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Show J , & s $?'' . TIIE HEP ALD PAGE SIX. V - ' VW '' JOURNAL Proves Farmer Can Have $15,000 Home For $6000 "V' w-f- c. WV - - ' V LofcVjI. UTAH,: THURSDAY, AUGUST Khu. WILLIAMSBURG, modern house, built hy (ho owner from native limestone, testing less than $t(X)0 in actual tash but equal to a $15,000 home in a is the answer of the city-th- at A. B. Fogle family living near here to the question of whether farmers can have a fine home. The house was built around the house frame of the old and the Fogle family lived there Members of construction. during the family planned the house without the aid of an architect and did all the construction work wit ' the exception of part of the plastering. The house presents a harmoniand attractive ous, appearance, one which would be a credit to any city. The walls are constructed of three colors of native stone quarried on the Fogle and adjoining farms A total of 650 tons of stone were us.-SETTING STONES HARD JOB The placing of these stones, s me of which weighed several hundred pounds, required the use of a tope with which to pull them up two rails leaned against a scaffold. In two chimneys, one at each side of the house, and m the porches white atones are sot in irregular fashion. In order to lighten the load of the rear wall over a sun parlor, artificial rocks were made. These rocks were made by sawing out h blocks of wood, two by chopping the ends with a dull hatchet to roughen them .and coloring with yellow limestone dust pounded in. .These 'rocks'1 were spiked to the shouted wall and mortared between, lha bumaj etc cannot detect tho substitution until the observer is told thr dif' ference. The house is 5o feet long, 31 feet wido and 30 feet high. The foundations run IQ feet under ground to limestone layers giving an unThe house usual safety factor. has two bathrooms, five bedrooms, an attic finished, n large living colonados room with fireplace, between living room and dining sun room, a kitchen and a porch or summer living room. ACCESSORIES COST MOST , All floors are oak a- -- "'1 won'1 work in the three r.inln rooms, downstairs are of oak. A beautifully finished oak. stairway, built by the Fogles, risc3 from the front hall. The largest cash expense of building the house was for finished is materials. The. heating an $800 hot water plant. Tho and electric fixtures tho plumbing all are In good taste. A farm light furnishes alcctrlcity. plant The kitchen has large , built-i- n ironing r cupboards and a fciilit-i- n board. Linen closets are provided and the oei. rooms all have large closets with outside window. The house Is located on a knoll amid large trees and shrubbery and flowers. The Fogles live on their farm, which they own. They also rent some land. Poultry and dairy are their main interests. Fogle quit, teaching at Baker university, Baldwin City, Kan., 23 years ago, to. take up farming in which he had always been interested. His love of sports led him through that college where he afterwards coached and taught He was a member of the historic Baker university football team back in the early 90s which defeated the best teams between Chicago and tho west coast fivv-ioo- The complete list of 77 teachers and principals selected to teach in the Bogan city schools for 1932-3will star t the opening day off Monday, September 12, showing but four new faces among tha faculties of the various scnools, and one sh'ft irora the junior high school to the senior high Supl Louis A I'eterson completed th: list of teachers late Wednesday afternoon Newcomers on th' faculty are Mrs. Bessie Ballard, librarian of the senior high school, who succeeds Mrs. George C. Jensen; Harold Bateman, a graduate oi the I'tah State Agricultural col- six-inc- , , , re Letter c,. A. hreJnck-su- li gc, who i fet! 4 I wl tm 3 ah m tb i u J r, A - UNNG- P DPATTED THE SLEEVE HOLE IN SAV,.WEr AJ2E OP SFbBTiNG HOOPLES ill give voiif2or ME OU THE OF THAT STEED y n Hyde Park. 10.50 Arrive ,c.