OCR Text |
Show THUEUAY, JCXE 21, THE LEHI FREE PBESS lslf THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1934 THE LEHI FREE PRESS Published by The Lehl Free Press Every Thursday Lehi, Utah Thone 8-- W Mrs. P.ozella Racl:e? and Mrs. LaRue Heber 3. Webb spent Monday la Salt Luke City. Wright vt Salt I.ke City spent Sunday I in Lehl with relatives. Armond Webb spent Munday in Salt Miss Myrtle Carson of Fairfield was Lake City., a guest at the Frank Fagan home Mas MalUe Davis of Sa.lt Lake City from Wednesday to Friday of last was a week-en- d visitor in Lehi. week. a Mrs. Dan Matthews of Virgin George P. Price, Manager guest of her sister, Mrs. John Price. Office. 32 West. Main Street Residence, 2nd West and State Miss Helen Evans of Logan is spend-iStreet, Lehi, Utan the week at the home of her grandMr. and Mrs. A, J. Evans. parents, Entered at the postoffice at Lehi, Utah, as second Mrs. Marjorle Clark and daughter. class matter the week in 1 n; Bantaquin Carina, spent and Spanish Fork with relatives. ADVERTISING RATES 30c per inch Tiisnlav 10c per line .V Readers PUBLIC OPINION N- - SHEPHERD Executive M America Banker Aisocet.e bankins today appears By F. WHILE $100 Want ads 10c Per Line for first insertion and 5c per line for each additional insertion. LOCAL ITEMS Mr, and Mrs. Earl Dowdlng and children of Sandy, spent the week-en- d at the home of Mrs. Dowdlng parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Manning. Anti-soci- W. A. Evans returned home Sunday from Montana where he has been Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clark and sheep. j shearing daughter, Nelda, Mrs. Marjorle Clark and daughter. Carina, were Salt Lake Mr. and Mrs. Kay Allsop and daugh- visitors Monday. ter. Donna, of Murray, wer Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. William Hadfieid, son Leo, and daughters, Donna and Willa, Mrs. Vern Beck of American Fork, Mrs. Dee Elder and little son, Dallas, was a guest of her parents, Mr. and spent Sunday In Murray with Mrs. Mrs. Charles F. Johnson, Thursday. Selma Backland and family. w, . Mrs. Morris Harding entertained at a birthday party, Wednesday afternoon honoring the 9th birthday of her son, Max. Games and refreshments were enjoyed by the little guests. FUGITIVE LOVERS" Barnhart. Mr. and Mrs. Ivor Peterson spent Mrs. Glen Peck and baby of Ameri Sunday In Provo, guests of Mr. and can guests of Fork, were week-en- d Mrs. "William Thompson. , Mrs. Peck's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Powers and Harold Johnson Harry Manning. enjoyed a fishing trip to Strawberry Mr. and Mrs. Charles Crabb and Itke, Monday night and Tuesday. family, Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Crabb and family spent Sunday in American Mr. and Mrs. Kay Ooates of with Lehl Fork canyon. the week-en- d spent, relatives and friends. , Mrs Jennie Nostrum and sons and Maude Russell of Provo, were Mrs. A. H. Pike, Mrs. LeRoy Crooks- - Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. ton and dauhgter, Helen Lou, were Sunday dinner guests I. R. Peck. of Mrs. Martha Ball, Friday. guests Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Peterson and Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Johnson spent Able J., of Hollywood, California, son, Sunday in American Fork, guests of arrived In Lehi, Sunday for a short Mr. and Mrs. Vera Beck. relatives. with , visit Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 8- Broadbent Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S Broadbent, and daughter,1 Ruth, were business Ruth, sons John and Alvln daughter, visitors to Salt Lake City, Monday. and Mrs Jay Haws spent Sunday in xtr Sarah Berry returned home Hunter guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elsy Sunday from a two weeks visit with Rhodes. Salt Lake relative. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Allen and TuesMr. and Mrs. Robert Chaderum of family moved to Salt Lake City, Their home. many their make to of day Spring vllle. are guests this week and them wish friends Lehi happiness Mr. and Mrs. Angus Gardner. - success. Mrs. Maude Russell of Provo was a visitor with Lehl relatives d Mr. and Mr. Harry Manning, Sr.; Mr. and Mrs. Glen Peck and baby, Mr, and friends. and Mrs. Ronald Cloward and baby, Mrs. Ivor Peterson, daughters Orpha, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Manning, Jr., and LaVon and Donna and son, Arnold, family: Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dowdlng were guests of Mrs. Frank Stebbins of and family of Sandy, formed a party to Saratoga, Sunday afternoon. Spanish Fork, Friday. week-en- Mrs. Hattle Beszant and son Leo, A winsome bahy daughter arrived to were of Green Llndon, Roxle Mrs. and gladden the home of Mr. and Mrs. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Bone, Bernard LIsome of Soldier Summit Thursday evening. Monday evening. Mrs. Lisoroe and babv are at the home of Mrs. Lisome's . mother, Mrs. Mamie Thomas. Mother and baby reported to be doing fine Mrs. Lisome was Miss Rhea Thomas before her marriage. PHONE If 8-- W you have any news of in- terest, any advertising, any jab printing or want ftnythiag in the printing line. $2.75 FiH 5 Lipstick Dry Rouge 1 vear to Lehi Free Press 1 Total j $1.00 .85 .. 1.00 $2.75 ALL FOR $1.00 Cur Motto: A Free Press In Eyery Lehi Home. cross-countr- nt cold-blood- ry Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Webb of Minneapolis, Minnesota, arrived In Lehi Tuesday for an Indefinite visit wth their parents, Bishop and Mrs. R. J. Whipple and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Misses Phyllis Kirkham and LaPrtel Webb ar.d other relatives. They were Accompanied hy Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Goodwin were hostesses at a "Treasure Chrlstensen and daughters, Wllma and Shower" honoring Miss Barbara Lott, a bride of the week, at the T. F. Kirk- LaRelle. The trip was made by auto. home home Monday evening. Mrs. T. P. Kirkham and Mrs. S. I. Goodwin asMr. and Mrs. J. P. Schow and Mr. Little Bonnie the hostesses. sisting and Mrs. William Martlndale enter- Jean Kirkham, dressed as a prlate retained at a bon-fiparty in the creek, ceived the gifts. The guests were Thoee present were. entertained on the lawn which was arSaturday evening. Mr. and Mrs, Ivor Peterson, Mr. and ranged to represent a beach with a Mrs. James Brown, Mr. and Mrs. David sand box, beach umbrellas, steamer Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Roberts, chairs, rugs and cushions. The honorMr. and Mrs. Herman Allred, Mr. and ed gueat was presented with a "CapMrs. Ed. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry tain Kldd Mat" which lead her to the Stoker, Mr. and Mrs. Millard Roberts, treasure (the gifts). Outdoor games Mr. and Mrs. William Jones, Mr. and were enjoyed. Mrs. Blair Carson and Mrs. Clarence Freeman, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Phyllis Lott winning the prizes. Ivan Schow, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wat-kin- s, A buffet luncheon was nerved, the dinMr. and Mrs. George Wing. Mr. ing table covered with a red and white and Mrs. John Bushman, Mrs. and checked cloth holding as a centerpiece Mrs. John Austin, Mrs. Maud Austin galleon ship on a mirror sea with a and the host and hostesses. Games and sand shoreline. Eighteen guests were a bon-fl- re supper were enjoyed by the present. al guests. Less-Carloa- m A CORRECTION In our last Issue and the one preceed-ni- g It the name of the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Turner who was drowned In the Mill Pond was printed as George CHERRIES FOR SALE Lambert W. E. Davis. DEWBERRIES FOR Salt I,ake & Utah Railroad OF LAMBS WHEN FIT FOR MARKET Lambs should be taken as soon as possible, advises Alma C. Esplln, sheep and wool specialist of the Utah State Agricultural College Extension Service, When the lambs are gone the ewes will thrive on about less than is required when the lambs are with them. If the feed is too coarse and the range dry, the lamb stops growth and if more feeds is not available it should be weaned and fed or sold. Frequently lambs reach 60 to 70 pounds weight In August but they are kept In the herd until October before they are sold although they weight no more than they did two months before, Professor Esplin points out During this dry year the ewes should be saved as much as possible from the hardship of oaring for lambe when they can be marketed. No careful operator runs dry ewes with ewes and lambs, Professor Esplln says. The division of herds by breed v The might be seriously considered. fine wool sheep herd more easily and should not be disturbed too much by "travelers." The dry herd, yearling ewes are generally herded too closely and and destroy feed by tramping. Too large a sheep herd makes labor more difficult