OCR Text |
Show Midvale Journal, Thursday, September 11, 1930 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllll~ An ln11ita.tion . • • • to look over tL.e new Fall ~ner~L.andise! No LiahpressU1'e sales:m.ansh ip hut ~nany tLinas you'll need and want-parti~ularly when you noil! the ~o~nbin ation of high quality and low prices. = -= -= -=-= ---= -= _,.·· ----. .......... -· -:-. :-.: IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.It!(!tttltlllltiiiiiit!llllllttrttllllltlllllltllllllllllll!!llllllllllrr~i Criss--Cross Curtains 98c a set Let in the sun . • . and use criss-cross curtains to do the trick I For these are of sheer marquisette, with tie-backs and cornice valance to match, and are self-ruffled! Your choice of cream or beige. Marquisette 15c to 39c The sun can come streaming in througil dainty marquisette • • , that's why it is such a fa.Yorite for surnrnertiml curtains • • • with aC without drapes. ''MALAB AR CAMBRI C" 15c a yard · A dainty, inexpensive, cotton fabric-very popular for howe frocks and children's dresses. 36 inches wide. 'R on do '' Cretonne Cam eric 15c to 29c 22c a yard ~ntpatte~w ~ tatii bedroom windows • • • lively desigtlll for the sunparlor • • • modernistic patterns for living room windows • • • in any color your r~ klemandsl New smart and tub fast . . . . Cambric sprigged with buds, flours and all the glory of an English garden makes dresses for fall and winter that are delightfull. At 22c a yard you can have several. 36 inehes wide. Fall Sewing Needs ~ ou Overdrapes 98c Yard Rayon damuk In fu,.. troua allover patterns makes draperies that look ever so much more expensive than they arc I SQ iDches wide. will find--elestic by the yard, Pengaurd safety pins. Penco brass pins Penimad needles, Penis nap fanteners, Penimaid hooks and eyes , cotton tap, Dutch linen tape, Penimad buttons, bone crochet hooks, thimgles, tape measures and stocking darners. 4c each Co. ·B J. C. Pen ney STOB lac. DEPABTIIEN~ MIDVALE, UTAH That's Right, Sustain Home Industry There are lots of lambs, cattle and beet sugar raised in Utah, and when you buy these articles at Rasmussen's Store you are building up Utah and your home town. When you see special prices advertised by our competitors, as a rule they are our regular prices. We appreciate your business and solicit your patronage. THANKS! CALL AGAIN! P. C. RASMUSSEN M~:tin Street, Midvale HERRIMAN ITEMS In honor of the birthday anniversary of Albert J. Crane, a dinner party was enjoyed Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Haycock of Salt Lake, by Mrs. Janette Crane, Mr. and Mrs. Terris A. Ingram, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Crane and daughters, Roberta and Evelyn. Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Huggins and family left during the week to spend the winter in Wyoming. Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Crane had as their guests during the week Mr. and Mrs. William T. Swan and family of Salt Lake. Miss Helen Hales spent the weekend , 'l.t Spanish Fork visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Mace and family of Bingham and Comorrah Eastman of Salt Lake were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Eastman this week. Miss Fae McKinney of Grace, Idaho, was the guest of Miss Ryllis Freeman last week. The Relief society held its monthly social Tuesday afternoon in the ward house. The time was spent in reports and sewing. A 4 o'clock luncheon was served to twenty members. The hostesses were Mrs. R. T. Bodell, Mrs. George Bowen, Mrs. Henry Bodell and Mrs. Louis Jensen. The marriage of H. G. Tempest, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Tempest, and Miss Bertha M. Minshew of Pocatello, Idaho, was solemnized In the Salt Lake temple Monday. Mrs. Orsen Freeman, Mrs. Orvil Freeman and Miss Ryllis Freeman viisted friends in Sandy during the week. MrR. ()live Miller had as her guests during the week, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Peter::>on, Mr. and Mrs. John Webb, Jr., of Lark, and Mrs. 0. M. Day of Draper. Miss Reba Freeman is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Narvel Wardle and family of West Jordan this week. UNION Mi~:>s Dorie Coomber is spending a few days thls week with Mrs. T. F. Greenwood of East Midvale. Mr. and Mrs. Nephi Gregory visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Reynolds of Murray. Members of the Unity club met Friday of last week at the home of Mrs. Walter Brown of Salt Lake. Mrs. Walter Berrett, Mrs. Chester Baker, Mrs. Clarence Wardle, Mrs. Fred Coomber, Mrs. J. H. Greer of Union, Mrs. Raymond