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Show ' 11111 4AAA4AAA ??????? ffff CurrjHJt) (By Redmond j (By Special Cumspoadeat) T I Aurora i Cfcii-Ucke- -- uui lrfJ pa-arn- r. Fr fr ai)' of Circleville, the Amasa Hansard Mrs. Elmer Nelson was a guest at homo Monday. a a a H. C. Hansen and R. D. Hansen of visitors Dear Creek, were week-en- d to Redmond. e Mr. and Mrs. Albert Poulson reand Mr. and Mrs. A. L Tippitt home Saturday after a one turned callson. Twain, Joyce and Sdanley, week's visit at Salt Lake. homo as R. W. Johnson ed at the a a a Richfield where to enroute were they W. Mrs. C. Parry, of Park City, Mr. Tippitts Is employed as a teacher tlo Redmond came Saturday and will in the Richfield high achool. visit for a week with relatives. a a Mr. and Mrs. Sid Humphrey left Mrs. Lynn Barney, Mrs. J. Barney Wednesday for Provo, where they will Mrs. Earl Jensen of Spring City, and make their home. Tuesday evening were "wein-er guests of Mrs. Bill Allred Thursthey were honored guests at a roast at Maple Grove. A number day of last week. a a of close friends were the hosts and Miss Phyllis Christensen of Cedar hostesses. Dty, returned home Tuesday after Miss Myrtle Madsen left Monday visiting for four days with relatives and friends here. morning for Price, where she will rea a a sume her studies in the Price high Mrs. Bart Thorpe and Mrs. Howard schooL Miss Madsen has spent her Nelson of Ephraim, motored to Redwith her vacation summer visiting mond Thursday. They returned home grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Friday accompanied by their mother, Ivie. Mrs. Anna M. Nelson, who will visit them for a' few days. with home Dalton returned Miss Maxine a a a summer the after spending Saturday, Mrs. entertained Willardson Idella at Spring City. number of little guests Thursday A. W. Curtis, foreman of the new afternoon in. honor of her daughter, school building, was taken suddenly Irenes birthday. a a ill Monday. He was rushed to the The Misses Helen and Beth Mitchel hospital where he is receiving of Salt Lake Dty were the guestb of treatment for an attlack of appendiMiss Verl Poulson during the week. citis. a Sal-in- Sal-in- a, NEW YORK. Vocal understudies are the latest, ever since th talking movies enme Into vogua A good many of our screen heroes and a a a heroines, it has been revealed, have to Mrs. Merlin Ivie and small daugh- poor voices and must, have others and talking. Somedo their singing ter, Maxine, of Los Angeles, arrived times this provides startling and amusSaturday. She will spend the winter ing results, as witness a recent picwith Mr. and Mrs. Riley Ivie. ture in which the movement of the a a a actors lips didn't at ail coincide with Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Buckley and the words of the song be was supchildren left Monday for their home posed to be singing. at Delta, after spending a week as On one occasion a screen actor reguests of Mr. and Mrs. Alma Bastian. cently was Introduced at the premiere a a a of his first picture. When voice the house heard his audience the Mrs. Jacob Bastian of Vermillion rocked with laughter and boos. It was AlMrs. with spent Tuesday visiting explained by the management that the ma Bastjian. . actor had a cold but this weak exa a a planation left the audience, skeptical Wilber Merrill and Arden Curtis to the last, very, very cold. left Saturday for their home in Salt a a so-call- - Lake City after spending the summer months here. a a v Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Sheppard and children of Salt Lake City, are visifc-inwith Mr. Sheppards parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Sheppard, this week. a a a Dan Cloward returned Monday from a short visit to friends at Springville. Dark Ghoit ef the Past Now and tbeu you may Bee a colored geminen of about fifty years or so. bis form still stiffly erect, walking along Broadway. He la Jack Johnson, one champion heavyweight of the world. The once famous champ, they say, has fallen Into days that lack the glamor he enjoyed In another decade. Johnson, though he made quite bit of money, saved little of It. He no lives In the sumptuous apartthat American visitors longer ment of the pasi hut In a modest Harin Russia were very much impressed lem hotel. There were days when he with the fact