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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL WEST JORDAN Mr. and Mrs. Parley Gillen and baby Joy, of Idaho Falls; Mr. and Mrs. F. Brower and two children, of Grantsville, were special guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Trane, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cramer of Salt Lake were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elias Denos Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Miner and children returned home Sunday after spending ten days at Springvme. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Bateman entertained at a dinner party at their home Tuesday evening of last week in honor of Mrs. May Swenson and Miss Osa Olson of Chinook, Mont. Covers were laid for the guests of honor and Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Sharp and son • Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Swenson of East Midvale, N. P. Swenson, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Bateman and family. Mr. and Mrs. 0. E. Shulsen entertained at a party at their home Thursday night. "500" was played. Prizes were awarded to Mr. and Mrs. Otis Yates for high score, Mrs. Ivy Lundquist and Oscar Morris for con~ solation. Luncheon was served to Mr. and Mrs. J. H . Jameson of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Axel Lundquist, Mr. and Mrs. John Yates, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Yates, Mrs. Frank Eberhardt and daughter, Margaret. Mr. and Mrs. Jonah Birch of Coal~ ville are visiting their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Abbott. Mrs. Birch is very ill at the present time. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Yates and children, Leola and Moray, of Salt Lake were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cundick, Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hogan, Sr., entertained at dinner Tuesday in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. George W. Evans of Raymond, Alberta, Canada. Sunday of last week Mr. and Mrs. Heber Gardner had as their guests Mrs. Ann Fox of Idaho, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Fox of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Clive Gardner and families. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Hobbs and Mr. ~d.JI.:Irs. Elias Denos attended a New Yeai~s party in Salt Lake Thursday night, given by Mr. and Mrs. James Payne. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Lotts entertained at a watch party on New Year's eve .'~' Games were played and lunche<t,n was served to Mr. and Mrs. Scott L8'nell, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Emery, Mr. and Mrs. Mick Gilbert of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. James. Householder and Mr. and Mrs. Dorius Adams of Bingham. Larry Whitman of Mt. Pleasant was the week-end guest of Horald Bateman. The marriage of Miss Emily Allgood of Crescent to Gordon Drake, son of Junius Drake, has been announced. A number of friends enjoyed a watch party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Henderson. Thursday night. Progressive "rook'' was played, prizes being awarded to Mr. and ¥fs. Wallace Bateman and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jensen. Luncheon was served. During the holidays a quilting was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Heber L. Gardner. The guests were Mrs. Cyril Fowles, Mrs. Willard Richardson, and Mrs. Albert Dimond. Harvey Dahl and Horald Bateman left Sunday for Provo to attend the winter term at the B. Y. U. A family reunion was held at the home of Mrs. Saphrona Bateman at Sandy, Friday. Dinner was served to sixty, after which a program was given. Those attending from here were Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Bateman and family, Robert Dimond, Lois Holt, Mrs. Zelia Holt and children. Mrs. Mary Shields and daughter, Utahna, spent part of last week in Salt Lake, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Shields. Sunday afternoon P. T. Bateman attended the funeral services for Amasa AlLred Clifford, 11-year-old son of Gordon Clifford, held in the Sixteenth ward chapel in Salt Lake. Mr. Clifford was formerly of this ~ ward. Mrs. P. T. Bateman spent the week- end in Salt Lake, guest of her sister, Mrs. Mary W. Bennion. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dimond and family, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Dimond and son, Alma, attended a party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Hardcastle in Sandy, Thursday night. Mrs. Ruby Hobbs was hostess to members of the .J. N. club Wednes~ day evening at the home of Mrs. Marie Denes. Cards were played, after which luncheon was served. Earl Sabey received quite serious injuries in q.n automobile accident which happened one day last week on the state road near Sandy. Earl's head was badly lacerated by glass from a broken door. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Burgon entertained at dinner on New Year's day for Mr. and Mrs. Al Barets and Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Woodhead and families of Salt Lake. George E. Burgon and family of Crescent were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bm·gon. • Compo.aition of Pewter Pewter is composed ot tin and lead. with an alloy of brass or copper, wWcb gives, parttcnlorly to old pew· "'ter, a mellow glow. The usual mixturE~ is 6 to 4 parts to 1 of lead, and an old formula was 30 parts of brass to 1,Qe0 parts of tfn. A hardening process has been discoYered-n trade secret.whfcb is apparently able to overcome the softness ot pewter, which was one of th-e gre:;.t causes of its decline tn the making ot utenslls. --- - - Friday, January 8, 1932 -- Pioneer Railroad Trip Impressed New Yorkers + For four dnys, after rending the announcement Utat the De'VIlt Cllnton would undertal<e a passenger run the full fifteen-mile length at the rand, the b11rghers or the Hudson vnl1ey bickereti. Some said the notion was absurd i some said they would keep Do You Know? + an open mind. Then September 24, 1831, arrb•ed. Conductor John '.r. Clark, first passenger railroad conductor in the North, tootled a tin horn as signal to the en· glueer to start, ancl the DeWitt Clin· ton, with a three-car train rocking bemind lt, was ott on the ftrst trip over the entire route from Albany to Schenectady. It was the beginning of railroading ln New York state and the pioneer was the Mohawk & Hudson railroad, original unit of the New York Central lines. The engine had no headlight, no bell, no whistle, no spark arrester In the stack, no cab. But lt got close up to twenty miles an bo~ with three coaches and did better than that on the slight downgrade. Today's electric locomotives do sixty miles an hour with a thousandton train, Part of Famous Trail Preserved in Chicago A 10-foot section of the old Cruces trall over which was carried the treasure wrested from the natives of Central and South America during the Spanish colonial times, and the gold from California in the days ot the ..Forty-nlners," bas been transferred to Chicago, where it is preserved in the Museum of Science and Industry. The trail, which ran from the vlllage ot Las Cruces on the Obarges river was partially destroyed by the construction of a road to the side of the Madden dn.ru, buut to increase the water supply ot the Panama canal. The engineers building the heavy. duty concrete road to the Madden dam site removed the ancient paving stones where their modern highway crossed the old trail. Di.apute Over •'Asparaaua" 'The term asparagus Is one of doubtful origin," writes Frank Vlze- a telly, dictionary editor. "It has been traced to the Latin from the Greek aspnragos. In Medieval Lati.D It occurred as sparagus, and was found 1n English in the torm sparago as early as the year 1000. One scholar truces it to aspharagous., the windpipe. Oot· grave explains the French asperge as 'the herb sparage or sparagus,' whlcb Skeat pronounced mere corruptions crt the Latin word. The French asperges ia a holy water sprinkler, a term derived from the Ln.tln aspergere, to sprinkl~ yet tbe asparagus of modern times scarcely seems su1ted for the purpose ot sprinkling, much less so when tied up 1n bunches." Stateamea in Council The British house ot commons, when ln session, sits from 2 :45 to 11 on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and from 12 to 5 on Friday, It begins with uncontenttous private bills and other :formal bustness. Questions to ministers ( whlch are not put on Fridays) occupy, or may occupy, the time Wl 8 :45. As soon as questions have been disposed of the public business of the day begins. Opposed business is not taken after 11, unless it belongs to a special "exempted" class or unless the 11 o'clock rule is suspended. Old New Jersey Grant Sold An old document in connection wlth