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Show ye a? ean. to A, 'resident ager ffiee iktoit impbeD- mal tea it of J, ident b :epr ndjffl- tmpbe!)-jned tmpbe!)-jned k i derate I icti MtUltlJ, bnorer icoial ; null-i null-i CaiP-of CaiP-of idottr L Wood eBerta mettiJ roodruff portwt SCTfSf 0 meet Botes s to oar irrin-ndislag irrin-ndislag W iiiied : assist rk o market it frit jr that inofr cttl re W1 f tw je fltr .J -cmY. DECEMBER 23, 1S32 sj f published 1T to uhl 8un Publishing ,0a Every uu ' n5rd Sr.. Manager A.r oi w:t. Main. Street. . 48 North 1st East, ence. W Nonn thl. Utah, as class matter 2 inch , tV fcw ,10c per line "i 10c Sl07and 6c Per Line fU Additional Insertion Local Items I and Mrs. F. A. Hunger enter-Lj enter-Lj at dinner on Sunday for Mr. 4 Mrs. W. A. Hunger. lends of Mr. Enoch Eusson will ,'jorry to hear that he is still in gjtical condition. ,s. Clifton Jackson and Mrs. and son of Pleasant Grove uests of Mrs. Samuel Jackson, -lay evening. j I 1 nd Mrs. W. Blaine Murdock fhlcago. visited Sunday for a 1 It time with Dr. and Mrs. Elmo. I jjigton. j ..... . and Mrs. J. F. Bradshaw dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. ard Bradshaw Tuesday evening. Monday they were guests of knd Mrs, Fred Bradshaw in Salt City. J,:- ' T. SATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES it County Clerk or the Under- ed for Further Information. Notice to creditoes I the matter of the Estate of trd L. Smith, deceased.-r-Cred- will present claims with vouch- to A. J. Evans at his residence, Utah, on or before February 833. ' LORENZO RAY SMITH, . Administrator. EVANS, Ettorney for Administrator. . Publication December 15, 1932. I Publication January 12, 1933. t J.0TICE TO CREDITORS , I the matter of the Estate of ail Elllngson, ' deceased Credlt- present claims with vouchers fhristie E. Peterson at 1018 Bos-v Bos-v Building, Salt Lake City, on W feTthe police at secona can V; peN ry inTToc Per Line For First n Fff efore February 15 1933- CHRISTIE E. PETERSON j W - Administratrix. is and Sullivan, Attorneys for Administratrix. 1018 Boston Building, Salt Law i Publication December 15, 1931. amiui'i publication January 5, 1933. I State! I ; , , , ., . ,., sideii, NOTICE TO CREDITORS i the matter of the Estate of I Elllngson, deceased Creditors present claims with vouchers Christie E. Peterson at 1018 Bos-Building, Bos-Building, Salt Lake City, on lefore February 15, 1933. I CHRISTIE E. PETERSON I Administratrix. is and Sullivan, Attorneys for Administratrix. 018 Boston Building, Salt Lake i - - 4 Publication December 15, 1932. Publication January 5, 1933. WANT ADS vTTER WRAPPER SPECIAL! Printed) Wrappers 50c Print- Mule yoa wait LEHI SUN. X)R SALE One solid oak roll-top I and swivel chair. $25.00 cash; to $50.00 to $75.00. See desk at dence of late Bishop Henry Ts,Lehi,Utah, 12-22-4t Aoel G.Knigiit I Insurance Counselor ff It'i Inauranc W Have It" 1 Special For New Years "RT PERMANENT WAVE $2.75 0 FOR $5.oo QCIGNOLE PERMANENT $2.00 ibeth Dean Phone 187-J T P-To-The-Minnte Equipment 1 SZaVlCE AND GOOD TEEIAL ARE TOURS j AT THE I LEHI SHOE REBUILDERS I4ROLD OSBORNE, H.nr f 5te Strt Lehi, Utah 1W. Mrs. James H, Gray spent Friday Fri-day In American Fork, visiting with her daughter. Mrs. Sterling Durrant. Mrs.. Annie E. Sorenson has been confined to her bed for the past several days, suffering with gallstone gall-stone trouble. She is improving. On Thursday Mrs. John R. Bone, George Bone, Mrs. Eldon Bone and Mrs. James H. Gray visited in Salt Lake City. While there they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Paltridge. Mr. and Mrs., Tarvel Hansen entertained en-tertained at dinner on Christmas day for Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Walker and family of Lindon, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Gaisford, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hawker and the Hansen family. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Carlson and family of, Murray were Christmas Christ-mas visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tarvel Hansen Monday. A delicious Christmas dinner was served, after which games were played. Mr. and Mrs. James Featherstone of Salt Lake City announce the birth of a baby son on Monday, December 19. Mother and new babe are reported to be doing nicely. Mrs. H. C. Featherstone has gone to Salt Lake Cltv to take care of .her new grandchild. She will visit there for about three weeks. Mr, and Mrs. James H. Gray entertained en-tertained at a Christmas dinner on Monday for Mr. and Mrs. Samuel N. Crane and children of Draper, Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Durrant