that the officials there made a Idg splurgp In Broadway. Today get such small wages. Maybe that hia activities cause no more ripple is the thing in Russia which makes a than the humblest pebble in the big It is said brotherly appeal to our college gest sea. j t tg( hf pr g s kpHo itfarin amind,ia brooding herd art funerrtied, hoVVrr( th bnaed-Sg of lb male or female ha not materially r barged. Neither has w er aide to dikfover th wy to ahortea I be prfiud of gestation so In that nature hold It' vwn. f re-pe- rt, -- of- RECREATION HALL tht SECOND WARD SEPTEMBER 10th 8 oclock high-price- d FREE-Sh-ort Program-FRE- E featurlna A Wedding Story-Boo-k nine oclock Footwarmers Snappy Orchestra Au-car- ry General Admission, 75c per couple ?" i g that 9 Beautiful Fisher Bodies With their low, graceful, sweeping lines and smart silhouette, their ample room for passengers and their sparkling color combinations and rich upholsteries the new Fisher bodies on the Chevrolet Six represent one of Fishers greatest achievements. Outstanding Economy economical car to operate. Not The new Chevrolet Six is an unusually only does It deliver better than twenty miles to the gallon of gasoline, but its oil economy is equal to. If not actually greater than, that of its famous predecessor. four-cylind- er six-cylin- The COACH ruADs- -. , iCQC DzD '525 Remarkable Dependability In order to appreciate what outstanding value the Chevrolet Six represents, It is necessary to remember that it is built to the worlds highest standards. In design. In materials and in workmanship it Is every inch a quality car! t fSWoN...525 E!S?"...'595 5 SSa The modem girl can drive a motor car seventy miles an hour and swim the English channel but she still screams when she sees a mouse crossj ing the parlor floor. 675 EK; K; 400 545 21111650 Amazing Low Prices An achievement no le.s remarkable than the design and quality of tlrs Chevrolet Six is the fact that It is sold at prices so amazingly low! Furthermore, Chevrolet delivered prices Include the lowest financing and handling charges available. Burr Motor Utah Company Salma, The fail fashion experts have dethat womens skirts shall extend three inches below the knees. This certainly is going to change the land: scape on Main Street. I .'595 All price, f. o. b.Jactory. PUnt. Michigan cided Dont Boow. acteristic of the truly On automobile! a ride in this sensational automobile which actually sells in the price range of the four! ;j Subscribe p4 you enjoy that aflent, At. ,w7. -velvet like flow of power which la char- The new Chevrolet Six is shattering every previous record of Chevrolet success not only because It provides the greatest value in Chevrolet history, but because It gives you more for the dollar than any other car in the world at or near its price! Facts tell the story i Modern features afford the proof! Read the adjoining column and you will know why over a. MILLION careful buyers have chosen the Chevrolet Six in less than eight months. Then come in and get Kills Copperheads Engine -- CHEVROLET SIX Md. Mount Savage, Miss : Katie McXamee, who lives In the ? north end of Mount Savage, has a cat that hunts copperhead :i snakes. Tabby, answering to the name of iuff." has killed eight copperheads this season, ranging from 14 incites to 2 feet in length. Most of the dead : snakes were carried to the house $: by the cut : of the tom The snake-huntin: cat lias not changed his dlsposi iji: f: tion as he Is tame and affec :j: jj- - tionate when in the house. The unique feline acts as an alarm :5 clock for his mistress, when he : awakens every morning at 5 i? : oclock.' He climbs a tree near $ Q the bouse, leaps to the porch : roof and mews at the bedroom window until Miss McXamee is S: aroused. The McXamee home is Sj near a cliff and rocky hill, where :j:j :$ snakes are said to be abundant Z Six-Cylind- er Chevrolets remarkable alx cylinder enftlne Impresses you moat vividly by Ititenaationally smooth performance; (tthe$ew . jj Remarkable prove the Value of I . )r Uf liua. capiul and labor mtirv fraas th business with th final fvnull of d rrrMd si'l'jdy and I be daerwaaod 01 !y mean h ghrr pike. Apparantly thei I outha-to worry about for the I Uing so far as a surplus ft chi ihcd though it la a guui thing tv Grand Opening LIGHTS OF NEW YORK Mrs. Agnes Harward and children of Loss Creek, were visiting with Mr. and Mrs. James Curfew Monday and .Tuesday. b-.