and tends to keep sheep restless and ill at ease. Small herds of animals alike respond to more careful herding. Some care- one-four- th 1 over-grazi- ng TraveS Over the World . . While Sitting in Your v rnHOT Easy Chair all oi us can go, as we would like to, and see tot ou- rselves the strange peoples La foreign lands aad wonders o! nature that who live the lie beyond the horizon. It is tor such as us that the writers uj travelers ol the National Geographic Society are scouring the world for interesting accounts of the "far places" which we would like to set, and theii descriptions oi what they have sees and what they would ha ve us see are appearing regularly in this newspaper stay-at-hom- Look for the travel articles in this caper. Then tell your foi they I interested in this friends about It will be as feature as you I are. ' i A FAMILY PASS TO ROYAL WITH EACH 50e PA ON SUBSCRIPTION Send In Your Subscription Today Bing and adv. SALE young ewes and place all twin buain t farntYlt.W anilu rw r l Xtr& foofl 5io iurQ asm. uauus . hvJ -ujicciner e60 lamb and handle the herds J FREE! 1 I WANT ADS ; Freight. d EXPERT URGES SALE Edwin Turner, the name given us at the time of the accident. The boys name of Edwin w. Turner instead of George Edwin as printed. See One Year for $1.00 Six Months for 50c Jams Hartshorn, Fourth Ward. CHERRIES FOR SALE First quality Charles Thompsen, Lehl Third Ward. , HOUSE FOR RENT See ueo. Munns at Frank W. Allen resid nce. aav Pump and Half Horse Motor, pulleys and everything ready to go For Sale Cheap L. D. Racker. tf GRINDING Scissors, saw sharpen ed. Sewing Machines Repaired. See William Osborne. tf For Madsen Cleaners Call Lehl Tuesdays and Thursdays. Best clearners In Utah County. Why not the bestT aav 1 PttFSS T.1RHT y 1 The Only Paper That Sets and Prints All Local News and Ads in Lehi. WHY HOT I BUILD LEHI? in DON'T TAKE CHANCES PAPER HANGING, Paper Cleaning, Caalomining, etc. Prices reasonable. Ralph Hutchings, 2nd West and State. First class film developing, printing and copy work of all klnd3. Prices reasonable. George L Bone, Phone 171-- J. tf re For Two Weeks Only OUTDOOR GIRL Large Box Face Powder PRISON BREAK AND THRILLING DRAMATIC HIGH "MAN HUNT SPOTS OF "FUGITIVE LOVERS." All the sensations of a rapid, thrill y trip are promised by Ing advance reports to audiences at the Royal Theatre, when 'Fugitive Lovers," new melodrama, opens here for a three day engage ment. , In addition to authentic scenes shot from a great Greyhound bus as It actually sped from New York to Hollywood, the audience will also see the most daring prison break and thrilling man-huever screened. A huge "road cruiser" rolls out of its terminal In New York City and, on Its first night out, encounters a prison break as It passes a penitentiary. ReRobert peated firing halts the bus. Montgomery, in the role of Porter, leader of the break, manages to climb , onto the luggage rack. Later, in clothing stolen from an unlocked bag, he enters as a passenger. Inside, Letty, New York chorine (played by Madge Evans), is repelling the advances of the gangster backer of her erstwhile show. In the rote of "Legs" Cafee, the gangster, Nat Pendleton, is trying to force Letty to return with him to Atlantic City. Porter enters the bus and befriends Letty. "Legs" plots revenge, Tyhen, suspecting Porter to be the man whom the police are hunting, he attempts to aid in his capture. J Montgomery gives an exciting performance in his effort to evade capture and at the same time protect the girl with whom he is in love. Daly, the detective, Is played by C. Henry Gordon, ace character actor. As on any crosa-countcoach, the bus In "Fugitive Lovers" is filled with variegated passensers, some humorous, some pathetlo. Ted Healy is a Jolly traveling salesman; his three stooges compose an hilariously funny vaudeville team, and Ruth Selwyn is another , interesting passenger. "Fugitive Lovers" was directed by Richard Boleslavsky. ours begins. From Door of Shipper to Door of Consignee. One complete service at no extra cost. Let us handle your withstood the temptations and avoided the economic pitfalls of the great boom. If they had not they would not be there, or their banks would not have been able to survive the rack and ruin of the economic hurricane, by which even many banks and bankers. rhn conduct was above reproach. have been destroyed. The other types of bankers, those