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Show w J 0 TIIE SPANISH FORK TRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH ,41' a . THE RED and GRAY it, G ORGAN OF THE SPANISH FORK HIGH SCHOOL NUMBERR 2 Vol.'l. ii l i n Wild Hay for Sale west of Benjamin. See Oliver Swenson, (adv) HUMORESQUE" A FILM OF on $000 a year. INTENSE HEART APPTAL nity For more thnn a quarter of a century he plodded along In Buffalo, a Fannie Hursts most appealing quiet, trusted, but not distinguished has been trans- lawyer. Unmarried and without family story, Humoresque ferred to the screen and will be the or a home, he took no part In the social life of his community, where 100 feature attraction at the Winona on other Ruffalontans may have been bef-te- r Friday and Saturday of this week. known to their The Intensely human atmosphere of lie had been an assistant district atthe novel Is said to have been Incor- torney of Erie county and also Its porated lntothe photoplay with re- sheriff. Tbe first that was ever heard markable success. The storyt centers around Leon Kantor, a boy of the Ghetto, who shows an Intense love of music. His uother, who has always wanted a musician son, is delighted, and on his seventh birthday buys him a violin. Leons playmate is pretty Gina Ginsberg. Fifteen years later Leon Is a recognized genius. On the night of his triumph at a big concert given for his people of the Ghetto, he enlists. Leop returns from France with a shattered shoulder and it Is said that he will never be able to play the violin again. Leon's music is his all. He becomes morose and die curaged. Before the war he had become engaged to crina. Now he Miss Ruth Simmons returned to 8alt Lake City Sunday after spending the week end with her folks here. PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES A big masquerade ball will be given at the Lake Shord Amusement hall Wednesday evening, February 9th. Tickets, 60c, Extra ladles 25c, spectators, 15c. i ' In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Utah, In and tor the County of Utah. In the matter of the estate of JOSEPH D. CRUMP, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at his residence at Lake Shore, Utah County, Utah, on or before the 8rd day of April, 1921. HENRY BELLOWS, Administrator. R. H. ANDRUS, Attorney for Administrator. NOTICE OP ASSESSMENT Napoleon Mining Company, principal place of business at Spanish Fork, Utah County, State of Utah. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors, held on Tuesday, January 18th, 1921, an assessment (No. 2) of one mill per share was levied on the outstanding capital stock of the Napoleon Mining Company, payable February 21st, 1921, to Marinas Baadsgaard at the First National Bank, Spanish Fork, Utah County, State of Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment may remain unpaid on the 14th day of March,- AD. 1921, will be - - delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment Is made before, will be sold on the 1st day of April, A. D. 1921, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of the sale. 4 $ h Y , At the regular meeting of the Spanish Fork Farm Bureau, held on January 29th, the following resolutions were discussed at length and then passed unanimously: First. That the Spanish Fork Farm Bureau favors a 34 week school year, the schools to open not later than the last Monday in August and be closed four weeks for the harvesting of sugar beets. Second. That the school board bo Instructed to keep teachers In the district, so that in case of storms, during the beet recess, schools might resumed. Third. That when the four weeks MARINUS BAADSGAARD, vacation lstover that all parents see Secretary, Spanish Sork, Utah to It that their children are sent County, State of Utah. back to school. Notice of Public Sale of Holder of For Sale 6 II. P. gas engine. Lein for Service Rendered and See Burt Thomas. Materials Furnished on Chattel. (adv) To Whom It May Concern: For Sale A garage. See Jos. Notice la hereby given that on SatL. Hales. of 19th (adv) the February, day urday, 1921, at the hour of 11 a.m. on the FOR SALE Hatching Eggs and said day, at tbe premises known as chicks from one of the best baby on situated the Williams Garage, flock of single comb Main Street, Spanish Fork, Utah County, Utah, and known as No. 304 White Leghorns in the state. See North Main Street, Spanish Fork, Clarence Smith. (adv) Utah County, Utah, the undersigned will Bell at public .auction one auto- wishes to release her from marrying mobile, Saxon Four Roadster, Model him a cripple. But In