- There are two rlac of cattlemen, well, he would call the buyer on the One man i lW breeder or producer, carpet and sak if he had bought the who rsifte cattle to be aulj buth a cattle or haj the other fellow sold atmker tnd feeder, them to him, meaning to sharpen up fat atmk and The riW cl ia made up of those the wit of the buyer and also to rv- paid hi who specialise on fneJing cattle. buy.'wiHj w" ing thin stuck from the breeder. to take everything the otlwr fellow Jut at this time, the breeder seem to be huld.ng the whip hand, du frequently feel prompted to ak principally to tbo generally admitted W ,iv U ahurt-- ge of breeding tattle. Stacker fjrJ with a profit or due he seek ju.l and feeder cattle sre aelling at the market value. Of course, we mut highest prco ever known during bw,p ghAt many of the cow. peaw time. The Southwestern range mvn w aeeustomed to taking luaa. man I grtting from $40 to Li fur VS that it la bard for them to rvrug-ni- l hi spring calves, and from t5S to fCS that there' anything else in th a head fur his yearlings. If ha is pro- tun in cm, but it look now k they ducing anything Ilka a fair calf crop will have to form the Habit of taking that U, if 75 per cent of hi cows profits for a while, at least those who are dropping and railing calves th run their busineaa right breeder is getting a wry sstUfactory When they began to sea a little return on his investment in breeding profit many of them uld "right now" itock, land, feed, labor and money. without considering whether or not. On the other hand, the margin bethey war getting th market There! tween the prevailing coat of feeder savms to b an inclination that wy cattle and the present aelling price of uily with those who sell at home, aPf fst stock is admittedly narrow. In Th !nilh u ,n th pMt lh buy. fact, many students of the market are er has known more shout the visible inclined to believe that the probable supply snd the general tone and trvnd increase in value after feeding out of the market than the rancher, but these csdves and yearlings Is likely to with central live stock markets now be so narrow as to border on tho dan- established throughout th West and ger point It la true that fat cattlo Southwest, values are determined by are selling at unusually high prices, supply and demand and with our mobut it is also true that the rot of dern wsys of disseminating Informafeeding the critter is relatively high. tion, there U little excuse for ignorAdd this to th thin stock ance of market values on the part of and the margin may be pretty narrow. the rancher. Then the point is to hkn-tif- y Those w ho make a practice of loanhis live stock with th kind that ing money to rattle feeders ore not was sold upon the market at quoted willing to take the risks that seem prices. to be involved and therefore the man If we wanted to sell bonds and who feeds cattle must have a larger stocks, w would not expect th buyamount of his own money invested in er to visit us but we would deal the stock before he can ordinarily through established agencies, familiar hope to borrow money on the balance. with market values fixed by our varA few yean ago, cattle loan compan- ious bond and stock exchanges. Supies were loaning as high as 75 to 90 ply and demand determine value and per cent of tho coat of the thin ani- that ii the only way to build up the mal. Now there are few concerns market. which will loan more than 40 to 50 If some of the securities were tradper cent of the original cost. This is ed in at home and tome through clearan important consideration and is ing agencies, the market would not bound to affect the number of cattle reflect actual trading values. About placed on feed, particularly in the all the livestock producer can do ia to western states, this season. get the market price as and when hi Some western cowmen who for tuff is ready to go. years have found it more economical. to buy their feeder stock rather than Speaking of cattle price cycles. a breeding herd themselves are thorities differ as to the period but going back into the cow and calf whatever may have been true of the game, finish feeding the calves and yearlings themselves. This seems like a practical proposition in cases where