OCR Text |
Show i- -. THE KAl.P.J II E O U K N A I SOCIETY i Logan People Return Here I n, MABCELLA Mendon Ward Plans For Gala Carnival Seventh 'Grade Have Dance UAC Club Meets At Bluebird Logan Stake Singing Mothers VOTE PLATFORM at tbe try. OF UTAH AND IDAHO CLARKSTON 80 acres, (the Phillip Lard 80) 240 acres (Lars Rasmussen place) 80 acres East of town. HYRUM acres acres acres 1 4 acres 29 While in Europe they spent considerable time at the Algemeine Clinic in Vienna, and also at various other clinics in the old coum SITUATED IN THE SECTIONS West Field West of high school home, 1 mile North new home. East. acres home. North East acres, home. North Si acres (choice) North 60 acres (hay grain) North East 74 Hay and pasture. North 320 acres, hay and grain. East 240 acres, pasture,. West 150 acres, pasture. West 20 acres, pasture. West 57 acres, equipped dairy. South IDAHO BUY A Idaho Falls LNOW La Vere H. Daines LAND BROKER Licensed Bonded - Experienced 24 South Main Phone 658 or 362 GLENDALE IMK0-H- Mss lit f cy he strike Sot u ty In equiuim Dolii.i Wili-xlewiil be ht Id Saturday meeting M will 2a at 2 m m the stake cl few weeks in I'tu.itello wun her p Mi and Mr house A good i prt sentatum from biolhet ziMl Harold t bter ill uatds ot the st Ike In th'MieJ Goldie and Jtaii H wist n of ireNton iMting our the week end with Mr and Mr ChriN-t- i ill J Lirsen and f imilv Mr ai. d Mrs Jese O Whctler t nterta.ned at a dinner ednesdav The !ut di im.itit .tmv o tin (ening The united guests were Mi uni Min Murriv Mortensen, ncwi-- t wonder ot the wm Id is told Mi and Mn Jaine Mortenen in 'Boulder Dim henling the and Mrs Mi Lmiist of PresLo the iter s new Chug hill wliuh ton plavs todav ontv m lonjuiution Kut ne M Hibbiit of Boise, with another popular gift night Id tho. and Edward E Hebdon of tonight Preston were visiting with rela'Boulder Dam excolorfull Mr Hibbert was Thursda ploits the exciting nu idents con- tives nected with the t onstrui tion ot on his way home after spending the mighty power projei t Ross the past ten dns in Salt Lake Alexander and Patricia Ellis have Citv on busmesN Robert Pet kste ul and Fred romantic roles, with Lvle Talbot playing Alexander's rival for the Ltwis of Pieston hive been laborin this love Dnanue drama, ing community during the girls daredevil action and innumerable past week Dr S E Nelson and Elmo thrills ai e woven into the picture The story concert's an automo- PeteiMin of Pieston were testing bile mechanic, cocky and sure of eatth in this i oinmunity during Unease Dr himself, but who shirks his work the w e k for B mg at every opportunity When his NVInmi is authorized rt preservaboss is accidentally killed in a tive of the sei ret.irv of agriculfight, the mechanic flees and in ture Mr and Mrs la land L his wanderings arrives at Boulder Auger, Dam. Romance changes his out- anompmul b Mr ami Mrs Ben HounJi f son it.d Lewiston look on life and he becomes a hero on the dangerous projei t motored to P truhs4 Sunday to attend the futural of discovered services his Eddie before past is I James Acuff, Henry O Neill, Egon Brecher John Miss Alue Rergipuust of and W llliara Paw ley are featured i, spending a few davs with in the supporting Cast her aunt, Mrs Alta J Auger A splendid program of short Miss Ma ric Hill of Fi anklin wax treats include a Krazy Kat a comedy and the latest a Suniluy (Il r. ncr guest of Mr anil Mrs Herbert Owen and family Paramount sound news dim Durxtellor of Mapleton Gift night is held at 9 15 tonight It's lots of fun and gifts are spent the week end with Muonic Owin positively given away every week If old Hikin' Nell or Cottle .Jim at the Roxy had visited our school last Friday they would have been at home for it was Hobo Day. right Each student came dressed as a famous character of the road David Jensen, as president of the ith George Raft as a lover, and Rosalind Rus- hobos of