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Show THE AUZBICAN tOBK CITIZEN ' FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER fc, t&S J BEST I of g e Lumber it the ff MILL m Uf fg riasn. Id band is now MRS OLD i v - J 0 lnsui l"l Grtn'vifM rVL DRIVERS 7 Issuing- 5 FORM fOUCY t ' . T-i.U :est First norm n jrican Fork I Km r 10 I m m SSZL Four "Daughters (Murageous" To C!ome to Cameo "Daughters Courageous," the Warner Bros, comedy of domestic life which plays Sunday and Monday, Mon-day, October 1 and 2, at the Cameo Theatre, could be termed a first cousin to the same studio's highly successful "Four Daughters," but It is not a sequel to that picture. ' The similarity starts with the cast, for every player Is also in the new one;, then It had the same director, and besides It was written by a writing writ-ing team one of whose members was also co-author of the screenDlav which was last year's hit. While the plot concerns dOTerent people than those In "Four Daughters," Daugh-ters," there is a basic similarity In that the new picture Is also about the Joys, the sorrows, the laughs, the tears in the lives of a genuinely "folksy" family. There are the same four daughters in this family and again they are played by Prlscllla, Rosemary and Lola Lane and Gale Page. Their i fo.hfr attain 4a fMaiifo Dalne ' wvwa . w v.wwtw 4WUU, OUU their suitors again are John Oar-field, Oar-field, Jeffrey Lynn, Frank McHugh and Dick Foran. May Robson again is a member of the household, this time, however, a faithful and outspokenold out-spokenold servant who has been with them for years. The girls' errant father returns on the eve of the wedding and he soon has It within his power to upset the nice future which loomed for his little family until he suddenly appeared ap-peared on the scene. The working out of this situation makes a sentimentally senti-mentally amusing tale with a moving denouement. Junior Demos To Dance In Barn, Go For Hayride The Utah County Junior Democratic Demo-cratic Hay-ride and Barn Dance will be held Friday evening, September 29, at the county fair barn in Provo, officers announced this week. The affair will begin at 8 p. m. Features of the evening's entertainment enter-tainment will be an old-fashioned hayride, and dancing in the barn, "amid hay, straw and com", according accord-ing to the committee. Refreshments will be served. Those planning to attend are being be-ing asked to dress in old clothes, and to be prepared for an evening of fun. The committee In charge is as follows: General chairman Dean E. Terry. Arrangements Douglas Phillips and Dean E. Terry. Invitations Ruth Olsen. Ticket and advertising Darwin Ellett, Spanish Fork; William Jex, Spanish Fork; Floyd Loveridge, American Fork; Beth Hutchings, American Fork. Refreshments Bertha Durnell and Blna Carter. USED CARS 11928 Chevrolet Sedan $ 45.00 11937 Chevrolet Sedan $495 00 11937 Chevrolet Coupe $475.00 11937 Chevrolet Sedan $595.00 11929 Ford Sedan $ 75.00 11930 Ford Sedan $ 95.00 11937 Ford Sedan $495.00 11938 Ford Sedan $545.00 11934 Ford 1H Ton Truck $175.00 See Lee Hallstrom 5 MAN'S MATTRESS CO. (9t Better Mattresses are Made 3 07. ALL KINDS AT FACTORY KUCES W ipedaliat fa Rcaovttfef Matrcsses -All ffWk GmanmtM- 'WE CALL TOa AND DELIVER ?t,Poro TeL Order to Lehi tO-W. Chadwick's Insurance Service Rlee Wastes as r4t Rice wastes are utilised as fuel In Italy In an effort to save coal, according to "Industrial and Engineering En-gineering Chemistry." With four pounds of rice by-products corresponding corre-sponding in heat value to one pound of good coal. It has 'been estimated that Italy could save 80,000 tons of coaL At present some thousand kilowatt-hours of electric energy, obtained through steam engines burning rice by-products in special furnaces with mobile grates, are being be-ing produced. It is reported. Since these plants are costly, they are restricted. re-stricted. The gasification of rice byproducts by-products and the use of the resulting gas for driving motors have permitted permit-ted