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Show TnunSDAY, JULY rzi 4, 1929 7znLY n-7- Lnx PAGE Einny nAYrroLg u7An MMtwMtMtiiuiaaiMMMIMtMHMIllllllllfN ' I J . Kitchenware s fa Ten Styles and Patterns. Summertime Wash Dresses Steel Kitchenware. No. Guaranteed Stainless . scouring no polishing. Look over your kitchen utensils and "see if there is not some article that you need. This Ware is all the highest grade stainless steel." Here are a few of the items: Boye Every Economical Housewife Knows That V. - Sheffields Carries the Best of Groceries Especially food and wholesome during the hot weather. We look after the health as well as the appetite of" our customers. It's safe to buy from us. Call or phone your order. EACH ! .25c Apple Corer Paring Knife (S.F.M5c u65c Long Spatula .1.65c .Wide Spatula Paring Knife (Clip)25c Kitchen Fork r50c ...60c Ladle Oblong STYLES FOR FORCE, VACATION AND SUM. HER RESORT Cake Turner Phone No. ING. IN A COUPLETS RANGE OF SIZES. .60c H. J. SHEFFIELD & SONS 1 . WEAR. 5 3 3 Kaysville, Utah 'niptfli Sests of Mrs. KAYSVILLE D1 Uy la unUal law tr MwHaw. ut adaatai bMn tnm Oita Cttr hr iatawtaa Tta fcrtwt M (IM Ml Lta H tta UmJ Un vta wrk la ttaa twill water ta Maratai aten aari lari rite la aapl r (na aMiUli iprt&n. BUT mmt taw VATKB ON BABTH. a imnal O. B. L. Mr. aari twite Beta aaw tailriUfl Stetauria, mam aari ilnali Itokta teal tete la Itate ta Itatai, Mta It tta hlfkwar. H lariaatital alaata. Hu tta ltovla aaaatr aaatoml lUfk actaal. taaaa. Tta aaw aari rianta Mill In a tell mt tta KararllU-Larta- a t aari tta aUMa aari trait tetalWhm t at tta KaraallU m t in-- n ariri ta tta wealth a tta jaaauaaaltr. Dalnrlag. awaeral 1 lifter trait aari aaaatahla rrawlag lac ahlaMat aari aaaaiag ara tapart aat lariaatriaa. Bum at tta larga aari dm laUari rriatlng pafcUatara, aataW aari wWf yaiatiac. iinrr. lut Frame house j FOR RENT N. See Roy Kilfoyle. Kayevlle. Adv.lt. Mr. and Mrs. Alma Webster and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Webster motored to Park City and Ileber City Sunday- Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy G. Webster of Ofden were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Webster. - Mrs." Clifton Ball and Miss Mae Ball spnt Saturday in Ogden as guests of Mrs. James Williams. Mrs. Clarence Brown of Ogden was the guest of her mother, Mrs. llyrum Sandall Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Coombs of Salt Lake visited with Miss Mary ' t- A. L. Ltfnt for ten We Wish All Our Mr. and Ifra. Harry Campbell of Elko, Nevada, are guest of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Taylor for a few days. Mrs. Oliver Freeze and son and Mrs. Douglas Phillips, all of Felt City, Idaho, are guests of Mrs. Annie H. Phillips and family for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. II. F. Bowen, Mrs. Mary Swanger. Miss Lorane Duncan and Wendell Nance motored to Sandy Sunday and visited friends. Mr. and Mrs. William Nance and son, Van, and Mr. and Mrs, Sidney Bass motored to Bluffdale Friday and visited with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nicholls. . Parley Killburn of Morgan, who is attending summer school at the Utah Agricultural college, visited Kaysville friends Friday. Miss Bertha rendered Sessions several vocal solos at the program giv. en at the training camp at Jordan Narrows Monday evening. The local camp of Neighbors of Woodcraft, entertained at a social in tho W. O. W. hall Tuesday evening. Fifteen guests were present. Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hart and son,' John R of Salt Laker were Sunday guesta of Mrs. Emily S. Barnes." Mr. and Mrs. Earl Waite and children arrived home Friday from San Francisco, where Sir. Waite had been undergoing treatment for an injured hand. Mrs. Elizabeth Green Dorrohn and Barnes Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lester E. Bybee of son, Lowell, arrived home Sunday eveOgden were guests of Mr. and Mrs. ning from a two weeks visit with Mr. and Sirs. Rulon Fisher at their Robert Green Sunday. home in Riverside, California. Francis H. Jex spent last week-en- d at the homo of Mrs. Mary E. LinMr. and Mrs. George W. Webster ford. announce the marriage of their daugh Mr. and Mrs. William Bues of Clin- ter, Laverna and Charles T. Tilder, of ton were Sunday guests of Mr. and Los Angeles. The marriage took place Mrs. Ernest C. Blood. at Santa Cruz, California, on Satur. Mrs. Thomas Towcll of Salt Lake day, June 29. waa a last week-en- d guest of her Mr. and Mrs. Orsoii, Layton ansister, Mrs. Joseph. E. Robins. . nounce the marriage of their son, HerMr. and Mrs. E. L. Tall spent Sun- man, and Miss Helen Ferguson, of day in Salt Lake as guests of Mrs. Elko, Nevada. The ceremony took Maud Evans. place in the Logan temple yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Green an- ' Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Palmer attendnounce the arrival of a son at their ed the wedding reception of their home Sunday evening. cousin, Miss Lucia Lairsen and KenMr. and Mrs. Jed Sessions spent neth Burbridge, which took place at Sunday at Clearfield as guests of Mr. the Larsen home in Salt Lake Thursand Mrs. George B. Thurgood. day evening. Mrs. A. If. Tueller of Salt Lake Christopher B. Layton and Mrs. married visited with her sister, Mrs.- - Preston Margaret- Sheffield- - wer M. Budge Sunday. Saturday. The ceremony took place Miss Melba Thornley returned from im the Salt Lake temple, after which the L. D. S. hospital Friday, where they left for a trip to Yellowstone .1 - she recently underwent an operation. Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Nut tall of Salt Lake visited with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold M. Barnes Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Underwood of Ogden were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Underwood, . The West Kaysville Sunday School officers are planning their annual outing to Como Springs on Thursday, - C July 11. since. Miss Dorothy .Layton .and - Isabel Burton entertained the B. L. S. club at a bon fire party last Thursday eve. ning. J.-- George Barnes, who underwent operation for appendicitis at the -- Dee hospital two weeks ago, returned home Sunday. Mrs. James A. Cottrell and Mrs. Eva Wiggill spent Sunday in .West Point as guests of Mr., and Mrs. William Knighton. Howard Thomas entertained at a chicken dinner at his home Sunday afternoon... Covers were Jaidf or. eight guests. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Flint was burglarized Sunday. Enhance was gained through a window. 1 10.00 !n change was taken.' Mis Wilda George and Miss Betty Iverson, both- of Los Angeles, are - ( 4 SPRAYERS, We have 1 t , the sprayer you want L for the insecticide to get rid of t -- I i -- moths, roaches, ants, flies and mosquitoes. Very durable and work well with any insecticide. Fine also for snraying floor oils and polishes. Layton Drug Co. a Muriel Reeves, secretary-treasureMiss Miriam Barnes, reporter, and Miss Lpurena Wilcox, notifier. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Larsen and children of Salt Lake were . Sunday Earle Robins. guests of Mr. apd Mrs. Mrs. Jed Sessions - and Miss Bertha Sessions spent Wednesday and Thursday in Srringville as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Selroy Boyer and family. , ' The Misses Ixleita Anderson and Doris Cottam, all of Ogden, and Bret Linford. ville, and Messrs Vem Woolsey, Albert Epperson, Verdon Thomasscn and Lloyd Mansell motored to American r: -- R. J. Burton fell from a load of hay Saturday and as a result broke three ribs. He has been quite HI fr park. At a recent meeting of the P. S. G. club, the following new officers were elected for the ensuing year: Mrs. Roy N. Kilfoyle, president; Miss , Phone 22-- W . LAYTON, UTAH Olive-Bywater- ot-Ka- ForkcanyonSunday and spent" the day at Timpanogos cave. Miss Bertha Sessions entertained the A Crescendo club of Salt Lake at a prettily appointed