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Show PAGE EIGHT In Race Treasurer Daryl Fowler of Letai, deputy county treasurer for f iye years, announced Saturday that he would be a candidate for the nomination as county treasurer on the Republican Re-publican ticket subject to the will be the Republican county convention con-vention at Springville, Wednesday. Wednes-day. . Mr. Fowler is a native of Lehi and atended the' Brigham Younf university. He owned and operated a farm in Utah county for 21 years, a substantial taxpayer, and is in sympathy with the farm bureau tax program. He has worked in the office of County Treasurer John C. Taylor Tay-lor for five year and prior to that time was employed in the office of the Utah-Idaho Sugar company. com-pany. Coming SAT., SEPT. 29 1 Day Only Direct from New York 1934 EDITION BROADWAY VANITIES 0 ACTS 25 PEOPLE and the Famous Ritz Carlton ORCHESTRA Plus Reg-. Screen Show All at Popular Prices i t 3& N 'W-M?: jyj. r1- . '. S-C-. '..-';-S.:.:.;...v.v.y: : J.-. tUJ. M It Fowler For - -PROVO - - When Their Meet It's the Grandest Thrill the Screen Can Give! Womrn will nntlrrtitaud . roniautle drama 7 A with OTTO KRUGER STUART ERWIN P KICKS duriBK thin engagement Matinees. .20c Kvcnlnps Bal. 2e Orch. 30c i Children 10c ORPHEUM WILLIAM POWELL and MYRNA LOY in THE THIN MAN" 5 'W&B!I.rCOMEbY Joan Crawford, Clark Gable Featured Joan Crawford and Clark New Price Policy At Provo Theaters Beginning today, certain screen productions at the local theaters will carry a slight increase in admission price. It is a known fact that Provo has long been far below the average av-erage in fair prices, but due to the demands of the producing companies, whose product is sold to the theatei on a percentage basis of the entire receipts, the new season contracts specify a minimum admission price. The new policy will not effect the entire en-tire week's programs, as for the present time at least, many of the pictures wil lbe shown at the present pice schedule. It is said that increased cost of production and distribution make this change necessary. TODAY! Lips . . mm vlH nitplaud thin . cxcitiii nuil clrotrlfylnK! WORD O 1 mm BETTY HOOP Cartoon (rantlaad Rlee Sabjeet "WATER RODEO" Paramount Sound News 3 MATS. - - - 15 EVES. - - - 20 - ODDITY and NEWS I n I Gable in "Chained" Gripping Romantic Triangle Theme Of Paramount Feature If you want an afternoon or evening of royal entertainment, hurry to the Paramount cheater, where Joan Crawford and Clark Gable's new co-starring vehicle is on view. It is titled "Chained" and was directed by Clarence Brown, who gave us "Sadie Mc-Kee," Mc-Kee," Joan's last. Clark Gable plays the kind o'f role the public has been clamoring for, that of a young rancher in South Amerira. And as a modern New York girl who falls in love on the boat that is to carry her away from despair, Joan Crawford Craw-ford gives one of the-finest performances per-formances of her vivid career. The supporting cast is equally good, with otto Kruger as the gentlemanly Mr. Field, Marjorie Gateson as his wife, Stuart Erwin as Johnnie, Gable's irreverent friend, and Una O'Connor as Amy, Joan Crawford's sympathetic companion. com-panion. Diane (Joan Crawford) is the girl to whom Field has been devoted. de-voted. When his wife refuses to divorce him, Field urges Diane to take an ocean voyage to forget her disappointment. On the boat she meets Mike (Clark Gable) and falls in love in spite of her- self. A day on his South Amer-to wb mmtm gfaBffwns I Z?:-?.AW: JL-: x.-.t StX'..- A CW. Kf-h, SW Ik.. s . ( jS. T1 jf 1 in ii " in r Nothing Like It Since the Earthquake! . . . TODAY Mon. & Tues. CREST PRICES Sunday, Monday Tuesday Mats. - .- - 15c fives. - 20c, 25c Children - - 10c Relief Clients Asked To Assist In Crop Harvest Relief clients in Provo are invited in-vited to donate their labor for harvesting the tomato, early potato, po-tato, and bean crop at the community com-munity farm at Eleventh West and Eleventh South, Monday, according ac-cording to A. . F. Edelman and Vern C. Johnson, members of a special committee appointed by the C R. W. P. U. Relief clients may call at the Provo city relief office, Monday to get orders to harvest the supplies sup-plies in the community garden, according to a notice issued from the FERA offices, Saturday. According to Mr. Edelman and MB. Johnson, the Request for the public to aid in the harvesting harvest-ing of the crop is necessitated by the fact