America, was the outsell as the glamorous girl who standing portrayal. Others wno did well were Letho thought herself too ritzy for ro- exceptionally Max Webster. Amy Webster, mance, 20th Century's dynamic Bardee Jensen, William Auger, comedy romance, It Had to Hap- Gene Webster, Connie Webster, pen, is now at the Capitol TheaSarabeth Larsen. Veloy Auger. ter with Bank Night Nelson, Norma Wheeler, Adapted from an original story LaRue Rulon Owen and Aina Auger. by Rupert Hughes, the new picAt 3 o'clock the hobos gathered ture tells the story of a man who rose from the slums to the top of in the jungle, the recreational hall, n with Miss the political heap for the love of for a real an alluring lady and then threw Leota Corbndge at the piano the hobo Why day, may we ask? away everything he had won for For variety, only. Several students the same lady have attendance for the perfect Manhattan is the locale of this school year and a little foolishexciting and humorous drama. is relished by the best of Produced under the personal su- ness men. pervision of Darryl F. Zanuck and The school is anxiously awaitdirected by Roy Del Ruth, It Had to Happen features Leo ing the return of Kelly Peter-bor- g who has been absent the Carrillo at the head of a strong past five weeks because of serious supporting cast, which also in- illness. cludes Arline Judge and Alan Blain ebster, missed our hobo Dinehart. The adaptation of the original day m order to go to Pocatello and his brother. visit Rupert Hughes story was accomIf old plished by Howard Ellis Smith awav for dame. Bad Luck, stays another few weeks, Davand Kathryn Scola. id Jensen will have a record that is hard to beat in school. For examined by expert oculists and almost eight years he has neither carries a certificate, saying his been tardy or absent. Good luck to him. eyes are better than normal. Fit. j ( , t Pte-s-to- -- Capitol Theatre -NASHUA. Ia . March 26 The Nashua fir" department roared out into the countryside to answer an alarm, located the fire, put it out, firemen piled back into the truck, discovered it wouldn't start The driver found that during the fir- - fighting activities a thief drained 20 gallons of gasoline from the trucks' tank satin-smoo- Au-pe- r, BISHOP HILL, Hi. March 26 Lightning hit the farm home of Miss Alice Laub. disabled the telephone and set the house on fire Olaf Sundb-r- g, hired man, summoned neighbors by firing a shotgun several times One, a mile away, called the fire truck, another was waiting with a tractor at a mudhole in the road when the Bishop Hill truck got stuck as expected on the way to the Laub home. Other tractors waited at other mudholes. The cooperation enabled muddy firemen to confine damage to the attic. d 1' hoe-dow- KANSAS CITY, Mo. March 26 John Atkinson and his girl friend had a spat and she refused to see him at her home. John tried locating her each afternoon near a high school by tooting bis ear horn. Parents thought 'hirtt a masher and in court the judge took the unromantic view and fined him $250. u ! 26 Ark BENTONVILLE, 1 , th March ii Circuit Judge John S Combs today mourned the loss of his gavel and $5 The jurist and Attorney John Nance disagreed heatedly on a legal point in a ci)il became suit. Argument heated The judge's gavel flew from his hand, was shattered. He promptly fined the attorney and himself five dollars each for contempt of court. ATLANTA, Ga., March 25 (I P Ralph McGill, sports editor of the Atlanta Constitution, says Umpire Claude Bond of the southern will be all set for association squaw kers this year when they accuse him of being blind on that third called strike. Bond, according to McGill, has had his eyes TONIGHT 9. On the Screen, Thurs., P. M. Fri., and Sat. NEW YORK, March 25 HT') Knox, Chicago publisher and candidate for the Republican detailed nomination, presidential broadcast address .i a nationally