OCR Text |
Show THE HELPER JOURNAL Page Four Workman's Merc i- - and we set no limit on your purchases one can or more, as you wish. 3-l- b. t 29C box (Regular 45c Value) BUY Vl lb. Tree Green Tea for.... ? !''. get one package of I And Black Tea FREE! 9c PEACHES Qt can Blue Pine ISC? at Sire Quart, doz... 69C? Deviled Meat 3 cans 10c MILK Any brand, can. FRESH MILK Quart 15C? Fresh Fruits and Vegetables of All Kinds IN OUR MEAT DEPT. NICHOLS Hams Whole or Half, lb PICNIC HAMS lb LEG OF FANCY MUTTON, lb... MUTTON CHOPS, lb. POTATOES j!9c ..New, Utah, 10 lbs. MILK Tall cans AH brands, can 29c 2 p. m. of Miss Eliza Mary Kavanagh and sister Patsy are visiting at the home of relatives in Scofield, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Thomas. Miss Susan Maulsby, accompan ied by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Maulsby of Rolapp, left this week to spend a two weeks vacation in the state of Califor nia. During Miss Maulsby's absence, Miss Mary Contri of Price is assisting in the local office of the Eastern Utah Electric company. Fruits FANCY FAT Hens, Fryers, lb. ISC Blue Bell, lb 19C I LOOSE LARD Pure, 2 lbs 19C POT ROAST 10 We Deliver 25CS COFFEE-Cha- se Si Sanborn, dated, lb 8Sc;i 0g 19 2 lbs Broken slices, can Blue Pine, 4 cans.... at his home here Wednesday Vegetables and Sliced Bacon Package, 2 pkgs. WEINERS PINEAPPLE ... Pork and Beans For your 24th of July dinners we are providing a wide variety of fresh fruits and vegetables, arranged conveniently and neatly for comfortable shopping and at bargain prices Oranges, Melons, Cantaloupes Ev- erything! : Cheer-U- p Cheer-U- p is a tempting drink for the picnic or for your home uses these warm days. It may be had in any flavor for 29c a bottle on Saturday. t 25C? Flour A new car of Sperry's products at new low prices. Milk Phone 303 Body Identified After 5 Months Beaver, July 20. A body lying in the morgue here for the past five months awaiting identification, that of a lad killed in the Union Pacific railroad yards, has been identified by Mrs. Harvey Heath of Price as that of her son. Every effort had been made to find relatives of the dead youth, and his description was broadcast by radio. After waiting in vain for word from their son, Mrs. Heath made a trip to Milford last week and positively identified the body. HARRY S. JOSEPH IS A CANDIDATE FOR OFFICE Major H. P. Myton was a visitor in Helper this week, seeking to further the candidacy of Harry S. Joseph for nomination as republican candidate for the office of governor of Utah. Mr. Joseph is well known in state political circles and plans to make an active campaign for the nomination at the state convention August 20, which will be held in Salt Lake. Major Myton i3 very well known over this portion of the state, having at one time been in charge of the Indian reservations, and after whom the town of Myton was named. Tall cans of milk, all you want. r.d -- any Jell Powder Our customers tell us that P. S. Jell Powder sets more quickly than ordinary kinds and that the flavor is better. You may get all you want in any flavor at 5c. This will be the regular price from now on. O. Potato Chips Potato Chips fresh, crisp and delicious 29c a lb. One pound of In the Market Spring Fries are at their best now for they are large and plump only 15c a lb. Saturday. Weiners and Franks These arcs popular for the picnic 10c a lb. Luncheon Meats We are prepared to v.i ply your needs in an,, i'l.ug in the Meat or Chvw" line at bargain prices asts, Steaks, C"io;s from tl:e best .ackers In Am. t it a, kept cool and fresli f ;r ; on. You can depend on m. LOWE TO MAKE RACE Salt Lake City, July 20. William J. Lowe, republican state chairman and prominent Salt Lake attorney, this wee!; announced his candidacy for the republican nomination cs governor. Mr. Lowe's statement follows: "At the earnest solicitation of friends from Salt Lake and from over the state I shall be a candidate before the republican state i't convention for the nomination for ft "A SURETY OF PURITY" governor of the state of Utah. fO-RSSCAC- It Is a curious fact that there are nnm han't), npssimists among the thun among the poor and who work hard for a those uiitoiig F. Wadswortn. m. Hath good living. D remarks in Collier's Weekly. Yon need time and money and p.n mind to worry otherwise care-fre- e ahout what Is going to happen to your health next. Th wsl'p earner has a certain amount of indefinite dread of ill ness at the l:ik of his mind be cause he knows Illness is expensive and disabling. But It never occurs to him to read medical treatises in order that he may think up some In fiiKt!n' disease which may hit hint. 1 sometimes think persons turn to the possibility of disea.