and Children of American Fork, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Swensoh and members mem-bers of the Gray family. - Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Dickenson and son, Irvin, Virgil Hutchings and Mrs. Julia Curtis spsnt Christmas day, visiting in Magna at the home cf Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ballinger. On Monday guests at the Dickerson home were Mr. and Mrs. Ballinger and children, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Poison and children of Sandy, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Dickerson and sons, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Dickerson and daughters and Mr. and Mrs. James Beverly. Miss Phyllis Klrkham entertained at a dinner party Monday evening, complimentary to Dr. and Mrs. Brown Ingersoll, who were married Friday in the Salt Lake temple. Mrs. Ingersoll was formerly Miss Lorraine Boley of American Fork. Dr. Inger soll will return to his practise in Denver after the holidays and Mrs. Ingersoll will continue her studies at the U. S. A. C. until spring when she graduates and will then join Dr. Ingersoll in Denver. Poinsettas and other Christmas motifs were used in the table and room decorations. ! Covers were laid for the guests of honor, Miss Barbara Lott, Morris Trane, Miss LaPriel Goodwin, Clell Jackson, Miss Klrkham and Mr. Ez Owens of Logan. o ' LEHI DEFEATS WASATCH IN EXCITING BASKETBALL GAME The Lehl Pelicans sprung a pleas ant surprise over many when they defeated the Wasatch Wasps, 36 tol7 hi one of the most exciting pre-sea-son games of the year, played Monday Mon-day evening in the local High School Gymnasium. Lehl played with j T&mrivTc r.r last, votir nnrf!"un,n wura u unaccountably continued to multiply! their list of basketball bigwigs. The score by quarters was 11-0, 164, and 91 o nn fv,n vwnrc vmT nTiH i Lutta for Wasatch and M. Allred and Evans for Lehl played the best hall Wasatch played without Giles, star center, but even so Lehi's win has its significance. ' y Lehi's lineup for this game consisted con-sisted of Markland Allred, Glen Chilton, Chil-ton, Don Evans, Marion Adams, Raeldon Goates, Leslie Hanson, Degelbeck, Peterson, Levi Hunt, Sterling Allred, Boyd Smuin, Allen Webb and Don Fitzgerald. The Lehl High School Sophomores ; defeated the Springville Sophomores ' in a game last week by a 16-15 score, m tms game xom woiiuiueu TRICKS 5C o HOW A CHILD CAW STEP i 1 1 JF-. It s pussibie'for an averagsized child or a nU aduU to step through .paying card. Ge, . cn.nl , qujllt, r h-- card, jrt tt like th. a Dove arawioi: bbu i-ui u""5 aHe to spread part -nd there pass inrougn. as ine eutrs ic y,"'" "h. h" th e.T much Jhat lltfle Johnni or Mary has actually stepped through the csro. muca Id the manner that animals Jump through paper hoops in a .. V HWnrlrtl Win 1. IJBrfW 3ZVERLT HILLS. You know la tht Radio lt hard to tell Just how aayonM stuff li golnc. That it they have no real uo as to whether wheth-er anyone is lis-tsnlng lis-tsnlng In or not. But us fellows that write on things of a political po-litical nature, we have an absolute ab-solute way of knowing Just who ia reading our stuff. Wa can check up on it to the Individual, because each ono writes you a letter telling you how "Wrong" you are. Just for instance they would writs to the paper, "I read Will Rogers, but why does he have to dabble In Politics. Let him stay on the funny stuff where he belongs." Well If they would Just stop to think I hare written on nothing but Politics for years, you never heard me on a Mother-in-law Joke. It was always our National oh International affairs. af-fairs. Well I have been in almost every country in the last few years. I hare talked with prominent men of those countrys, our Ambassadors, or Ministers, and I would havs to be firetty dumb to not soak up soms information. For Instance I was in Japan, China and Manchuria. I wrote one paragraph that was copied all over the Far East, and editorials written on It Well I couldent have done it by staying In Hollywood or in an editorial room. I had to be over there j learn it, it was "China owns the lot, Japan owns the house thats on it, now who is going to furnish the Policeman?" Police-man?" Still you will read some letter where it says, "Why does Will Rog- j ota uuib luiu IUC3Q .ULCiuduuuai problems he knows nothing about?" viWhere do these other fellows get allof their vast stores of knowledge? knowl-edge? I never hear of ein fcoing anyplace. If I write about Mexico, I have been down there half a dozen times. Nicaragua? Been here twice and fouju out things that I couldent ever have by reading about It Crossed India at the heighth of their troubles, been in Europe and talked debts till I had everybodys angle over there. There Is not a State In this Conutry that I am not In ever once in awhile. Talk to everyone, get the Rranchers and Farmers angle. an-gle. I said that nothing would come out of the meeting of Mr. Hoover led the way scoring 13 of Lehl's 16 points, S Evans, substitue guard sinking the other ones. Ban-man, Springville reserve forward, was the high scoring Red Devil, with six counters. : 0 FIFTH WARD LEADS "M" MEN RACE Standing of the teams: W Fifth ward... .....3 Pet 1.000 .750 .333 .333 .000 Second ward ."