Clayton, Mr~. Clarence Sharp and Mrs. Lester Forbush of East Midvale, and Mrs. Mildred Sedden and Mrs. Walter Brown of Salt Lake were in attendance. Refreshments were served. Miss Twila Smart left last week to teach in the high school at U con, Idaho. Mrs. Emma Nicol spent Monday with Mrs. May Smart. Copperton School Fight Is Renewed Attempts by Bingham taxpayers to stop construction of the proposed new high school at Copperton and the abandonment of the present Bingham high school were renewed Monday, when suit was filed in Third district court to enjoin the Jordan board of education from fulfilling Its contract with Paul Paulsen to build the structure. The complaint, filed in behalf of J. R. Hales, Bingham taxpayer, asserts the contract, awarded August 16, is void. The complaint alleges further that bids for the new school were opened by the board on July 26, but that the board had failed to file plans and specifications with the state ;uperintendent of public instruction and receive the superintendent's approval. For this reason no bid was aw11.rded. the complaint states. On August 4 plans and specifications were filed, and on August 7 the state superintendent gave his approval, the complaint states, and on August 6 the contract was awarded to Paul Paulsen for $222,800. ContendIng that the Jordan school board had no right to advertise for bids until after August 7, the complaint asserts the acceptance of Paulsen's bid is void. The action also contends that the proposed high school will be constructed within 12 miles of the present Sandy high school, contrary to state laws. To prevent the construction, a writ of Injunction prohibiting the board from giving money to Paulsen and restraining Paulsen from receiving money is asked. I SCENIC PLAYGROUND S OF AMERICA WANT ADS FOR SALE-Estate Heatrola, $60 A-28 cash. Call Hylaad 2264-J. FOR SALE-5-room modern home with double garage; gas connected; or will trade for small place. 192 A-28 , First Ave. By G. M. KILBOURN Enchanted Keyholes of Glacier Skyline FOR RENT-Three furnished rooms, S-4 • $20 per month. 80 E. Center. A FOUND-Double folding canvas camp cot. Inquire of P. C. Rasmussen. SPECTACULAR t r a II-balcony that rides like an epaulet along the shoulder o! the clitrs was completed last summer to Glacier National park, Montana. Together with the eight-mile Garden Wall route already widely known, this new High trail from Granite park northward past Fifty Mountain camp and prac· tlcally to the Canadian border ifves the trail lovers ot America, at last, a chance to ride alr•ng the continental divide as well as over it, in a rapturous three-day excursion that Is both beautiful, weird, and magnificent. Most mountain trail trips have a mutual falling-they climb patiently for half a day or more to some great divide, then begin to drop valleyward again almost immediately, with only the briefest of stops on the pinnacle where views were enriched a. thou· The new Glacier trail, sandfold. though, will make the most ot that ecstatic upland, prolonging Its moments of triumph not only for hours, but days! Riders-or bikers already conditioned for a considerable cllmb-may make the three-day sky trail consecu· ttvely as a beginning of the five-day "north circle" route !rom Going-tothe-Sun chalets on St. Mary lake (whose boatrlde, tocldentally, Ia one of the most beautiful in America). Hikers wishing to avoid a very long first day, however, should enter the park on the west side instead, and ride the early morning bus to Logan pass; with the main climb thus disposed of', they wlll find the remaining eight miles of minor ups and downs as easy as it 1s delightful. Lake Me· Donald, now ten mlles west by air line, lles high on the horizon, whlle by contrast the chasm o! Logan and McDonald creeks seem far below tt, and the streams seem creeping uphill to reach the lake. Also tar below ltea the automobile road, which was the first to struggle to the divide In Glacier, and which even now doea the motoring public a favor, paradoxically enough, by ending In the pu1 and therefore adding the psycholoiieal climax to their trip that will be eem· pletely lacking 1! the road la ever completed. Perhaps the most delightful teatura of the combined Garden Wall and High trail Is the repeated opportu• nitles it offers to climb the hillslde yet above, occasionally, and thus peep .through the keyholes of a bristling divide that not even the famous Glacier goats could follow consecutively. 