-p- at demonstration r, plots conducted by J. F. Larne to see effects of irrigation, culti11:15. vation, fertiliser, etc. LeaveSmith-fielGo through Hyde Tark and o d. school d Lynn J Hodges is being tran.,-fcnfrom the junior hign school to the senior high school. i h a ksuu is planning to Mr do graduate study in an eastern Mrs Ballard has spent university the summer in study in southern Above is tile $15,000 home that the Fogle family built for $6,000. California. Mr. Bateman formerly Is the V'gl family. Lett to right are Aria It. ; Aria Bracarn taught at Clifton, Idaho. arid RArhel Alice F. D.iniel; Walter Mrs, 1 nr list of principals, secretaries, ForIp', father; Fogle, mother; teachers and supervisors of the system, with the school assigni ments follows: Senior high school 23 George J S. Bates, principal; Margdret Larson, secretary; Joseph Adams, Serge U. Balm, F. H. Baugh, Jr., P A. Barkdull, Anna E. Boss, Mrs Ballard ( librarian r, Mrs. Ef-t- u Brown, Ira A. Cola, ! R. B. Crookston (coach , Oreta Hall, A. T. Henson, J. W. Linford, Inez and Rees Maughan, May McCarrey, Evan B. Murray, P. A. C. Pedersen, Priscilla Howland. Mrs. Bab and Pearl Spencer Shepard, Mr Hodges. Junior high school f21 Alvin Hess, principal; Afton 3 Pain, secretary; Carmen Ballard, H. C. Bateman, Kita Cranney,, Willis A. Dial, James E. Evans, ,JVfr. Harding, Phebe Harding,, Parley Mrs. Nettie Lund,. Yeppa Lund, Mrs. Laura R. Merrill, librarian, Hattie Morrell, Lillie Nielson, Harold M Peterson, E N. Koeae, J. K. Vanderhoff, coach, VV. W. Welch, C. L. Whatcott, Gwen H. Redfhrd. Clementary schools: Woodruff (12i C. D. McBride, Mrs. principal; LaVcrnc Allen, -ynt.ita ili Gardner, Hilma Jons-- s ,n, Lcl.ih Letikersdorfcr, Alma Lee McGowan, Annie Noddo, Mabel ej thdhum,- - Mrs. Mm Mary E Quaylc, Rutfi Simpson and Ethel Lund Benson (6i-- - William 3. Alien, Hard Adams, Sophia principal, Bcssio Baker, )ora , Larson, Mi'3. Pack, Fern Rawlins. - " . Ellis 14 Edith O Spiithj Lorce Fames, Augusta Mad-,cBernice Quinney fii Wilson Virginia Daniels, orincipal; Myrtb Jacques, Violet Jensen, Georgia Roberts, . Ada Stan-ro, star ii weds Mo ,THe . capital banker By 3 United t 1 , , t H t i Stewaj-t- ONE-AC- PLAYS T , Preston Man Faces Prohibition Chatgc Williams Larsen, organist A.. J. Peterson,- - Stage director is and music direc .Litjenquist,, The Thelma pageant is in charge of Miss Re(a Allen and Mrs. Melba Nielsen, stake bee keepers. A scrap book display will be on exhibition ia the faculty room during the evening, and awards for the two best scrap books will be made, also an award to tho .swarm with the highest percentage of members completing scrap books Handcraft exhibits made by the Beehive girls will be arranged in ward groups. AH - people attending the pageant are invited to view the displays. Graduation certificates awards will be presented by Mrs Marie C. Thomas, member of the Beehive committee of the Y. L. M. M. I. A. general board. tor, at ve USAC campu3 ARDEN NO ENOCH , Apolonia Enoch Arden, who coli- husband the cealed his identity when he returned home and found his wife hapWhil i Candelario pily married. was in jail on a charge of liqugr smuggling, his wife, with the and children three Candelario a man. possessions, l.in off with Apolonia told police tie wanted ins wife and children b ick alsj, his prize cow. CL PASO, Candelario Is . Tcx.-- No, no long-abse- Annual August Q o 3&xcxCJL o o o o g O o o Profits Sacrificed tb Make More Room o o Here's a Of Kind j. Factory To You . Sample the o Bargains We Are Offering be a good joke it National if the child born a minute after midnight of September 9 is the heir to mil lions and scorns the offer. on g O ' ' ' o o o o o o o o o o o And Get Any One Of The Following Free o Warners-Firs- t HOLD CHURCH X Pay 59 for this SHARP, Tex, Aug 25 (IJPi As though they had been schooled In a seminary, a flock of turkeys was discovered . "holding church" in a rural chapel near here, with one big black gobbler strutting to and- - fro on the rostrum and more than a dozen standing cor rec.tly oij the ba'ks of two front Pes-- r . and readings wore riven by .loan Marv Carter, Martha Peterson. Champ Joyce Aden. Haz'd Owens, Vclva Hunter. Jessie LaMarr An- dersnrt and Horare Bunee Progress ' in voice culture v. u especially noted in the recitations of Martha Peterson. Hazel Owen-VelvHunter. Verda Johnson and Camilla Spillman. The amusement hall was crow. ed with, parents, relatives i.,id friends of, the students. i S J j Pint l ull 1 tide Size