OCR Text |
Show .. l\'lidvale Journal, Thursday, August 21, 1930 SANDY The Allsop family reunion was held Friday, August 15, at Sandy. They met at 2 p. m. The afternoon was spent in races from the age of 3 to 50, prizes being given to the winners. A baseball game between members of "Love at Home;" invocation, Perry J. Tolman; vocal solo, Aurdey Allsop; reading, Alvin Farnsworth; vocal trio, LaR,ue, Donna and Pearl Allsop; address of welcome, C. Earl Allsop; reading, Miss Marie Farnsworth; the family was played. At 8:15p.m. the following program was enjoyed at the Sandy First ward: Singing, vocal trio, Florence, Evelyn and Wanda McNarney; piano solo, Grace Allsop; vocal solo, Mrs. Deloris Tolman; musical number, Arthur Allsop; step dance, Florence McNarney; piano solo, Miss Venus Anderson; vocal solo, Rodney Allsop; piano solo, Lois Bur nnam; harmonica selection, _..•arrell Allsop; violin solo, Clifton Allsop; trio step dance, Thos. Allsop, Melvin McNarney and C. M. Anderson. The remainder of the time was spent in games and dancing. There were 120 present. Mrs. Mildred Peacock of Manti is visiting relatives in Sandy this week. The Just-a-Mere club enjoyed a party in Little Cottonwood canyon Monday evening. Supper was served from the Coon Chicken Inn to Mr. and Mrs. Hyrum Jacobson, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bird, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Boberg, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Orton, Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Ostler, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ferguson, Mrs. Fern Hendrickson and Evan 0. Jensen. The marriage ot Miss Melva Hardcastle and Nile Shields took place Wednesday, August 20. Mr. and Mrs. Lon Kenney and Mrs. Martha Bardsley of Gunnison were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. George Woods of West Jordan. The marriage of Miss Lucile Tolman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jud,sen Tolman, and Arthur Smith of Draper took place last week. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Benton bad as guests for the week Mrs. Benton's mother, Mrs. Morgan Jones, and sister, Miss Mary Jones, and Newell Moore, all of Boise, Idaho. They returned home Friday. . Miss Marjorie Hughes entertained the Second ward-Beehive girls at her home on Pioneer avenue Monday evening 0f last week. Games were played and refreshments were served. Mrs. George W. Hilton, Mrs. Marion Hand and Miss Reva Hand were hostesses at a miscellaneous shower at the Hand home last Monday evening, honoring Miss Marion Atwood, a bride of this month. Games were played and prizes awarded to Miss Solomy Atwood and Mrs. Gibson. Mr. and Mrs. Amasa Boulter have moved to the Marriott home on Main street. Mrs. Alice Bardsley and Mrs. Martha Ann · Gee of Lehi were guests Friday of Mrs. E. E. Peebles. Mrs. Hazel Peterson and daughter, Barbara, of Gunnison, are visiting at the home of her sister, Mrs. E. E. Peebles. Mrs . .r. M. Woodhouse, son Lyle and daughter Barbara left Saturday to visit relatives at Manti. Mr. and Mrs·. Lon Kenney and Mrs. · Hazel Peterson and daughter Barbara of Gunnison visited relatives at Lehi, Friday. Sandy First ward won first prize at the M. I. A. annual outing held at Saltair. Sandy First ward had 115 present, the most of any ward in the East and West Jordan stakes. Mrs. J:;~.mes R. Lll.ne entertained at a family di:pner, honoring the birthday of her daughter, Mrs. C. J. Lobb of California, who is visiting here. Mrs. T. E. Raddon had as her guest last week her sister, Miss Vivian Rawlings of Bingham. Miss Helen Vincent visited relatives at Mammoth, last week. The elders of the Sandy First ward gave the following program at the ward . chapel, Sunday evening: Sing- I I Right Under Your Thumb Just where you want it That's one of the advantages of having a savings account. Your mon.ey is always there, ready for an emergency that may come at any moment. Ready, too, for any investment that might present itself. Start today and learn the many advantages of saving regularly and systematically. 4% Interest Midvale State Bank MIDVALE, UTAH 'f: • ' .... ·.~ ., . ,' . 