OCR Text |
Show frfiday, July 23rd, 1926 THE TIMES-NEW- NEFHI, UTAH S, Local Mews T Born to Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Chris- tensen, Sunday evening, a girl. Mrs. T. A. Foote, returned home from Wednesday Payson, Utah, whore she attended the funeral of a relative. "I HAVE opened a bank account Today" is more convincing than "I will open a bank ac count Tomorrow. Judge T. II . Burton, A. V. Pyper and Joel Taylor were in Eureka last Monday on business connected with the Juab County Fair. Miss Mabel Wilson entertained the members of the Honolo swarm of bee hive girls at her home last Wednes day evening. The time was spent in planning a trip to the canyon for the 24th of July. Refreshments wore served to the following: Ruby An Ethel McPherson, Lorena derson, Helen Arvilla Bracken Kendall, Wright, Iona Garrett and the hostess Mabel Wilson. Mrs. Perry C. Hall entertained the Woodbine club at her home last Friday evening. The time was spent in sewing, after which a delicious luncheon was served to the following, Mrs. Mrs. J. R. Stanley, Leonard Linton, Mrs. Ralph Carter, Miss Al icia Reed, Mrs. Wrlll Allen, Mrs. E. D. Park, Mrs. H. E. Black and spacial guests, Mrs. Wilford Bailey, Mrs. Chester Foote; Mrs. Ida Davis of Ed. Pasadena, California; Mrs. Christensen of Garfield, Utah; and the hostess, Mrs. Perry C. Hall. D Warmth by Wireless HI NATIONAL BANK DIGGING UP RELICS Mania for Collecting OF ANCIENT LONDON Takes Strange Forms Rich men are often ardent collectors. Their fancy may lead tbera into philately, numismatics, bibliomania, Jt or It may wreak itself on humbler articles. Even for an old piece of glass or a historic watering trough they will pay big prices if the desired object completes a collection. When they die and their heirs sell their treasures, the rush that other enthusiasts make for the prizes Is unTo the philatelist a derstandable. comb-bacWindsor chair la simply something to sit on while he looks at stamps, but to the collector of Colonial furniture It Is a precious gem. In the yearning of such Individuals for certain possessions there is no mystery, but it is puzzling to see ordinary citizens squabbling over sink strainers and tea kettles at an auction Just because they once belonged to a rich man. What unfathomable motives drive a housewife to bid up the price of a food chopper? What magic properties attach to a millionaire's butcher knife? If the purchaser pays several times the market value for It she surely will not put It to ordinary uses. It should be venerated like a relic of a saint and hung In the place of honor with a blue ribbon on It. Perhaps the new owner regards It as a shrewd Investment. Duplicates could be cheaply bought and spurious relics have been known to bring an high prices as have genuine. The Impulse referred to Is hardly like the mother's comprehensible Instinct to preserve her baby's worn shoe. It Is more nearly related to the human failing which made It neces. sary for old Delmonlco's to replenish the stock of teaspoons every six months. Part of It springs from the perverse pleasure of paying more for something than It In worth. Like Jane Carlyle's simple housemaid, many people make the cost the only standard of value. Their cry of admiration, like hers. Is "How expensive !" For those to whom a kitchen utensil Is merely a thing to conk with, the spectacle of bidders paying three times the asking price Is comic. It lacks only the auctioneering Marx brother to make It complete. New York Times. k Hell Cat Power The size of some of America's great electric power stations can be appreciated from the fact that one plant alone the Hell gate station In New York city produces more energy than all the plants of Greece, Denmark. Latvia. Poland, Hungary. Norway. Kumanla, Turkey, Switzerland. Sweden and the Netherlands. These countries have a combined population of 109,000,000 people whereas the Hell gate plant provides but about one fifth of the electric current consumed by the city of New York alone with Its approximate 6.000.000 Inhabitants. The annual output of the plant Is now about l.OOO.OOO.OOO kilowatt-hour- s each year. No other station In the country equals this, though there are some building which will rival It Yngo-Slavl- steam-operate- A tableload of fossils and relics of human activity In bygone ages, taken from clav excavated on the site of the new Daily Mail building in Lon don Is being examined at the Guild hall museum, London, by archeologlca! investigators who are composing from its contents a coherent story of this part of ancient London, says the Lon don Mail. The fact that the excavations have revealed no traces of the Roman occu patlon tends to confirm the belief thai the area was Just outside the district developed In that period. The first recognizable finds were as sociated with the monastery of the White Friars. The new Daily Mall offices are being built on what was the garden of these Carmelite monks, the license to use this ground having been granted to them In 1397 by Richard II. At that time the Thames