the installation of IS plants producing pro-ducing 1,000 horsepower. Michigan U Carillon The Charles Baird carillon at the University of Michigan consists of 53 bells in chromatic sequence. The largest (Bourdon) bell weighs slightly more than 12 tons and has the pitch of E flat below middle C. The smallest bell weighs 12 pounds and sounds the note of G sharp, four and one-half octaves above the Bourdon. The bells are hung on a steel frame over 30 feet in height, 120 feet from the ground. A soundproof sound-proof cabin has been erected to house the clavier from which the bells are manually played. Flaming Youth When a sophomore, dressed only in a bathing suit, appeared in Harvard Har-vard university's memorial hall to take his final history examination, proctors prepared to oust him. He was permitted to stay when -he showed a physician's permit explaining ex-plaining that he had contracted a severe case of sunburn while studying study-ing on the roof, and was unable to put a shirt over the raw skin. Biblical Air-conditioning Joseph A. Shires, a Denver hv ventor, has offered, to alr-conditica the town of Oberlin, Ohio, to "pep up the inhabitants, increase production, produc-tion, improve health, benefit babies, and make the town a winter and summer resort and a convention city." He did not disclose the exact nature of his invention other than to refer his readers to Hebrews, Chapter XI. Rendesvous In Sweden Den Gyldene Freden, or the Golden Gold-en Peace, is the name of a small cellar restaurant of Stockholm, where Bellman, the Swedish Bobby Burns, sang his songs with tus cronies two centuries ago. Its food is excellent, but too many visitors have robbed it of the charm it had tor artists and bohemians in the old days. Hair-Raising Drink A new kind of cocktail, both antiseptic anti-septic and hair-raising, was revealed with the arraignment of two men before a United States commissioner commission-er at Boston on charges of possessing possess-ing tax-unpaid liquor. Reportedly sold at 15 cents a bottle, the cocktail cock-tail was composed of hair tonic, bay rum and water. Tooth Time Somewhat puzzled were subscribers subscrib-ers of the weekly Wyanet (III) Record Rec-ord when they found that one page of a four-page section was blank. That is, they were puzzled until they saw in small type the explanation: "Don't laugh. We had a helluva time filling the other three pages." Buses Run on Methane Fifteen hundred omnibuses in Italy are run by methane, or marsh gas, it is reported to the American Chemical society. Emanation of this gas in the district of Salsomag-glore Salsomag-glore will make possible the saving of tons of gasoline, it is believed. Bee Was Bullet While sitting in a park in New Orleans, Or-leans, Farmer Henry Bourgeois thought he was stung on the head by bee. When the spot began to swell he went to a hospital Surgeons Sur-geons extracted a stray 22-caliber bullet from beneath his scalp. Farm reptJatlea Shifts Last year, according to the U. I. bureau of agricultural economics, approximately 1.000.000 persons moved off farms, while $00,000 moved from towns and cities to tare: gland's Cheese The principal kinds of cheese made in England are Cheddae. Cheshire, S til ton, Gloucester, Wens-leydale, Wens-leydale, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Cotherttone, Lancashire and Dorset Dor-set Pfnscher Trails Fugitive " A Dobermaa Pinachei from Royal Canadian Mounted Police headquarters headquar-ters at. Halifax traced a man who had broken out of jail to a hideout about 33 miles from the aiL Scottiah Pride To emphasize its Scottish associations, associa-tions, bagpipers piped cattle into the ring on' Ayrshire day at the Nova Scotia agriculture department's farmer's week at Truro. First Automobile Permit Elwood Hayncs, automobile inventor inven-tor and manufacturer, received the first license or permit to operate a gasoline automobile. Cheese-Making States Wisconsin and New York lead la cheese-making in the United States. Only Way Off Tattoo marks can be removed owly