that fell below the hieh standards of professional ethics and business prudence that character lzed those that remain, have passed out of the picture. But they hare left for those that remain a dlfflctrtt herit age of susoiclon and 111 will. How irrational this Is. when we re flect that not more than three or four ner cent of our entire population suf fered nersonal loss because of what any banker did or neglected to do, whereas literally millions of bank depositors did not lose a single cent as a result of banking difficulties and really owe a vote of confidence and thanks to their own bankers who were true to the highest conceptions of their stewardship and brought their Institu tions and their customers safely through the greatest business disaster the world has ever seen. It has been a nee nil ar feature of the psychological distortion of the times that many who owe nothing but gratitude to their bankers joined in blaming the banker far out of proportion with any rational consideration of the facts. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Webb and famll, Mr; and Mrs. Booth Sorenson and family and Mr. and Mrs. Heber 3 Webb and son, Wayne, spent Thursday night in American Fork Canyon. , i door-ste- p. Your responsibility ends and The Banker! Today The bankers who are in charge of our banks today represent men who Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Evans, Mr. and Mra. Heber C. Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Heber J. Webb and son Wayne, spent to Saturday at from Wednesday Mutual Dell. Mr. and Mrs. Fon Wharburton and Miss Lots Dlckerson spent the past of Pleasant Grove, were Sunday family Mrs. week In Sandy with her sister, dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Art Poulsen. A telephone call brings i "Red Arrow" Service to your 'm Mrs. George Nesblt and daughters of William Hadfieid, son. Leo, and Mrs. Waleosburg, Colorado, who have been Dee Elder were Salt Lake visitors, visiting Mrs. Nesbitt's mother, Mrs. to their home C. Letter returned Monday. E. N. Webb and M. S. Lott were Mrs. Isaac Turner and baby of visitors of the Cedar Fort Sunday Virgin, are guests of Lehl relatives. School, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Crane of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Gray and Draper, were callers at the James H. Cray home Sunday evening. daughter, Dorothy, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Buckwalters of Ameri Mrs. Estella Addis spent the early can Fork, Friday. part of the week at Llndon with her Mrs. W. D. Ely. daughter-in-laMr. and Mrs. Vera Curtis of Deli, are spending the week with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Taylor of Salt Curtis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Lake City, were guests of Lehl rela- Barnhart. tives Sunday. t Mrs, Junius Banks and family and C. C. Hackett attended a Booth Mr. and family Prior Dean Mr and Mrs. reunion at Liberty Park in Salt have moved to Spanish Fork for the family Lake City, Friday. j summer. as I distorted light in the eyes of some, the more reasoning in our population undoubtedly hare a less Jaundiced view than would appear from certain irresponsible often orators, as spokesposing t J men for that indefinite quantity called "the mass" of our people. acts on the part of somt bankers forF. N. SHEPHERD merly bare been exposures, of spectacular the subject that but 1 can say without reservation of the acts no In typical way were they of and attitudes of the vast majority mind their fellow bankers. The public was shocked into the belief that these more rep untypical instances were far and were, really than tbey resentative this belief has been encouraged by po litlcal and demagogic elements. Mr. and Mr. Elmer Peterson of Hollywood. California, and Mrs. Mina Webb spent Monday in Salt Lake City with reltalves. Thursday. SUBSCRIPTION One year in advance (llll H9 THE BANKS PR1HTIHG LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES FORM LETTERS You can't afford to take chances with ordinary Cheap Plumbing. You might save a few cents to start with but it cost you dollars and dollars in trouble and expense LET US GIVE YOU ESTIMATES AND HELP CIRCULARS YOU SOLVE THE PROBLEMS HANDBILLS BUSINESS CARDS STATMENTS BUTTERWRAPPERS s.LdDinr M3 PLUMBING and HEATING LEHI FREE PRESS Set and Printed in Lehi Build Lehl Not Another Town or PHONE 23 jjjST STREET LEHI TJTA |