6 ' v. • ..._,I . ' ply I:-IEA VY DUTY • THE LOWEST PRICES AT GOODYEAR EVER OFFERED HEAVY DUTY TIRES! WHICH SEE THIS LATEST GOODYEAR PATHFINDER ing, "Our Mountain Home So Dear;" prayer, J. T. Ostler; singing, "How Great the Wisdom and the Love;" remarks, Elder Melvin Strong; vocal duet, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Peterson; POLITICS AND PERSONALITIES remarks, Elder Earl Cox; song by anyone explain why, in a counCarl Sorenson, Rex Shaw and Ken- tryCan where a live issue is born every neth Pierson; remarks, Elder J. W. day, political pick the maThompson; vocal duet, Mr. and Mrs. terial they docandidates for a campaign platClifford Pettingill; remarks, Elder form? Look at Tennessee's recent Carl J. Sorenson; singing; prayer, primary contest. Congressman CorElder Arthur Allsop. dell Hull, who won the Democratic Mrs. Katherine Rhoades of Spring- nomination for senator, is a nationally field, Mo., is a guest of Mrs. D. M. famous authority on tariff and taxaNickle and children. tion. Yet his opponent, Andrew L. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bradley and Todd, deliberately campaigned on a daughters, Betty and Jane, spent platform that promised voters an impossible system of taxation. Sunday at Brighton. In Texas, "Ma" Ferguson ran on a Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pettingill and children left Wednesday morning for platform of "vindication." In AlaCalifornia, where they will spend the bama, Tom Heflin is raising the cry of "persecution." The primary camwinter. : Mr. and Mrs. Ashe! Thompson. and paign that sent Senator Furnifold son, Jack, visited Mr. and Mrs. Sam- Simmons to defeat, was based also uel Bullock of Bacchus, Sunday. Miss entirely on outworn issues of the 1928 Mary Thompson returned home with presidential campaign. Ruth Hanna her parents Sunday, after spending McCormick, striving to reach the the week at Bacchus at the home of senate, reaped a harvest of votes in Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bullock, the the primaries by promising the Illi, nois electorate protection against the guest of Miss LaVern Shaffer. Andrew Carlson of Tacoma, Wash., World Court. The burning question in Minnesota's spent ten days visiting with Mr. and Republican senatorial primary was Mrs. Peter Setterberg and family. Miss Beth Thompson spent part of whether Senator Thomas Schall, the week at Draper at the home of fighting for re-election, or his oppoher grandparents, the guest of Miss nent more closely resembled Minnesota's famous senior senator, Mr. Maxine Smith. Mrs. Peter Setterberg entertained Shipstead. Senator Schall won. In at a birthday party on Wednesday, Arkansas, the candidate for nominahonoring her son Richard. Games tUm to the senate seat now held by were played and refreshments served Joseph Robinson, complained that Mr. Robinson had been in public life to eight guests. Mr. and Mrs. Gail Olson and two too long and should now step down sons and daughter of Salt Lake were and give a "younger man" a chance. A senate committee is now investivisitors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. John gating campaign expenditures. Why Oldham. · Mr. and Mrs. LaMont Hodges of not appoint another to investigate Delta were guests Sunday of Mr. and camapign issues with the purpose of saving the electoral mind from comMrs. Marvin Bird and children. D. M. Nickle has gone to California plete paralysis through an overdose of humbuggery? for an indefinite stay. Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Korth returned home Saturday for a trip through PROTECTION THAT DOESN'T Yellowstone park. They also visited PROTECT relatives at Garland When the magic prosperity-device Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Orton and of tariff protection collapses as comson, Boyd, visited relatives here dur- pletely as it bas since enactment of ing the week. the Smoot-Hawley bill, the remedy, The Misses Naomi and Murielle according to protectionists, is more Sloan of Salt Lake spent the week- tariffs. So we find the domestic end visiting in Sandy at the home of sugar group, who are now in a worse Evan 0. Jensen, the guests of the hole thau. before they had obtained a Misses Phyllis and Luana Jensen. higher duty, blaming their predicaMr. and Mrs. L. E. Van Dam and ment on overproduction. The overdaughters, Nola and Claire, and son, production is blamed on Cuba. The Jay, and Mr. and Mrs. Alma Me- suggested cure is a tariff high enough Cleary: and son, Van, left Saturday for to keep down imports of raw sugar a trip to Yellowstone park. from Cuba. Evan 0. Jensen and son, Keith, and Certainly, overproduction is the J. T. Bollinger and son, Milo, Leo basic cause of depression in the sugar Nelson and friends enjoyed a trip to industry. But why blame Cuba? Her Granddaddy lakes, spending