OCR Text |
Show PRO VO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, . J U N 8, 19.30. PAYSON SOCIETY KOTES I if? i An interesting marriage of early Thursday. Luncheon was served at June W33 that of Miw Marjory Wilson, daughter of Mrs. A U. Wilson, and Ralph, Kitchen, son of Mr- and Mrs. William Kitchen which took place on Wednesday, June 4, In Salt Lake. The bride has been employed at the Dlxon-Taylor-Itussell etore and was previously a student at the B. Y. U. Th groom v has been attending school ftt the "Y" where he was prominent in athletics. They will reside in Provo. ' , ' . ., Mrs. Emma Wilson, Mrs. L. V. Nebeker, Mrs. Hazel Patten, Miss Faye Schaerrer, Miss Ghrystal Rchaerrer, Miss Evelyn Tllson.Miss Orabelle Huber, and Miss "Mildred Pace motored to . Provo Saturday evening to attend a miscellaneous shower given by ' Miss Kathryn Lewis in honor of Miss Marjorie Wilson, a Payson bride of early June. Close friends from - Provo also enjoyed the delightful affair. 1 :30 with covers placed for the members of the Keora Bridge club and the following special guests, Mrs."" Elmer McBeth, Mrs. R. A. Poiter. Mrs, J. A. Earle, Mrs. Ray Monsonc end - Miss Clarissa Hay wood of New Jersey. Bridge was played during the afternoon prizes being awarded to Mrs. Porter, and Mrs. E. E Robinson. Members of the Wightman family enjoyed a family gathering on Memorial day, with a dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl , O. Nelson. Pi esent were Mr. and Mrs. M. II. Ross and family of r Salt Lake, Dr. and Mrs. N. C. Spauld-ing Spauld-ing and family and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Simmons and family of Provo, Pro-vo, Mr. and Mrs; Lynn Wightman and baby of Price, Mrs. Genevieve Ellsworth and children and the Nelson family of Payson. Misi Marjorie Wilson entertained at herf trousseau tea Sunday afternoon after-noon and more than one hundred friends called to see the lovely display dis-play arranged by the young bride. ITer mother and grandmother, Mrs. Emma Wilson and ' Mrs. Joseph Bingham nnd her aunt Mrs. Hazel Patten assisted In receiving the guests: MIse Evelyn Tllson, Mrs. Evelyn Douglass, Mrs. Madolino Dixon, Miss Chrystal Schaerrer, Miss Orabelle lluber, and Miss Mildred Pace Verved. Pink ruse.s and peonleti and orange blossoms decorated the entertaining rooms, v The Legion auxiliary ladies held un interesting meeting last week at tbe J. M. Cowan home witfi President Presi-dent Nellie LI. Stewatt in charge. A report from the committee showed that the poppy sale went over 100 per cent this year with 700 poppies old or 200 more than in past years. After the business meeting a social was enjoyed and luncheon was nerved by" the, ; hostesses, Mrs. Martha Chard; Mrs. Gladys Wilson, Mrs. Claribel II. Moore and Mrs. Tressa Reatdon. " - Mrs. Frank Blair was hostess at a most delightful Bridge party last DURANT HEAD IS C?JIIilISTIC OAKLAND, Calif., June 7. The best business since lost August is reported in ii etetctneht iwued bv the Durant MotoV company of Call ornla today. Highlights of the statement follow: V ' An increase In peraonnei was made, 100 men being added to the payroll a few days ago. " Orders are already in hand for the entire May product ion and a part of the June production. Shipments made up to May 20 exceed ex-ceed the total shipments for the entire en-tire month of April. Eatly reports from dealer regarding re-garding the new four cylinder s model, introduced recently, are extremely ex-tremely satisfactory. The statement, signed hv President Presi-dent Norman DeVaux, follows: Tor some months I have beenj telling our dealers each month that I was convinced 1930 offered ample Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dixon Spanish Fork, Dr. and Mrs. Wheelwright and Mr. andi of F. B Mrs. Parley Butterworth were the din- and Mrs. Kay ner guests of Mr. Monson Tuesday evening. ; A family reunion was enjoyed by the following members of the German Ger-man Ellsworth family on Memorial day at the' home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Ellsworth, Dr.- and Mrs. L. N. Ellsworth, Mr. Harding, Mr. and and Mrs. E. L. Madsen and family all of Salt Lake;. Mr. and Mrs. James Thorne and family of Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove, Dr. J. H. Ellsworth and children of Eureka, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. MeKell and family, Mrs. Genevieve Ellsworth and two children chil-dren and . Reuben Ellsworth of Payson. ... - Air Travel. For Scenery Is Gaining OREMSOCIETY . A number of Orem people are at- j tending the M. I. A. convention in I Salt Lake City, this week. .U . . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hampshho and son Richard of Salt Lake City were visitors at the home of S. R. Hampshire, and Richard Hamp-shire Hamp-shire on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Williams, Lucil-i Williams and Lawrence Mausey of Salt Lake City, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. .Marsden Allred of j Jeo Calfler and son. Marvin, ofj Mt. Pleasant are visiting at ih-i I California have returned to their j home of Mr. and Mrs. - Mahlon j home aft;r visitinr at the home of. w Mrs- Sai-ah Calder. Byron Hampshire and mother, j Mrs. Elizabeth Hampshire, of Mt. Pleasant, were, guests at the home ALARM, CLOCK : Instead of watching the clock to; see when you -should -start. this or. that about the bouse, M-hynot st the al&rm clock and when It is tirse . A shower will be given Friday j to dinner, ycu .can le r i!y Mrs. Catherine Michael Wednes- of her son S- R. Hampshire on i evening m honor of Mrs. ;perCy reminded without having to .hav day evening. .Thursday. Thatcher, nee Mi&a Naomi Selman. l it cn your -mind. Mrs. Eruily Rley of Ogden and Mi's. .Margret Moore of Preston, Idaho, are spending the week bre with jtholr sister, Mrs. Mary Ellsworth. Ells-worth. - . , Mrs. E. E. De Lacerda . of Des Moines, Iowa, is visiting with her brother. Rev. James O. Arthur and family. ... - SALT LAKE CITY, June 7 U.P Increased air travel, particularly by people coming to the Rocky Mountain Moun-tain region on vacation trips, , is r.eely, predicted by traffic managers man-agers of five airlines making .Salt Lake a terminus, and preparations nave been made to increase passenger passen-ger traval facilities this summer. Inauguration of regular day and night passenger service over the Varney Air Lines, operating between be-tween here and Portland, was the biggest step taken in t$e improvement improve-ment of facilities. The Varney lines entered the passenger business vith a vengeance in May, and operate oper-ate two planes in each direction dally, serving. Boise, Ida., and Pasco, Wash., between terminals. Lighting of the National Park Airways route from here to Great Falls, Mont., will make regular jaight flying possible on that line, which carries passengers within sty-iking distance of Yellowstone Park, Craters of the Moon National Monument and Glacier Park. There is a possibility that Yellowstone Park sightseeing flights will ' be made from Idaho Falls or Poca-tello. Poca-tello. Western Air Express, operating between here and Los Angeles, and Boeing Air-. Transport between tJan Francisco and Chicago, expect passenger service . to be heavy, and the Seagull Airlines, operating be tween Ely, Nev., and Salt Lak4- tiave enlarged their facilities for a predicted increase of travel. . r" - ' - , NEW 'RACKET UNCOVERED IN CALIFORNIA A group of Payson ladies motored to Spanish Fork Wednesday evening eve-ning for a bridge party at the home of Mrs. C. H. Dixon. Her guests were the ladies of the Tres Joil club and Mrs. Blaine Hansen an-1 Miss Hazel Hughes of Spanisn Fork and, Mrs. Ray, Monson as special spe-cial guests. Mrs. Earl Page received the club nrize and Minn Wiio-Vip Ihj Kust. prize,:: .r,; . ... Mrs. Julia Simons and Mrs. A. C. Bailey and children of Burley, Idaho, Were in Payson for Memorial day and to. visit with relatives and friends. They left for home Sunday Sun-day accompanied by Miss Grace Simons who will visit in Idaho-for several weeks r ' Mr. and Mrs. Quayle Dixoncame down . fiom Rexbui, Idaho, and spent Memorial day with their parents, par-ents, Mrs. Adelia Dixon and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jeppson. Saturday they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Hansen at Spanisn Fork. '.They, returned home Sunday accompanied by Mrs. Jeppson and Mrs. Laura Cromer and children. Mr. and Mrs, Ray Done and two sons of Oakland, Calif., and Mrs. Melvin Done and two daughters of Cedar Citv ar vlstHnir fn,- n fw rpnortunity to build up a record weeks with relatives. ealea year, ft have felt that tne au tomoblle industry was as sound -basically as the economic structure struc-ture of the country and that whatever what-ever slackness there might be wai . temporary and would bo brief. I have also felt tftat as soon as general gen-eral confidence improved somewhat the orders which "had been helJ back would .pour in, so that the total to-tal business oiT the year would be at least normal and probably,, so far as this company is coocerntsd. i would exceed our best previous twelvemonths. "I am very happy now to be abb to say that we have some definite indications that this judgment was correct. Business actually is improving. im-proving. I am sure that this improvement im-provement will be sustained. '"When I say we have some defin ltje indications I mean actiial, concrete con-crete facts. I will cit6 some of them. Up to the evening sot May 20 we shipped from our Western Durant plant 646' automobiles, or four more than we shipped In the entire ;month of April. Two hun tired eleven of them were of mi-new mi-new tour-cylinder car. regarding which our'dealera. have sent in bosh. very enthusiastic reports since it was introduced May 18. Thv sa-that-this car la selling readily and that It seems to meet a definite public demand. "The remainder of these ship ments were chleflv of the model introduced in-troduced earlier this year, the Dur- . ont 614, but there .Were some other types in the tota. "We are now shipping 50 cars' a day and will advance that schedule v. next wcek,whenjwe will put on ad-'. ad-'. ditional men. We: recently added 100 y men to our production force and now are justified, by increasing business," in making a further addition.! ad-dition.! Everycar we can produce in May has been ordered-and we now have 'in hfd orders ' for 258 carj on our June schedule. Completion of our May .schedule ; LWONNEWS Miss Fern Thome, who has been aboring in the Canadian mission for the past two -wears, returned home lait Monday. Miss Thorne will be ihe speaker at. the Sunday light services." Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Ercanbrack at Provo visited in Lindon Thursday Thurs-day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Thorne and children, Fern,. . Jess and. May .notored to Richfield Tuesday to see their- son Clinton, who was seriously' injured in an automobile accident. They returned to their :Vome the following day. Mrs. Martha Johnson visited in SAN FRANCISCO, June 7 IT.I! There are no racketeers in California, Califor-nia, in the accepted definition of the word, but authorities have un covered a swindle , that in its organized or-ganized viciousness almost approaches ap-proaches those proportions i the 'eye specialist" graft. According to Dr. Charles B. Pink-ham, Pink-ham, secretary of the State Board of Medical Examiners, . California, has been flooded in recent weeks with smooth-tongued "graduates" of a swindling school located somewhere some-where in the east who have victim? ized sufferers : from eye troubles for many thousands of dollars. The . "racket" is worked like this : First, the "surgeons," picked with an eye to theiivdisarming personalities, personal-ities, are educated at the "university" "uni-versity" in a 'crude line of prov fessional patter. They are then assigned . "territories," previously platted by espionage operatives who are hired to ascertain the financial fi-nancial standing of their intended "patients," their age, amount ot education and waildly " knowledge and this is an important point on which the preliminary wdTrkers seldom sel-dom eri and whether or not the., suffer fiom eye ailments. Miss Emma Blank of a community commun-ity near Fresno or San Bernardino or Riverside or Chico or a dozen other places come one day to her door. She meets a well-dressed, paternal looking man who because .ie is smart does not alarm her by asking about herself, but inquires ihii way to the home of some fictitious ficti-tious John Doe. Miss Blank never heard of him. "Very well; thank you.. Good-day But he interrupts himself, looks more closely at Miss Blank's eyes. ''Miss Blank, did you ever have eye utruble? ... I thought so. May I ?ook closer? I don't like the looks of that eye, Miss Blank. By the merest chance, I am traveling with the woild famous Dr. Blythe of New York- He is outside in the machine. I think if I were you . Dr. Blythe, with many a regretful tchk-tchk, tells her that she has cataracts in both eyes. It will be only- a matter of days, unless something some-thing is done; before blindness descends. de-scends. " Miss Blank, thoroughly alarmed. Provo Tuesday before leaving for r i 1"1aicna,r vadium t: - - . water" dropped in her eveath iMa tweeked with pincers to give an -anrorn.a. She will remain there during the summer. While there Jhe will be the guest