OCR Text |
Show Midvale, Utah, Friday, -~··-- .... Au~u'-t 10, . 1931 The Ute Sentinel Published Every Friday at Jl,lidvale, Utah. By ELROY BOBERG - ---WOODRUFF PRINTING COMPANY, Publishers G. S. NORTHCUTT, Editor RAMONA LEAK, Associate Editor MIDVALE, tiTAH, FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1934 Leaves Out of Aunt Lu's Diary ERA IN BANKING DEPOSIT L"'SURANCE TAKES MrS, Rim .mgtOn RecaII8 I:-JEW Scenes Of Early Life AWAY DEPos_•ToRs HAZARD (Continued from page 1) (Editors No-This Is the third ol a. l!'erles of articles on the Uves of early pioneers of Jordan valley) amounts represented the total amounts deposited by each person or firm up to $5000.00 each. After the depositors had been paid the Federal Deposit Corporation assumed full charge of the defunct banks and will salvage everything possible for the stockholders and others interested at Personals Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Phelps and The keynote of success in home gardening lies in the practice of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fenn were dinplanting a large variety of vege- ner guests at the home of Mr. and tables and fruits and then in con- Mrs. Heber Hart of Brigham City suming as much of these as pos- on Monday. -<>sible at home The commercial Dr. Harold E. Nelson and wife ....-;-:--:-··~!' may make profits from a single crop but the very nature at·e spending a few days in Yellowof home gardening prohibits big stone National Park. -0,....., .... ··<Tin:.; on a single crop system. The following spent Saturday l,'-.1 h"'n ~- h~ '"'TY')~]l g-rower sells pra:duce be invahably loses twice- evening and Sunday at Ute Aylett first, from the waste in preparing cabin in Brighton: Mr. and Mrs. small amounts for market, next in Hollis Aylett, Mr. and Mrs. Ray the grocer's profit when he pur- Fenn, Mr. and ~Irs George Cox, Mr- and Mrs. Harold Nelson, and chases what he did not grow. Mr. and Mrs. Pett of Copperton. Purpose of Variety Growing many vegetables in the -oMrs. W. W. O'Brien of Sandy home garden means something for the table at nearly every month of had as her guests Tuesday Mrs. the year. It means cutting down George Cox, Mrs H. P. Miller and the grocery bill and adding pala- Mrs H. E. Phelps. table dishes to an otherwise tiresome menu in off seasons. But Mr. and Mrs. John Jensen of the enthusiastic home gardner will Portland, Oregon, are vis.iting with not be content with many vege- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leak, Mr. tables but will plant a number of and Mrs. R. R . Gilbert and Miss each vegetable. Such planting Hc.rrict Jensen- Mr. and Mrs. Jenwhile it has slight experimental sen are former residents of Midliabilities, may eventually lead to vale, having lived here some twenfinding the best strains for his own ty years ago. soil, water conditions, or individual -<>tastes. It will also greatly lengthMr. and Mrs. T. A. Talboe are en the season of many of his fav- visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Rasorite vegetables. By selecting ex- mussen and family. They are t'rom tremely early melon seed, for jn- Grass Valley, California. Miss stance, he tnay have some of the Genevieve Rasmussen bas returned first fruits to ripen in his section after spending a month at their with the main crop varieties to home. supply his table until frost and a Mr. and Mrs. Royce Gilbert regood supply in the cellar to last turned home Tuesday after spenduntil Christmas or later. ing a couple of days in Pocatello, Try Something New --o-TT vou've never tried to g-row Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. George Olson and fall he~ lettuf'e. t'aH spinach. or '"'orn sAlad. you'll find it interesting daughter, and Mr. nnd Mrs. Jack +o P1A.nt R. few rows Your risk Anderson of WP.Rt Jol'dan, ~pent r.fln be littlP. more than a . dime or the week-end at Brighton. .,,., for seed $J.nd some day next Mrs. Fred Rosse and daughters Ma.v vou mig-ht discover for yourself that all g-ood head lettuce d()es Ardis, Ellen and Mrs. Gladys Allen nnt come frnm California or the and son Bob, spent the past week in Montana visiting with Mrs. IsaImPerial Valley. belle Turner at Billings and with Tho Olllest Way of Planting friends in Butte and Anaconda. On A nnmber of nurRf'lrfes recomtheir return trip, they spent two mend fall planting- of trees and shrubs and although this may seem days in Yellowstone National park. -<>\'T'fUsual to many of us it is vertuMrs. Harold Allen and son of allv natures way of planting. Most "f tho wild qE'et1A are shed from Kansas City, Missouri, are spendthe pods in the fall of the vear to ing the summer at Midvale with be blown about or scattered by the Mrs. Allen's mother, Mrs. Rosse. wind finding lodging in some fav- They came to Salt Lake by way nred spot wher~ the winter's mois- of Los Angeles via air. The enturn wiH bed it down for an early tire trip required about 18 hours. growth the next sprine-. Most of th .. t'I"PPS Pnd !':!hrubs wltic.h propoe-ate by tip-roots or shoots form th<>se roots in the late suxnrncr or fall. Fall Pla nttn ~ Good A large attendance marked the Ma.ny of the failures in plantingyoung- trees results because the welcome home party given at Mid:. soil is not properlv pressed ~bout vi'LlE" First ward Tuesday evening the young roots of the tree. 