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Show THE PAGE FOUR .Hi i. hi i Tiki wftrnm TIMES-NEW- at Nephl, Juab County, Utah Entered In the Post OfUcs at Nephl, Utah as second clat3 mail matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 187J Editor and Manager Associate Editor A. B. GIBSON ROY E. GIBSON GIVE THE KIDS A BREAK ONCE IN A WHILE By EXPERTS Can you Imagine that In the year of our Lord, 1932, the young people of Nephl, thriving county seat of Juab County, Utah, settled by Mormon Pioneers some eighty years ago, have to wade In the Irrigation dKch. or waller around In the mill-rac- e, to cool off? Can you Imagine It? Talk about going to Chicago's tenement district to find children!! We as parents, should be so darned ashamed of ourselves for not building an open-ai- r, swimming pool for our children that we would call a holiday and put our shoulder to the wheel and give the young-ste- s an even-brea- k with the rest of the world when It conies to goin' in swimming. Most men of Nephl can remember when they were boys and had a good"01' Swimmin' Hole" but today the youngsters of Nephl haven't even a SmimmJng hole they have to use the Irrigation canal. Nephl, a progressive little city without even a swimming pool. We wonder If we are actually getting so greedy for our individual needs that we fall to see the need for progression that will benefit the other fellow's sons and daughters. ..We naturally have to linger around and talk depression part of the time, but we should change the word "depression" to "PROGRESSION" and do something that will bring joy to the boys and girls of Nephl. ABO under-prlvlledg- When a pari breaks, don't be annoyed and delayed by waiting for it to be sent to you. Bring it in to Texaco Service hard-to-g- et "August 24 will be an eventful day in Richfield when the farmers of Sevier county gather at the county fair grounds for the annual outing sponsored by the Sevier County Farm Bureau" and "Plans are now complete for the Salt Lake County Farm Bureau Day to be held at Magna on August 25." These are the opening paragraphs of two lengthy articles concerning the activities of the farm bureaus In two of the more important counties of the state. What is the matter with the farmers of Juab County? What do they lack leadership or real energetic followers? Are the farmers of this county satisfied with their conditions or do they believe that organized efforts to Improve conditions cannot help them out of the situation that now confronts agriculture. According to prominent leaders In agriculture, one of the foremost essentials to success In agriculture is farmers' cooperatives. We believe cooperatives to be a real essential to the progress of agriculture, and furthermore, leaders In agriculture In Juab Valley are doing an Injustice to the laymen by not effecting a unit of the Utah Farm Bureau. The fault may be with the laymen , but the state leaders should awaken and take the matter in hand and perfect an organization in Juab County and then sell it to those not already in sympathy with It. We believe in the farm bureau and hope that a unit is organized here that will assist in getting the farmers together and work out their difficulties and keep abreast to the progress that is taking place In agriculture. Texaco Service Garage ENGLISH ORATOR rJ ed WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH THE FARMERS Phone 9 if you wish us to call for a job. ISfl ed sun-heat- Garage and have it welded. ... It will last then until the new part arrives, and often much longer. Welding saves you time and money. 1 ABG think what kind of a city your city would be if every citizen were just like you? Would It be a live, busy city or would it be like a living cemetery? You should stop and ABG THE PARABLE OF THE TALENTS Smith, Bfteen years old, a pupil of the Windsor Country Boys' school, who was chosen from all of England's school boys to represent bis country in the International oratorical contest in Washington. O. P. G. Brickbat for Browning When Browning's English transla- tion of Aeschylus' "Agamemnon" appeared, one unkind reader remarked that now all the perplexing lines of Aeschylus had been endowed with perfect unlntelligllility ; and the Greek scholar Jowett declured : "1 have been able to understand Browning's English only with the aid of the Greek original." Golden Book Magazine MARATHON WINNER NEPHI, UTAH. Levari News Tiinm(gsKfws Published Every Thursday S, The man who "went and hid his talent in the earth," and thereby became historys most familiar example of unfaithfulness and folly, must have lived in times like our own. His country, we take it, was emerging from one of those depressions, which off and on have visited every people under the sun since business began. So fearful was he that he fell Into worse