by removing th skin. England's Bta-Ealer.' A sin-eater was a person who for trifling payment was believed to take upon himself, by means of food and drink, the sins of a deceased person. The custom was once common com-mon In many parts of England and in the highlands of Scotland. Each village had its official Sin-eater who on notice of a death would go to the house and sit In front of the door. Food and drink were handed him and when he had finished the repast, re-past, he rose and pronounced the ease and rest of the dead person for whom he thus pswned his own soul In Upper Bavaria, where the custom cus-tom long survived, a corpse cake was placed on the breast of the dead and eaten by the nearest relative. 'Curfew Must Net Ring Tonight The late Rose Hartwick Thorpe wrote the poem "Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight" on a slate during an arithmetic lesson when she was 17 years old. It was based on a story she had read in Petersen's magazine in 1865. She copied the verses and placed them in a dresser drawer. Subsequently the poem was published pub-lished in the Detroit Commercial Advertiser. It was not copyrighted and was immediately reprinted in papers throughout the country and In England. Unfinished Werks Music has its "Unfinished Symphony" Sym-phony" of Schubert, literature has "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." unfinished un-finished novel of Dickens, and recently re-cently returned American tourists report an "unfinished" Greek temple which has stood for 25 centuries at Segesta, in Sicily, roofless and floor-less, floor-less, but majestic In Its architecture. architec-ture. Americans Honored to France Visitors find many statues honoring honor-ing Americans in France. Paris has statues of Washington, Franklin, Paine, Lindbergh, Myron Herrick, Alan Seeger, and Quentin Roosevelt Men tone has one of Longfellow, Rhelms has Carnegie, Angiers has Jefferson, the village of St. Gaudens has Augustus St Gaudens. Slse of Atlantlo Ocean t The Atlantic ocean covers over one-fifth of the earth's surface and includes three-tenths of the water surface of the globe. Its length, including in-cluding the Antarctic ocean, is 13,000 miles; average width, 3,000 miles: greatest width, 8.000 miles; area, Including coast waters, V 000,000 square miles. Hamlet and Holger Danske The true renown of Elsinore, Denmark, Den-mark, is not its Hamlet legend, which Shakespeare foisted on the place, but Holger Danske,. the huge giant tutelary genius of the nation, who sits in stone in the dungeon of Kronborg castle awaiting the hour when the Danes will call him to save the country. Honest Stranger John B. Webb of Tonawanda, N. Y., received a letter posted in that town. When he opened it a quarter fell out. Inside was a note which read: "Inclosed, please find 25 cents which I have owed you a long time." Webb hasn't any idea who sent the money. Inexpensive Poland Visitors report that amusements and entertainments in Warsaw, Poland, Po-land, are among the least expensive expen-sive things in the city; theaters, operas, and night clubs are within the reach of tourists with the smallest small-est pocketbooks. Waterloo Visited Often Waterloo, a short bus ride from Brussels, is said to be even today the most visited battlefield of Europe. Eu-rope. Recent writers, however, aver that the famous place is more popular with Americans than English Eng-lish tourists. Stone Wall Justice The Judge of a Chicago court promised to leave no stone unturned in getting to the bottom of this ease. A defendant soon to appear before him was charged with stealingyes. steal-ingyes. a rock garden. Utilise OU gfalfe Half a doaen old cruisers , and SO obsolete destroyers of the British royal navy are being converted for eonvoy duty and as training ships for the royal naval volunteer re- rrtsea Pepvlatlsei More than 1,000,000 persons spend some time each year in the nation's penal institutions. The average daily prison population stands close to 150,000 men and women. Disraeli's Homo .... Hugbeoden