flowed over the site of the present Daily Mail building (Carmelite house), and the south end of the monastery garden was the river bank. Earlier excavatlon work In the vicinity established the conviction that the friars disposed of their broken utensils by throwing them into the water at the foot of the garden and the discovery now of vari ous vessels Is regarded as Important evidence of their domestic habits. Particularly Interesting is a part of a curious earthenware brazier which, from Its shape and funnel devices, was apparently carried from cell to cell for cooking and heating purposes. Traces of the charcoal burned in It seven centuries ago still remain. Of the same date are several earthen ware candlesticks, while a number of Jugs of the Tudor period, used in the monastery before Its dissolution in the reign of Henry VIII, have been found. A tavern wine glass, kitchen utensils, and three-leggecooking pot glazed Inside, are the most Interesting specimens of the kind ever obtained In the Carmelite neighborhood. Notable among the discoveries, also, are several stoneware drinking bottles or Jugs, cut to portray the features of an old man with a long beard, caricature of the supposed to be Cardinal Rellarmlno. Until 1697 the maze of hovels remained the refuge of criminals, but the community disappeared In that year, when an act of parliament was passed revoking Immunity from justice. Subsequently, on the site of the new premises, the Wbltefrlars glass works were erected. No explanation has yet been found for a set of heavy glass cylinders found In the soil, but a heap of shapeless fragments of glass tells of an exciting epUode In the history of naval recruiting. Resisting the press gang when It attacked the factory to sets the glass workers for navy service, the operatives poured melted glass on the heads of the attacker, who fled so precipitately that the officer In command was almost trampled to death. Ton needn't rlimh t proob- heat-makin- Well, He Made Good Somebody rummaging around old files In the Laclede (Mo.) News, found this item in an issue of 1881 : "John Pershing will take his leave of his home and friends this week for West Point, where he will enter the United States Military academy. John will make a first-ratcadet with Uncle Sam's blue, and we trust that he will ever wear It with honor to himself and the old flag which floats above him. John, here's our hand ! May success crown your efforts and long life be yours 1" good-lookin- g British Women Workers Approximately 4,000,000 women are employed In British Industries, It was stated by Miss Margaret Bonfleld, former Labor member of parliament and the first woman to serve as parliamentary secretary for the ministry of labor. She said there were some 10,000 women engaged in mining and about 225,000 in engineering. Mementoes of Dead Queen of the contents of Queen Alexandra's private room at Marl borough house have been distributed to charitable Institutions In accordance with the late queen's wish. Her most cherished household goods both at Sandrlngham and Marlborough house have been sent to relatives and friends. Most To Be Inspected the hilltop to rearfi heaven, for the valley Is juxt ns dose to It only, no ne Is In a hurry Constitution. to InvestlgHtP.--Atlan- ta Add to the Pleasure of Writina Inspection of all apples and peara will be made at the shipping point to determine that the fruits meet all the requirements 01 tne ieaerai pure food and dTug act, it wa8 announced by Harden Bennlon, state commissioner of agriculture, yesterday, following a conference between himself and others ot the board of agriculture with L. D. Elliott, chief of the Denver station of the federal bureau. Mr. Bennidi 3ald there was no fear at the conference but that practically all the Utah grown fruit would pass the regulations with comparatively little treatment to rid them ot spray residue. In the end the plan adopted will probably be the employment of all of the regular inspection forces of the state department of agriculture in the shipping point inspection, Mr. Benniou eaid. Wherever chemical analysis are re quired, the agricultural college will be asked to serve. The conference was called for the purpose of evolving some plan of meeting the requirements of the federal bureau relative to the arsenical spray residue on fruit. It is a most unus- ual collection of Writing,' Papers which you will find here. Both in texture .and color schemes, ample variety is on display to allow choice to fit individual require I ments. No Time to Lose The man and the girl stood entranced at the scene. It was the Lake district and the third day of their honeymoon. "Darling," she whispered, "isn't this heavenly?" Her husband sighed. "D you know." he exclalmod, "life doesn't seem long enough for our happiness. Just think, even if we are fortunate, our married life can hardly last longer than !70 years." "Is that all?" she queried, edging closer. "Yes. Only 50 years in which to love each other." "Then kiss me quirkly, dear," she said ; "we're losing time !" London Answers. Hotie of French Royalty The famous palace of the Tuiierles is In Paris. This structure which des rived its name from the (Fr. tuileries), that formerly occupied its site, was commenced by Catherine de Medici in 1564, continued by Henry IV Hnd completed by Louis XIV. The palace was sacked by the revolutionary mob In 1792, 1830, 1848 and 1870, and was almost destroyed by fire set by the Commune In 1871. Napoleon I., Louis XVIII, Charles X, Louis Philippe, and Napoleon II I, all resided at the Tuileries. Its union with the Louvre, which adjoined it, was accomplished by Napoleon III In 18.T2-5The gardens of the Tuileries, west of the palace, are ornamented with trees, flowers, fountains and statuary. 