........3. 'First ward.. ...1 Tnird war d ..... 1 Tne nfth and Fourth wards won Lehl Stake "M" games Thursday niSht - Smith from the Rftn ward and Curtis of the First ward were stars. The Fifth ward defeated the Second ward by a 25 to 10 score. The First ward boys were victors !ver the Third ward by a score of lo " JUNIOR BOYS GLEE CLUB ORGANIZED A Junior Boy's Glee Club of fifty-five fifty-five voices has been organized at the local High School, under the direction of Abraham Anderson. practises are being held weekly and a very promising chorus is expected, Glen Degelbeck has been selected president. Lindhoat . j- THROUGH A PLAYING CARD Jl HIT THE CARD THE. . Lines. rr apaqt, 1 AND A CHILD CANEASIW i'STtP THROUGH , . . mm tn should "J" ".alS r Tit it EL- J TEE LEm BUN, LEUT, IROTR and Rocaerelt on the debt. A lure guess. Bat at election tlms you make people sore if you tell tm the truth. Republicans got sore at me because Roosevelt was elected, and the cancel!ation!8ts got sore at me because they had to pay. I guess that was all my fault? Now. as far as showing any dissreapect for our Presidents or high Officials, that Is only an excuse, its something I am saying that they dont like. Its not ' something I am saying that the Presidfent or some official dont like. I have told more jokes than would go In this room If tbey were written on tissue paper, about Mr Coolldge, yet he knows that I bare the greatest regard for hlra personally, per-sonally, and for his ability. Mr Hoover I wish every critle had to relS every nice thing I hare said About him during his administration, administra-tion, I know him, admire him, and I think he will tell you that I hare been fair. I have spoken hundreds of times about the bad breaks he got. We hare been a fortunate Nation Na-tion we have always had good Presidents. i Ton are going to find from now on , that this Party thing is I lot of I hooey. People are voting policies now, not partys. We are living In a time when If one or the other of these partys dont start dellrerlng an economic Government to the people, they are both going out on their ears. The Democrats are only Ing for a trial. So on with the Show. We will have many a laugh in the next four Is one thing M-hniif- the npmiv L1 crats, ttiey nev- ir'f ,v' i 3UCs er put on a dull show. But al- this, that as bad P as ve sometimes some-times think our Government is run, its the best run I ever saw. So this winds the whole thing up. There has only been two that has dissagreed with me, the "Rabid" Republican, that was just sore at the world anyhow, no matter what you said, and the other Is the Can-cellationist. Can-cellationist. My lack of humor, lack of english, lack of good taste, and all the other things they accuse me of, is a lot of bunk. Let the same things be said In favor of their opinion, opin-ion, and I would be a great guy. So now we got the whole thing straightened straight-ened out. He Is a "Die Hard" Republican, Repub-lican, or a Cancellation. But you are still going to get the truth. . 19S2, McNnugkl 5)Wrta. . . STERLING FOX ARRIVES HOME FROM MISSION Elder Sterling Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Pox, arrived home Friday evening from the California mission, where he ehas been laboring as an L. D. S. missionary for the past twenty-five months. He Is looking fine and says that he is glad to be home again, although "he enjoyed ; his mission very much! " I He labored for seventeen months ' in San Bernardino, and the balance of the time in the Arizona district. He received his release on December . . i Hi3 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ell Fox, and Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Royle motored motor-ed to Nevada and met him at Boulder Bould-er City. They then continued their travel to Los Angeles, where they visited with Homer Royle, who Is laboring as a missionary in that city at the present time. They visited all Important points of Interest in and about Los Angeles and report