last night the program he wouid follow if elected. He declared his chief concern" to be that the American government should be the servant of the All of people, not their master. his program was shaped to remain well within the Implied limits of conservative interpretation of the constitution. He advocated lower tariffs to permit increased imports and in consequence increased agricultural exports, reform of the crazy quilt" banking system "under which we lie uneasily today, and revivification of industry by retiring the government from socialistic . experimentation" and "wasteful and by a spending return to "simple principles of thrift and honesty. --E-M 18 12 E PAGE FIVE. Frank LOGAN 80 acres, improved equipped, 127 acres. Cub River ranch. 320 acre. Ranch Custer 160 acres. North Preston .i will meet 3:30 W. McCay, FARM LAND 16 58 2 MEYERS. Marcella Meyers went back to the Garden of Eden to secure a motif for her costume as an entry m the spring bathing beauty contest at the California Pacific San Diego. Miss Phyllis Nielsen was hostess to the members of the Trocadero club at her home Monday night. Bridge games were preceded by a luncheon, served at three small d nasturtiums tables. formed attractive centerpieces at each table. Mrs. Elva Reese, a special guest, and the following club members were present: Mrs. W. T. Wallace, Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs. Grant Nielsen, Mrs. J. Elwood Hansen, Mrs. Frank Neuberger, Mrs. Earl Nielsen. Mrs. C. B. Chestang, Mrs. Mendon ward has announced Irvine Sheffield, Mrs. Horace Taythat all plans are complete for a lor and Mrs. Byron Darley. be held High seor honors were won by big ward carnival, to Mrs. Earl Nielsen and all cut to Saturday, March 28 The ward Relief Society organiMrs. Walter Brown. zation will be in charge of a bazaar to be held in the ward hall In the aftduring the morning. ernoon an auction sale and reTo freshment stands will be conduct-- , Parents of the seventh grade ed by various organizations of the students of the junior high school ward. The festivities will be concluded are invited to attend the class dance at the school gymnasium with a dance in the amusement The Mendon orchestra will Friday between the hours 6:30 and hall. furnish the dance music. 8:30 p. m. Everyone is invited to attend A program will be given, followed by games, dancing and re- the affair, and outside visitors are welcome. freshments. Patrons and patronesses of the VV. L. dance are W. Welch, C. Whatcott, Yeppa Lund, Mrs. Laura H. Redford, Mrs. Gwen Merrill, Miss Carmen Ballard and Miss Bertie M. Evans. The UAC Women's club met Monday at the Bluebird with Miss Charlotte Daocey as hostess. Mrs. E. G. Peterson gave the literary review My Old World" by A singing practice for the Sing- Ernest Dimnet ing Mothers of Logan stake will be held Saturday at 3 p. m. in the Eleventh ward. KNOX OUTLINES home of Mrs. J. Preston Avenue. l Kar-too- t The Y. ! n, Friday afternoon at CIT 2 Roxy Theatre MILWAUKEE. March 2G U Fellow woikmen pitied Joseph Markiewitz because his dinner pail never contained moie than a piee-- of bread, some raw ba on, or a bit of sausage. After Mirkiew nz s death it was disclosed in count court he left a $20,000 estate Election results were: Marian Peterson, president; Marian Skidmore, vice president; Cleo Mon-sosecretary, and Virgie Minnoch. Meet Friday Newcomers club 2 'll'1 me Imitv CLEVELAND, Marth 26 d I'' Tulips and roses, beautiful though they be in the spring, should not require $4i0 a month for their upkeep Thats what the heirs of Mrs. Ethlinda Whitmore, who died in 1933, told Judge Harrison W Ewing They ask-- d a tourt order prohibiting such payments provided in Mrs Whitmores will Van-derho- Newcomers Will won n-- the Alpha Chi Omega house Monday evening preceding election of sorority officers for the coming year. Alumnae members of the sorority and mothers