4 IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU SEE 18 FOR ALL KINDS OF GOOD PRINTING curate tile-kiln- APRICOTS R. Price I FOR SALE Joseph handle the Watkin's products Mrs. Elliott Miller. 1 ; ; - c 8-- We buy eggs, veal, hogs, poultry and cream. G. W. Lunt and Sons. FOR SALE Good Electric Phone 87W. My home for sale at bargain price and on easy terms. Only a small flown payment required. Balance on exceptional liberal terms. J. W. Paxman. Poor Prospect for Mother Little Walter Is a very sympathetic child. "You're awfully tired of keeping house, aren't you, mother?" he said the other day when she looked unusually worn. "Yes, dear." "Rut there Isn't much use In dying and going to heaven. Is there? 'Cause you'd have a mansion on your hands then." Boston Transcript. ADS RUTH MUSKRAT Ms: WANTED Pork, Veal aud Poul- Cy's Market, Phone 7. try U We pay top prices for cream and Nelson-Rick- s eggs Creamery. Tlione 7. . Electric Service at Pole The penetration of electric service into the polar region aided both Amundsen and Ryrd in their recent successful attempts to fly over the North pole. Electric light furnished at Kinys bay, Spitzbergen, enabled the crews of aids to erect the Amundsen hunpir for the Norge (pronounced In two syllables with a hard g) and helped I'yrd's men handle materials about tbat Intrepid flyer's base Ruth Muskrat, Cherokee Indian girl, was awarded the Henry Morganthau prize of $1,000 for making the best use of her college education. 8he graduated from Mt. Holycke college, Massachusetts, In 1925, and since than has been the outstanding spokesman for her people. The award was In recognition of her work among Indians at Haskell Institute. She Is In charge of the placement bureau of that college. Miss Apricots $1.00 Elliott .Miller's. WHETHER IT BE A DOCTOR, A LAWYER, A MINISTER, per at bushel 7-- I have in my possession one rewith bench possessed Player-Pianand roll. Will sell for the unpaid balance. Terms to reliable parties Robert Loniax. o, EE EE d Says the Deacon Progress the Increasing of motoring, pedestrlanlsm Is gressing by leaps and bounds, serve the Arkansas Gazette. Along with d Finds of Exceptional Inter est Recently Made. , That It Is no more Improbable to broadcast heat waves than It Is to broadcast sound waves Is the view of Prof. S. E. Dibble of the Carnegie Institute of Technology. But, he states, much research work must be done to discover Instruments capable of controlling heat waves, and a detector that will anticipate the waves, hold them, and amplify them. It Is known that heat travels through space and through solids, says Professor Dibble, and when once we learn how to pick up these waves and control them, heating throughout the world will be revolutionized. Heat broadcasting will mean better health to the public, because It may remove from the air the Impurities of g modern systems. 1 Utah rruit According to Prof. Engar, there will be no bund concert Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Judd left Tues day for a short vacation at Fish Lake PAGE FIVE 55 3Ej MECHANIC OR A LABORER A THERE IS A DIFFERENCE and CHIROPRACTORS. In order to SHOW and I in PROVE to the SUFFERING and PUBLIC general, will, starting Monday, and continuing for three days, So, also, there is a DIFFERENCE in CHIROPRACTIC t ive THREE ffl CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS FREE OF CHARGE I care not what your Ailments may be, how Acute or Chronic, Many of ll ;d Incurables have been made Well in three or less treatments. POSSIBLY YOUR CASE WILL BE ONE Being a Graduate of four schools, and having two state licenses, together with stand Capable and Willing to render my my years of Experience in Practice, services for the period of three (3) days (starting Monday, July 26th) Free of Charge. In taking advantage of these Free treatments you will get the same Careful Examination and Skillful, Painless adjustments as though you were paying for the same. Remember Chiropractic will Relieve 90 per cent of All Diseases. so-ca- Dr. E. Masisneld of t i v 1 " - v r v , - 1 THE DRUGLESS ROAD TO HEALTH Doctor Chiropractic User of Palmer and National Methods. Testimonials of the Highest Quality Office hours 10 to Furnished. Visits to the Home made by Appointments. 12 Noon, 2 to 5; 7 to 9 p. m. Office over Nephi National Bank. Painless Methods sT sTm i s 33 |