America's early days was sold at auction in London recently. It ls a crown grant by George ill !n Msy, 1770, for service& rendered ln connection with the conquest of America of 100,000 acres of land ln New Jersey. The docomen~ which consists ot tour sheets of script in vellum to which the seal of New York is attached, Is In un excellent state o:f preservation. It was found in a pile ot rubbish by a Hounstow (England) man more than 40 years ago and until recently it lay neglected amongst his household lumber. Aristotle's Wisdom A reader is kind enough to remind me, writes "Peter Simple" in the Lon- don Morning Post, of how Aristotle once "said a mouthful," which ts strangely applicable to the present day: "Vain men," said Aristotle, 11 are tools as well as Ignorant ot themselves, and make this plain to all the world; for, not doubting their worth, they undertake honorable offices, and presently stand convicted or inca· paclty." Valuable Accidental Find Rochelle aalt was discovered sectdentally In 1672 by Peter Selgnette, an apothecary of the French city at Ro· chelle, wrote Charles B. LaWall 1n "Four Thousand Years of Pharmacy." It also was sometimes known as "Seignette's Salt,"' in honor of tbe discoverer. He ascertained that the new compound had laxative propertle1 and advertised lt as a secret nostrutQ called "sal polycbrestrum," or ''the sal\ o:f many vlrtues."-Detro lt News. Bi• Busineu Man Napoleon," says a biographer, ''was personally acquainted with every ofll· cer, high and low, 1n his armies." The type who would run a bank and know 17 vice presidents by th~r 11rst DaJil8, -Detroit Nows. 11 ·- HAT these stra11ge looking boats are the type that ply the Great ' Lakes In the grain trade? They are known as "whale back&" because of their- length and the way In which they lie low In the water-. Practically all the grain carried from the head of the lakes to the blg eastern elevators is transported In this type of vessel. T METHODIST CHURCH NOTES The ch,oir Will furnish music for the church worship service on Sunday evening at 7:30. The pastor will use as his sermon theme, "A Set Purpose." One reel of moving pictures entitled, "Sunday in the City of An· gels,' ' will be shown as a part of the service. The chw·ch school meets at 10 o'clock with classes for every age group. The choh· will practice following the dismissal of the schooL Vincent Miller will be the leader at the Epworth League meeting on Thursday evening at 7:30. A basketball game is scheduled with Centenary church for 8:30. The team will go to Westminster gym to play the First Methodist church team on Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. They won two practice games last Tuesday evening. The Boy Scout troop meets on Friday evening from 7 to 9 with something doing every minute of the time. Some badges are to be awarded and the new members formally received into the troop. Drawings Made For Hoop Men Sportsmen Lay Plans for Year (Continued rrom Page One) creased activity in the propagation of game birds and anim.als, Mr. Cook announces. The department hopes to put 15,000 pheasants into the field during 1932. This is practically twice the number of any previous annual plant. To this plant will be added the natural increase from the birds now in the fields. A mother pheasant often rears 20 chicks to a point where they are big enough to take care of themselves and the closed season on hens in 1931 assures a good increase in 1932. The department has already constructed a new hen house and a large brooder house at the state game farm at Springville. More than 1000 hens are wintering there to mother next year's pheasants. In the past only 6UO hens have been kept. Utah is getting a reputation for being a deer state and should have better hunting than ever in 1932. Cook expects the deer hunters to do even better than they did this year when they killed 7000 animals. A modern elk bunt will also be on the 1932 books, the commissioner thinks. Cook favors hunting of these animals to keep the increase down. He declares that he never wants to see the Utah elk increase to a point where the slaughter of two years ago can be repeated. With the prospects of a fellowship from the Arms and Ammunition Institute, Cook has high hopes for the return of upland bird shooting. This f~llowship will make it possible for Utah to make a thorough study of lhe causes of the decline of the grouse in the state and to seek remedies. In addition to the hunting there will be a heavy fish planting program which will assure the anglers plenty of sport. First round pairings for the opening games in the interchurch basketball league were announced by Coach Bryan Patterson of Westminster for next Tuesday night as follows: 7 p. m.