the week, 1930 crop is ten per cent less than returning home Saturday evening. that of 1929, according to the United Mrs. Mae Glazier df Riverton spent j States department of agriculture, and Friday the guest of her sister, Mrs. Cuban exports of sugar to America Glenn 0. Pollard. this year have been less than half Mr. and Mrs. Glenn 0. Pollard were those last year during the same peguests of Mrs. Pollard's parents, Mr. riod. Our insular possessions, on the and Mrs. David Bills of Riverton, other hand, have increased their 1930 Sunday. production by 213,004 tons and have Miss Luana Jensen is spending the already shipped 1,33,0334 tons of week at Murray, visiting relatives. sugar to the United States this year. A dancing revue of the Sandy It is obvious that the higher tariff school dancing class, under lhE\ direc- has only stimulated the entry of dutytion of Mrs. Katherine Peterson (for- free sugar from the Philippines, merly Miss Katherine Jensen), was Porto Rico and Hawaii into the given Friday afternoon at the Sandy United States. Economists predicted Junior high school. Fifty pupils were this very condition months before the in attendance and many parents tariff bill was passe'd. It was also were present to view the dancers. predicted that the two-cent sugar Mr. and Mrs. Brig. Smith and son duty would not really benefit the of Granger were guests Wednesday of sugar industry in this country. But Mr. and Mrs. Bert Boulter. the domestic producers still ask for Miss Ruth Anderson, Miss Mabel more protection to enable them to Larson and Miss Ireta Hansen enter- "expand their production." tained at a miscellaneous shower a.t DRESSED UP DIPLOMACCY the Anderson home Tuesday evening, It is fairly easy to spot an Amerihonoring Miss Melva Hardcastle, a bride of this week. Games were play- can diplomat ·at a foreign court. Clad ed and prizes awarded Mrs. Albert in conventional cutaway coat and Anderson and Miss Anna Gunderson. striped trousers, he strikes a sober Mrs. A. 0. Cook and son, Gordon, note in the gay medley of colorful of Midvale, visited relatives in Sandy, uniforms affected by envoys from foreign countries. Yet there was a Monday; Mrs. Doyle Brown, Mrs. L. E. Dl.<- time when our representatives abroad paix and Mrs. C. J. Lobb were dinner were attired in raiment that rivalled guests Tuesday of Mrs. Frank Fer- the peacock's plume. An echo of guson and Mrs. Mary Osborne of Mid- those bygone days is sounded in an article just published in the Foregin vale. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Benton and Service Journal on the subject of dipfamily are leaving this week to make lomatic attire. Here is a description of one uniform prescribed by the state their home in Salt Lake City. Mrs. Martha Bardsley of Gunnison department in 1817: "A blue coat, was the week-end guest of Mrs. Violet lined with white silk, straight standing cape embroidered in gold," to be Peebles. W@rn with "white cassemere breeches, FRANK W. TUCKER OF gold knee buckles, and white silk UNION CALLED BY DEATH stockings.'' Whether our envoys should affect Frank W. Tucker, 28, of Union, the gold braid and silken splendor of died of a h4!art attack shortly after their foreign associates is still an The subject was midnight Sunday at the home of Miss open question. brought up during the secretaryship Oginda. Jensen of Providence. Mr. Tucker was born in Butlerville, of Elihu Root, but it is thought that September 1, 1901, the son of Edward he objected to the gaudier costumes. C. and Jane E. Tucker. The body Some of our diplomats favor the was taken to aSlt Lake Monday after- adoption of more colorful uniforms, but the majority seem to be untrounoon. Washington News Letter bled by any inferiority complex in the matter of dress. , ·· ANOTHER CENTENNARY Exactly one hundred years ago American agriculture became acquainted with the world's oldest commercial fertilizer when the first shipment of nitrate of soda reached our· shores from Chile. This summer fourteen of our agricultural leaders, representing the principal farming sections of the United States, ti'aveled ·to Chile to participate in the ·centennial celebrat~on which gave official recognition t:o nitrate's distinguished history. The program was held in Santiago, the capital city, where a memorial tablet was unveiled as 'part · of the commemorative exercises. ·A reception by the president if Chfle, visits to the principal cities, trips through the nitrate fields in the northern provinces and