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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • 12

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

cr jnw 1 -x' '5 jf y1 -A' Jtar-t t' x- v' ir- -t a Ogden Standard-Examiner Sunday November 1 1970 12A was closed down for a cleansing bars that may have escaped a to rid it of the salmonella the search probably remained on spokesman said Only a few the market he said Since then the Williamson plant a division of Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical 'NO' TO SMUT Adulterated Candy Bars Off Shelves AA-sy SWM" wav Jolly Giant Sells 'li Booh Bring in ycur favorite color nega- and have them made into big full-color prints Of Copenhagen 3 ORDER NOW FOR THE HOLIDAYS! Kodacolor only Reg 150 WASHINGTON (UPI) Trick or treaters apparently had little cause for worry that they would receive previously cited adulterated candy bars on their Halloween rounds Saturday night A spokesman for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said Saturday probably few of the millions of possibly adulterated candy bars were still on store shelves The FDA had notified two manufacturers that their candy bars did not meet federal sanitation standards when inspection of one set of bars disclosed rodent hairs and the other was infested with salmonella Four bars manufactured by Hollywood Brands of Centralia 111 were adulterated by rodent hairs the FDA said Before the recall began Milk Shake bars on Sept 16 Big Time and Butternut Sept 21 and Pay Day Oct there were an estimated 800000 on the market the spokesman said As of last week he said only about 125000 were still on the market He said millions of four more potentially dangerous bars manufactured by Williamson Candy Co of Chicago were on the market before a recall of Salted Nut Rolls began on Aug 27 and for Choc-P-Nuts and Nu Clusters on Sept 18 5x7 COLOR ENLARGEMENT Reg 159 a twvAvv Vv4wvw bimonthly series of magazines called Juice and Crows Success was immediate although revenue was a bit modest One contribution from a 10-year-old boy went like this: upon a time there was It was such a thing it knew everything but it know very much either and it could only drive because it had wheels but anyway there was 117 things it do The The improbable title makes sense as the bushy giant a frustrated poet ex plains it: adds atmosphere to the magazine Raspberry Juice suggests good taste and Crows Feet well Danish slang for a childish 13000 COPIES Sigvaldi printed 13000 copies of the first edition an optimistic start in a country of four million people Nevertheless it was nearly a sell-out He tried selling through book stores While he personally peddled 15000 in four months 800 stores had sold just 221 magazines So half has since become sole distributor I need a few more kroner to tide us over the weekend I just stay out another couple of he said to Sigvaldi is himself and his sculptress-wife Kirsten who designs her costumes Besides the grass suit he has a nearly-authentie leather Viking outfit and an outlandish multi-colored plastic jacket with violet corduroy slacks The couple live in an old seaside villa north of Copenhagen Sigvaldi commutes to his baby carriage downtown by motorcycle The magazines sell for the By PAUL ANDREASSEN COPENHAGEN the jolly giant of Copenhagen and the Pied Piper of the north and more one of the few local magazine peddlers who make his living on the pornographic press He cuts quite a figure on Stroeget the prime shopping mall In red and green rubber boots snug artificial grass pants and tunic and a beanie sometimes topped by a police revolving beacon bristling red-bearded Otto Sig-valdi has become a Copenhagen fixture Sigvaldi all of tall edits publishes and sells books by and for children His shop is a baby carriage he pushes almost daily up and down mile-long Stroeget youngsters crowding at his feet NATIVE TALENT He is alternatively taken for a hippie a public relations gimmick and an eccentric None of these descriptions fits Sigvaldi At 27 the Dane is a moderately successful publisher who in his own words children Three years ago he was translating books into Danish worked on one written by French youngsters and decided to hunt for native talent in the homeland of Hans Christian Andersen For two years