PlllftCot Kul-hini- Ftexil! ; Orderlies Says: t ore m uFanny FiAPrER Altohol Pool er 109 Iuietcst Aspirin s Many Other Bargain s Now On Display! g v, A 12:5-iArri- for lunch and meeting. OOG$$&QQOOOOOO0OOOOOOOONHOOOOa Maybe I and. the only person who feels this wav about it but the idea of putting a youngster to work the minute It arrives in his somewhat cold world, just for the sake of publicizing a movie seems to me distressing and fairly more than faintly vulgar. ever-popul- 12.15. orr IT t i The eoutraet wWb" Tignod by of ronrir," the child's parents, ths stndio bulletin. T.oret'a Young will act as tile baby's god mpther. No mention is made of tho amount to he tv'H le child c h- - it- duties will bo during Its movie career. if n n or creed No distin"lon vlll be modi?. But photographs of sw-rTobies and ditcments of the attending nhvsicians as to the time of birth must be mailed not l'tcr than September 15 to tho studio. will -- pm NCA BCTVICJh. , n Webster (3) - H. P. Howell, principal, Luciie Burgoyne and Mrs Millie Merrill. F. H. Baugh and Ethel Lund, music supervisors; A. T. Henson, instrumental music director; P. H. Barkdull, art supervisor; George D. Harding, attendance supervisor; David Tarbet. clerk. BY and - l; d, Quietly married at a fashionable New York hotel, Frances Starr, WashRobert. Golden, Donaldson, Broadway ington hanker, are pictured here after the ceremony. Miss Starr, wlio was raised to stardom by the late David Belaseo, divorced Haskell Coffin, the artist, two years ago, Donaldson, a widower. Is the father of three children. Ruth Chutterton. for whom Miss Starr was bridesmaid recently, was one of her attendants. 11:55 Arrive at James Thain's, Benson, tg .see effects of rotaLeave tion to control nematode HYRlM Beehive gills of Hy rum stake plan to present "The Quest" a pageant depicting the spirit of the hive, whu h i.i the foundation of Beehive work Tins program will take the pi u e of the regular annual swurm (lay and will include, m addition to the pageant, the awarding of ertifi-cate- s to the gradu iting girls PAINTS SCENES It will be I id it the Smth Cache high srhr i Sunday at 8 CAMDEN, N. J , Aug. 25 d ! p m. Eighteen swarms of the Miss Florence V. Cannon, who Hyrum stake, numbering 125 girls, has won numerous awards for her will participate. found The pageant was written by Mis painting and sculpture, has Jennie Richards, of Mendonl M I the Camden waterfront more A stake board member. The for a vacation than the PEONIES NOW pun ehara-tereionl sneaking hills of Italy and France. She are: t most of her time sketch of! , Planting of peonies, may best be V.vftle Dunn: Spir-Srliipod, famine Rolf. ion fends read- - dpde painting the river craft from now (ifn(jl rrcei which dock at Cooper Point. Lathrine Adams; Kathrme weather. N5 a n, and Gracia thft.nicture, t - - HOLLYWOOD Certainly there have been fantastic contests before this in Hollywood,' but National studios have turned up probably the most remarkable me to date. They call t a ''Baby Race for Birth," which is what I call a pretty dismayof ing piece press - agency. The first baby to be born on September 10 in the States is eligi ble for a movie one contract forVTl'iyear . Sc p options tembef. W Is th release ua(e, of the film. Life Be so the offer Is made- to pub Ucise u Reft TO GIVE PAGEANT Miller tifewellyn ' 3 1932 BEE HIVE GIRLS Hollywood 1 pMn-ipa- I Spotlighting j , 11:45. i H0I2SE? 15 NAKED Kil-hnr- i 11 .35- .-, Arrive at Albert Hoffman's, Benson, to sec system of subirrigation and rotuMon Leave el it-a- STAHK t beet tour motorcade, with the time of departure, and the projected to hour of arrival at each place as follows: bevipited op the tour iscourt house, 8.30 a. ColLogan. Go south through lege ward. 8 55 Arnve at field of Magnus Monsan. Hyrum north field, tor and prop-ajee ettects ot manure Leave at 9:ut. fertilization. Go east. 9:15 Arrive at C J sen's, Hyrum, to see effects ve manure and phosphate fertilize--Leaat 9.35. Go north. 9:45 Arrive at 'H. S. Hul of dl larrn, Nibtey, to sea effects of controhiie methods ferent qing glory and Canaua thistle, ave 10:15. , Go north through an to North Logan, t 1030 Jeff Bodroros, Arrive North Logan spur, to sec eft eels Leave of manure and phosphate. 