of the .members were special guests at the dinner. Miss Ruth Owens gave two vocal selections and a short talk was given by Mrs. Joan C. Van-colore- Mirth Okla March 26 il Pi Oklahoma officials Morde-cai dei nidi today that George District Attorney at Madera w Oklaof Calif , needs a map homa Moredecai addressed a telestate to the capitol at Guthgram rie It has been 27 years Mine the capitol was moved from Guthri-t- o Okl ilioma City chapter dinner was given at Trocadero Club Has Meeting 21 OKLAHOMA Has Election Dinner treasurer. YORK. de Alpha Chi Omega A l'KM MILD MARCH Meets Saturday ba.l on record m a kidnaping ta-- i Mrs Antoninettc $1 yesUrd.i Wildman accused him of kidnap -, Dorotht i mether ing 55 lidman Sylvester Magistrate Sabbatino adjourned a hearing to May 1 and set the unique bail v hen Smith, blushing, introduced his 1101101" as Mrs Jacob Smith They hadn t intended U tell s aunt, they said, until Mrs Smith became 16 on Saturday Insbruch, of Oberammergau where the original and continued "Passion Play" is produced every ten years. The return ti:p was made through the Tierol section of to then Switzerland country, where mar.y cities were visited including Basle, Lucenne, Bern and Interlaken, the latter city is situated at the foot of the mountains of the most visited section of the Swiss ..Ips, the city is known the world over for its wood carving artistry. The trip from Interlaken to the mountain tops should not be overlooked by travelers, the Budge family reports. The trip is made by leaving the city on a narrow gauge train on smooth surfaced rails, until the grade becomes so steep that it is necessary to take a car especially designed to be operated on cables and notched tracks, the following cities are passed on the trip: Interlaken, Wildersivil, Grund, Gnudelwald, and Scheidegg, 6192 feet above sea level. On this level hotels are located for the accommodation of the thousands of tourists who visit the place yearly from this elevation in almost an the famous easterly direction three mountains are to be seen: 11925 The The Eiger feet). Moench (12315 feet) and The Jungfrau 12498 feet). Any time during the year snow can be seen drifting around the upper third of these glacier tipped mountains. The downward trip was made through Wengcrnalp, Wengen and from here a side trip to the famThen ous Truemmelbach Falls. through Lauterbrunnen and back to Interlaken. The family then continued to Holland, Germany, Belgium, France, visiting No Mans Band, and then to Spain, where they visited Sansa Bastine. Just beyond this city is ' a peasant section of Spam where the peasantry still live in caves. They then went to Madrid, the capital city, taking a trip through many miles of grape vineyards, Serville, Barcellona and visited the famous Spanish shawl All these factories in Cornado. trips were made by auto until their return to France, where Alvord left the party and returned to the States with the car. Dr. and Mrs. Budge coninued their trip from Marseille to "Port Said, thn to Cairo, Egypt, Jeruselum, Palestine, and back to Port Said, through the Suez canal, crossing the Red Sea to Aden, Bombay, and Columba in India. They continued through the strait to Penang and Singapore. From there they went to Hong Kong and back into the inti m .r Cantong, China, a trip selaom made by tourists. Then to Japan Cobe and across the island of Japan to Yaucohoma and Tokyo, returning to Yaucohoma where they sailed for Honolulu, there embarking for San Francisco. They reached the Frisco shore on December 18, returning to Utah to spend the Christmas holidays with their children. They left for Phoenix, Arizona on January 6, where they have spent the past three months, having just returned to their home last week. I Jatob Son'll Ixgan on June 30, 1035, touring through the and lt NFW , eastern states to New York City. They sailed from New York on the