-- e as a refuse from boredom. At first the idea Is a fascinating one. hut sud denly thev are hoist by their own petard. The Idea becomes an obsession and they really feel sick. Living becomes an expensive affair. They go the round of the spe cialists and sanitariums, trying to find some one who will five them a positive and dire diagnosis. Often an unnecessary operation will effect a cure. Any operation Is painful enough to Jolt one out of Imaginary Ills. Camel Compels Tribute From Desert Traveler Unlovely, striking, ill nalured are camels, but withal the brutes ..Machine sliced, lb. finest pack aninvals in the world, and the only one capable of surviv FRANKS Bologna Ing li a wilderness of thorn bush, I; sand and relentless sun. Minced Ham, 2 lbs... You never come to feel the slightest affection for a camel. Hut SPRING Friers hard trip through a difficult coun ...Milk Fed, per lb. try, a country that would kill h beautiful horse In a week and a ROASTS-Pri- me touh mule in two, you are aston Ished to find your camels thriving. Beef, per lb actually putting on flesh on a diet of thorns in heat almost unbearable YEARLING to a white man. ..Lamb Chops, lb. You watch them curiously at their slow, unhurried pace, carrying BACON-Su- gar their ;;,"K) pounds, never stumbling, never shying and never showing the Cured, sliced, 2 lbs... slightest need for that precious com And at the finish modity, waur. of he trip yo:i foci like taking o.T your sun helmet every time you 1H BOILED HAM 25c ?16C i: 12e;i or whole, lb i BUTTER 5 12C? 100 12C? lb 10 c $1.29 heart trouble, having been confined to bed for several FLOUR-Pri- de of days before the end came. the Valley, sk. Deceased was born in Helper, January 9, 1917, having been a resident here with his parents all Carrots, Turnips, his life. Surviving are his parents S Beets, bunch Mr. and Mrs. James Bruno and the following brothers and sister, QUALITY MEATS Mike Bruno of Long Island, Pete 5 BACON-H- alf cloth bag.. 111 well-to-d- 22-2- 3 SUGAR Migllcci of Chicago, Dominick Miglicci of Helper, and Mrs. Jose phine Pellegrino of Kenilworth. The Flynn undertaking parlor will have charge of interment, final arrangements for which have not been made. Half Pint jj it Pork and Beans 3 cans CREAM JULY 25-l- b. HENRY BRUNO OF HELPER SUCCUMBS TO ILLNESS died BOTTLES-F- ull 5 L. A. Gidding of Salt Lake City, grand master of the Odd Fellows state grand lodge, and Walter Heir of Provo, grand herald, arrived in Helper Wednesday and were luncheon guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hall. Wednesday evening the state officials, accompanied by Deputy Grand Master Henry Hall and William Bartlett, grand junior warden of the encampment, left for an official visit to the Green River lodge, and Thursday visited the lodges at Clear Creek and at Scofield. Health Boredom? From Refuge Imrinanr SATURDAY Henry Bruno, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Bruno of Helper, M. J. B. JR. Coffee, can 5 FRIDAY AND 5 Our stock is complete CRACKERS .V.W.V.V.V.V.WAV.V.V. Odd Fellow Heads Making Off icial State Visits 10c SUCCESS i i I meet a camel. .fames Atlantic Mont Mr. 1C. Hauinj In Meat and Grocery Five Convicts Are Paroled Five men convicted from Carby the the regat of board pardons state ular June meeting. Pat Sapanario, convicted of assault with a deadly weapon on thp person of Ramon Caberillo at Standardville February 14 of thia 13. year will be freed November Three youths, Vanve Ingram, John Erdei, and Erwin Jacobsen, convicted of beating and robbing Gust Pappas on a ranch will be paroled September 1. Henry Palmer, sentenced on a prand larcencv charge, has been pardoned after serving 11 months of a one year sentence. M Salmon h Fancy Pink, tall Ground, pound Cans, Malt Syrup There are no grounds for believing, as many people now be- lieve, that Abraham Lincoln came of inferior stock, or that his father was an "ignorant, shiftless vagabond." This Is the gist of a message received this week by Don E. Lam'oson from Dr. Louis A. Warren of Fort Wayne, Ind., author of "Lincoln's Parentage and Childhood," and foremost living authority on Abraham Lincoln's life. Dr. Warren has asked Mr, Lamb-so- n to put him in touch will all persons in this locality possessing documents or other facts having a bearing on Lincoln's parentage or ancestry. 2 Salted Wafers ipeci Box Sati Graham Crackers tor Box ?.Pound Pork and Beans Pound Dinnerette, can "atsu Sardines Dinneret Large Oval Cans Hour Cocoa Harvest I can Rockwoods, A Becco good al Kipp Sondes I Pint Bottles We Reserve the Right to Limit SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL Qtumti $2.00 Nai 1 MAM litis M. g Illl M,Bf4uiMJiuiiw acad aarri II u V U LJU VJ "II lliced ITS. TI V ' 9R V ZS tJtJJ TTfc 0 J 1 I Lai and his Kainbow HELPER to DENVER by TELEPHONE $1.65 Friday Saturday July mi STOCK ' lURl UenSlic Specials for MMtuj1iiwrlftTT7lw CAME OF COMMON PS oesi roous, quart jar riji vt- Lacy jp Salad Dressing COMPANY LC 1 Mission Brand, 2 cans Wesley Hyatt, the son of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Hyatt of Castle-gat- e has returned