'Wben in honor of Willard A. Jenkins. g-rowth starte, the plant's energy who recently returned from the is exhausted before the roots can L. D. S. Canadian Mission. The program, conducted by H. rstabli~h theJnselves and take up food Fall planting largely elimin- M. Nicbolsen, was as follows: two ates this cause of failure because vocal trio selections, Willa Stokes, trees planted in the fall are dor- Lenora Aylett, Alice Todd; songs mant and the earth has a chance and readings, AttWood children of readings, Roberta to finn itself about the roots be- West Jordan: fore growth begins the next spring. Lindsay and Roxine Conkle. E. L Most of the trees and shrubs may Cropper and Willard Jenkins were be planted In the fall after they the speakers. The program was followed by become dormant. There are a few exceptions and among these are games and refresb.ments. the cherry and peach. As she watches her grandchildren romp at play, visions from out of the past come before her eyes, and again she finds herself a tiny tot romping through brush and desert wastes in the vicinity of the least possible expense to all Too"'le when it only consisted of concerned. This new procedure is seven small pioneer homes; the a wide departure from the system day back in '71 when she was one heretofore employed in safeguardof the passengers aboard the stea- ing a bank's depositors and invesmer Garfield when it made its tors. According to Mr. Frank V. Lanmaiden voyage to Antelope Island, ham, special representative of the and she recalls the many hardships endured by the famllles trying to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporeke out a Uving on their dry farms ation. who visi~d Midvale ';l"uesin the Tooele district. Such are day and Mr. Tyler Vincent. cashier the reminiscents from out of the of the local branch of the ContinnR.st as seen by Mrs. Elizabeth ental Bank and Trust Company, Rllnlngton, mother of Mayor L. S. there are 60 insured banks in the state of Utah with insured bank Rimington of Midvale. Mrs. Rimington was born in a accounts totaling 209,386 for an small pioneer home at the "Old amount approximating $50,000.00. Mill Settlement" in 1857, the Insofar as the knowledge of these daughter of Robert and Eliza An- two gentlemen goes every bank geline GoUaher Skelton, who had operating in the state of Utah is emigration to Utah from Eng- insured through the agency of this federal insurance institution. land In 1849. Her early life was like that of •other children of early pioneers, STORES CLOSE WEDNESDAY :m.a.inly long days of labor in the Business houses of Riverton will fields, hours of housework in the close for a half hour holiday on <evening, and an occasional day's Wednesriay c.f each weel~ for the lOUting to go to the picnic grounds remaining ~Lanmer months. :and a dance at the Bowery in Garfield. Today she speeds along smooth :ribbons of concrete in an automobile and recalls when she use to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brady travel the same highways when have as their guest Miss Marjory they were covered with either lay- Madsen of Mt. Pleasant. ers of thick dust or the wagon -a-sank to the hub caps in mud. She· Mrs. Earl Evans was a guest bas made journeys over the dis- at an entertainment given at the , ;trict with yokes of oxen, horse home of Mrs. Erin Howard com' .drawn wagons, automobiles and Plimenting Mrs. Harold Payne of .hopes to some day travel in air- California. Mrs. Payne was before planes. her marriage Miss Lorene Berrett ' Her early education was recei- of Union. 'ved in a little one-room log school -0in Tooele, when a child's education ]\:frR. Ivv Hull entertaineQ at a was recorded by the number of birthdav party Monday in honor 0 Readers" they ha.d read and not of her daughter Marian. Fourteen by grades as by our modern guests were present. schools -a-In 1872 she married George A. Clifford Mccall had his tonsils ; · Rimington, and the young couple removed Wednesday. began life on a farm near Tooele, -o-and were among the first farmers 1\liss Wi11a Greer left Friday for to attempt dry farming In that Stockton, CaClifornia. district. Here she remained fpr -<>35 years, helping her husband craSunday School officers and teadle grain which had to be tied in chers enjoyed a bonfire party bundles by hand; cut the hay crop Thursday evening in the grove of . by hand, and it was her lot to have John Berrett. to spend many long weary hours -a-stacking bay during the haying Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. season, and then again pitching James Brady, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. the hay from the stack onto the Boggess and Mr. and Mrs. George wagons to be hauled to market la- Shaw were guests at the home of ter in the auumn months. She at- Mr. and