S. S. Manhatten on July 17. Following a pleasant voyage they landed at Plymouth, England. After visiting cities of interest in England they proceeded to Scotland and then to Norway, visiting Oslo, the Fjords and the region of the Northern Lights, and upon return visited imiortant cities in Sweden and Denmark. They crossed the Baltic sea to Germany, then to Czechoslovaka, Austria and Hungary, visiting in these countries the main cities and places of interest. They report one of the most interesting trips was through the cities of Prague, Czechoslovaka; Vienna, Salisburg US HAY. S. Relief Society ( InThe News JEden Beauty IJ. Austria; and then into Germany mountains through the Bovenan where is located the unique city THE II. A L. Budge and son, Ahord hate recently returned from an extensive world tour. They lei t HI A N, 1,0(1 Oddities After World Wide Tour I)r. and Mis. T. ma&& 7 ...orjr: (NOT A NOW FLAYING TWO BIG what you are, I never want Geo. Raft 'Jean Parker in LIME HOUSE BLUES to see you again! - STARTS TOMORROW - Toulis. ten to me! What I am is my business. ,Your job is to love me and love me till you die! EWrsTi'i- -i CHAIN THEATRE) If thats LAST TIMES TOMTE! Tht girl the whelt world tilked about in "Rendezvous" asruax IU llJ riitMTJ amt ciut ztanfln ttraia 'jciti FEATURED NORMAN FOSTER CHARLOTTE HENRY in and "China Seas" teamed with the J-- i OB screen's lover I LEO CARRILLO ARliKE JUDGE ALAN DINEHART ANDREW TOMBES SADDLE ACES in Logan) A DARRYL 70 CO) F. ZANUCK TBIT MOOUCTICM FrmMcd by Jottpi M. $tWcb Hud try fey Raert SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS P. M. P. M. Every Day But Saturday RUSSELL with (By Edward Eggleston) and REX BELL in 10c Until Six 15c After Six RAFT ROSALIND stormiest THE HOOSIER SCHOOLMASTER First Showing ; GEORGE Atfcttf rl6 POPEYE KIW SATl RDAY! i TREAT jft u, 2 di Producer KjmJ V Also COMEDY and NEWS Gnftk (Continued 1 from Page One) loHiivml Miinotim (It it bin orgam.ition would put ,t third ticket into the r.u e. part IliUtllt on.l n..J i ..ev ;f tried to cover up the faux pas. flut the fat was in the fire. Pionuntnt state i ml ln k m tin movenunt m i.t m hoi protests against gittiug nnvii up in the presnh nti tl i fight They assorted t h it Townsend and (Menunt had no nun-datto launih a tnud p trt insisted that the or g itmTimn stu k strictly to its own objective its efforts on tinting aiul .senator-- , who congressmen would vote for the $2' a month pension plan ! niPItU Joan e vSHEL L'nder this powerful internal pressure, Clements dropjtd his political ambitions for the time His latest strategy is to build himself as a presidtntial white hope foi I'MU, using the Townsend movement as the spring-boa- ! d Plajing a decisive role m thing Clements does u his everybeau- teous, wifi, Thilmi a one time stenog: iphei whom he married in lh.it Mrs Clements keeps out of the hfm light, but .she has a very important voice in her husbands affairs and ambitions. Between lur and the Townsends no love is lost 2- ear-ol- d ftWHEBEiTHE BIG ( Iknnett and Fred Mac-Mtir- who meet and find ro--n im e in ll Hours by Air. oniirg to the Roxy tomorrow. Not manv members of Congress now it. hut the official reporters ho w dk on the floor shorthand notes use the old lahiontd dip pens, and carry their inKweUa around with them. The well is speuaSly designed to fit in the dosed left hand . . . The nmol question of the constitutionality ot the Social Security Act wnl he publnly disiusstd by the hoaids h iirnian, John G Winant, m a iadio addres May 12. Since cmung to Washington, Winant, formtr governor of New Hampshire, has chopped into compira-tiv- e obscurity. Nobody ever hears ot linn . . The University of Pittsburgh has invited a Bolivian to teach a summer school course in International Law. He is youthful Enrique de Lozada, secretary of the Bolivian Legation in Wash-ingt- o v thog i. PICTURES-PLAV.- ! |