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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • Page 5

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PRO VO (UTAH) JULY ,21, .1935 PAGE FIVE Mrs. Franklin Bradshaw and children have left for a six weeks' visit to Los Angeles and San Diego, California where they will visit relatives and friends. Miss Cleo Long- has returned to Salt Lake City, where she is in nurses training at the L. D. S.

hospital. She has been vacationing here for a week. Mr. and George W. McLen- npn are spending the week end as the guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Jack R. Browning at their home in Cottonwood canyon. Miss Elsie Williams of Emery county, has left for her home after attending the B. Y.

U. summer school for the past six weeks. Accompanied by her parents, she visited the cave in American Fork canyon last week. Mr. and Mrs.

Andrew Broaddus have left for Eugene, Oregon, where they will spend two weeks with Mr. Broaddus' people. Misses Leola Knudscn and Geniel Stevens will leave this afternoon for Ogden, where they will remain until after the Twenty- fourth, the guests of relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs.

Dave. Whyte of Springfield, Idaho, are among the visitors here. U. M. Kimball of Ogden, visited friends in Provo Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Hayes and daughters, Mrs. Helen Burt, Misses Elaine and Ha Hayes, and grandchildren, Boyd and Marie Burt of Rigby, Idaho, have returned after visiting their mother, Mrs.

Eleanor J. Hayes. Mrs. T. Ashton, daughter Sylvia, and son James of Battle Creek, and Mrs.

Ashton's mother, Mrs. A. A. Wctterstrom of Salt Lake City, are the house gusets of Mr. and Mrs.

H. W. Geasc. The young people came to participate in the Timp hike. Ivobrrf, H.

Freshwater, 19, Provo, and Dorothy Phillips, 18, Provo, were granted a marriage license at the county clerk's office Saturday. Mrs. Clara Moore Schofit-Id of Hiko, was in Provo last week to attend the birthday celebration of her grandmother, Mrs. E. J.

Hayes. Benjamin Coie, his daughter, Mrs. Geneva Korup, and Mrs. Korup'n friend, Miss Catherine Whcaton of Wciser, Idaho, have been the guests of Mr. Cole's son and daughter-in-law, Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Cole. They are spending a few days in Salt Lake City, but will return here before leaving for home. Dr. and Mrs.

John T. Wcstwood (Betty Halliday) have arrived from Los Angeloo, to spend the summer with Dr. and Mrs. David Wcstwood. The young man graduated this spring from the University of Southern California school of dentistry.

Mrs. David Westwood has just returned from a lengthy in Chicago with another son and daughter-in-law. Mr. and James B. Wcstwood (Evelyn Vacher.) (QNGRATULATIONS Todays Pattern Mr.

and Mrs. Walter C. Corbett of Washington, D. have a fine baby boy, born Saturday morning at the Crane Maternity home. Mrs.

Corbett was formerly Ann Mackay. and Mrs. Fred Clyde are the proud parents of a baby son born Thursday at the Crane hospital. FOR SALE OR TRADE Acres Good Ground, 2 large modern coops, good flowing well, dwelling, barn, granary. Located close Can raise own grain for chickens, beets and vegetables.

Real bargain for some one. Phone 370 HE fascinating scalloped side closing and smart collars and cuffs ue bn eive this house frock a distinctive air that insures its being ncclaimed. Make it of percale, gingham or seersucker. Pattens ire sized 36 to 52. Size 44 requires 5 yards of 35-inch fabric with '-3 yard contrast and 5 1-4 yards of 1 1-2-incli bias binding.

To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP SEWENO OF; STRUCTIOXS, fill 'out the coupon below, being sure to MENTION THE NAME OF THIS NEWSPAPER. The SUMMER PATTERN BOOK, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when pu7chased separately Or, if you want to order it with the pattern abovs, send In just an additional 10 cents with the coupon. JULIA BOYD, 103 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK Enclosed is 15 cents in coin for Pattern No size Name Address City stat9 Name of this newspaper Address your envelope to Julia Boya, Frovo Herald Fasmon 103 Park Avenue New York, N. T.