'one o! these 1s Swiftcurrent pass, throuih which come "north ~ FOR SALE--Concord· grapes, 3c lb. Baled straw, 30c. A. A. Malstrom, S-25 559 East Center St. ~--------------------------f' Come in and see us in our new location. U.S. CAFE Dinners, Lunches Short Orders Are served in 1a manner you will appreciate and enjoy. Samas & Thomas, Props. f"" .........,........................................,_ ......................-.. .i't· !l"-.,.........- .................................................................................. :-. II ELECTRIC HOME 1L I i I I i ., i! 1 IIII ItII BAKERY d j! 16 North Main It i. dl : lj ll . Ii LEO LEWIS, Prop. ' ...- ................... ..................................................................''i J.. i;1.!-• . 1j ~ r.;;;; ...... _ ..- ......................................i .......................................- ..... . Orchid Beauty Salon Duart Permanent Waving ·-····---Finger Waving $6.50 Marcelling Water Waving 13 N. Main St. Shampooing • Mid. 117-J Midvale Shoe Shining Parlor for Ladies and Gents %0 cents Shoes Dyed and Color Restored Iris Theater Building MAURIE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE All Phases of Beauty Culture PERMANENT WAVE $6.50 UNDBERGH IS STILL GOING When he flew the A t l a n t i c Ocean, many people said, "It's just luck-he won't last long." But he is one of the ()Utstanding figures in aviation today, and no doubt will be for many years. The 0. P. Skaggs System started with a new conception of food merchandising, and it is still going, with prospects of remaining one of the outstanding food distributing s y stems in the world. START THIS MONTH TO SAVE MONEY Think of what you can do with even a few dollars saved every month on your grocery bill. Why pay prices for ordinary foods when you can buy the best at lowest prices every day in the week at your 0. P. Skaggs System Store! There you will find greater variety from which to select your daily menu, and you will be delighted with the high quality of every article. Q.P. SK"GG..S FOoo"'W$f't¥fiJ J STORES STORE AND MARKET "A Surety of Purity" Midvale, Utah Ladies' and Children's Hair Cutting Phone Mid. 295. 19 North Main Midvale Bakery and Grocery 17 East Center Street Kootenai Peak. .· circle" travelers from many Glacier camps to reach the High trail, or "triangle" trippers to reverse the Garden Wall route, back to Sun eamp. Two others are the "saddles" in the divide just above the Grinnell glaciel'B, throUih which you may look down on these huge double-decked Ice banksand !rom which, particularly In tke after·supper bour, the numerous goat population o! Grinnell mountain may be discovered taking an afternoon stroll. The next day, a few miles north of Granite on the High trail, a tenminute climb brings Ahern pass, and with It the sight ot a sullen glacier which disputed the path through the pass tn the mining days of thirty yeal'B ago, and which aomet1me1 hurled luckless pack trains over the clltr toward Lake Helen tar below. Here too for strenuous hlkel'B, there ls alj!o a' well-rewarded fi!ty-mlnute scramble up the rock slide to the wlld northern rim o! Iceberg lake, whose lee-cake population melt serenely ln the July-August springtime 1,700 feet down the cli1fs : this view from the Iceberg wall Is a spectacle not likely duplicated anywhere tn North .America-and one that probably not fifty people have been prlvlleged to see. (~. lUO. Wostern Newspaper Union.) Keen Ob•erTer Four-year-old Johnny was Usteninr with much Interest to an explanation ot the phonograph in a neighbor'• house. He didn't understand where the music came from. "Johnny, the music comes through the needle and out the horn," said his mother. "But what doe~ the music come from?" asked puzzled Johnny. "It comes from these black round records," answered Johnny's mother. "Oh, then that's why you see so ~any ot ~-~~~:~ken up l~ the alleJ." ~ 0 & E ELECTRIC SERVICE Complete Electric Service Radios and Auto Service • Midvale 272 25 E. Center St. WHERE WILL YOU BE 'l Statistics show 85 out of every 100• who reach the age of 65 are partially • dependent. Metropolitan Life provides a retirement fund to eliminate old age dependency, and also provides family proteetlon. See Your Local Agent METROPOLITAN LIFE INS. CO. GEO. W. COX, Local Agent Mid. 222-W '1'1 Jefferson St. J. i1. MORGAN Your watch deserves attention Wr- repair it right and aua.rantee £he job. Jewelry of all kinds. Prices lowest. Give us just Jne trial and be satisfied. H. F. RASMUSSEN Tailor Suits made to order EXTRA TROUSERS FREE! PRICES VERY REASONABLE Alterations, Cleaning and Pressing 64 W. Center St. Phone Midvale 117-w Express and Truck Service Hauling, Moving and Express · Bert Bateman Call Midvale 297 ~ |