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Show JL Thursday, November 14, 1929 ,41 J A THE TIMES- - NEWS. NEPHI. UTAH LEVAN iOiL $ 13V 6r Arthur ' 5 folks make stamp collections And some just "gather moss," Some keep collecting1 dimes until Old Sharon rows them across; But the finest of nil collections Is this don't be confined A perfect collection of alibis That you have never used! Some w$0 The rarest of all collections Is a store of alibis That you have never resorted to, And it's one your friends will prize. So save your unused alibis, , Just lock them in the vault, Nobody loves the man who cries "Of course, it's NOT MY FAULT!" -- 5Vv &ZtX7rrt More Automobiles Short Skirts Will Stay Russia Tries Farming A Killer Acquitted BIG Johnson of Sandy, Utah U and friends here. Sum vialliug relatives DEMONSTRATION Mrs. Joseph ChrUteuaen returned home Sunday after spending a week here with relatives ana friends. born of ONE Street's statement, hurricane now sub. Ming, predicts that because some flocks have dropped the United States will stop buying automobiles. This country needs at least 6.000,-)0- 0 new automobiles a year and will ttvy them. Twenty five million automobiles are running in the United States now. Thirty million will be running before foolish long. The drop In stock values will interfere temporarily with the sale of expensive diamond and pearl necklaces, and a few sable eoats may sell at a bargain. But the automobile, worth Its price, whether It be $7,000 or $700. will be In demand as much as ever. Dr. Nystrom, HAPPENINGS professor of market- Mr. and Mrs. Charles AlcNelley returned home Wednesday after a trip to Lynndyl. MRS. B. M. SNELL Will Be in Nephi Next Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Winter of Fountain Green spent Thursday with relatives here. Monday and Tuesday Russell Gardner of Provo spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Gardner. Sunday School conference will be held In the Levan Ward meeting house Sunday, November 17th. They exteud an invitation to everyone. Le Grande MangeUon at City spent the week end parents, Mr. Mangelson. Salt Lake and with his Lorenzo Mrs. and To Demonstrate The HORTON WASHING MACHINE HORTON ELECTRIC IRONER J. A. Bosh returned home Saturday night after spending the in Salt past week with relatives Mrs. Demonstration Will Be At Lake City. ing at the Columbia University School Ttieo, the young daughter of Mr. of Business, says women refuse to Mrs. Fred Stephensen met with follow dressmakers' orders and wear and a painful accident Saturday when she long skirts. leu and sustained a broken arm. The "fashionable" five per cent of women will wear long skirts at night, Mr. and Mrs. RushhII Wnrthnn nt with a tall at one side dragging on Salt Lake City spent the week end 1 ft) Brisbane PAGE SEVEN nere wun Mr. the ground. The other ninety-fivper cent, lees more but fashionable, Intelligent, m ft i,mm,t,u .aiirti will sUck to the short skirts. That Is good news, if true, but usually the majority Is led by the minority. In styles. And moving pictures, showing "the latest," as soon as produced, cause styles to change In three months. It used to take two years to make a change. "An atack of ptomaine poison 10 While we talk about farm relief years ago left my whole system disordered. It was bilious and consti- In Washington and supply genuine pated and sufered with indigestion relief In Wall Street. Soviet Russia after nearly every meal. I lost makes real experiments. naRussia, developing gigantic tional farms with modern machinery, plans a complete revolution In farming methods. million small farms Twenty-fiv- e that feed Russia's population, and of the earth's surface, cover one-sixwill be changed to big scale farming on a basis that would double the crops, using half the land. ft ana Airs. j. f. stepben-se- Ostler & Allen Nephi, Utah n. e 1 LOCALS Earl H. Steele, manager of the Venice Theatre, was in Salt Lake City Tuesday on business connected with Nephi's ahowhouse. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bowles returned to N'ephi Sunday after enjoying a week's visit with their children in Salt Lake City and Provo. Mrs. Geo. D. Haymond left last Friday for Pocatello, Idaho, where she visited with Miss Dorothy Haymond, who is attending college in the Idaho city. 'M" Men of the Nephi ward perfected an organization Tuesday evening, with Eugene Worthington, as president; Earl Warner, vice president; and Clarence Ockey as The Writes Friend In Calif. About It th VL secretary. Lacey P. Vickers, who Is employed by the Mountain States Telephone at Salt and Telegraph Company Lake City, was in Nephi Wednesday visiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Vickers. Alma Tranter, who also accompanied his mother to Salt Lake City, will remain in the above city this winter, and has accepted a position with the Utah Gas and Coke company. Mrs.Cleo L. Reed was operated on in the L. D. S. Hospital as Salt Lake City, last Tuesday, and it is reported that she is getting along as good as could be expected, due to the seriousness of the operation. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lunt, parents of Mrs. Reed accompanied her to the hos- pital Paul E. Booth, assitant cashier of the First National Bank of Nephi, is working at the Payson State Bank this week, on acocunt of their assistant cashier, resigning to accept the cashlership of a bank in Mr. Booth states Spanish Fork. that they are training a new man for this position, but on account of the Increased biySiness of the JPayson bank, it requires an additional man. it - . Mrs. Ramsey Connelly sDent the latter part of the week at Tooele, Utah where ployment. Mr. Connelly has em FOK PUBLICATION Mrs. jRmAI PAtArosin nf Pantnr. field haa been hern far noma tlmn Department of the Interior Genvisiting with her parents, Mr. and eral Land Office at Salt Lake City. airs, reier sorensen. Oct. 28, 1929. Utah, Mrs. J. M. Bosh delie-ht- f ull v en NOTICE is hereby given that tertained a large number of her Daryl Chase of Nephi, Utah, who, friends and relatives at hlrthrtnv on Dec. 11, 1924 made homestead party in her honor, Saturday, Nov. No. 034213, for SW4NEVi. iu. a very appetizing luncneon wat entry NW14SE14, Lot 2, Sec. 10, Lots 17 served to all present. & 18, Section 11, Township 16 South, Range 1 West, Salt Lake Meridian, Darryl Chase and Bert Green- - has filed notice of Intention to make halgh, who have been raising turkeys on the Chase ranch south of Levan final Proof to establish claim to the land above before W. A. shipped out their first lot of turkeys C. Bryan, described, at Nephi, Public, Notary Monday, which was 480 birds. Al most all of the pickers hired were Utah, on the 27th day of December, 1929. from Levan. names as witnesses: Claimant Pierce, Miss Frances Bennedlct, who Is William Warwcod, Harvey Anderson & Daniel Nielson, all attending school at Provo this year, John of Levan, Utah. spent the week end here. Oral Griffith, a former resident of ELI F. TAYLOR, RpeiRter Levan, now of Beaver is shaking hands with old friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Durrani of Salt Lake City spent a few days of last week here. They were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Malm-gree- Oui farmers would not care for that, too much danger of being .viped out. Farmers like their own cows, barns, fields, ploughs, agricultural machinery. Idle and ruatlnc vea months In the year. Tlicy would not become salaried agrarian officials, even hey made more. Russia at least We are fa trying to do something. THE TIMES- - NEWS SUPPLY trying to Walk on eggs, doing nothing, without driving farmers from the Republican Party. CHRISTMAS CARDS In France, Richard Corbett shot bis mother to death. She had cancer. . The young man, British, told the MRS. ANNA E. LEWIS weight and was so rundown that French Jury: "I loved my mother. I looking after my housework was out killed her because I loved her. Sciof the question, and my nerves were ence could not deliver her from her so shattered that sound sleep was agony. I delivered her." impossible. "Four bottles of Sargon gave me The judge said: "It was for God a gain of six pounds. I now eat until I am almost ashamed of my- to consider when your mother should self and my digestion is perfect. My have died, not you. God might nave nerves are relieved, I sleep fine and prolonged your mother's life." am so strong and energetic my houseThe son who admitted killing his work is no task at all. My two sous mother shook his head and murmured, are taking the treatment with won- so that the Jury could hear him: derful results! Sargon Pills rid me "God Is only a religious belief," of constipation and I feel like a difAnd the jury acquitted him. ferent person. I have written a friend in California advising her When one or two are gathered totoo, to take this wonderful treatthe stock market Is disgether, ment." Mrs. Anna E. Lewis, 2434 cussed. only avenue Jeweler la A Fifth W. 34th Ave., Denver. Ord & '.ManETPlson. Agents. (Adv.) New York lets it be known that he has for sale a $300,000 pearl necklace, which can be bought for $100,000. But It must be all cash. Some lady apparently expected prices to go up forever. XOTICK ARK ' READY FOR INSPECTION TUNNEL LUNCH After The Show Or Shopping Try A Bowl Of CHILI At 1h- - TUNNEL LUNCH Open 8 a. m. to 12 p. m. E. M. Claridge, Prop. OSl-N28-- n. OF YOUR Camels are for knowing smokers! Secretary Seward made a good bargain when he bought Alaska for $8,000,000. Poultrymen NYE ft N Announce the Opening of an Egg Receiving Station AT NEPHI SEE GEO. W. LUNT & SONS The Interior Department says Alaska contains at least a hundred and fifty billion tone of coal. To buy twenty tons of coal for a cent is good business, to say noth. lng of gold mines and forests. Secretary Wilbur suggests that this Alaska coal be developed as it should extracted. be, all its of being burned up wastefully, according to the usual custom. Mr. Keudsen, president of Chevrolet, writes from the steamship Bremen, "Some time ago you observed that few native born Americans learn a trade. I wonder if you realize what useful service you can render American industry by emphasizing often the Importance and advantage of young people a trade. teaching Though they may never use It with their hands, it will develop their brains." Some Americans think a trade is good enough for their boys. They say, "I want my boy to seem to be somebody." Mr. Knudsen, a good American, but not native born, learned a trade, worked at It many years. That is why he is somebody. Henry Ford selected him to man age his production. General Motors took him from Ford, to manage Cher rolet production. And KnudBen haa many millions o' dollars, plus an Interesting job; s trade, plus brains, did that for him. not NYE & NISSEN Are the Pioneer WHITE EGG DEALERS On the New York Market We W'll Pay You CASH For Your Eggs At the Highest Prices (, 1929. br King Fratuna Sfodic.u. lack Psfp rr,ARETTEFi It's jost too bad if any smoker because of misinformation denies himself or herself the pleasure of Camels. New smokers are not always in a position to have a real preference in cigarettes. But when they acquaint themselves with Camels they develop that sense of discrimination that leads to real smoking pleasure. Camels are made so carefully and of so good a blend of choicest cigarette tobaccos that even those with inexperienced smoking taste quickly recognize their superiority. They are for those who appreciate the taste of choice tobaccos, the fragrance of a perfect blend and the soothing mellowness of a really satisfying cigarette. when they learn the difference they flock to 1929, R. J. Reynold! Tofrce N.d Company, Winston-Sale- Camels |