Mrs. George Jenkins in tended the crops whenever pos- Emigration canyon. sible so as to permit her husband to leave the farm to help build her children amid such setting-, and the first L. D. S. meeting house feels that she has been well paid in Tooele, and again give him time for her early hardships through to help in the hauling of rock to the love and kindness shown her by tbem. build tbe temple in Salt Lak~. It was in this• small farm home Today she is St>endlng her dethat her ten children were born. clining vears at the home of her and received their first education voungest son in Midvale and joys in loyalty and J.Undness towards in having- her grandchildren around others, and above all else not to her, and looks forward to a time shirk from duty when there was when she can again have her childwork to be done. She is proud of ren, 43 grandchildren and 38 great the fact that she was able to raise g-randchildren in a family reunion. UNION NEWS 1- ==---\. Your Own Back Yard PAGE FOUR ••• • •• Large Crowd Attends · Welcome Home Party NOTICE In order to clear up any misapprehension that prevails among the citizens of Midvale or adjacent communities with reference to the proposed subsistence homP.stead project . . . relative to any fees, commissions or any other form of remuneration . . . paid or to be paid . . . for the preltroina.ry work that has been or is to be done . . . be it hereby known . . . that every worker who has participated in any capacity in the activities incident to the sponsoring or development of the said Subsistence Homestead Project . . . has done so at his or her personal expense . . . and in no instance has any remuneration of any nature been paid or will be paid in the future. Those wbo have worked upon the proiect have given of their time and money solely and purely for the purpose of promoting the best interest of Midvale and its citizens. L. S. RIMINGTON, Mayor. 300 ATTEND REUNION (Continued '"'from page One) marks James A. Bateman, Harriet Bateman. Mrs. William Bateman, and D. R. Bateman; reading, Julia Tillbury; vocal trio, Marinda Dimond and Desna and Ethel Beckstead, accomoanied by Iona Silcox; vocal trio. Afton, Lavon and Francis Margetts; comic solo. Geo. Margetts. All officers for the present year were re-elected for 1934-35. DRAPER NEWS Senator William H. King spoke on the principles of Mormonism at a M. I. A. meeting at the Dra-, • per ward ch;,c:..pel Sunday night. Musical numbers of the program included: vocal solo by Mrs. Frank Tuft, accompanied by Mrs. Wilma Day, and a violin solo by Howard Ballard accompanied by Miss Anne Fitzgerald. A largecrowd attended the meeting. Members of the Draper 4-H club under leadership of Leah Crossgrove, are planning a. week's vacation at Brighton. The club•s membership includes: Dean Fitzgerald. pl'esident; Ethel Carlquist, vicepresident; Beverly Smith, secretary; Betty Henderson, reporter; • r Mary Mickelsen, cheer leader; Lucile Fitzgerald, organist; LaBerta Heaton, Helen Smitb, Alta Terry, Those who have completed their sUlDJiler work are LaBerta Heaton and Betty Henderson. Miss Zoie GaTfield, Miss Anne Fitzzgerald, Harold Fitzgerald and Lowell Boberg returned to Draper recently from an extended trip to the northwest and Pacific coast. The quartet of young people traveled by auto and report having had an interesting trip. Will Take Excursion Wednesday, August 22, the High Priests quorum of the West Jordan stake will take an excursion to Utah Lake. They will visit tbe pumps at Pelican Point. From there they will go to Saratoga. where they will enjoy a program, swimming and lunch. Transportation will be furnished to those who have no means of their own. Every High Priest and his wife Is Invited to attend. CRESCENT NEWS Mr. and Mrs. George Beckstead and family left Satu1·day for the coast where they will visit in Oregon and California. -0- dinner was given Thursday evemng at the home of A. C. Lunnen honorin~ Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Lunoen and daughter of Oxnard, Calif. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Lunnen and daughter and Mrs. R. B. Edmondson of Oxnard, California, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Beckstead and family, A. C. Lunnen, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Lunnen, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Peterson, and Mrs. Rose Oakes of Crescent and La Rae Pons of Salt Lake. A -o- SAVE BEFORE PRICES GO UP! Mrs. "Pv,tarcel1a Jaynes entertained at her home honoring the birthday anniversary of her son Fred. Ten guests were present. STORAGE LUMP -oRal ph Martin suffered a broken arm Sunday wh.en he feU from a horse. $6.75 per ton COMMISSION AUTHORIZES CLOSING RIVERTON STATION Permission was granted Saturday by the Public Utilities Commission of Utah to the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad to close its Riverton station. The conipany. however. must make arrangements to take care of all property which Is unloaded at the station. Delivered West Jordan Milling Co. • PHONE MID. 108 |