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Show • THE MIDVAI.E JOURNAL ·~ PIIIL._.irltll told bJ MI. ••rw HotWitllCweaOUI Gift of Oratory A Modernized Bathroom for the Younger Generation BpeeclJ8 eaa now be broadcast to .UUooa of DII!Ople but ecleDee aa yet bas beeo unnble to do a thing to lm· prove the speeebea. Eugeolstt; given ~of aSh· time, think tbeJ can-by Improving ~~~... ttl tilt. oae: the apedea. Bow rare Ia the pnlus '........ Barat.oa ,... tor • tlae • of true oratory; rarer far th8D that or • &f.,_te; ucl oo oae oeeu1ea tllere poet, aculptor or painter, F. H. Collier ~ before the beadt • certain eommeota. In the St. Louis Globe-Dem~-- WIJo. It lleelll.. laac11Uied peeu. ocrat. America baa never bad but one ..., fbaJ ............ b .....cl of ... Daotel Webater. It baa produeed a .tlPC It tlae clerk llad lad a qped aoore to enchant us In muatc with 91 IU.de. wlalcb wu dl.'nlatecl oo their volcee, others to read the lines of drama with telllnc effect, but the a. lleneh. . . . Barrl8oa ~: -.n.e 8DkDewD to me 11u ahraJ'S orator wbo aweepa his audleDce along Iliad aa l~ltlble lure, a11d all my with himself ID enthusiasm It one In Ute t laue bad a C!llllt81tf to lmow ten mllllou. Hoet of the people who say somewllllt realJJ ltd taapap COIUilated of. e atablell at laome 1 ~tl IH!ard aD thine atlrrlng, do It with the peu. lloaal ~ from the Ups of a Thought flows easily trom the ftngera *'11'~--.-.: that wu aot Vf!rJ IDtorm- b•t appareotlJ Dot from the tongue. Maoy are expert aud coDTlneloc ID their apeech mall:lnc-clealln l mainly '1l.ow ... the ehaaee of my ute. t.l'lae .,...... reached the olll pntlemao lD facta aod eopnt arrumentt; but Bat ... I llad au bnt lltretched out that It DOt orato17 ID lt. blcbeet .- . , . MDd. Be but ov• me ID a tenle; the orato17 of Mark ADtoDy, o1 Demoethenet, of Burke, of Ben17 fatbel'lr W&7 Ud INlld: 11 Ward Beecher, of Robert Iocenoll, of 'I alii ftN JOU wW DOt waDt to Pb1Ulpt1 Brooks. ID aome lostaoeea, eloquellee ba .,. "' wu plDJq to read lt. b•t 111%tJ ,..,. of 1a IUMerrieDce bad done come p-aodlloqaeDee ; whereas dee08lr work. I ~ammooecl lll1 1Ut tlve eloc:utloo, movlnc the emotlODB .lush. cut dowD •7 .,... aod llllld: ud ,.maiDIDI permanently u a floe .. '011. DO I No. Tluuak J011 110 at~ of rhetorical value Ia always reetralnecl ; IUcb u Lincoln'• addresa •UC!IL' "Biate with ehlnlf7, be bowetl UCI at Oett;rsburc; ud Weblter'a debate poeketecl the lle1'lpt... atJ with Bape. !'IIQ& famoat1 leetarer lD at Nft'Dilam eolllllarlanct.la Jaw ••to- • Thursday June WOMEN WORK HARDER THAN MEN. IS CLAIM .... ... w..· By Sarah Stevena r•••• Early ...... Dramas Acted ODiy .a Sunday TtiMib lfcklaton lD 1780 frOned ot tbelr reprded th- with • _ . toteiiallt .,.._ Ia the SIDeeDth .eeatal7 8 1Q wu aJIDOR tbe pJa7· &oer'a 0817 eiaDee of ptenalameot. It wu ._ aDtll 1JI'I9 tbat pla,a were aeted OD wreeir dQa. and 1IDtll a C!OD· llderUie ~ elate 811Dda7 wu atlll ~ u the ocealloa tor th• prottldfoa of llft' pleeM. Queen lllllsa.._. ,ati9DIM4 8uDda7 PlaA u did ~..... I. aa4 ereD the hJper «erp: took DO ueeptloo to the practice:. .._... we Nad of the thea lbbep of Loocloa t)roduelnr • A Mtd8Umlliel' Nllbt'• Dream" at lllt town Ja0ue OD & luac1a7 ereDJ~~tr U late aF lest. The praetlc:e, Jaowever, wu not 1Vlthoat IIIUJ' opponenta, and there eaa IHt oo doabt that SuDday pertormuc:es bad DOt a Uttle to do with thf' Purltae dlaUb of planolq ot _..., 4eaertpttoa. Mndl•er (Jiloc.> OD ._..., •aemeota, 801De ~ * GuudlaD. C.••••• Wa,.. Da:ra W. of the pioneer Ia the treks aero. the plalu eourap wu requlNd to face the 2,000 mllea ttretdllog N*olr1J ID troat of them. A. typical tndll eoDSiated of 8ll4t wap, "two of fov-yeu-old steen aod one 7011• of eow." Ia float of them were aaoant&IDa, thlnt, buqer, prifttloD aod the pettllellee that overtoefr adp'attq hordeL Sooa they ..,.,., ID a eolamn of wqona &aiel to lae 1100 _.._ loq-sU momar toward tM 1n11t, their oceoputa without proper food; depeadeat GPOD unhealth· faJ tl:l'eaiU tor wa•. eaveloped In u batol.able clast. Ia- calm weather abe c1alt 1MUld ..._ to thick at times daat tU lead teua of oxeo eould not .. froiD the ...,.,.._ Then. qalD Cle lteadJ low of wiDe! would burl the dut aod IUI4 IDte IDe ball. with ~ eneqh to ttlq the face aod rl'*' ...... • s.... ...._._A..Jie a • ~ ~~. aoout tnw, Jon ll'ewbold delllonatrated a cast-Iron plow. It ..,. lllmllar to calt-lroD plowa wblelt ba4 been demoDatrated llbortl7 ~ Ia Bqlud. Recorda fD. cllcate that ~ ftmecl detrlmeo tal e«ects fnm 10 mueb lroD ID C!On· taet with tile 1100. aad evldeatly this ant A.medeu eut-lroo plow was .