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Show The Midvale Journal, Thursday , Decembe r 5, 1929 ----.---- RIVERTON seph Densley and Mrs. Mrs. ordon Densley, with the following irls, MLs Fern Densley, Miss Rena onicher, MiSt! Ivy Peterson, Miss ovella Maynard, Miss Vilate Butter. eld, Miss Mary Aylett, Miss Amy ewbold, o~:h:Iiss Mildred Page, Miss ici Freeman, Miss Ruth Hamilton, iss Merle Green, Miss Lorna Crump nd Misse Willma and Ruby Hall isited at the home of Mrs. Clara H.. ell, Mrs. Anna Guitard and Mrs. liza Lloyd an<! pr-e~< nted a program nd gave cheer baskets. Mr. and Mrs. l{euoen Wiberg enterained at a family dinner at their ome Sunday. Covers were laid for iss Ann~ Wiberg of Park City, Mr. nd Mrs. Lester Pugsley and children f Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. John I. iberg a d family, Mr. and Mrs. Joeph Morgan and daughters and Mr. nu. Mrs. Carl Wiberg and family. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Freeman ntertained at Thanksgiving dinner WHERE TO SHOP LOUIE'S AUTO SERVICE 6507 South State St. GENERAL REPAIRS Complete Mot"or Service Sioux Method of Grinding Valves usco Brali.e Lining-Stops Quick, Rain or Shine. Bakery FRESH CANDY A full line of Fresh Candy as well s Bal,ery Goods fills our show cases supplybtg every demand of our ustomers. Visit om store and be convinced. MIDVALE BAKERY (1 Door East of Drug Store) Phone 2a5 7 E. Center & E ELECTRIC SERVICE Complete Electric Service Radios and Auto Service 25 E. Center St. idvale 272 CLARK'S BEAUTY SHOP UAR~PERMA- ENT WAVING... . at their home last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Zach Butterfield, Miss Mary Nossack, Miss Pearl Jensen and Mr. and Mrs. Zach T. Butterfield were entertained at a party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Palmer at West Jordan Saturday. Mrs. Arminta Densley left during the week for Idaho, where she will spend the winter with her son and Mrs. Ray Densley. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Butterfield entertained at dinner Sunday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Zach Butterfield, Misses Phyllis and Evelyn Butterfield. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Freeman and sons, Cecil, Russel and LaRain, and daughter, Mary, returned home Sunday from Idaho, after. spending five They were entertained at days. Thanksgiving dinner at the home of d:rs. Freeman's parents at Shoshone and were also guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Freeman at Rupert for two days. Mr. and Mrs. Zach T. Butterfield, Mrs. George Bush and daughter, Virginia, and Mrs. Gordon Cummings of Salt Lake fanned a party and visited at Tooele Sunday, where Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sewell entertained at dinner in their honor. Mrs. Gordon Densley, Mrs. Joseph Densley, Mrs. Cyrus Bills, Mrs. Golden Densley and Mrs. Claude Densley were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross McMullin at luncheon Wednesday. Mrs. Gordon Cu=ings of Salt Lake spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Bush. Mrs. Joseph Densley entertained the Seagull Girls and the Mi Kan Wee Girls at a candy pull at her home last Monday. She was assisted by Mrs. Gordon Densley. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Densley and children visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wilson at Bennion on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Densley and children visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Wilson at Bennion on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Crosby and Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Myers of Salt Lake were entertained at dinner Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ........................... 41!8 e 00 d t}J Marcelling inger Waving hampooing Water Waving 13. N. Main St. id. 117-J BOOTH'S BEAUTY Parlor Paul's Supreme Permanent ->aul's Supreme ermanent \Vave 411!7 50 'I' • Phone Midvale 200 01( TH MANWho is building a home-wt. have the coverage contractYOU WANT! GEO. W. COX EERepr~senting the ETROPO.L.ITAN LIFE INSURANC E COMPANY 13 First Ave Midvale, Utah Thoroughly Remodeled And Modern and up-to-the-m inute U.S. CAFE Samas & Thomas, Props. Our lrusiness is growing and e want your business always J. S. MORGAN our watch deserves attention e repair it right and guaranee the job. Jewelry of all 'nds. Prices lowest. Give us ·ust one trial and be satisfied. L.A. SUMBOT ~- [ ~ Latest in Hats - :.-·-, Row to Raise Poultry By Dr. L. D. LeGeaT, V. S St. Loubl, Mo. Dr. LeGear is a graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-six years of veter• inary practice on diseases of live stock and poultry. Eminent au• thority on poultry and stock raising. Nationally known poul· try breeder. Noted author and popular lecturer. Uaquel Torn's \\'l'ott·ing n t>lack soleil hat with a turn ·llown brim In front which joins the crown at the side. Two ornamental pins art> st en as trimming. A scurf handkerc-hh•f gives color to the costume. L. L. Myers. Miss Crilla Myers and Mrs. Geort;e Lang of Sandy were entertained at luncheon Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Webster. Miss Lvonne Broadbent and Miss Natalie Ellertscn of Santaquin spent the week-end as guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Tischner. Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Stephensen entertained at Thanksgiving dinner in honor of Mr. and Mrs. E. I. Malouf and children of Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Stephensen were entertained at dinner Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Larsen of Magna. Mr. and Mrs. Pershyl Richarson, Ivan Dahl and Berniece Bateman have been selected to take a special course in dancing and games for the M. I . A. workers which is given at the Deseret gymnasium this week under the direction of Mary Woodhimman. Milton Lancaster, Marlon Bateman, Henry Schmidt, Ross Egbert, Harvey Cundick, Roy Silcox, Harold Hogan, La Ver·n Finlayson, Stewart Sanders, Kenneth Leak, Dell Kaun, Dell Smith and Y. T. Bateman left for Suthern Utah Tuesday for a weeks trip in int c rC$t of the "M" men basketball I team. II by num ber· For the fastest long distance telephone service. call by number •. Usually you'll get your connection while you hold th~ line. Miss Evelyn Peterson joined a party of friends from Salt Lake Monday night and attended a show at 1 the Playhouse. She also spent Monday night as a special guest at the home of Miss Jean Anderson of Salt Lake. Twain once said of the weather, that everybody talks about it but nobody does anything about it. Much the same thing might be said about co-operative marketing among poultry raisers. To be sure, there are some co-operative organizations now working successfully in several sections of the country, notably in California and some of the central western states. The "Co-ops" of Canada, too ,offer a notable example of what can be accomplished. Taking the whole situation by and large, however, it is almost literally true that much has been said about co-operative marketing, but little done about it. To be sure, it is no simple problem to get a thing of this kind started. That very fact, however, is a most excellent reason why something should be started at once. Today, egg producers are in much the same posiiton as were the workers of a few generations back. Without organization of any kind, they are at the mercy of those to whom they must sell. John Jones with ten or twelve dozen eggs to sell each week must take them to the nearest market and accept the price offered or tote them home again. A well organized association shipping carloads of eggs each week suffers no such disadvant: ages. quantities large sufficiently With to really mean something, the association is in a postion to seek out the I I I I I I I I ................ I I I I I I Electric Home Bakery and Cafe. WflERE COI<'FEE IS KING I Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Deming and small daughter, Barbara, of Coalville, are here on a visit and are contemplating making their home in Midvale. Runeral Designin g P ,ONY PLANTS For Sale KNOWLE S FLORAL Te1ephone Mid. 156-M Mid val~ E. Center St.. Midvale Beauty Shop $6.00 DuArt Permanent ............. . W a.ve ........................... Finger \Vaving EXPERT OPERATOUS Phone 1.\lid. 216-W 58 N. MalnSt. WERE GIVEN LAST WEEK Last week all the grades from the third up were given standard achievement tests in arithmet ic, reading, language, word-knowwdg e, and language usage. These tests will be carefully graded and the results will be used to aid teachers in correcting difficulties students have. The results will also be tabulated to show how Midvale school compares with other schools in the dl:>tl'ict and tu show how our Jortlan schools compare with other school districts. ~LASSES IL."EE-DEEP IN WORK I• : : D~ pI s. SL~CED BACON 25e SATURDAY ~Tt,~TER KEN T Screet~ • Christmas Shopp ing , At the Bank If~ F. RASMUS SEN Tailor SUits made to order 1st class fit and workmanship Guarante ed. Alteration s, Cleaning and Pressing 64 W. Center St. Phone Midvale 117-w ACHIEVEMEN TS 'IESTS The girls of the seventh grade are going to sleep snugly and warm this winter. Each one of them has made a night gown of flannel or flannelette. In this project the students cut their own patterns and especial emphasis is given to different neck styles. Gone are the days of mush, fried eggs and bacon breakfasts, say the eighth grade girls. In their class the study of breakfasts interests them. They are learning to use fruits, ::;alads, specially prepared eggs, and tasty meats. Certainly, in some of the homes in the future breakfast will be a meal that will be worth rising early to eat. Girls of the ninth grade are at work on luncheons. They study school, cafeteria and home luncheons in order that they may be able to select, prepare, and serve them properly. The home economics department is one of the busiest parts of the school, and a visit to it would show many things of inter st. Midvale WE HAVE YOUR BAKED GOODS READY FOR YOU No Heed to bother planning your Chri;tmas baking. Save the time and effort this task requires for other duties then come here and select the baked ' goods you need. Delicious pastries-every thing of the very best q\Wlity. in a big way and we who li~~ -in this age must fall in line or watch the p1·ocession go marching on to a suecess in which we cannot share. If you are not big enough to get into the procession smg1e-uancte<l, you can combine your resources with others like yourself and aU march tog ..a.n'-'1· for the co=on good. I do not mean to imply that cooperative marketing 1s a. 1\:in3·-cu,·cAll for every ill the poultry business is aflficted with; ne1. •. . do 1 w1::-11 to give the impression taat a simple . .. club of poultrymen 1" .,;uou.:,J.... co-operative association must be a well managed, commercial institution. It must be big- enough to be truly r~presentative of the territory in which it operates. It must be operated on the principle laid down by the Three Muskelt:t!rs of l.JW•las' famous story, "All 1or one and oue for all." The poultrymen must onderstand the management' s problems, and the management . must understand those of the pvlli ll' j.u.... n. 