and better assimilation of all the feed they eat. More than 350 different dairy feed formulas were tested to develop today's Larro. Thousands of actual Herd v Check profit records prove that Larro hat the cows and increase full nutrient balance to build their flow of profit milk. See us today for Larro Farm-teste- d Dairy Feed. at hand im .U CAuuutyH corporation for whom such trustee is acting, is given; also that the said two paragraphs conDean Christensen, who now tain statements embracing affi teaches at South Cache but who ants full knowledge and belief is a former member of the i as to the circumstances and high school faculty, was conditions under which stockholders holders and security the who do not appear upon books of the company as trustees. hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona tide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any in terest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as no stated by him. 5. That the average number ol copies of each issue of this pub or distributed lication sold through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the twelve months preceding the date shown above is 1151. (This from information is required daily, weekly, semiweekly, i and triweekly newspapers only in 01 '. fefc lituK fefe CM FOR SALE RFNT a room house See Georg M call Mt. Pleasant O 21 29 pd 2 13 R m COMPANY Ml. , Pleasant Phone 13 1 klh per month Brown Mt. Pleasant Mill & Feed All . i" mi. ...... |