- Midvale Methodist vs. First Methodist; 8 p. m.- First Presbyter~ ian vs. A. Z. A. fraternity, and 9 p. m.- Phlllips Congregational vs. Third Presbyterian. The E. T. Richardson trophy will be awarded the winner of the league. The cup, however, must be won three years before a team becomes in possession of it. All games will be played in the Westminster gymnasium under the direction of Coach Patterns. This is the third season for the in.. Skylark" Iron Worker terchurch league. The A. Z. A . fraIn the building trade the term '"skyternity won the championship the rark" Is applied to a structural iron first year, and Midvale won it last worker, who earns the title by work· year. The Midvale team hopes to win tug high tn the air. He ls also known again this year. as a topman. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • DELINQUENT NOTICE East Jo['dan Irrigation C-ompany, Principal Place of Business, Sandy, Utah. Notice: There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment No. 41 of ,1.00 per share, levied September 16, 1931, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective stockholders, as follows: Cert. No. NameShares Am't. 1039C Jos. Lee Anderson...... 3 ~3.00 1436C Jos. Lee Anderson. ..... 1 1.00 lti56C D '. W. Adamson. ..... ... 2 2.00 !779C Emma W. Alls op .. ______ 1 1.00 "070C Floyd Ainsworth ........11 11.00 5260 Geo. W. Brown ............l6 16.00 J.U930 Geo. W. Brown ............ 6 6.00 1881C Rhoda Bratmer .......... 2 2.00 149C Albert Cowdell ......... 1 1.00 1911C Carl V. Carlson. ...... _.. 2 2.00 1963C C. M. Carver.._............. 7 7.00 2116C A. B . C1ements ............ 11 11.00 2.00 l980C Geo. A. DaY-·---·----------·- 2 549C A. A. Dalton. __ ___ ____ ...... 6 6.00 1.00 1235C A . A. Dalton .......-- --- ---· 1 2.00 2005C c. B. Davis ·---·-----------·- 2 1697C Nick Dokas ______ .......... 2 2.00 1998C James H. Day.............. 6 6.00 2.00 1824C Wm. R. Edge! ----·-·---- 2 827C Norman L. Forbush .. 3 3.00 651 J. W . W. Fitzget·ald .. 30 30.00 176C J. W . W. Fitzgerald __ 1 1.00 846C J. W. W. FitzgeralcL32 32.00 1381C J. W. W. Fit zgerald .. 29 29.00 1793C J. W. W. Fitzgerald ..l5 15.00 2130C J. W. W. Fitzgerald.. 30 30.00 llt5C B . F . Fitzgerald.......... 8 8.00 21760 I<'ederal Land Bank of Berkeley ...... ...... 39 39.00 1662C " " 14 14.00 1717C " "' 33 33.00 1721C " " 33 33.00 1726C .. II 14 14.00 1732C " " 31 31.00 1920C " 76 76.00 1799C Violet Grange Grace .. 8 8.00 1800C Violet Grange Grace .. 3 3.00 1353C C. M. Hendricks on. ... 3 3.00 2000C James Hardcastle .....13 13.00 254 Mary E . Young.-----·--·-- 6 6.00 2188C Ira Hardcastle ........... 25 25.00 1043C H. P. Johnson. ........... __ 2 2.00 1718C Willis Jensen ........... ... 8 8.00 1928C H. W. Jayoes --- ----------- 3 3.00 2162C Earon J e nsen .............. 18 18.00 219B Ruth Lloyd -·----.. ---------- 5 5.00 1722C Laura E. Larson ........ 7 7.00 361C John Larson, Jr. _____ ,____ 2 2.00 362C J. E. Larson. ............... 2 2.00 2098C Chas. J. Landh .. .......... 3 3.00 668C Jos. J. Mousley............ 5 5.00 669C Jos . J. Mousley _____ , ____ ,_16 16.00 948C Andrew A. Malstrom 4 4.00 1303C Andrew A. Malstrom 3 3.00 1304C Andrew A. Malstrom 1 1.00 910C Ann P. Marriott-- -·--·--· 3 3.00 1655C Murray City --·--·- -···-204 204.00 875C William Nelson ..........10 10.00 1484C William Nelson .......... 2 2.00 1856C Geo. Nelson --------- --·-·-·15 15.00 1544C Ethel Nielson .............. 13 13.00 1904C James Perry ._............ 35 35.00 2037C Duke Page --- -·--·-·------· 2 2.00 1976C Oscar Peterson ..........10 10.00 2125C J. Fred Potter ....... --- -·-- 7 7.00 Silas Ricllards .......... _ 1 1.00 1863C Mary E. Robinson...... 4 4.00 1428C W. C. Snow....·-·-·--------- 7 7.00 1461C A. H. Schrader , _____ ,___10 10.00 769C Salt Lake COunty__ ____ 30 30.00 1413C Salt Lake County ...... 7 7.00 353C Mamie A. Spencer......50 50.00 1489C Mamie A. Spence t·------12 12.00 1499C Arthur T . Smith.......... 2 2.00 907C Clyde Swenson -----·---· 1 1.00 2160C State Bid. & Loa n _____ 1 1.00 1471C Hannah Terry __________ ,_23 23.00 1957C N. P . Thompson. ......... 1 1.00 2127C w. R . Thomas .............. 2 2.00 1597C Richard G. Winter._ ... 