a wonderful trip. They were gone about two weeks. They report Homer doing fine and enjoy ing his missionary work immensely. We are sure Elder Fox made a very successful missionary and we sincerely welcome him home. o TO BE HONORED . AT WEL COME HOME PARTY ' The M. LA, officers of the Fifth ward have planned a welcome home party, honoring Elder Sterling Fox, to be held to-night (Thursday) at o'clock p. m. in the Fifth ward chapel. The program has been outlined as follows: Guitar selection. .Clarice and Betha Allred Stunt Cleora Lewis Piano solo... LaDrue Dorton Quartet number. ... .George Brown and company of Provo Piano duet Hazel Phillips and Beth Anderson Piano solo Miss Jones or LiOgan Dancing will follow the program. A good orchestra has been secured and a Jolly good time Is promised everyone. The public Is Invited. .. .; Waiting ; ' One of our severest lessons Is te learn to wait We have been so hypnotized by the popular thought of dolng.-C a Newcombe. j Too Muck Protactioa Muriel, aged seven, had been te visit a little friend of hers who seemed overprovlded with fussy relatives. "Mamma," she said on returning home. "I feel sorry for Nadine, she's got so many look-after-hers." Boston Transcript UTAH VVENTY years of conservatism conserva-tism and Impeccable ethics eth-ics In Ills dealings with men had finally succeeded suc-ceeded In grinding Into Thomas Mare's consciousness conscious-ness one bitter, outstanding outstand-ing conclusion. The illtnd law of compensation compensa-tion wus no law at all. As he grew older and more bitter and more resigned to the disillusionment disillusion-ment of the twenty years since he had been on his own in the struggle for existence. Thomas found himself more and more frequently airing some of his bitterness In the presence pres-ence of Adaliu, his wife, who was part of the reason for the sullen resentment that tugged at bis heart, like a tide. No more than In his own case fllll H tVT'.M. did there seem any reason for the sullen kind of fate that "3 1 t If . 'j!r7i Yjln dogged at the J.ll S'V She was a good wife. More than that, she was a good mother, and If ever a woman played her game of life fairly and squarely, with due regard for others, with fidelity toward her husband, and adoration toward her children, that woman, was Adalia. i And yet here was the fifteenth Christmas since Thomas had married mar-ried her, and only the annual heartbreak heart-break of Inadequate holiday spirit, Inadequate funds, and fear of facing fac-ing her children on Christmas morning, morn-ing, to confront her in the way of holiday anticipation. The slow anger that had been lying ly-ing In embers In the heart of Thomas throughout the years of their marriage seemed to catch Ore this time. What had Adalia done except be sweet, sacrificing, tolerant toler-ant and godly, to deserve the Insistently In-sistently drab fate that tugged at her footsteps since her marriage to ; Thomas? Real Hpp!nea Do you know people who always have to be certain places In order to be happy? They should be Joyous Joy-ous within themselves regardless of place. That Is real happiness. Exchange. No Possible Vacuum? Millions of molecules of air are left In the best vacuum known to man after the most powerful pumps have taken out all the air possible. I J fi For a limited time subscriptions to the Sun will be accepted as follows: One Year - - - - - $1.00 This offer applies. on old or new subscription payments. Pay two years with two dollars, or three years with $3.00, any number of years at $1.00 per year providing you pay your subscription one year in adrance. Lehi Sun Publishing Co. A Lehi Institution S Ht S c S: s S H S i4 What had Thomas himself done except try, as conscientiously as a man knows how. to fulfill his obligations obli-gations to employer, family, children, chil-dren, and his God; and why was he, at forty-five, unable to get footing on the ladder of success beyond his wretched ' role of assistant gar dener? Deep within the rebellious heart of Thomas Mare, rancor against his employer, against the little-girl daughter of his employer, against the whole scheme of society that made his state of oppression possible, pos-sible, began to burn and rage and finally sweep through his being. The plan to Improve upon the scheme of his universe and somehow some-how obtain for his brood some of the compensations which had all of their lifetime had been denied them, began to grow in the heart of Tbomns Mnre. "4 For a man to reconcile himself to society that was built on foul undergrowth un-dergrowth was folly. Months of that secret mental fodder succeeded succeed-ed In rousing within