'lhe.<! n:mst _be harmony and l;v.,.,;\! nuei ac:tu~n m. every part~ . or the whole thing wrll col1apse or 1ls OWl! we1ght. The. th~ng to do is to s ~udy su~.;c. orgamzatwns as are already successfuHy operating anu u.c.'7<-'·. Lv ;,vo...>" own ~ocal needs the . prmc1ples f~:nd practices they have found successful. Shape a course that you ,,h.; ·.v yu'"' can depend on to get you some place and then ~t~ck to rt, out make you•· plans flexrble enough to. allow .Lor really necessary chang·es m the futore. (Copyright, 1929, by Dr. L. D. LcGear, V. S.) AR~ Mrs. Elwood Johnson entertained Monday in honor of her baby Bonny Jean's first birthday, at thei~ home in Bingham. 1 1 I I HOME ECONOMICS • Our \\'orkmanship, equipment and ateqallil are combined to give your rebuilt shoes the best appearence and he most. Bring in your .shoes today we will put new wear into them at small cost. SINCE 1910 "There must be a reason" 21 E. ~enter St. most- favorable markets, and can regulate shipments into those markets in such a way that a higher average level of prices can be maintained than would otherwise be possible. Collective bargaining, the factor that has made possible the present high wage levels for workers, is also brought to the poultryman through co-operative marketing. Other advantages no less important, though not so often considered, are the possibilities of standardizing and improving production methods, standardizing and improving the grade of the product and stabilizing production. It is a well established fact that in some sections of the country only white eggs find a ready sale at top prices, while in other sections brown eggs are the favorites. Let us suppose that a number of poultrymen whose natural market is a brown egg territory are producing only white eggs. They know they are not getting as good prices as they should, but they do not know why and have no way of finding out as they operate independently. As members of an effective association they would be given the necessary 'information or if their total volume was large en~ugh, their separate lots could be pomed into larger units and shipped economically into some territory where they would find ready sale. I cannot too strongly emphasize, however, the need for organization in the poultry business. Labor is organized, and look where wages are today. The fruit growers of California organized and boosted their profits millions of dollars annually. The walnut growers got together and sell carloads where they once sold bushels, and at higher profit, too. The poultrymen of Canada formed an association and realized twelve cents a dozen more for their egsg than they had ever been able to get before. Here are just a few examples of what co-operative marketing has done and is doing for those engaged in it. The poultrymen of this country must come to it also, sooner or later, if they are ever to realize the full profit that is rightfully theirs. This is an age of big business done The Midvale State Bank is .a good place to do some of your Christmas shopping: Savings Accounts for the youngsters will encourage them to develop thrifty habits. A Certificate of Deposit makes an ideal gift for grown son or daughter. A First MoTtgage Bond for wife or husband. Other gifts fade away, but a good bond goes on paying interest year after year. Do some of your Christmas shop· ping with us! Grid 0 • $114 AND UP In cabinet with built-in Electro-Dyn amic Speaker • O NLY Atwater Kent- with 27 years' experience, and the largest and finest radio factory in the world-cou ld offer a set as good as the new Screen-Grid model for so little money. And only a furniture specialist could build a cabinet as nne. Experts made this set-it looks it and actS it. Crafcsmansh ip and Quality! You'll like this radio. EASY TERMS-C omeToikty WEST JORDAN LUMBER CO. Midvale State Bank Midvale, Utah Here is our o-reatest cren tion. We are ver-y proud of our 0. P. S. bread, 0. P .S. butter and 0. P. S. floUI·, but our 0. P .S. bacon is even more out of the ordinary in pleasing quality, than is any other 0. P. S. item. 0. P. S. b:.con sell.-: for 50c oer oound when sold undel' the nacker's label. It is the verv- best quality packed by one of the largest packers. IN EVERY MARKET You wiD be able to 'find 0. P. S. bacon in every 0. P. Skaggs System store or market. It will sell regularly at this time at 39c. Get your 2, 3 or 4 pounds tomorrow w bile it is on sale at only 25c !)el· pound. See our hams, bacon, picnic hams and othe1· cured meats, which are coming to us from Nebraska, the com and hog state. You will be able to notice quickly that corn-fed bacon, hams and fresh pork is much more !>leasing in taste and shrinkage than other products produced from other grain, potatoes, etc. Don't fail to get your share of 0. P. S. bacon Saturday, December 7. 114 N. 1\Iain St. Phone Mid. 212 Midvale, Ut. "Entel'ing Our 26th Year in Business in Midvale" "A Slll·ety of Purity" Store and illarket Midvale - - - - - -• Utah |