he collected contributions from 5 to 13-year-olds from their teachers and from friends fas Sigaldi said that kids have such an original language Grownups understand it let alone imitate A year ago last December he had assembled enough material to publish the first of a WITH A BABY CARRIAGE as his shop Otto Sigvaldi is a familiar sight on Stroeget the prime shopping mall He sells hooks by and for children which he edits and publishes Sometimes he is taken for a hippie (a public relations gimmick) because of his unusual dress but he is one of the few local magazine peddlers who make his living off the pornographic press equivalent of about 50 cents but Sigvaldi pays no royalties to the want them to write because they think make 20 or 30 kroner I want them to write just because they want Reactions to enterprise are mixed He recalls one elderly Danish lady walking up to him on Stroeget and poking her lighted cigarillo into his grass suit More fondly Sigvaldi remembers an Englishman who rushed up to him with a gift of three volumes of poetry and disappeared before the Dane could say thanks means Those Proposition 1 Gateway Amendment! more efficiency in State Government who know say Vote FOR Proposition 1 Pd pol adv by candidate Among the many citizens and organizations who urge you to vote FOR are these: LET'S TALK ABOUT ft a 1 a 4 AMD THE ECONOMY illil i II eg' trf fj mm si According to the Utah Department of Employment Security Ogden area employment is up over a year ago OGDEN AREA NON-FARM EMPLOYMENT 1969 AND 1970 EMPLOYMENT 67000 Utah ever needed a new look at its future it needs it now The Utah Constitution needs to be streamlined and revised The Gateway Amendment (Proposition 1) will provide the Former Governor George Clyde 1 known as the Gateway Amendment will provide an orderly way of improving each aspect of Constitution without interfering with its existing strengths and Governor Calvin Rampton 1 allows Utah citizens to revise some portions of the State Constitution vote on the changes conveniently and consistently and be assured that basic safeguards are still Neal A Maxwell Chairman Utah Constitutional Revision Commission 66000 65000 64000 -6000 62000 Utah League of Women Voters Utah Legislative Conference Utah Legislative Council Utah Manufacturers Association Utah-South Idaho Farmers Union Board of Commissioners Utah State Bar Utah Womens Legislative Council Utah Woolgrowers Association Board of Commissioners Weber County Junior League of Ogden Inc American Association of University Women Greater Ogden Area Chamber of Commerce Salt Lake Area Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors Pro-Utah Inc Salt Lake Community Services Council Utah AFL-CIO Utah Cattlemens Association Utah Education Association Utah Jaycees Junior League of Salt Lake City Inc 61000 Jam Fta Ma Am May Jun Jut- Aua Sea Oct Nov Occ SEPT 1969 64330 SEPT 1970 64900 According to the Utah Foundation Weber County people are spending more now than a year ago Heal A Maxwell Edward Naughton Mrs Jean White Robert Bullock Eric Aaberg Kuhre William A Dunn Dabb Elmo Hamilton Harold Woolley Fields Meeks Wirthlin Calvin A Behle Richard Cahoon Edward Vetter FIRST HALF 1970 RETAIL SALES-WEBER COUNTY George Clyde Kay Allen David Dunn Dye Walker Wallace Theron Godfrey Cecil Pearson James A Eberhardt Herbert Corkey Jr Douglas Reeve Kenneth Olson Veri Topham John Rupper MD 1 Wagner Wallace Albright Mrs Eugene Bliss James A Felsted Ernest Wilkinson Haven Barlow Mrs Mary Cockayne Fidlar Madsen William Beutler Robert Clyde Frank Sawyer Nathaniel Johnson John Hinckley Johnson Hal Harmon Keith Hunt James Hannan Sardfciel Taylor Marcelius Palmer Mrs Dee Olpin Kent Herman FIRST HALF 1969 RETAIL WEBER COUNTY Governor Calvin Rampton Gus Backman Franklin Richards Richard A Van Winkle Charles Peterson Ernest Mantes Albert Bott Kastler Jr Oscar McConkie Jr William Moyes Sidney Baucom David Kunz Gallivan David Harvey Edward Clyde Allan Hunter Mrs Draper Jr $136232212 $125084988 THESE FIGURES REPRESENT A 13 INCREASE Albert Christensen Dixie Leavitt 1970 1969 FOR PROGRESS WITH PRIDE Paid by Utahns lor Proposition 1 Gus Backman Chairman VOTE REPUBLICAN NOV 3 Paid pol Adv by Weber County Republican Central Richard I Stine Ch.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977