manor, home of Benjamin Ben-jamin Disraeli, earl of Beaconafieki. prim minister of Britain during Victoria's reign, has been opened to the public as a museum. Rhode Island's Proper JName The smallest state in the Union has the longest name Officially it is "the State of Rhode Island and Providence plantations." Trans-Continental Telephone New York and San Krancisco were first linked by long J i stance telephone tele-phone in 1015. Siie of Cocliish Some codfish grow u a length of five feet, and a weight uf 100 pounds. Railway (niter Chicago is the gn.itest railway center of the Unilcd States. L E. Nickerson Heads Rio Grande Motorway System Denver, Colo., Sept. 28 Emphasizing Emphasiz-ing a policy of closer coordination of rail and motor transportation thruout Its Colorado, Utah and New Mexico territory, Rio Grande Motor Way, subsidiary of the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad, this week announced the election of L. E. Nickerson. formerly with Oeneral Motors and the New Haven railroad, as president and general manager of its 2600 mile motor transportation system. Rio Grande Motor Way, unit of National Trallways Bus System, Sys-tem, is now a wholly-owned subsidiary subsid-iary of the Rio Grande railroad, following fol-lowing purchase of the minority interest. Mr. Nickerson brings to Rio Grande Motor Way years of experience ex-perience in the relatively new motor-Tall transportation field. Attracted At-tracted by the possibilities presented present-ed in the intennountain west, Mr. Nickerson feels that there are unquestioned un-questioned opportunities for further developing coordination of rail and highway service. Tuttle Named To Finance Post In B.S.A. Council The regular monthly Executive Board Meeting of the Utah National Parks Council, Boy Scouts of America Ameri-ca will be held in the City and County Coun-ty Building, Provo, Monday, October 2, at 7:30 P. M, announces Henry A. Gardner, President. It la desirous that all Department Chairmen and District Chairmen be In attendance at this meeting. Special outline of yearly objectives will be presented. The following department Heads have recently been appointed for the 1939-1940 fiscal year, according to Henry A. Gardner, President of the Utah National Parks Council, B. S. A. Departments Finance, Ed. R. Tuttle; Health and Safety, Owen L. Barnett; Leadership training, Verl Dixon; Camping and Activities, Roy Passey; Advancement, Advance-ment, Charles DeGraff; Organization, Organiza-tion, D. D. Wight; Senior Scouting, C. J. Hart. Planning Committees Publicity, Reed Biddulph; Boys' Life and Reading, Oliver Smith; Uniforms and Appearance, Wayne B, Hales; Public Relations, Carl P. Eyrtng: Cubbing, James McGuire; Trail Builders, Elmer Jacobson; Budget Promotion, M. W. Bird. National Representatives Dr. Joseph Hughes, Spanish Fork, Utah; Wallace Calder, Vernal, Utah; T. C. Larsen, Provo, Utah; Henry A. Gardner, Spanish Fork, Utah; Clayton Clay-ton Jenkins, Provo, Utah. The General Board of the Y. M. M. I. A. will conduct a special training train-ing session for all Scouters in the Council area at Provo, on October 11 and November 13. This is a part of the Y. M. M. I. A. Church Wide Scout Explorer Leadership Campaign at which members of the General Board and Scout Executives will participate. Scouters and others interested in or near the meeting place should make special effort to be in attendance. VOJJOTO An average of 125 cars of American Ameri-can tourists cross the line Into Mexico dally at Laredo, Texas. To keep your car running smoothlycross smooth-lycross our line. To keep gas consumption down and motor efflo-lency efflo-lency up your car should hare a complete scientific motor tune-op at least every SjOOO miles. How long since your car has had one? Wo wonder it's "not the car It used to ." JACK'S BODY & FENDER SHOP American Fork Day Nlte Wrecker Service Phene U . Ant Painting -Radiator Repairs Commercial Photos Pictures any place; any time; any kind. Copies For books of .Tmembrance. Francis Foster A" CITIZEN