4 4.00 4400 Peter Winquist .......... 2 2.00 2164C J. W. Warf--·--·--------·--· 4 4.00 2088C Geo. C. Whe tman ...... . 3 3.00 2102C Geo. C. Whetman. ....... 3 3.00 And in a ccordance wit h law and an order of the board of directors, made on the 16th day of Sept ember, 1931, so many sbaTes of each parcel of such stock as may be necessa ry will be sold at public a uction at the office of the secretary at the Sandy City Bank, on January 15, 1932, at 11 o'clock a. m., to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. A. R. GARDNER, Secretary. (First publication January 1, 1932 ; last publication January 8, 1932.) DELINQUENT NOTI()E Sandy Canal Company, Principal Place of Bul:!liness, Sandy, Utah. There are delinquent upon the following described shares of stock on account o.r a ssessme tlt levied on the l;;lth aay of October, 1931, the several a mounts s et opposite the na mes of ~:.he r esp ective shareholders, as follows: t.:e rt. No. NameShares Am't. .Gll Anderson, ~- M ............... ~ $1~.00 HI A.n.derson, C . .M. ............ l3 o:t.OO 11:1 AllsOp, 'lhOS. 111. l W. H. ~loc ks) --- ------- -------- 3 12.00 275 Ahlstt·om , J a ne ,;,_, __.. ,_. 4 16.00 .t:~4 '1 ra cy Loan & 1rust Company .....__,___ _____ .. _,__ 6 24.00 95 Braa y , L . A. .................... 5 ~0.00 t16 Brady, L. A ..................-.... a 12.00 .1 a :t .tsu~; r.et· wood, J. H ............. 1 4.00 v'i 1 Car p enter, Clyde ............ 2 8.00 <lV9 t.:lln s te m;en, L;. li' ........... 4 16.00 utiu Dibbtee, 0 . R. ................ .. 38 152.00 62 Engman, Victor --- --------·-- 1 4.00 M9 l! at'l"tl', .JOhn W. (Bal.) l2 0 & E ELECTRIC SERVICE Complete Electric Service Radios and Auto Service Midvale 272 25 E. Center St. Regular Dinner 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. 35 Cents Our Own Meat Pies Served at All Hours 10 Cents Special Attention Given to Short Orders U.S. CAFE Harry Thomas, Prop. Friday and Saturday, January 8 and 9 Desert Vengeanee • • • I Take • Tbi sW oma n • • • • • • • Spoilers • • IRIS THE AT·RE • • Sunday and Monday, January 10 and 11 -With- We are equipped to print Stationery of all Kinds, Statements, Letter Heads, Envelopes, Butter Wrappers, Wedding Announceme nts, Hand Bills, Window Cards, Newspaper, Books, Magazines, etc. etc. Subscribe for the Midvale Journal now, $1.00 per year, and receive all the local news in South Salt Lake county. Midvale Journal Midvale, Utah 2:1.00 l'l'reas) l!'e rg uson, Stanley ~- 3 12.00 . . . ~ ( l! 'arthin~ham., S. H ......... 2 8.UO US Geerts ou, JO::ieph l V. Samuelson) ......_.....14 56.00 131 Gre gory, Nephi & Mary 3 1~.oo .1.tJ8 Uregory, Nephi & Mary 1 4.00 J 5'1 LiaetOa, J. A·--- --·---·--·-----·- 6 24.00 45 Guardian .ltire lnsUl·ance Co. (C.~" . WinnJ ---· 6 24.00 29 Hansen, Wm. A ............... 19 76.00 v:tB H atch , E sle ...................... 4 16.00 .163 Johnson, Annie 0 (Bal) 10 32.00 .1:00 J obnson, Arthur _........ ... 3 12.00 J4.2 Kohn, Mat t ...................... 1 4.00 J~4 Mor:rill, A. W ................... 3 12.00 .no Merrill, A. W ................... 1 4.00 J 95 McCa ndles , Fawn .......... 1 4.00 J 46 Olson, J. H ·------ ·-·--------... --14 56.00 286 Olson, Frank H ............... 7 28.00 .1;18 Peter s on, L. E ................. 1 4.00 &74 Peebles, E. E ..... _.. ____....... 1 4.00 270 Charlier Geo. B. (J. D. Rawson) ...................... 1 4.00 383 Rawson, Wm. A ............... 2 8.00 385 Sorensen, C. H ................. 1 4.00 31 Tripp, Caroline {Ray 4.00 Whitman ) -·---.. --.--.. ·--- 1 245 Thornblad, Joseph E .......l l 44.00 121 Thornblad, Joseph E ....... 5 20.00 366 Toomey, Otto N ...... - ....... 1 4.00 153 Utah Nursery co......~...... 7 28.00 141 Wardell, Clarence L ....... 6 24.00 378 Williams, Brigham ........ 6 24.00 186 Wilson, F. W. & Gertrude ........... ·-- --------- ----- 5 20.00 And in accordance with the law and an order of the board of directors .lnade on the 9th day of October, 1931, s o many shares of each parcel of said s tock will be sold at the office of the secretary of said company, Sandy City Bank, Sandy, Utah, at public auction on the 15th day of January, 1932, at 12 o' clock noon, to pay the delinquent assess ment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. ED JACKSON, Secretary and Treasurer. (First publication January 1, 1932; last publication January 8, 1932.) R. Gary Cooper and Carole Lombard Tuesday, Wednesda y and Thursday , January 12, 13, 14 |