dinner party at her home Tuesday evening. A crystal basket of roses formed the center-piec- e for the table decorations. After course-dinner the time was spent in music. Those prepent were s, Mrs. Erma Hardy. Mrs. Carolyn Miss Dora Dunvon, Miss Ruth Lundquist, Miss Katheryn Cunningham, Miss Gladys Knott, Miss Stieko, Miss Lourena Crow and Messers. Albert Eccles, A. Nelson Fisher and Lester Rigby. Mrs. Roy N. Kilfoyle entertained the P. S. G. club at a social at' her home .Tuesday evening. The time waj spent in games, after which refreshments were served ' to the following guests: Mrs. Elburn Chipman, Mrs. Wendell Barnes, Mrs. Clifton., Blood, Mrs. Lois Phillips, Mrs, 0. E. Tyner, Mrs. Darve Miller, Mrs. Ralph Layton, Mrs. Howard Sedgwick; Misses Leone Miriam Barnes, Linford, Muriel Reeve. Claudia Cannon, Doris Thom-lMildred Crawley, Melba Thornley, Bell Holland, ra Odd, Edith Lay-toGolda Burton, lourena Wilcox, Florence Chadwick,-HeleHyde and Rosamund Ueldrum. -- Ec-cle- De-lor- es y. n, n Customers and Friends Timely. Hints on The Picnic Lunch . The picnic and the lunch mean one a Glorious 4th of July and the same thing and as picnic means a good time, a good lunch is necessary to make it so; and the goodness of the lunch depends greatly upon the way it is packed. The summer season should never arrive without a supply of waxed paper j in the house, since it is essential in Phone packing the lunch. Every article should be separately wrapped in the . paper. A picnic kit of some kind is almost a household necessity for the family with summertime gipsy habits, and the automobile has made gipsies of us all. The Joy of not Dishes Are The automobile kit with its many container for meat loaf, salad, etc., as Possibility that the general wheat well as its supply of dishes makes price situation this year may turn out packing the picnic luncheon a real somewhat better than was antici- pleasure and it makes eating the lunch, pated earlier in the season, due to the eon even more so, since one food does effect of bad weather on the size of not flavor the other. While we the crop, is indicated by the Bureau like both cake and pickles, we do may not of Agricultural Economics, United want the one to taste of the other. States Department of Agriculture in The wide necked thermos jug can be its July 1 report on the farm situawith hot meat and potatoes and packed tion. the gravy poured over. . -the This month, says bureau, isnot at all impossible to take will largely tell the story as to wheat, to the picnic, if the objective dishes hot a but reports thus far have indicated somewhat disappointing yield. There is not too distant. A pan of creamed are certain dry areas in Kansas and potatoes and a meat loaf may be taken from the oven just before starting up in the spring wheat territory and wrapped first in clean dish towwhere the crop has headed rather els and then in newspaper and will done while have rains short, heavy considerable damage in the Southwest. keep quite, hot for a considerable time. The individual waxed paper containThreshing returns from the Southwest generally have not been up to er are nice for packing fruit or potato salad in putting up a luncheon for expectations. A stronger market position for hog just one person. With these containand with waxed paper, there is no producers is reflected, says the bureau, ers in the June pig survey which indi- reason why, even if packed in a shoe cates that the pig crop this spring box, the pickles should become too was about 8 per cent smaller than last friendly with the cake. spring. The decrease- in the eleven Corn Belt states was about 6 per cent. expensive than in the city. Farmers are paying 50c out of Breeding reports indicate that there will be about the same, number of every net dollar ol profit on the farm sows to farrow next fall as farrowed for taxes and 53 per cent of those last fall. taxes are for schools, and the price It is expected that supplies of tree of land has broken down so