a very wonderful way he Is restored to full 14, Motor No. 24056. w ill be made strength and, to the Joy of his mothSaid auction and sale of Sections 3773, er and Gina, turns toward new convirtue under and by 3774, 471 and 479 of the Compiled quests In the realm of music. Laws of the Stale of Utah, 1917,and A stag party was given Monday for the purpose of satisfying a lien at tho homo of Mr. and Mrs evening automoon said of the undersigned bile In the sum of 293.45, together David F. Hughes In honor of John G. with the costs of said sale, said sum Thomast The jUmo was delightfully ispent in music, and cards. Earl M. being for services rendered and Thomas, faniouB step dancer, enterIn said furnished repairing owners at the request. tained with singing and step dancing. automobile and for their compensation in garag- - At midnight luncheon was served. Ing, caring for and safekeeping the Enjoying the occasion were Earl Thomas, Kiel Thomas, Grant Hales, said automobile. Utah, January WellH Monk. Angus Christenson, Dated, Spanish Fork, & JEX, McKell, Robert Hughes, Edward SAXTON 1921. 29th, Hughes, Joseph B. Hughes, Alton By R. L. JEX. BOOTH, BROCKBANK & JOHNSON, Hughes, James Weedon and Walter be y oGr-al- d Attorney. (Copyright, Montan ) UP FROM OBSCURITY 1854 1859 1863 187(1 1881 1882 1884 1885 July 21, Frances Folsom born In Buffalo. 1885 Graduated from Weft o, 18C4 March 18, Stephen Grover 1837 by Jaincg Morgan ) 1820, WEDDED IN WHITE HOUSE Cleveland, bom at Caldwell, N. J. An office boy In a Buffalo , law office. Admitted to tho bar. Aselatant district attorney of Erlo county, Elected aherlff. Elected mayor of Buffalo. Elected governor. Elected President, March 4, Grover Cleveland inaugurated twenty-secon- d president, aged forty-seve- col-leg- 1385 Juno 2, married President Cleveland in the White 1913 February 10, married Prof. Thomas J. Preston at Princeton, N. J. House. TIIE Democrats bad lost power ASunder a bachelor president, James OTHER man has stepped so NOquickly from obscurity to the presidency as Grover Cleveland. When Garfield stood on the steps of the enp-Itto be Inaugurated he never had heard the name of this Buffalo attorney, who was to stand In the same place four years afterward. Cleveland remained unAt forty-liv- e known outside his county. At forty-seve- n he was in the White House. It was a meteoric rise. Yet this man was no meteor. Slovof mind, with a narrow range of rending nnd of Intellectual Interests, Cleveland was stolid In manner and without brilliant qualities. But he bad a character as rugged and Immovable as a mountain. It had been built up In rural parsonages, where his father, a Presbyterlun minister, was required to rear a large family and set an example to the commu- ol n. -- Buchanan, they regained It after a quarter of a century under another bachelor president. That strange coincidence was brought to an end by Cleveland' marriage In the second year of Ills administration. From the day Cleveland entered tbe executive mansion at Albany, gossip bu.-ilmade matches for him with ono after another of the eligible women who appeared at his receptions. A special favorite of those persistent rumors was the pretty widow of one of his old law partners, Oscar Felsom, whose limne was one of the few homes In Buffalo where this unsocial person had been In tbe habit of visiting. It was not suspected that all along Ids own choice hud hocn the daughter rather thnn the mother. Mrs, Folsom and her daughter were guests of the president nnd Miss Cleveland In their first month at the White House. , Even the wiseacres of Washington did not guess that tho beautiful young girl who was provnt at a reception all hi white would lu another year fie the bride of her host. Miss Folsom had graduated and was traveling In Europe when the country was set In a flutter by the announcement of licr engagement. She returned home to meet sueh an ordeal ns no ever other American girl of twenty-twhas faced. Her name was on every tongue In America; her portrait was 4n every paper, nnd tbe press boats Larson. Mr. and Mrs, R. S. Bradford and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Craven and family, Mr, and Mrs. Victor Lelfson daughter visited here Saturday and and "Grandpa" William Jex went to Sunday with Mr. a,nd Mrs. John E. Bowen and family, Mapleton Tuesday and spent tbe day with Mr. and Mrs. Victor Whiting. Mabel Rowland of and Sprlngvllle John G. Thomas of this city were Mrs. R. S. Bradford entertained yesterday granted a license to marry Sunday night In honor of Reed Mon- by County Clerk Wallace