Washington Menry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) year. Blackberries are boil ing these days in copper kettle which once prepared corn liquor Federal agents in Louisiana hav turned over to women on relief the copper kettles seized from moon-shiners. The women are using them for canning. To SPANISH FORK BOYS PRAISED SPANISH Rex O. Daniels, commanding officer of Battery of 222 Field Artil- cry has received the following etter from Colonel Hamilton Gardner: "My Dear Captain- Now that we have all resumed our normal existence after the 1935 camp, permit me to congratulate you and youi officers, noncommissioned officers and men of Battery C.

for winning the regimental merit cup at camp. I think he award was well deserved. "Battery showed the results of very careful and excellent training during the army training period and it functioned in the field in a most commendable manner. Your battery is fortunate in having as high a type of personnel as can be found in the entire Utah National guard and elsewhere I am quite sure. I have always felt a personal satisfaction that I was responsible for placing Battery at Spanish Fork and I have taken great pride in your development and accomplishments.

I would greatly appreciate your conveying the substance of this letter to all the member of your battery. With best wishes for your continued success, I am, Very cordially yours, HAMILTON GARDNER, Colonel 222 Field Artillery. Ruling Queen to Rule Again Mary Hanks Dies At Salem Home Indians Invite Whites To See Religious Tribal Dande Still devoted to the screen and her admiring fans, the queenly Mary Pickford has her eyes again on the film firmament where she once ruled supreme. A ten-year contract calls for six pictures a year from her. and she intends to star in some of them.

From this latest picture of "America's Sweetheart," you can see that she still has the youth and charm and beauty that endeared her to movie fans in former years. Mrs. Mary Alverima Keele Hanks, wife of Wilson Hanks died Wednesday night at the family home in Salem. She was born in Salem May 9, 1899, a daughter of Alexander and Alice Bielley Keele. She has always resided in Salem and was an activ L.

D. S. church worker. She is survived by her husband, three sons and two daughters, Alden Keele, Milo Calvin Sibil May and Delia Mary Hanks, Salem; five brothers, John Keele, Blackfoot, Idaho; Joseph Keele, Grouse, Idaho; William Keele, Ririe, Idaho; Alvin and Enest Keele, Spanish Fork; one sister, Mrs. Clara Pratt, Vale, Oregon.

LAKE VIEW MRS. SADIE SHAW 018-R-2 Mr. and Mrs. Theo L. Anderson and baby daughter of Pioche, Nevada, are visiting with Mr.

Anderson's mother, Mrs. Thomas Boulton. A number of Junior girls and young married women of this ward have been practicing soft ball and expect to display their talent in the near future. Mrs. John Brant and twins of Brawley, California Delbert Lunceford of Los Angeles, California, are visiting with their parents, Mr Mrs.

John Lunceford for an indefinite stay. The Primary officers and' teachers enjoyed an outing at Geneva Tuesday evening. Swimming was enjoyed after which a weiner and marshmallow roast was partaken of by the following Mrs. Margaret Taylor, Miss Nellie Jacobsen, Mrs. June Scott.

Miss La Von Williamson, Miss Ezma Williamson Gloria Jacobsen Donna Davis, Miss Eve- Cutting. The place is now held under appointment by Senator Dennis Chavez, who must stand for re-election next year. Simms is the husband of the former Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick, once a representative from Illinois, and an unsuccessful bidder for a senatorial toga. A reported 30 per cent increase in sales over 1934 is causing great excitement in the furniture industry, one of the most severely hit by the depression.

The upswing is the largest in six years, and unfilled orders indicate a still further betterment. Harry HopKins' office comes a poem by a relief client in the Salt Lake City transient bureau. A parody on Joyce Kilmer's 'Trees," it begins: SPANISH FORK I MRS. EFFIE DART Reporter Phone 168 Mrs. Mildred Larsen of this city is at Petaluma, California, convalescing at the home of Dr.

and Mrs. Mark Lewis following a' i yn Lloyd and Miss Edna Scott major operation in the Petaluma a guest. Hopi Indians will gather in Hotevilla, one of the most interesting of villages of northern Arizona, in their home dance on July 26, according to word which has come direct from the chief of the village. This dance for rain is held once Miss Pauline Burgess, daughter a year. On that occasion all of the brides of the year dress Alpine Girl Wins 4-H Scholarship To Brigham Young of Mrs.

