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Show THE CITIZEN 14 and after whom Washburn Mt. is 'named. t J. Palmer Sharp, accompanied by his son, D and daughter, Beth, and Miss Marie Squires have left for a two weeks trip through Yellowstone park. Miss Helen Talbot, Miss Verna. Green, Miss lone Coulson and Jerry Summerhays, chaperoned by Mrs. B. H. Coulson, have motored to Ideal beach, Bear lake. Dr. and Mrs. E. D. Hammond have given up their home in Federal Heights. Mrs. Hammond and children are in Cottonwood canyon and Dr. Hammond is at the Newhouse hotel. ter, Undine, to Junius R. Hathenbrook. The wedding will take place September 1 in the Salt Lake temple. gone to Portland and the northwest, where she will remain for about six weeks. Miss Lena Hayden has Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Jones of Long Beach are visiting Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Meredith in the Meredith apartments. Mrs. J. F. McEnany has gone to New York to visit her brother, Dr. L. N. Rudy, for three months. and Mrs. Laurence Hedberg have gone to Los Angeles and Santa Barbara for an extended visit with their son, Elmer R. Hedberg, and family. Mr. Captain and Mrs. R. S. McNiece have returned to the city and are at home at 1185 Blaine avenue. They will leave about August 15 for Berkeley, where they will make their home. Meredith, Jr., and daughters, Louise and Elise, are making a tour of Yellowstone park. Mrs. W. S. Romney and family have Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Graham and returned from an extended stay at Bear lake. Mrs. Mildred Foote has gone to California to spend a month in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Del Monte and San Diego. Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. White and little son, Jack, have gone to Yellow- stone park. Mrs. A. R. Whitbeck and daughter, Genevieve, of San Francisco are visit- ing relatives in Salt Lake, after spending several weeks in the east. Miss Catherine Lewis has returned from a several months trip east and is with her mother, Mrs. Alvah Lewis, at the Sherwood home on Twelfth East street. Miss Beulah Hudson has gone, to Colorado Springs for a visit and will later join a party of friends in a trip to Topeka, Kan. Professor and Mrs. Joseph J. Daynes have returned from Los Angeles, where they spent three months with tlTeir son, R. E. Daynes, and daughter, Mrs. N. C. Christensen. They are now at the home of their daughter, Mrs. C. W. Baldwin, 1265 East Third South street. Dr. and Mrs. W. G. B. Terrell and children have returned from an ing at upper falls, Provo canyon. out- Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cates and little daughter, Barbara, have arrived from Ray, Ariz., to make their home in this city. They are at the Hotel Utah. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Critchlow and daughter, Miss Anne Critchlow, have returned from a visit to Chicago, Balt- imore and St. Paul, following Miss Critchlows, graduation from Vassar college, which Mr. and Mrs. Critch- low attended. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse G. Riser an- nounce the engagement of their daugli- - Mr. and Mrs. Oliver R. daughters, Catherine and Nanon,and son, Stuart, are spending several weeks in Provo canyon. with it are defined and explained, also winds, rains and frosts, as well as methods of forecasting weather. An Interesting feature of the bulletin is a method which the authors have described of forecasting the temperature at a given place on a given day. In actual tests temperatures have been determined within a. mean temperature of 4 degrees. The formula, which is workable only in connection with a table which is given, is simple. The records from which the conclusions given in the bulletin have been derived have in a number of cases been kept for forty ciated years. LOTS OF THESE FREE PASSES. Halt! Who goes there? came the sharp challenge of the border patrol. Candies (J ''rVTTTT poorly dressed man with strange twinkling eyes crept up. He carried A a zither. A friend, he said. Also an actor. How did you get through the Carpathians? demanded the patrol, his bayonet the while pressing the actors breast. On a pass, replied the actor. V They had been having a few words. And Mrs. Blank ended in the usual way. I could have married Mr. Brown or Mr. Jones if Id wanted to, she said bitterly; and both of these men I refused became rich, while you are still as poor as a church mouse. Of course, retorted her husband, Ive been supporting you all these years they havent! r ZtF Pastries W V W V W Light Lunches W i . Thomas Insurance & Investment Company Mrs. Willard S. Evans will entertain at luncheon Saturday at the home of her mother, Mrs. H. J. Chambers, 955 East Ninth South street. Insurance Of All Kinds Mrs. John B. King and daughter, Isabel, of New York are guests of Mrs. Kings parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. . Telephone Wasatch 3164 Wilson, in the Maryland apartments. Boyd Park Bldg., Salt Lake City . . will for South America to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Haskel leave August 15 make their home. UTAH CLIMATE. CITIZEN: I That Utah has a very wide range of climate is evident from a bulletin recently issued by the Utah experiment station entitled, The Climate of Utah by Dr. F. L. West and N. E. Edlefsen. Woodruff in Rich county and St. George in Washington county are the record holders in temperature, the former with a winter record of 50 degrees below zero and the latter with a summer record of 116 degrees above. The largest annual rainfall recorded is a little over 31 Inches at the forest service experiment station in Sanpete county, and the smallest, which is about 4 inches, at Wendover, Tooele county.' The longest growing season recorded is 225 days at Midlake on the Lucin cutoff of the Southern Pacific railroad, and the shortest is nineteen days at Scofield in the coal mining district of Carbon county. There are numerous charts and diagrams showing the yearly precipitation, the amount of rainfall each month, the distribution or frequency NTERESTING REVIEW OF I T OPICS OF THE DAY, COVERING I E 1 1 EALOUSLY WRITTEN HtV DITORIALS DEALING WITH ATIONAL & LOCAL EVENTS. of these rains, the date of the last killing frost in spring and the first killing frost in the fall, and the average length of the growing season for the leading towns in each county. A chart is also included showing the relative value of the four most important farm products of each county. Weather and the many terms asso- - NDUSTERIAL SITUATION, IN Subscriptions $2.00 Per Year PHONE WAS. 5409 H 311-312-3- 13 BiiiiiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ness Building g Bt',1 |