10:40, Go cast and nortn toward A MV APM THBUTHAT Blood - WAY HEVV-HtH-- jvlOSE Butter Prices OTT (Continued from Tage 1) JOKE WAT A MINUTE, I'VE B.UN JASON pBOLL 16 8eT Foe PI AN PARLEY ENTERTAINING SALT LAKE CITY, Aug 25. U'l'i -- The executive committee of the National Woolgrowers association BY GLAbtS litlBRM will map plans here Monday for Another of the Ruth the annual convention of the which ia to be held Mocnch Bell student recitals was at the amuseFourth ward given Frank Merrill, night soon in Salt laike . HtblSTON ment hall Wednesday night. This arrested Fills Wallace presentation Was probably the most . ARE EXEMPT Monday SALT LAKE CITY, Aug 25 il to successful of any previously given. 4 The program was varied and County Attorney Hart charged Utah cannot collect a state gasowell selected. Wallace with being a persistent line tax on fuel used in Four one-aplays violator of the prohibition law. of inter-stat- e planes, according to were given. The first. "The King's was fantastical He was taken before Probate a court decision here Wednesday Breakfast" and SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 25 d'tn Judge NVphi Ldrson who placed In which the state was attempting The cast included philosophical. tho oldest and the youngest of San Francisco butter today, 92 his bonds at $500. and his hear- to rolled approximately $40,000 in the students of Mrs. Bell. The score 19 IJi. axesing wua set for September 1st. gasoline youngest students were the stars of the play. Mary OTTR Champ played her role of Princess By Louise with a charming naturalness seldom seen m one so young. Bobbie Bersbeek and Herbert Champ won their audience with their appealing interpretations of Dux ana Dox, These two little bova gave th3 favorite selection of the evening as they appeared in "The Limitations of Youth," by Eugene Field. Princess Nastasia," presenting Joyce Alien, Peggy Hougson sou Joan Carter, a story of child's play was entirely different from he first play but equally as lovely. Tiny Joyce Allen proved herself "o fc? a natural born actress. Her 'wagger as she changed her character from a little girl playing with dolls to an old beggar was absolutely professional. Joan Carter displayed genuine ability as the older sister. She has a good voice and utterly lacks Peggy Hodgson, as the little playmate, locked like a lovely Joll with her curls, wide eyes and adorable smile. Older students of Mrs. Bell 3 re presented in the plays "When Kaffirs Wail" and "His Exit The former was a foroeful tragedy. Verda Johnson, Wallace Everton, and Harold Hansen appeared in the plav. Miss Johfison has an excellent stage presence and a remarkable voue She gives promise bf developing into a fine dramatic actress. Both Mr. Bverton and Mr. Hansen showed capable direction. The last play, "His Exit was an original play by Clayton Chen-ea student of the U. S. A. C. Mr. Cheney recently won the Utah Federation of Women's clubs award with this play. Jessie" LaMarr Anderson, Hortensen Egbert and George Bell were in the cast Each J'R,Vi1A.iM3 gave a pleasing interpretation. C iw ar mtt ttmvtcc. we, $ Between the jtlaya abort pkit? FORT WORTH, Tex., Aug 25 Will Five year.old Patsy Curry is doing her Christmas shopping" earlier this year It is a busy time for Saint Nick, in December, so Patsy has mailed her Christmas letter in August. And she didn't forget a few suggestions for her baby brother. thw's Tour Beet 9 VERY LATfc fN HtH-Ht- COiNSENDlNT Here's More About He'll probably EGAD, COME ain't DAT me junior hign school, U Harding, former pu of the senior high svhJoi, wno returns to the system as a part time instructor at the junur iiign s. hooi and attendance supervisor, and Miss LaVern Alle i, who will teach at the Woairuii ai George n awed V a Job", eh -- 3 m a OB MINE , IN A BABBET2 SHOP, VAS A BPcJTHEB WHO'S A JOtXh Y AN' HES BlTKP A HOGS ToMOPBcW NAMED An J V By Ahem vVncIw what ahm gonna 150 WIF GOtAt o TAT 26 vo' 6iB M& veS'cav 9 Ah'm BtTTiKi' FiVE: OO IT ON A HOSs FRLN FOR SCHOOLS T 1932. 25. Our Boarding House FACULTY SET WITHIN CITY By NEA Servlie. xmas V O Sale Ends Thursday, Sept. 1st PRESCRIPTION BRUJG CO. O Logan, Utah .WSuI Hfhlimt " nre j g -- - 33 North Mam X OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOC9QOOOOO |