Jessie Burgess of Alpine, has been awarded the scholarship offered annually by Brigham Young university to the high school student in Utah county who excels in 4-H club work. Wesley in their bridal costumes and stand on the roofs of their house.s as the residents dance in the street. This dance is a masked dance and is one in which clowns appear aa Knudsen, of Provo, has been a humorous clement even though chosen alternate, in the event that i it is a deeply religious ceremonial, unforseen circumstances should The dance is announced six- prevent Miss Burgess from using the scholarship. The winner has been active in club work since she was 10 years old. She has engaged in both the clothing and foods projects.

For the past two years she has been a club leader as well as a member, and has achieved a high record, according to Anson Call, of the county agricultural office. Her father is dead. Her mother has been community supervisor of 4-H club work in Alpine for the past five years. For several years before that she was leader of a club. This scholarship, which is given by the college of applied science, is for a year's tuition.

Miss Burgess plans to enter B. Y. U. this autumn. Leila Johnson, Miss Margaret Taylor, Miss Velma Madsen, Mrs.

Nedra Reese. Mr. and Mrs. August Johnson and family, Mr. and Airs.

Joseph H. Taylor and family and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ray motored to Provo canyon Wecncsaay evening where a weiner roast was enjoyed. Stanley Jorgcnsen left for Las Vegas where he will be employed in the railroad shops at that place.

Mrs. Leland Jorgensen and family of Park City motored to "Provo Thursday when visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alma Jorgensen. ICELANDERS TO MEET SPANISH FORK Plans are going forward for the annual Icelandic celebration to be held Aug.

2 at the Geneva Beach resort. The public is invited to attend the outing. Records credit two Greeks with having written the first comedy play. This is said to have been about 560 B. C.

teen day ahead. That is, the dance this year was announced on July 10, and during the sixteen days between the announcement and the dance, leading men of the tribe pray for rain. The chief of Hotevilla has issued an invitation to his white friends in Utah. He has invited them to come and witness the dance entirely without charge. He does not believe in commercializing these ceremonials.

The only request he has made is that visitors refrain from interfering with the religious rites. Hotevilla is near Tuba City. One reaches the village from here by crossing the Lee's Ferry bridge. If a sufficient number would like to make the trip, a bus could leave Provo early on the morning of July 25, remain over night at beautiful Jacob's lake in the Kaibab, and then go on to the village in time to see the climax of the dance on the twenty- sixth. The trip could be made in four days, or five if the group wished to 'visit the canjfcns, at a very small cost considering the distance and the opportunities to see something unusual.

Those interest are urged to get in touch with Prof. H. R. Merrill. TAKEN TO HOSPITAL A.

W. Cherrington was taken to the L. D. S. hospital Thursday for medical treatment, following sev- ei al days illness at his home here.

Saratoga BIG FREE PROGRAM Coin Shower, Races, Boxing Bouts, Water Carnival, Fire Dive! JULY 24th LOOK! Butterfly fan Dam-e at 11 P. M. More Daring than 1934 Fan Dance Miss Aluna Avis of Hollywood. hospital. Mrs.

Larsen accompanied her sister home brother-in-law and wiien they visited here recently. Dr. Lewis and two other surgeons performed the operation. Dean W. Billingsly and wife and "I wish that I could one time Los Angeles.California STRIKE THREAT It begins to look as if the friends of General Hugh Johnson were better prophets than they realized, when they warned the ex-NRA boss that he was begging grief by becoming New York City works-relief administrator.

Inside word is that Manhattan building trades laborites are threatening a city-wide strike if an attempt is made to pay subsistence wage scales instead of prevailing union rates on work-relief projects. Johnson, incidentally, has been taking X-ray treatments at Walter Reed hospital here for a serious condition in one of his lungs, resulting from a protracted severe chest cold. IN THE COLD make A poem lovely as a steak." l' ANTD3OTE Ralph Brewster, ex-governor of Maine, now Republican congressman, has won the name of the "Man Without a Country." For years in the state of Maine, he campaigned against the power interests. Then after sitting in with anti-power groups in Washington, he switched suddenly against the holding corporation I bill. Now, neither side is with him.

Super-sleuth J. Edgar Hoover has accomplished notable results in curbing bank robberies. Since the justice department was given power to cope with this form of crime, bank robberies have dropped from fifteen per month last year to five per month this i Some of the bright young legal sharks of the administration claim they have discovered a sure-fire antidote to ward off supreme court attacks on New Deal legislation. They propose to include in each act a simple-worded statement removing it from the jurisdiction of the courts, under pain of a heavy fine and imprisonment for violation of the ban. The legalists assert they have specific precedent for this in the post- Civil war case of ex-parte McCardle, in which congress passed a law forbidding judicial review.