__. rep&Jre4 .rt-er Itt moldboard beea. . brok• 'l'lae obltfllate quaUty o1 the .U Ia the 111-'=tppl vaU8J led to tile of aee1 . . . .d et lroD atrtpe • CU moldtioiards et plOWL .John Bllnt 188'1, IDd WUUam ParllD, 1842. . . . P.OIIIIIW ID the .... plow but .._ ot the .lllddle West. llueb credit .Tamet OUyer, wbo, be . , . . _ ....- uperlaeott fa 18G3, mat., ~ the proeea for c:)lflllnr . ....,. ptow l)OIDt&. .. .._._to .,... m .... wiat ...... tok dowotowo to Ulli &D4 tile boJ told ........ lD Ida ttoek· , __ ra. .... wbltkered ..._.._.lad .A.IW. fa ,aln4. laD aod ID- ..... ...,,. ............. .., "W)a ....... , . .... for Cbrllt· ~ ............ . lfltl•t ud : The teleDce of cooke17 did not al· ways flourish ID France. It languished. lD a ve17 loferior state uoder the early mooardls. "Grerol'J of Toura bu preae"ed the acoount of a repast of Freadl .warrlore, at the uorelleved rudeDea of which we are astounded," writ• A.DthODJ Olyne ID the Boston Transcript. Charlemagne Uved poor· Jy and ate but little. PhiUppe le Bel wu bard)y half aD hour at the table, and J'ranela 1 tllougbt more of amorout dalliance tbaD of ee.tlq and ~or. Nerertbele&l, It wu under thlt lalt klq that the ICieDce of eookery took Itt rita In FraDee. Few ban beard the oame of Oootbler d' ADdernacb. What BaeoD was to pblloaopby. Dante or Petrarcb to poetry, Copernicus or Gallleo to astronomy, Gonthler was In France to gastronomy. Before blm, their culinary eode was a eolleetlon of serape picked up here and there, the names of dlabet were aa barbaroua aod uocontb as the dlabes themselves. OoDthl'r II the father of cookery. u Deecartee of French philosophy. It II laid that be IDnnted, ID lesa tbaD teD yee.re, Dine ragouts, thirty-one sauces and twenty-one 110upa. Te~~~ptiq Doc'• Appetite Nursing a stet dog, espeelaUy when It Is ID the eouvalescent stage, 11 aot u 8ll8J task, as auy dol owner who baa beeo tbrougb It !mows. ODe ow• er wu llaYlq great dlflculty In cet· tlq hit dor to ee.t. Be mentioned the matter to aoot"er dor oWDer, an old· timer who bu been throqb much of lt. Said be: "I aot thlt from an old ladJ wbea I was a ll:ld aDd rm no spt:O, dllcll:ea. You mlcht tblnll: It's tur old-tasblooed ootlon, but rve tried It aDd never knew It to falL Try the dor on a UttJe emoked berrloc. Just eooup to ret blm ttarted. It'• crest u u appetizer." The owner follow-ed the ~aaeatlon, and lUre eDODih the dor ate the tmoll:ed h8l'l'lor, with relish, and then tiii'Ded to a few other thiDP. After a few daJS, with an oceallooal taste of tmoked ben1Dg, the dol'• appetite came baek. Old-fashioned or not, the t:reatmeot wu taeceutul.-Bro drton JDoterprlte. WEST JORDAN Kn. Margaret Jlfner and Krs. Marie Denoe entertained tor the J. N. club aad their partnen at the DeDos home, Wedneeday DJpt. "GOO'' was played, high score IOfDC to Kra. Orton Sbulaen and <>acar Korrlll. Luncheon waa aerved to axteeD memberll and gueats• The Relief society members held a Ott .Authority Batlwoom Decoratiott TT means so much to 70UDPten .1. to have their ~ IMft bathroom. And It means just u much to a mother. For here one can keep In orderly fashfoD the many toilet articles. towels, medlciDea and liDeu that go with ralttng a family. TheD, from the standpoint of h:r· J'lene. the prevention of colds aDd other Ills, a separate bathroom for children It the llrst step to health ,and cleanliness. So It you have children clve them their own bathroom as soon as :roo cao. But don't walt until you buDd TOUr C&lltle to do so. Now-a-da,.., a large closet can be traDsformed Into a modern, dltldren'a bathroom easily and quite