through the agricultural regions in the south were among the highlights of the trip. Besides commemorating the 100year anniversary of the. first exportation of nitrate of soda to the United States, the centennary is significant in that it comes at a time when the nitrate industry is entering a new era. American interests have applied efficient mass-production methods to the mining and refining of the fertilizer, and swift progress is being made in modernizing the business and in improivng the distribution of the fertilizer. The present beds of nitrate · are adequate <lt supply the needs of the world for several centuries, according to conservative estimateJ,J made by geologists and engineers. Nitrate territory extends over about 77,000 square miles, an area nearly equal to the combined size of Ohio and Kentucky. GRIST FOR THE LEGISLATIVE MILL If you haven't obtaine<I your particular brand of desired "relief" from congress, don't be too qui'ck to blame the legislators for lack · of effort. No less than 14,947 bills wer~ introduced in the first two sessions -of the 71st congress covering a p.e riod frem March 4, 1929, to July 3, 1930. This is an average of' more than 26 bills to each congressman. ·.. The results of this vast amount of proposed legislation are not so imposing. Only 540 bills became public laws affecting groups of people or the entire nation, while 281 were written into private laws affect,ing certain individuals or corporations only. Committees of congress made 2,066 reports that resulted in 927 resolutions and laws. What the third session, which starts on December 1, will bring forth is necessarily a matter of speculation. Returning congressmen will find a calendar already well stocked with would-be laws and will probably be confronted with reports of ten bills that are now in conference. SILVER INDUSTRY HAS A CHAMPION Senator Tasker L. Oddie of :Nevada, large silver producing state, is trying to "sell" the government an ~dea for popularizing silver coins. I)hs suggestion is that silver dollars. be reduced almost to the present halfdollar size and half-dollars be made one-fourth smaller. This would cause an increased use of coins instead of paper bills and an increased demand for the metal. A silver doll~r in the United States is worth about thirty cents. Of course, as the senator carefully points out, his plan is desLgned to help the government also. . Upkeep on paper dollar bills is estimated at about two per cent annually on each bill while the loss on silver dollars is practically nothing. Senator Oddie has asked the department of commerce to call a national silver conference in December to meet in Washington. He Is also urging the bureau of mines and the bureau of s~andards to conduct research work With th~ purpose of discovering new !uses for silver. i There is a distinct prejudice in the East against "cartwheels" lj.S silver dollars are sometimes dubbed, but Westerners prefer them to the paper bills. In 1890 there were m,9re than 570 000 000 cartwheels rolling. around pocket~ and purses. Now t~ere are but 38,628,669. U Pay telephones, chewing ~m v~nd ors and coin boxes of vanous kmds ha~e popularized quarters, nickels and dimes but have made the bulkier coins even more unpopular. .· BIG---1BLANKET A big, broad-shouldered, thiek·treaded Goodyear with 6 ()Ues of a sturdy, shock-absorbing Supertwist Cord (Goodyear patent) to withstand hard blows on the road. Yes, sirt Full oversize and a handsome looker. Latest example of the super values Goodyear ean offer because of enjoJing the wgrJd's luarest tire sales. If• ll BVYl 29x4.50 ........................... $8.40 30x5.00 ........................ $10~80 28x4. 75 ...........................$9. 70 30x5.25 ........................ $11. 75 29x4. 75 ........................$10.10 29x5.50 ........................$12.55 29x5.00 ........................$10.45 30x6.00 ........................$13.35 Phone Mid. 275 ••• We Come on the Run 30x4.50 . $8.75 SALE! Direct factory shipment·' at greatly reduced price~. .. 'I W'arm Plaid Blankets Standard size, $4.50 values, sale price........................... $3.39 ' Part W' ool Blankets 70x80, $5.50 values, saJe price................................................ }'r McKEAN SERVICE STATION Sandy, Utah ; "·' . j Famous aotbing C.o. "We Dress the Best Dressed Men in Town':~ .. ·: , 't ..' I ', $4.19 Others at $2.39 'I ' - ·., ·' ;,' 't':.q,. ... ·- , . J'r "• I· . ' -~ ..- . ' •' .,. ' ) 1' ., • • ,. I ~. ' .' .I ~... ' ...; |