The supreme court upheld the law. Few know it, but Tom Corcoran, the young Brain Truster attacked by Maine's cackle-voiced Representative Brewster, actually was brought to Washington by the Hoover regime. His mentor was Eugene Meyer, former governor of the federal reserve board, who persuaded Corcoran to join the legal staff of the RFC. California's Representative Chas. J.

Golden has decided that something should be done to protect waste-paper dealers from possible contamination by obscene pictures and literature. To this end, he has introduced a bill requiring the postoffice department to destroy by burning "obscene pictures and like matter which, because of their nature, should get into unauthorized hands through sale as waste paper." (Copyright 1935, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) are visiting here with Mrs. Billingsly's mother, Mrs. A. B.

Huntington and other friends. The Eight Needy Needles 4-H club met at the home of Miss Katherine Jones, July 17, at 4 p. m. The time was spent in sewing after which refreshments were served. Jimmie Shay and Harold Sholes of Salt Lake City were dinner guests Friday evening of Mr.

and Mrs. Fred S. Dart. Sanford Reunion At Balsam Park ROOT BEER We Feature Brown's Ice Cream POPE OPPOSES BILL WASHINGTON, July 20 Sen. James P.

Pope, Idaho, today promised the Idaho Public Utilities commission he would "actively oppose" efforts to repeal the "long and short haul" clause of the interstate commerce act. descendants of Thomas Sanford and Ira and Susan Lucina Clark Sanford are urged to attend a family reunion July 30, at Balsam park, Hobble Creek canyon. Activities begin at 10 a. m. and will be concluded with a weinie roast and bon-fire supper in the evening.

In charge of the entertainment are President Frank Sanford; Chairman Bert Groesbeck of the sports committee; Carrie Tripp, lunches; Helen F. Sanford, program and Mrs. Flossie Sanford, secretary. INJURED BOY IMPROVING SPANISH Thomas, who has been in a serious condition since an injury received while bathing Monday afternoon in a swimming pool in the old millrace, is believed to be slightly improved at the Hughes Memorial hospital. The boy who is ten years old suffered a perforated intestine when he struck some sharp object in the swimming pool.

The following ladies gave their services to the M. I. A. Sales Day Thursday in Provo from Lake View, Mrs. Lillie Sumsion, Mrs.

Ruth Johnson, Mrs. June Scott, Mrs. Martha Scott, Miss I The Twain Meet in Ohio 5 10 A mild starvation, followed by the taking of food improves the mental processes, according to tests conducted by scientists of the university of Chicago and Michigan. INSULATE YOUR HOME with ASBESTO-LITE Enjoy a Cooler Summer and Save of Your Fuel Cost Call for Information and Estimates GRANT EKINS 160 SOUTH THIRD EAST PHONE 1347-W an new HEATROLA RANGE FOR COAL AND WOOD is in every way a worthy companion for the famous Heatrola Heater Flouting Kipling's "East is east, and west is west, and never the twain shall meet," K. M.

James Lin, below, 22, son of China's president, found his choice, Viola Brown, above, 20- year-old Columbus, dime store clerk. Her honesty in returning a wallet he lost last April in the dime store interested Lin, an Ohio State student, in the pretty clerk, and launched their An Ashland, justice says they were wed there. But Lin denies they'll marry till his father consents. FEATURES OF THE HEATROLA RANGE "Double" construction cast iron inside, porcelain enameled steel outside. 4 Big, roomy Heavily insulated dcor.

Easily movable oven bottom. Handy grid for broiling. Mak3s broiling as easy as frying. Ped-a-Lifte? Key Plate. Step on a pedal and the left key-plate section raises to a angle.

4 Handy flue cledaottt and roomy ash pan. You know, of course, that Estate Heatrola original cabinet the recognized standard of quality in the small-home heating field. Although widely imitated, it has never been equalled in respect to heating power and economy of operation. Now comes the Heatrola Range, designed by the same engineers who conceived the Heatrola, built in the same plant, of the same fine materials. The Heatrola Range embodies, we believe, everything that you want in a coal and wood range high quality, long life, convenience, economy plus unmatched beauty of design and finish.

oivRuss.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
864,343
Years Available:
1909-2009