that state fruits probably will not be much in tax commissioners are' being forced to excess of the market demand this year, as conditions in the fruit belts are rather spotted and production will fall below last seasons record. California grapes also will be in lighter supply as a result of the severe spring freeze. A price level for potatoes is expected, although any trend toward especially high prices, Steady Cherry and Berry the bureau believes, would be limited by a tendency to dig early in the main-cro- p Picking region. Call Kay s ville 174-R- 1 reduce valuations of land for taxation equality of education, and we ban ahd this reduces school money; -come to a place where this equality cf If the farmer is to have equality education cannot be maintained by of opportunity, he must first have the local rural units. . Chipmans The Perfect Crime Confectionery Featuring teClive Brook, Olive Rich and Cast. 5-- Chapter W "Two-Re-el Comedy OPERA' HOUSE, Saturday, July Wheat Price Situation Expected to Improve; Short Fruit Crops Show at 8:30 P. M. 6 Admission 10c and 20c Kowley Drug Co. '2 Tho Storo Meets Your Every Requirement. Phone Kaysville, Utah "It 45 FAY WRAY, and GARY COOPER, in The First Kiss Also The Dizzy Diver, a Paramount Two-ReComedy. Second Chapter of Heroes of the Wild el - well-sustain- Magic Diamond r . i 4 CIVIC CENTER, Wednesday, July 10 Show at 8:30 P. M. Admission 10c and GAEAGEl 20c t Fruit Pickers ed Wanted At Once! Bill Introduced to Aid In Rural Education Charles Brand of a bill in congress for an appropriation of $100,000,000 a year to help rural schools of the nation. ..This. sum, according. to the bill, would be paid to the states for the purpose of cooperating with the states in paying salaries of teachers, supervisors, and principals, and ether current expenses of elementary schools In rural areas.1 The bill provides that the money be distributed on a60-5- 0 basis and In accordance with the rural school population of the states wish' ing to participate in the fund. .. Representative Brand, in a recent communication to the office of the Utah Education association, says: It is known that money is escaping from rural sections Into more populas centers in a greater and greater degree. Chain stores are 'sending their profits out daily. Buying fencing and farming machinery at present prices with' heat,cornr and oats leaves the real profit deposited in the manufacturing centers. ' This wealth is leaving' the rural sections and in fact does not bait in very many of the states but coagulate in a few large centers- - where it to the national pays income-tathe only way to ever get any of it back is .to send it back from the United States treasury. The biggest product of the farm goes to the city for nothing. I refer to the boys and girls who graduate at a cost of $2,000 apiece for educa. tion and $2,000 apiece for keep and the country loses them to the city, permanently, and, the ruiney they have cost never ruturtis to the rural section.' The U. S. department of Agriculture advises me that 200 such children leave each county Un Iowa annually for the city, a draip of $80Q,000 each year from each county. Education In the country is more Representative Ohio has introduced X?UJ?V when-w- e . jGaXTj.tSmile get through with it. Our new grease rack is now installed and we have greased many cars, this is something that every car needs and will save you much time and mjpneyjfjthe greasing is done properly. - -- We use the. Alemite -- Greasing System which-give- s better grease job than other systems and costs no yoira more. Tires i Dont forget to check prices on Firestone and Goodyear tires with E. L. Tall. The values will surprise you. We have a complete stock, all sizes from the ones that fit the smallest car to the largest truck. . 7 th Heaven The Most Thrilling . c. , Love Story on' The Stage! - SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY! : v I rr- For Service Call - E. L. Tall Phone 101 Garage Kaysville, Utah |