land and improvements are such as syertorta to permit carrying a breeding herd. The generous rainfall which has brought out feed and provided water ; for stock all through the Southwest j em range country may tend to cut down the number of calves and yearlings available to feeder buyers, as many cowmen report that feed is ro good that many ranchers will be able to sell their young stock for beef ra( ther than os feeders. The situation on the whole is favorable to the breeder and producer, yet there is so much underlying strength in the entire cattle industry that there will undoubtedly be sufficient demand to take care of the reduced crop of Stockers and feeders. Miss Florence Winegar and Miss lone Christensen of Salt Lake, visited were here Sunday at the home with lones parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. who was of Mr. Curfews father, and Monday. suddenly taken ill. Mr. Curfew is Christensen, Sunday much improved now. STOLEN TIRES can soon be loa a a I am often reminded of some of the cated through a Sun Classified Ad. curt and very apt sayings of one cf and Cloward Mark Mrs. Mr. and the pioneer national packers. When children were visiting at Salt Lake cattle returned week. last purchases did not figure out so They City during home Monday and were accompanied by Mrs. Clowards sister, Mrs. Glen Gregory, of Salt Lake City, who will DIXON Cat Hunts Out and spend a week with them. 5HftHKHJHCHS0CHHKHJH30000CHDfC a a a Mr. and Mrs. Miles Curfew of pact is nut true today Uhum of th changing methods ef produc-Iki- . and i maturity. N4 I mg u fie to old Steer Wr plentiful. Today there are few to found in lie traffic and nothing mure than lung and throes that WC h Vo todtOod th period of emt and production about iu we mutt keep Ut mind that w have slo leeod the tun when a turjdo may be reached. Losses in this line of business mav bo considered a th ineutslda route to profit because with an everproduc. ituatioru ' Dk, SAUNA SUN, 5ALDA. UTAil rsry a Crsoh us Highway, driven by Oral Ni4on tnk tl Monday The auto II was of As't wnkrj Wednesday and very large claas ft o'clock when it ran aUut Us night in wli grade. TV liuirwt, rvgUterod into a hore jut South of Redmond wi, UVm CfcfUtfBwi Sml was killed instantly but no hoc The , Chr and Fa Jt atriou except a few alight in injurie tUi by lb gxwj itifaJiM Irrt bruise and cuij wrund to the achwd t the Urf and the fuwl bt (Kit the kIhwI Urn UiU ua would U imt aucrcuduL Itrtriag Officer Entertained, The cffuvt of the Redmond ward VkiUm. Un M. I. A. entertained the retiring ofMr. ami Mr. Anwi Harvard sad town ficer Wttxaday night at W a Irip to Yellow- halt loo, Jc u, left were played Intrrvstmg game stone Park, Idilto and rtler iMewl after which Wwiou refreshment ing points WidnMdijr. WfciU were served, they will vU4 with their aun and Mr. and Mr. Wildaughter-in-law- , Frank Thun ton, superintendent for liam Harvard, at Rigby, Idaho, the Great Western Salt company, ac. rompanied by Mr. Thurston am Swffrrt Fractured Aria. Wright and Dick Thurston, have reaon tf Mr. turned from a Urn day vacalkm, spri.1 Calvin, th 4 yesr-oi- d and Mr. Quay Ivie, was painfully In at northern point. They visited IdaJured a Hen he suffered a fracture ho Falla, Ogden and Salt Lake. On arm. a result of fallinr front a horee their return they were accompanied Mediral aid was summoned and Cal by Mr. Aliev Thunton of Ogden. via la getting aloof nicely. The latter will be the guest at her son' home indefinitely. Opening Social. Mr. John Riding of St. Georg Is Preparations are being mad for i N'el grand opening of the Aurora Mutual visiting with her daughter, Mr. lie Tues-day Draper. Improvement association next a evening. A very interealing proPeterson left Mr. Erastua and Mr. gram la being planned and worked where McGill, for Nevada, out The Young Ladle Board baa been Sunday Kiel ihelr will with vlait son, ofthey reorganised and following are the lVtersou. Lucinda ficer: President, Laxenby; a a e counselor, Elnora Sorensen and Amy Hides and sons, Gerald Erma Mr. treasurer, Dora Curtis; secretary and and Mods, spent Arlo, daughter Christensen. From the reports this week with last of visiting L. Y. Thursday will bo a banner year for the rdajjvea at Deseret. M. I. A. SrM tH A SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR |