Orem-Geneva Times from Orem, Utah (2024)

NOVEMBER 2, 1950 OREM-GENEVA TIMES does not mean indifWe may work and Patience ference. and wait, but we ought trust to be idle or careless while not waiting. -Gail Hamilton Lumber Distribution analyzing domestic lumber In the trend has intrastate shipments to distribution, been increase and for for long hauls between regions to gradually steadily steadily decrease, there has and no apparent trend either up in the volume of transbeen or down continental hauls. a ROSE by any other, name! Compulsory Health Insurance IS Socialized Medicine no matter what they call it. Thomas' Senate Bill 1679 and Bosone's House Resolution 6766 are socialized medicine bills.

Granger supports both bills. A vote for WALLACE F. BENNETT, IVY BAKER PRIEST and PRESTON L. JONES is a VOTE AGAINST SOCIALIZED MEDICINE. Sponsored by DR.

N. FREDRICK HICKEN Wood's From Five Continents Used In Bank Murals LOUISVILLE, murals. perhaps the most unusual in the United States, will adorn the walls of a Louisville bank this winter. The murals, each six feet long and four feet high, are fashioned from hundreds of tiny pieces of wood and present typical scenes of the life of Kentucky--a steamboat, coal mine, sorghum mill and a tobacco auction. No stains or paints are usedjust the natural tints of some 50 different pieces of wood from five continents.

One has only to watch Fritz Bade, their creator, at work, to realize that here is no stuntman, like the fellow who builds a model of the Eiffel tower from 11,000 toothpicks. Although Bade has been an artist in oil, pencil, etching and wood all his life, he pursues art as an avocation. He has been a manufacturer and salesman for years. For several years, Merle Robertson, president of the Liberty National Bank Trust has been giving an original Bade etching each Christmas some of the bank's larger depositors. After seeing some of the artist's inlaid wood pictures, Robertson decided a set of Bade murals would lend distinction to the bank's proposed new building.

There is color, depth, perspective and expression in these glorified jig saw puzzles. Blistered poplar has just the right blotches of light and dark to make a "buttermilk sky" over the steamboat. Timber on the boat, standing out white against the cloudy sky and the muddy water, are cut from holly. The shadowy deck is Brazilian rosewood end a tiny awning on the afterdeck is tulip wood with lemon and orange colored stripes. Black and white striped zebra wood from Africa makes: sweater for one of the deckhands.

"Grain for anatomy, color for effect," is Bade's rule. "I never use a straight grained wood to depict a rounded surface of a body," he explains. The grain must conform to the shape to be portrayed. Bade says he never has counted, but he estimates there are from 750 to 1,250 pieces of wood in a picture, perhaps as high as 1,500 in some. It takes him 200 to 300 hours to make one picture.

Time Switches Go Rural in Helping To Maintain Top Production of Eggs By IRA MILLER of light, however, it is necessary to Farm Electrification Bureau supplement natural light with artifcial light. It takes more than human intelli- It is important that the lights be gence, stamina and agricultural know- arranged to shine on the roost as well how to operate an electrified farm. as the floor, feed troughs and water Automatic controls are necessary, fountains, since some hens will stay too. So necessary, in fact, that most on the roost if any shadows or dark farmers can't get along without them. areas are present.

One 40 to 60 watt they are part and parcel of to- lamp should be installed for each 200 day's "push button" farming era. square feet of floor and roosting area. Among these ingenious day and Lights should be placed in reflectors 3 POULTRY HOUSE LIGHTING -helps keep egg production at top levels. night "electrical watchdogs" are time switches. One of their main farm jobs is to help maintain egg production at top levels throughout the year.

This is done by providing farmers with automatic, low-cost control of their poultry, house lighting for systems. Time with switches are applicable use all lighting plans. Their task is to turn lights on and off, or to dim them, if desired, at stated intervals. The automatic control of lights relieves the farmer of one more manual chore. And the regularity of lighting intervals as provided through the use of time switches, has a beneficial effect on poultry.