OFFICE rnoNe 5-W American Fork - sCUh m nv w . Dramatized 'Elijah' To . Be Notable Production Dramatized versions of Felix Mendelssohn's Men-delssohn's master Oratorio "Elijah" have been presented several times in America but the version to be presented In Salt Lake City by the Tabernacle Choir In conjunction with the M. I. A. will be very outstanding. out-standing. The dramatic effects will be created cre-ated by a cast of one hundred twenty-five people on a mammoth stage, while at the same time the choir of three hundred twenty-five voices will do the singing. They will be supported by a full symphony orchestra or-chestra of fifty pieces. This combination demands perfect synchronization of acting with music and makes it possible to realize tremendous tre-mendous effects that could not be obtained If the same group were doing both the singing and the acting. act-ing. This outstanding production will be directed by J. Spencer Cornwall, Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir con ductor. W. O. Robinson, field secretary sec-retary of the Y. M. M. L A., will be the director of dramatics. The experience gained from last year's production of the oratorio will enable en-able all those taking part to give an even greater performance this year. Because of the enthusiastic way In which RoUln Pease's inspired Interpretation In-terpretation of the . character of Elijah vu received last year, he hat been given an Invitation to again take the title role In this oratorio. Due to the magnitude of this production and the expense involved It is doubtful if the people of this state will have the opportunity of seeing this dramatized version of Elijah again within the next few years. This oratorio will be given in the great Tabernacle In Salt Lake City, ALLIS-CHALMERS Power Farm Equipment THE LEADERS OF MODERN FARM EQUIPMENT DID YOU KNOW! The largest hydraulic Turbines in the world capable cap-able of developing 115,000 horsepower each were built for Boulder Dam by Allis-Ch aimers, designed to last for 500 years? Comer Implement Co. PHONE 67-W LEHI, UTAH OLD 'OhWlDBMiKl m-K ejs- KENTUCKY STRAIGHT iie CHEERFUL AS W Proof 1 1 1 . t v u. i new ffl I si s 01939,Natkal Dittfflefi Prod.CorpJJ.YXL voua ouswto feooe in a warm house That's only one of the many joys of having , . AUTOMATIC Ak Y-V t M. S. Plumbing Man Arrested For Drunken Driving J. M. Oaethe, 49, 000 truck driver of 317 Maple avenue, Salt Lake City, was In the Lehi City jail Tuesday night, booked for asserted drunken driving following an automobile auto-mobile accident near the Western railroad tracks north of Lehi, in which six Salt Lake City people narrowly escaped injury. Oaethe was driving his truck north when it crashed into a four-wheel trailer loaded with lumber, and pulled by a car driven by Ernest C. Clayton, Clay-ton, 36, also of Salt Lake City, according ac-cording to Sergeant Elmer Loveless of the state highway patrol. The truck knocked the lumber forward, caving In the rear of the Clayton car, but not injuring its six occupants. Besides Mr. Clayton, they were his wife, Mrs. Ollta Clay-ton, Clay-ton, 37, their two children, Elwood, 5, and Beverly, 14 months; a nephew, Marvin Mellville, S, and Mr. Clayton's Clay-ton's mother, Mrs. Stena Chris ten-sen, ten-sen, 56, all of Salt Lake City. Edward M. Mayne, 47, of Bait Lake City, passenger In the truck, received re-ceived minor cuts and was taken to Salt Lake City for treatment, Sergeant Ser-geant Loveless reported. Clayton was given a traffic ticket for operating a trailer without rear lights. TJragaayaa Meat Experts ' Uruguay shipped more than 73.000 tons of refrigerated meat to other countries in 1938. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, October 3, 4, 8, and 0, during conference week. Doors open at 7:00 p. m.; curtain, 8:13. BRAND BOURBON WHISKEY ITS AWfEJ J I jftej There's a rare, genial quality in Old Sunny Brook friendly smooth- that makes it "cheer ful as ita name," Why not boy a bottle tonight? 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