of her daughter daugh-ter Elanch. Mrs. Alta B. Walker and son DeVcre spent last week visiting in Salt Lake with Mrs. Walker's sister, Mrs. E. L. Velter. Mr. and Mrs. Mllo Burraston of Goshen visited Wednesday with friends and relatives In Lindon. Mrs. Beulah Budwell and chil-dren chil-dren ot Ogden visited last week with Mr; ,and Mrs. O. L. Carter. Mrs. E. C- Lamb of x Fountain Green is visiting with her son. Do Verl, who is working for Orvell Carter. OFF THE WAGOJf STEVEN3VILLE, Mont.., June 7 lR Literally, this Ravalli county and shipments made on the orders community is off the water wagon, nlready in hand will make May th The old street sprinkler, which has best business month we 'have had served as a dust settled for 22 years since last August. I am satisfied will be abandoned and the more that the business wheel has defin- modern method of street mainte-iteiy mainte-iteiy be'un its upward swing." " 1 nance oilins-wlll he invoked. impression of reality, and tiny frae ments of flesh-colored rubber drop- ' ped in 'ier eyes. A moment later the "cataract" the rubber frag- : ments are removed and shown the frightened patient. Meanwhile, she has made out a fat check, never less than $5C0 and as much as $2000. They bandage,, her eyes' and beat it for the bank. Californians, especially residents of rural districts, are warned not to submit to casual operations by house-to-house "surgeons", and to telephone police the moment they are importuned. .... BEES GET BEESY EETER, Cal June 7 (U.n V.- L. Conlee, Exeter business man, is is through with having bees as pets. For several years a swarm of bees had made their home in Con-lee's Con-lee's garage. He looked upon them as friend little pets, and left them undisturbed. Conlee changed his attitude when the bees attacked him from.flahk and rear when he entered his garage.-. Conlee obtained revenge by smoking the bees out with sulphur. ; n nesesman springtime r i oors projnse 1 y of ; 4 i i i v"" -i - - m 1 -mm -Rj,r: : for D X 1 la- THAT doesn't mean youvon't evjr have to clean, lb em. No floor is so perfect . . . But it is true that a fashionahle iloor of Armstrong's linoleum can Vtake pretty good care of itself when careless feet track in mountains of mud, when little fingers spill r the milk, or the gravy, or even a whole bottle of -the. blackest ink. Such little accidents leave no trace on the spot-proof, tain-proof Aecolac-Processed surface.' A damp cloth, and presto! youi Armstrong Floor is spick-and-span again. ' - ' Then think of the joy of a floor without a single lodg- Ing-place for dust and dirt. Just a emooth, gleaming furface that you keep imooth and gleaming with a quick iaily dusting, an occasional libt waxing antl .polishing. Why, even In kitchens, baths, and halls, nhere floors 7naynecTwashrngnowancthen,ali you need tlotoreUlrt the smart new look is to touch up the surface ouce tit twice a year with Armstrong's Linoleum Lacquer. (QUr laboratory experts caution. u riot to Jacqucr over war.). But let's not forget that above hljlliestj new Armsirjn .. Hoors, lend refreshing eJflop weii-aressedrooms. justseetdf yoqreitfit iocal , v n , ?.!'? LJa'-'V-..,. (;?.,: V. . ' ' - ' . t- : ' NEW .. Mb TI1IS SPRING . . . At the left you see a modern motif, Emboiscd Inlaid No. 3220. Center design is De Luxe Marble Inlaid No. 13120. At right, Armstrong's Embossed Inlaid Design No. 5266. -- . .-.V ' x- i s it . .. - rj . V v . .. ... ?ifV.T'-:.-,-.-J.V.T-f'.- jC" . 1 4r-'iz-i'j?li A Few of the Features Armstrong Offers This Spring v DE LUXE JIARBLE INLAID Unusual effects in three tonedi xuarbleizing. Many choice colorings for home and office. LINOSETS- Large figured inserts ships, knights, helmet?, atsrs, etc., that can bo set at random in a floor of your own creation. to create bordcrs,forframingLinoels, for designing originaLfloors. TEXTURE EMBOSSED A brand-new kind of linoleum flow effect Lb tapestry, band-laid atone, and broken tile motifs. . - ACCOLAC-PROCESSED SURFACE Spot-proof, stain-prooA easily cleaned even ink wipe up. On all Anutroog' I :noleu- I2NOSTRIPS Plain color in strips of various widths. Use them ARMSTRONG CORK COMPANY, Floor Division, Lancaster, Pa. I - 1 n v s II If . ' U ' . .. , - " . in oleum jloors ike house 1 or event room in PLAIT? 1 NLA I D 'Y7- E M D o,3 S E D ij room in tne nouse JASPE AUABESq PRINTED . nnd- AnSIS.TIONC.1! pDAsTCZl O v V Ten Busy Stores n 1 ' A- T a y I b it The Home Furnishers of . CENTRAL, SOUTHERN lAND EASTERN UTAH f i |