Thomas ainre the Impulse and the courage to carry out an act that two or three years before would hare seemed to him the act of a mad man. Thomas Mare had reason tc know that in a drawer of a desk in the room in which Theodore Longman slept, there usually reposed a roll of bank notes sufficient to keep Mare's family In luxury. And, curiously, cu-riously, stubbornly, almost Insanely In the mind of Thomas Mare was the determination that this year there would be no little frustrated faces around his Christmas table. The Mares were going to have their first real Christmas; and In his desperation Thomas even said to himself the Mares were going to have their first real Christmas, even if a fly-by nhr promoter named Theodore l-ongnmn was going to be found dead In his bed on Christmas day. Secretly, cautiously, subtly and with a finesse that amazed himself, the plans of Thomas Mare took shape. So clever these plans, that even In the eventuality of having to use force once he found himself In the apartment of Theodore Longman, It would be Impossible to trace the crime to the Innocuous gardener. The family of Mare was about to be emancipated. "Papa, am I going to get a sled for Christmas?" Here It came again, the Innocent and authentic desires of his lnno. cent children, that frightened look in the face of Adalia; that heartache heart-ache look. Christmas eve came, and with It jBn open drawer containing six thou-the thou-the rounding up of plans he had hand, three hundred and fifty dol-been dol-been carefully making over a period )ars shudderlnc turn away, of nine weeks. Nothing failing him. l eaving It untouched, at seven-thirty o'clock in the ere i,v Moan. N..-r)pr syndicate I ' VVNII Service! 1 Hospitality Another thing we can get along without is people whose apparent ambition is to see whether thetr guests can talk louder than their radio. Nashville Panner. Dear Outruns Auto When a Canadian motorist recently re-cently caught up to a deer,- at a speed of 65 miles an hour, the animal ani-mal managed to keep ahead of the automobile and finally turned off Into the nnderbrnsh. SUBSCRIPTION OFFER to the THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1332- nlng, Thomas Mare bad reason to know that rejioslng In the upxr right nand drawer In the bedrtini of Theodore Longman would be bundle of bank notes amounting to six thousand, three hundred and fifty dollars. At eleven o'clock, according to ' cu'tom: nr LonS'naD ri-ure m ma ueuroom, luru on rus reading lamp for nn hour or two before he fell asleep. At one o'clock the watchman of the grounds, a good-natured Irishman, named Curry, would be down at the thiid gardener's little cottage for a tweak of midnight egnog. That was the hour upon which Thomas Mara staked and staked hard. J Ironically, every move on tbe chessboard was precisely as l.mw.ug Mare bad planned. A little Inter, Thomas Mare, with a flashlight In his hand, and his cap pulled down over his face, was standing stand-ing beside an open drawer In the bedroom of Theodore Longman, Long-man, who was snoring. There was the bundle of bank notes with a rubber band around it precisely as he had known It would be I And for the life of him, to his ' degradation to his humiliation, - to his self-loathing, Thomas Mare could not lift out that bundle of bank notes. Not for the life of him, not for the soul of blm. And so, Impotently, blinded with rage, stifling with humiliation, the figure of Thomas Mare leaving the bank roll, turned and tiptoed from the chamber of Theodore Longman. It was long about breakfast time on Christmas day Just when Thomas Mare, sunk In the abjectness and bhame of he know not what, was beginning to dread the little breakfast break-fast table circle of the frustrated faces of his wife and children, that the summons came. Theodore Longman, waiting In the panelled study of his Georgian house on the hill, Informed him that, at triple his salary, Mare was to become general superintendent over the premises. What Longman did not add was that, at one o'clock that morning, he had watched a man with a cap pulled down over his face and a flashlight In his hand, stand beside Fad fer Japanning During the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centurtes, Lorlne Letcher Letch-er Butler writes In the Brooklyn tOagle, the ladles, of fashion looked upon Japanning as a new kind of fancy work and It vied with embroidery em-broidery and tapestry making as a feminine diversion, the first instance in-stance of an Industrial craft taking Its place in society. The ladies found It fascinating to copy the funny little figures, the pagodas and the ascending proportions. s |