Hales. ey. All of the Money family and a 6 x 12 rods. Located number of young men friends Were For Sale 9 wil Reed on 3rd south and 3rd east on Main leave February present. to fill a mission In tbe Central States. ranyon read with 6 room bungalow. Modern In every respect, full baseJefferson Duvls, son of Warren E. ment, four rooms, hot and cold water Davis Jr., of Altonah, Utah, left Salt A fine location facing tho north for Lake City today, to fill a mission in prices and terms see Ammon Simthe Northern States. (adv) Elder Davis mons. has the distinction of being the first Tbe annual meeting of the Spanish missionary to be called from the Altonah ward. Fork Live Stock Assoelaton, wll be held at the City Hall, Spanish Fork Mrs. Roy Curtis charmingly enter- Utah, Saturday, February 6th, at 1 tained the girls of her old crowd p. m., for the purpose of hearing the Tuesday evneing. A sumptuous din- annual financial report, electing 1 ner was served at 7:30, covers being director for a terra of three years laid for fourteen. After supper a and 2 directors for a term of 1 year, number of games and niggle were Bnd transacMng sueli other business enjoyed until the Wee sma hours of as may properly come before the J. M. CREER, President the early morn'ng. meeting ?'9'MtS,'l,'M,l, ANGELUS--WINON- A 4 4 PROGRAM 4 4 4 ANGLIA'S, FRIDAY and SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4tli and 5th 4 4 4 4-- 4 o A seven reel special, a 4 4 Kt- - - v, tTy ' -- a remarkable leading char- - these things make a great picture, then THE PENALTY 4 if actcr, mat teily direction, gawiess photography, perfect acting 4 4- ',v V'1 V I r ov great story, X 4 4 will rank 4 4 - 4 4 4 Added Attraction TEN NIGHTS WITHOUT A BAR ROOM 4 - 2 " !4 - V 4 4 4 . 4 4 4 X 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Straw stack for sale in Leland, See Elmer Swenson. (adv) ls I (Copyrlcht, 1820, by Jvm fellow-townsme- bred-to-la- ' By JAMES MORGAN By JAMES MORGAN and floor work of Robertson, El mer and Lewis were good. Loveless was the only Payson player to play what might be called good ball. Friday night the Spanish Fork High School team tangled with the Payson High School team at Payson. The passing and the keen basket shooting of the locals proved too much for Payson and we won, 21 to 27. The first half ended with Spanish Fork on the long end of an 18 to 9 score. During the second half we were beaten 12 to 9, but this was probably due to the fact that the basket we bad during the second half was dark. All tbe boys played consistent ball fur Spanish Fork. Kitchen was the only player for Payson team to show much basket ball. This Friday night, February 4th we meet the Sprlngvlle hgh school tehm in our gymnasium In what should be a whirlwind of a game. Sprlngvllle has whipped Provo High and Payson High by about the same scores as the Spanish Fork .High. A big bunch of rooters is to accompany the Sprlngvllle team, and we are sure of a mob that will tax the capacity of the gymnasium. Our second team meets Sprlngvllles second team at Sprlngvllle on Thursday. We are all set to win both games. Come on boys lets go. 40, 60, or 80 acres of meadow land for sale. See Oliver Swenson. . Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents Tbe Seniors Confetti Bull was certainly a rousing success. The floor and the music were excellent and nearly everyone was there. They all forgot their troubles In tbe blowing of horns and the throwing, of confetti and the dance was full of life from beginning to end. But this Is not the last time the Senior class is going to show you a .good time. The real senior dance Is coming. Watch for the "Senior Hop which will be the last dance or all. No class In school Is backing Its officers better than tbe Senior class. We have our class pins ordored and will soon be wearing them. They are tbe best that could be had. The senior class proved that It was the most lively class In and the most school when It won the $10 prize given by the Ladles' Literary Club for the class handing In the most books for the public library. The Spanish Fork High School won two games of basket ball last week. On Thursday the Payson high school second team came over here and were handed a nice little trimming by our second team. Although our boys looked like pygmies on the floor by the side of the Payson players, they were far too clever for their husky opponents. For the home team Otto Gardner and Eddie Rowe were the big scorers, while the guarding free-hear- ted , Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents 4 4 4 4 4 4 Cleveland