from Los Angeles where he graduated from the University of California with a BS degree. He is a member of Theta Tau, national honorary society of record for high jump. REFUTES CLAIM LINCOLN Lib Hop Tuna Fish WESLEY HYATT GRADUATES FROM U OF CALIFORNIA S lalt Balco, Hop Flavored, can s 1 jap ti hat An-ton- is Pul ,ray, Pineapple 2 cans Large Mrs. Sylvia Shiro Malatche, 33, wife of John Malatche of Klamath Falls, Ore., and a former resident of Helper, died Sunday evening at her Oregon home following several months of illness. Burial will take place Thursday in Klamath Falls. Deceased was born In Italy in 1899, on December 28, and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shiro sr., of Helper, having been a resident, or luamam tans ior the past four years following her departure from Helper. Surviving are her husband and four children, Arnold, Raymond, Johnnie and Edith, all of Klamath Falls, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Shiro sr., of Helper, and the fol e lowing brothers and sisters: Shiro of Klamath Falls, Mrs. Margaret Raby of Bingham Canyon, Joe Shiro jr., of Spring Canyon, Mrs. T. Turner and Vincent, Jack, Florence and Pauline Shiro of Helper. The Peony in f.fsdicins Three truckloads of trout from A pharmacist, whose fussy solid the state and government hatch jj tude for peonies stirs the gardener eries were planted in Scofield restold us that, once ervoir last week under the super"J in our make-up- , Community Builders upon a time, all doctors were called vision of the Carbon-Emer- y Fish HELPER UTAH S paeoni. The plants they used as and Game Protective association. medicine were called paeoniae. It's According to plans, several more all because the peony was the first lots of fish will be planted during medical plant known. The (Jreeks. the summer in local waters. he went on. had a high regard for ONLY THREE TEAMS LEFT IX BOYS SEXIOK DIVISION the common garden variety of peony as an antispasmodic. Mon golians, to this day. have a kitchen The senior division of the American Legion baseball league now habit of using the root of the has but three teams remaining in white peony in their soups; grind the schedule, the Lowenstein Merc, the seeds to mix with their tea an and S. C. Welfare having dropped other observation muffed by the lady of "The flood Earth." Mod out, and leaving the Moose, and B. P. W. to finish the ern physicians don't think much of the peony's medicinal properties, season. are content to let it serve ns yj of the Teams Standing a memorial flower. Indianapolis W L Pet. News. Moose 4 0 1000 B. P. W 3 1 750 Kiwanis 2 2 500 Ueful Information Revised Senior Schedule When H. fi. Wells was attending 23 Moose B. vs P. W. July luncheon at the Dutch Trent chili July 30 Kiwanis vs Moose in :ew lork some time rko. iilon Aug. 1 B. P. W. vs Kiwani3 with Conrad Massiisiuer, the Cuban Aug. 3 Moose vs B. P. W. the latter was enter cnricnturlst, Aug. 6 Kiwanis vs Moose talning the others with swift thumb 8 B. P. W. vs Kiwanis Aug. nail sketches and merry patter. jj of his fumilv Massnguer Speaking FORMER HELPER MAX yi said : OPEXS BUSINESS HERE In live "My people Havana. Eleven of my relatives are in Jail there D. Hela former Roy Tamplin, now." per resident, arrived here this Whereupon Mr. Wells, who was week with Mrs. Tamplin and the sitting on the oilier side of the tachildren to remain until fall. Mr. ble and had been no part In Tamplin, who has businesses In the conversation, taking pricked up his ears Santa Monica and Inglewood, and said: Calif., is opening a roofing estabwi. i say: now does one lishment while here, his advertise- about setting one's relatives ment appearing in this issue. Collier's Weekly. jail?" They are stopping at the home of Mrs. Tamplin's parents, Mr. and A Statue Mrs. C. H. Bishop, Mrs. Tamplin "The statue of a great man," said being remembered by many as the III Ho, the sage of Chinatown, former Miss Bertha Bishop. "should be like our reputations, RIVER CHANGES COI RSE TO which, by depleting magnificence AFFECT TOWN SITE BRIDGE without personal resemblance, puts an end to all blame; even that of The stream running thru Helper art criticism." Washington Star. during the past week has slightly altered its course in a manner which leaves it washing at the FIRE AUTOMOBILE high bank just above the Townsite HEALTH ACCIDENT bridge on the west side. The condition if permitted to LIH5 i continue would eventually wash i: !i the banking out and endanger the structure, and city officials will take immediate steps to enforce the bank. Insurance l : cans Coffee Airway Fresh FORMER HELPER WOMAN PASSES AWAY IX OREGON I C New Low E Day Pried bon county were paroled FISH PLANTED IX RESERVOIR SELLWOOD? "It Agency V . 1 Ramblers After 8:30 P.M. Only 95c rates. in Vlus Federal tax on ifi amounts over 50c. Station-tO'Stalio- n TELEPHONE Come both nights n?ul liavp a Good Time! j The Crowd will be Here i 1 |