Before artificial lighting of poultry houses became so widely used, farmers grew accustomed to accepting slumps in egg production during fall and winter months. However, later experiments have shown, that' flocks will maintain or more of normal summer production during this "off period" if they receive an adequate amount of light. To obtain this amount 12 to 16 inches in diameter and 3 to 4 inches deep, and located about 6 feet from the floor. They should be spaced half-way between the dropping board and the front of the house, 10 feet apart and approximately 5 feet in from the ends of the building. A maximum "daylight" periodnatural plus artificial light- of 13 to 14 hours is recommended for 1 laying pullets and fowls, depending on their condition and production.

Twelve hours maximum is recommended for breeders recovering from molt. When artificial lighting is introduced late in the season, the length of day should be increased gradually at a of about 30 minutes per day until the recommended maximum is reached. Poultry house lighting does not, as was first thought, result in chickens consuming large amounts of extra feed, but has a beneficial effect in stimulating those organs which enable birds to continue satisfactory production of eggs. If the true spark of religious Words are not always the and civil liberty be kindled, it auxiliaries of truth. The spirit, will burn.

Human agency can- and not the letter, performs the not extinguish it. vital functions of truth and -Daniel Webster love. -Mary Baker Eddy "WILLIE THE WIZARD NOW APPEARING AT Auction CITY OPEN EVERY WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7 P. M. UNTIL MIDNIGHT "WILLIE THE WIZARD" is a mathematical genius with a photographic mind.

Try to stump him with any mathematical problem. He works them instantaneously in his head! Tell him your birthdate and he will tell you how many days and hours you are old! BE HERE AT 7 P.M. WITH YOUR TOUGHEST PROBLEM! SQUARE ROOTS, CUBIC ROOTS, ETC. WILLIE THE WIZARD APPEARS BEFORE AND AFTER EVERY SALE AT AUCTION CITY 670 NORTH STATE STREET OREM Funeral Held for Henry Wooley, 71 Funeral services were conducted today (Thursday) at the Olpin Mortuary for Henry Joseph Wooley, 71. cattle and sheep man of Escalante, Utah and brother of Mrs.

Perry (Mary) Liston and W. E. Wooley of Orem. He also leaves two other sisters, Mrs. Henry (Susanna) Cannon of Union, and Mrs.

Carl Shurtz of Escalante. Mr. Wooley died in Salt Lake City on Monday of causes incident to his age. He was born Jan. 16, 1879, at Escalante, the son of Joseph and Lucy Prince Wooley.

He received his education at Escalante schools and at the Davis high school at Kaysville. He is a member of the LDS church. Burial was at the Provo City cemetery. Bishop M. D.

Wallace of the Lincoln ward was in charge of the services. Council Okeys Jaycees' Efforts To Get Lights The Orem Jaycees' project of obtaining semaphore signals at the 8th North and 8th South intersections on State Street and regulation of parking along Sate Street received the stamp of approval of the Orem City Council last week. Mayor J. W. Gillman told Weston Kofford, president of the Jaycees, and Torval Nelson that the local club had the support of the city in its attempts to get the red lights.

The Jaycees representatives suggested that parallel parking would afford better vision for motorists entering the highway and designated parking lanes would also make the highway much safer. It was also proposed $1 -and worth it WICK SWAIN HAIRCUTS custom built DOUBLING FOR GROUCHO During recent stopover at Fairfield-Suisun airfield in California, Truman chatted with Harpo Marx (left) and air base commander. that another double line painted to designate the way as four lane to eliminate the dangers resulting from the motorists driving full speed right to the curb line. Mr. Kofford asked the city council to renew the Jaycees' license and concession rights at the city ball park for the coming year.

Mayor Gillman said a re- from the Orem stake Primary for the concession rights for next season, but no action had been taken on the matter, and both requests would be filed for future action by the council. A report was given on the Jaycee house-numbering and city directory project. A new measuring device has been ordered and the project will be completed as soon as the new quest had already been received eqiupment arrives. THE STORY PRINCESS WILL BE IN TAYLOR'S IN PROVO FROM 3:30 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

THIS SATURDAY THE STORY PRINCESS WILL PERSONALLY AUTOGRAPH EACH COPY OF HER NEW BOOK BOUGHT ON She will also tell a few of her Wonderful Stories! OF TAYLOR'S TOYLAND OPENS SATURDAY!.

Orem-Geneva Times from Orem, Utah (2024)

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