at Mrs. Grover Cleveland. Sheriff, crowded about her iddp from which of him outside his neighborhood were she was smuggled nhouifl a revenue r vetoes from the cutter to avoid the curious crowd at his mayors office only two years before his New York dork. election to the presidency. The whole There had been only one nmrrlnge state of New York stopped to listen of a president, and John Tjler was a to bis resounding whacks and next the widower, which took some of the rowhole country took notice. mance out of the occasion. For the The sudden, the theatrical rise of first time a president was to marry As Miss Folsoms the man was not a mere caprice, a In the White Ilmisi blind stroke of luck. On the contrary, mother bad given up her home nnd ns he was nominated and elected presi- her grandfathers house wns In mourndent because he was the logical, commo- ing for Ills recent death, like the n-sense choice; because this un- affianced of a sovereign she went to known, unambitious lawyer of Buffalo hap husband's home to be married. had become In two swift years the 'T?he wedding In the blue room was most conspicuous embodiment of the extremely sinple, the only guests bethings thnt the times colled for Inde- ing a few relatives of the bride and pendence In politics and a higher groom nnd the members of the cabinet. After tne cake lmd hern out In standard of conduct In office, nere was a man who was to moke the state dining room, the bridal pair his own precedents, a uma who was succeeded In stealing out the hack door to care for nothing thnt had hap- under cover of darkness to a waiting in a switch yard. They had pened before he happened. The first train eluded the curious crowds gathered In president after the Civil war to have had no part In that strife, he s with- front of the White House nnd ut the out a political past, ami his face was station, but not the ubiquitous press, whose locomotive was under steam and turned wholly to the future. In readiness to pursue them, with a lie struck dismay to the greedy trainload of reporters, to their honeyhopes of the Democrats, ufter their moon retreat In the Maryland mounlong wandering In a wilderness with- tains. out spoils, by announcing that he, The continued attention of a vigiwould let the Republican lant press wherever the presidential finish their terms, with the exwent was Indignantly resented couple hud of who those been guilty ception the by bridegroom, who hotly deWhen of "offensive partisanship. nounced tho ghoulish glee w lih which the Republican set, ate attempted to his family affairs were discussed. More Interfere with sueh removals as he 1 umre cruel were the imprintdid make, he objected to the revtvul j mullelous, ed tales which were p rslster.tly circuof an old statute "after an existence as he remained In public of nearly 20 years of almost Innocu- lated as long ous desuetude." Tlds pbraie was too life. Sirs. Cleveland Is said on one occamuch for tho senators, nnd the act was sion to have given a pathetic libit of repealed. what the strokes aimed at the presiAt last Cleveland deliberately sac- dent through her little ones meant to rificed himself for tbe suko of plain a mother. With childlike linshfulness The prospects of his speaking. a daughter was holding hack from the were bright. His native congreetings of a small company at the servation bad made Idtu a favorite White Mouse, when Mrs. Cleveland lu the great finanelnl centers of New said, .Speak up, dear, or the people nnd tbe York, business will be told that you are deaf und Interests of the country were satisdumb. fied with him, I.ut "it the eve of the Mrs, Cleveland herself was spared. election of IW be upset tho entire At first her girlish charms, afterward situation by sending to congress his her womanly dignity nnd her maternal sensational tariff tnesng, opening made this most youthful tin devotion with the now- oft quoted words: "It most beloved mistress of the White is a condition which confronts us, House. not a theory. sledge-hnmme- office-holde- 4 rs 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4- - 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4- - 4 4 4 t 4 4 4 4 4 4-- 4 4 4 4- - 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 t 4 4 4 4 4-4 4 W-t- Wll, LI M LENT AVENGER. DUNCAN in THE SI- - Matlneo 3:30. 44- 4-- 4 4 4 WINONA, FRIDAY uml SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 0 l.it and 5th .1 4 HUMORESQUE THE BIG EXTRAORDINARY PICTURE With HAROLD LLOYD comedy J Dont rains this screen treat. FROM 4 4 4 4 HAND TO MOUTH. t Children 20c, adults 30c.. y; 0 |