that no more funds are available for harvesting, and in order to save the crops from waste. Relief clients are invited, in addition to harvesting their own supplies, to donate a few hours more for harvesting the crop. The C. R. W. P. U. truck will leave Pioneer Park at 8 o'clock Monday morningr and will stop at the Tabernacle corner on the way to the farm. Those who wish to obtain supplies from the farm and donate some labor are welcomed to ride on the truck. A team and plow, belonging to the C. R. W. Pj U. will be on hand to help Monday at the farm. ALIMONY HEARING SET Order to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt con-tempt of court was issued by Judge Abe W. Turner of the Fourth district court Saturday, on Irwin McDowell. McDowell was ordered by the court on April 14,. 1934, to pay Jennie McDowell $40 a month alimony, which he allegedly has failed to do. The hearing was set for September Sep-tember 29, at 10 o'clock. An Illinois bank, going . out of business, offered free fountain pens to induce customers to check out their deposits. If the bank wanted people to withdraw their money, it should simply have failed. ican ranch convinces her there is no one else in lfie for her. She returns to explain to Field, but finds he has obtained the divorce. div-orce. To save him suffering, they are married. She meets Mike a year later in New York, and in an effort to stifle her love for him, rushes with her husband to their Lake Placid cabin. What happens when Mike follows must be seen be appreciated. SEE The Hongkong of West where society's spoiled spoil-ed beauties hunt adventure and find damnation! SEE Thugs and coppers in a nerve-shattering fight to the death on Frisco Bay! SEE The snatching of the frontpage front-page heiress whose exploits make Frisco Jenny look like a Pollyanna! SEE The Barbary Coast tearing the lid off when fog manacles man-acles the forces of the law! And a Hundred Other Heart-Stopping Heart-Stopping Thrills! C A First National sensation with ? BETTE DAVIS DONALD WOODS MARG. LINDSAY HUGH HERBERT L.Y LEfTALBOT ARTHUR BYRON j PLUS "Puss in Boots" (Natural ! color) -Vitaphone Musical I Screen 'Snapshot Latest News : Stars of Crest Thriller r . ' v "4 rf )- S?F v. -A 4 i .I, rV i. I They look all set for a moment of romance, Lyle Talbot and Bette Davis, in a scene from "Fog Over Frisco," the new First National picture at the Crest. Others in the cast include Margaret Lindsay, Donald Woods and Hugh Herbert. "Fog Over Frisco" Thrilling Mystery And Romance Film A melodramatic murder mystery thriller comes to the Crest theater on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, under the title of "Fog Over Frisco," Fris-co," with Bette Davis, Donald Woods, Margaret Lindsay, Hugh Herbert and Lyle Talbot in the featured leads. This First National picture, based on the story by George Dyer, is an exciting tale of adventure. ad-venture. Bette Davis, playing a heavy for the first time in her life, is one of the leaders of a band of international bond swindlers, although al-though she is the daughter of a wealthy bond broker. Other important im-portant members of the band include in-clude Lyle Talbot, vice president of the bonding house, a weakling to whom Bette is suposedly betrothed be-trothed and whom she bends to her will; Douglas Dumbrille, the master mind, secretly married to Bette and who later slays her when his fancy turns to another; and Irving Pichel, a go-between, who is also slain by the master mind. Donald Woods and Margaret Lindsay have the romantic leads. Hugh Herbert, as a picture snatcher, furnishes no inconsiderable inconsider-able amount of comedy relief while Arthur Byron, Henry O'Neill and Robert Barrat have important roles as the bond broker, his partner part-ner and a secret service operative respectively. Others in the cast, which is an unusually large and talented one, include Alan Hale, Gordon West-cott, West-cott, Charles Wilson, Charles Min-jir, Min-jir, William Demarest, Douglas Gosgrove, William Davidson and George Chandler. Paramount Books Stage Attractions The Paramount theater tins made arrangements with oik- of the leading booking agencies to circuit one of their complete var iety shows every two weeks at the local showhouse, according to Manager S. I. Levin. The shows after opening in Provo will travel over the Marcus circuit. Each show will carry its own orchestra and special stage effects. The acts are reported to" be of the highest quality. In line with the new policy, the double-bill programs formerly shown on Friday and Saturday will be replaced by the best single feature screen attractions from the leading producers and surrounded sur-rounded by a . well balanced program pro-gram of popular short subjects. PROBE ADJOURNS NEW YORK, Sept. 22 U.H Inquiry into the Morro Castle lire was in adjournment today while Dickerson N. Hoover, chairman chair-man of the investigating board, was in Washington to report to his chief, Secretary of Commerce Daniel Roper. FREE LECTURES by Geo. A Martineati There are no incurable diseases. He will prive you the right combinations, combin-ations, which means right food, to insure health, happiness, and success. The body is self -repairing1, but we must furnish natural foods for repair. PUBLIC LIBRARY September 21-22-24 8 p. m. Go Back To Work BUTTE, Mont., Sept. 20 r.i: A small group of union workers today trudged up the snow-pow-dcred Butte hill to receive assignments assign-ments to go back to work in the mines tomorrow. This group, a cross section of the 5,000 Montana copper workers who had been on strike since May 8, consisted of engineers, firemen, pumpmen and watchmen. Meanwhile plans for rehabilitation rehabilita-tion went forward rapidly. The Alaska Steamship company announced an-nounced a 50 per cent slash in its rates between Seattle and Nome in order to encourage shipments of building materials and food. The food supply on hand will last 12 days more. The building materials ma-terials available are not sufficient to provide adequate shelter for the 400 made homeless. FALL FASHION FESTIVAL 0 hit irifT'J Septembei 24th to 29th OPEN No sales will that we may 112 l3 service of good merchandising. PROVO, UTAH Celebrities To Appear On B. Y. U. Lyceum Program At least four celebrities new to Utah county audiences are scheduled to appear on Brigham Young university's lyceum course for the coming year, according to Professor John C. Swenson and Dean Herald R. Clark of the lyceum committee. Prominent men to make their first appearance on the college hall stake will be Mr. Lawrence Dennis, lecturer on economic and national problems; Mr. George Garner, celebrated Georgia negro tenor; Mr. Arthur Kallet. author of " 100.000 Guinea Pigs" : and Mr. Upton Close, authority on Asia. Three men who apepared last year will also visit the "Y" college during the coming season Dr. Bruno Rosclli, founder of the department de-partment of Italian at Vassar College and authority on war and peace, will be among the first to lecture. Mr. Fredrick Dixon, distinguished dis-tinguished American pianist, will return. Since his debute in 1922, Mrs. Dixon has risen to the front rank of younger pianists, states "Wc Make It Hot for Anv One Using Our Coal" THE BILLINGS COAL COMPANY Still does business at the Same Old Stand We Are Still Supplying That Good NATIONAL and BLUE JAY COAL Let Us Fill Your Hins While the Summer Rate is On DOMESTIC LUMP f Per Ton STOVE - NIT yUj Delivered We are headquarters for Kindling, and our Coke friends get the best the Steel Plant makes. LET US HELP SOLVE YOUR FUEL TROUBLES TELEPHONE 491 It W&M(r W 1 1 mmM if Get MONDAY to acquaint you with: A Larger A Better Store .... Far Greater Values ..... The Newest Authentic Styles be made . . you are requested to come, "show off" our accomplishments in the LEWIS LEO 200 SPECIMENS ADDED Two hundred specimens have been added to the collection of mammals in the zoology department depart-ment at Brigham Young university, univer-sity, according to C. Lynn Hay-ward, Hay-ward, instructor. The school now has over four hundred museum specimens of mammals. The new collection was made by Mr. Hay ward and Harold Hutchings during the summer They spent six weeks in the L;i Sal Mountains and on Mount Timpanogos gathering the animals, ani-mals, which range in size from the tiny shrew to the badger. Dean Clark. Commander Donaid S. MacMillan, noted Artie explorer, ex-plorer, will be back from an exploring ex-ploring expedition to relate his experiences and show pictures of his travels. In addition to these, other artists art-ists may be secured for the arts course prog rani. Professor Swenson Swen-son said. MOVING? If moving call the Hardy Trans-fer. Trans-fer. Modern equipment and men who know how to handle the most fragile furniture. PHONi: 148 GET FORD A V-8 THIS WEEK! Free Tickets Here NIGHT . LIVING MODELS in Windows 8 to 8 SO P. M. Hi m. LADIES' STORE N. LEWIS, Manager |