Inexpensively. Or, It you already haTe two baths, one can be made juvenile almost overnight. And I offer as proof the delightful bathroom for ebllclren shown above. What a cheerless bathroom It was. Plaster w a 11 a - o 1 d u4 cracked. But worst of all. a worn· out toilet seat that even soap aDd water couldn't keep clean. But lt Mr. and Mrs. A. L. McAIUater and daughter, Luella, were special gue8ta of Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Adapl& at Uolon, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Turner of K1D'· ray are apendiog this week with Krs. Turner's pareDts, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hart. Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Parker are home after spending a week touriog through the different canyoos in southem Utah. Ben McAIUster Is visitlog relatives ID Kanab. Ed Wheeler of California Ia visiting bls father, Joe Wheeler, and other relatives here. C. E. Hogan ja visiting his daughter, Mrs. EldeD Barntt, at Roosevelt. Mr. Hogan Is very slowly lmproviog from an operation at the L. D. S. hospital several weeks ago. Horald Bateman bad the misfortune to have hia comet stolen from the B. Y. U. at Provo, last week. Mr. and Mrs. _W IUiam Ashby have moved to the home formerly owned by Frank CUndick on Redwood road. Kr. and Mrs. J. S. Christeosen of Rock Springs were gue8ta MoDday at the home of ll(r. and Mrs. Ernest Slleox. Counselor David M. Haun had charge of the monthly fast meeting Sunday afternoon. After the preUmIDary exerclsea, there were ten childreD coDflrmed. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin J'enaen, Kr. and Mrs. Willard Richardson, Kr. and ¥rs. Ivan Janes bad babies blessed. RuJen Hogan and PauJ Schmidt bad charge of the sacrament. Short talks were given by David T. Dahl, Thomas FiDJayson, Lorenzo Parker, John Booth, Lydia Cook, Charles Beckstead, Mrs. Zureta CUndick, Mra. LueUa McAIUster. The choir sang a number of hymns. Benediction was by Claude Abbott. Mlu DeLila Gardoer came home Mooday, after speDdiDg a week ID Logan. • Mr. and Mrs. Lamont CUndlck of Park City are visiting bla parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles CUndick. Kr. and Mrs. Charles Dimond, Min didn't take looc to correct this worat evil. lo weDt a lovely new toilet seat ID soft, sky blue. What an Improvement thlt one change made! Incidentally, the modern toilet seats are moat Inexpensive and they can be bad in almost any color you wish, as well as glisten· lng, sanita17 white. All plumbing stores carry them. And they are easily installed In ten minutes. For the walla I used an amusiDg blue and pink paper especially made for children's bathrooms. Curtains of white organdie bound with a double scallop of old blue and red brought charm to the windows. In each cornet' nltches were cut ID the walla for roomy linen shelves and deep drawers. The woodwork I painted pure white with a trim of blue. A shower curtain In sky blue, downy towelt ID turquoise blue, and a generous sized clothes hamper eovered with left over wallpaper completes the story. And let me remind you once more that of all the Improvements you might make none will beautify or modernize a bathroom so quickly or lnexpeulvely u a clean, Dew toilet seat. attended a shower at the home of Miss Nina Halliday In Lehl, Monday night, in boDor of Miss Luelle Walker, a June bride. Mlss Halliday and Miss Walker are former school teachers of this ward. Mrs. J. W. Warner of Sandy spent four days during the week with Mrs. Amlie lnbbard. Mrs. Warner and family were formerly of this ward. Clyde Soffe and Miss Gwen Silcox were special guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Brown at Sandy, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Furse have bought 10 acres of land on Redwood road, formerly owned by IDbbard's, where they expect to have a home ID the Dear future. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Silcox enterLeila Abbott and Miss Vlrgiola Haun tained at a family dinner party Sunday. Special guests Included Mr. and M1'8. L. W. Tripp and family of Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Silcox, Mr. and Mrs. Lavell Silcox. ¥rs. James A. Bateman Ia spending the week at Taylorsville with her mother, Mrs. Amelia PixtoD, who has been seriously lU with a heart attack. Mrs. Frank Brady and soD, Bobble, Mr. and Mrs. Gladwin Woodhead, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Berrett, Miss Hattie Berrett of Salt Lake were special guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Burgon, Sunday. lllrs. Wells Barney and two chlldreD and Mrs. Ward Hancock left for their home ID Idaho, Tuesday, after spendlog two weeks with their sister, Mrs. Loula Nelson. On Thursday Mrs. Charles PetersoD was boateu at a dinner party given In their honor. Suuday they formed a party and visited relatives In Spaolsb Fork. The West Jordan stake Boy Scout committee and all Scout workers of the ctifferent wards of the stake, with thelf partoera, took a trip to the Scoqt Wigwam iD Mill Creek canyon on Wednesday, June 3. A baseball glUM, program, refreshments and dancing were eojoyed by all. It will be good news •to everyone that Mickey McMilleD, with his Melodians.- who are Dow called "The Vanity Stampers," will furnish the Asserting that American women work longer and harder than American men, Charles W. Appleton, vice president of the General Electric company, appealed to those attending the recent National Home Service Cooference to help raise the efficiency of homes to that of factories and offices. He said that "the prosperity of business and industry, no less than the welfare of the nation," depends on the home. "Think what the home will be," he said, "when It is on a par for comfort and conveolence with the factories and stores as they are today, and contemplate the effect on the life of the woman In the home with more time for thought, more to get acquainted with and to enjoy her children, more to give vent to her natural creative, cultural and artistic Impulses, and some time for reflection and rest." Now, American housewives work more than 1,250,000,000 hours a week -more hours than men work In their employment-M r. Appleton stated. While mechanical and electrical devices have improved greatly working conditioos outside of homes, women doing housework "continue to work the same number of hours in about the same way as they did hundreds of years ago." He pointed out the economic importance of the home, saying that it "is sort of rotary converter, recelvlog the products of the factories made in the main by machinery supervised by men, changing it to digestible and consumable form and then turning It back again through men and children into the economic and social streams in the form of calories and physical and spiritual contentment and serenity, to repeat the process." 0 & E ELECTRIC SERVICE Complete Electric Service Radios and Auto Service Midvale 272 25 E. Center St. SPEAKING OF LIFE INSURANCl!: CHEVROLET SETS PLANS FOR JUNE A Dational demoostration campaign, with a goal of one miUioD demoostratioos duriog the month, hos been mapped out for June by the Chevrolet Motor Company. The campaigo Is In line with Chevrolet's previously expressed oplolon that the potential buying capacity of the country is uolmpaired and requires ooly Intensive sales effort to develop a satisfactory volume, according to H. J. Klingler, vice-president and general sales manager. The past four months for which registration figures are complete show that Chevrolet sixes have led the domestic passenger car market. . During the month of June, every one of the 35,000 Chevrolet dealers, sales maDagers and salesmen wiD be required to fill an assigned quota of demonstratfoos , appraisals and sales. The campaign Is unique In that the objective Ia directly aimed at Increased demonstrations , and that special recognition will be given salesmen who flU their demonstration quot.a. During the month the campaigo will be stroDgly supported by dealer window displays, campaign buttons, wind-shield stickers, special advertising literature and helpful guidance from the factory. "Time an(! experience have proven that sales are made directly In proportion to the number of convlnclog demonstrations and this fact was never more true than in the case of the 1931 Chevrolet car. The smooth six cyliDder power of this car, together with its beauty of line and wide range of selections makes it unquestionably the great American value of the year," Mr. Klingler said Endleu Division When 5 Is divhl ol hy 0, the answer is Infinity, sin<'e " will gu Into 5 an infinite number of times. Orchid Beauty Salon Som Co. Permanent Wave............$5.00 Duart Permaneot Wave ................fi.GO Pee Wee Perma.Dent Wave......... .$1.00 (For ChlldreD) Also--ComblnaU oD Waves, Finger Waves, Water Waves, ShampooiDc and MarceiUDg. Veda HaosoD, Operator.. PboDe 11"1-J Come in and see us in our new location. U.S. CAFE Dinners, Lunches Short Orders Are served in a manner you will appreciate and enjoy. Samas & Thomas, Props. - Canoot be stolen; cannot burn; can never be anything but an asset; is guaranteed to be worth more tomorrow than it Is today; can be purchased upon the easiest, most perfect All Types of Permanent Wavlnc, paymeDt plan ever devised. Prices from $5.50 to $6.50. Finger Waves, 50 CeDtll . For details, see We are now located iD our Dew quarGEORGE W. COX ters in the Olson Bldg. All modem Bepresentlng MetropoUtan Life equipment. Insurance Co. Tel. 295 25 N. MaiD "1"1 .JeffersoD St. MAURIE PIERSON, Operator TeL Mid. 222W. MAURIE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE • OSIDg quiltlog party In the ward chapel .A. ~d Qeyelallcl boJ b• ....,..,. tW . .ta Ola• bu a YerJ .-: ~- before £brlamu 1 tie ~ Poor Food Set Before £,-rly French Mcmarcht music for our Friday olght dances. Krs. Wells Barney and two chlldren and Mrs. Ward Hancock lett for their home Tuesday, after speDding two weeks with their sister Mrs Louis Nelsou. Mrs. Charles P~terso~ was hostess at a diDner party given In their honor. Sunday they formed a party and visited relatives In SpanIsh Fork. Mrs. WUace Bateman entertained at dinoer Sunday. Special guests included her father, N. J. Sweoson, and Mr. and Mrs. George A. Bateman and family, Miss Harriett Bateman of Ogden, and Miss Fern BIDs of Riverton. Covers were laid for eighteen guests. "'f au a.. da1IIDIW 1 1 - . , tbat ,.a•d teraet wllat 1 told y..,• Tuesday afterDooD. Kl8s Ida Cooley IIDterta.IDed 22 friends at her home Wed"wday olght. Gam• aild luncheon were enjoyed. The engagement of Kl8s Marle Wldderberg of Salt Lake to Lionel Dimond, aon of Kr. and Kn. wuuam S. DimoDCI, baa been &DDOunced, the QULrrlaa'e to take pla.oe Wedne"'ay, .June 17. Many aoct.1 eventt are be1J1C planned In their bouor. Kr. and Krs. Altl'ecJ Batem•n of Arimo, Idaho, llave purcllued a poultry farm at RivertoD, where they are mo~to make their home. Kr. and Kn. _temu were f0!'1D81'1y of this ward. Kr. and Kn. EUu Denoe, Kn. Onoll ShnJMD and cblldren, Grace &114 LarldD, motored to BIDghem and •ttended a blrtMq party In bonor of 'lD& 4mde Trep81da at her home, He••e '• soDie InSide l.nforD iatl.on ..............,...,.,.. Tueeday Dlpt. lila ¥ai7 Dab1 entertained at a +mher IML1'tY 'l"hunday Jdght at the )omll ~ ucl Mn. ef::r= =r.. 1\UIC=-t.. :::::Ct! HOW C8D we aft'on:l to booM: low-pricec1 1.tiret? Bay I We CIUT7 Eell7 Lotta Mila-the SAFEST low-pricecl t1ra oo tha market. Built -.ul cuanmteecl by the builden of the World't fiDest tires. l&de o.ot just to tell at a price, but to cive BERVICB. If coocl tires at a IDODCY· •vine price aro what 7ou wat, we've lira. LavlDla Naylor tPeDt JJ'rlday :':!~1~=-~~U:OH:= 0. .,eat eeveral a,. vllltlng here en route to sutte. MOat., w~~ere they wm ~ twO W..U ftllttn~ reli.Uvea ........ 8 E. Elee trle Serv lee 25 East Center Street ae NOW GOING ON Many Bargains in Men's Furnishings lot 'eaal 4.4()..21 --------·--·····----·--------$4.95 4.75-19 ..................................$6.65 ~,J.~~~...~ ~ 4.!)()-~ -----·-·-··----·-····-·-···-$!).6C) 4.7lS-2C) ····--·-·····-··-···------·····-$6.75 Cooley. 4.5C)-21 ·------··---------·---·--·------$5.61) 5.C)C).2C) ------------------·--·-·----·-----$7.lC) Phone272 1931 Famous Clothing Co. "We dress the best dressed men in town" Midvale, Utah |