trouble than he was trying to avoid, and tragically missed his life's, greatest opportunity. Entrusted with a certain amount of cash, he hoarded it, instead of using It. He could have bought the best of goods at bargain prices; he could have made lnves-ment- s, more advantageous than any which had been or ever would be in his day; he could have done his part 'toward, providing jobs for hungry men, toward quickening sluggish strenms of trade, toward restoring confidence and prosperitiy. But he was afraid, and "went and hid his talent In the earth," wherefore, as a matter of economic and social justice it was taken from him, and given to those who had. the courage, the loyaKy and the enterpriseto use it. The old parable is now strikingly new. Its truth rings afresh in the following lines from a current advertisement: Don't say you can't help. Don't say you're to little to help cure a big national crisis. You can help. Have you hidden your money away, buried it in the ground, put it in a sock, locked it in a safety deposite vault? Then bring It out, If you want to help this depression. You'll help your state and your nation and your fellow men. And you'll help yourself. Every dollar you put back into use helps. It will help make a market for the things you grow. And it helps you. Your money Is worth more now. In terms of what it will buy, than it has been in many, many years. There Is a feast of bargains spread out before you. . . Prices will go up. The value of money In terms of what It will buy will shrink. It will shrivel, if it remains hoarded. Bring it out Into the sunlight. Let it sprout and grow you a new crop of dollars. Not in wild speculation, not in wildcat schemes. No need to lose it that way. The best securities, the best lands the best investments of all kinds ae waiting for you on the bargain table. Did you know that the biggest fortunes were not founded In periods of prosperity. They were founded In times of adverse conditions, like these, by men who had cashand courage. Those words are worth every man's ponderlngs. They are words of common sense as well as common patriotism. They are approved by the ages of the past, and they will be verified by history now In the making. Who hides his talent today will find himself, at last, shamed and empty handed; who uses it will be numbered among the fortunate, the faithful and the good. Alanta, Georgia, Journal ABG Ft. Green News An enjoyable shower and dance Miss Juul Dalby Is enjoying a as given by the parents In honor vacation In Bandy and Murray. of Mr. and Mrs. Kenll Rasmussen last Wednesday evening at the Com Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle BraKhwalte munity hall. An excellent program spent Sunday In Levan with friends. was given and refreshments were served. Miss Lucille Sorenson returned to her home Thursday after a visit a Relatives and friends of Miss at Axtell for the past three weeks. Rosequlst were surprised last Teelt when she announced her marThe Mlwes Addie and Beth Wri riage to Lloyd Aagard of Levan. She ght of Provo spent Sunday and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Monday with relatives here. Odvln Rosequlst. Mr. and Mm J. R. Petersnn nf Miss Dean daughter of Axtell were guests of Mr. and Mrs Mr .and Mrs Oldroyd, Leonard Oldroyd Is reier sorenson Sundav. seriously ill at the family home Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bown of Fay Elaborate plans are being made ette were visiting relatives In Levan ror a big celebation on August 24. Thursday. when "Lamb Day" will be held. A meeting was held Sunday aftenoon Mr and Mrs. Rov Karnshaw nf p.nd commlt'-eefor the event were San Francisco are guests at the chosen. The feature of the will nome or Mr. and Mrs. A. Earnshaw. be a Free Barbecue... Tenday choice lambs will be barbecued and serMrs. Joseph Chrtstensen and ved. A program and dance will be children of Richfield are visiting held following the barbecue. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Bosh Miss Delia Robertson. Mrs. Dora Sorenson and E. J. Johnson returMrs. Wesley Rowem reti'rned to ned following a three her home here Friday after a visit ueksSaturday to California. trip with her husband in Georgetown, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Holm an and family have moved to Manti Mrs. Harry Hickman and child where Mr. Hoi man is taking care ren of Tooele are visiting at the of a Service Station there. home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mortensen. Mrs. Neal Lund and four children of Murray returned to their home Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Hansen of this week after spending a few days Salt Lake City are visiting at the with Mx. and Mrs. Niels Lund. home of Mrs. Hansen's parents. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Malmgren Several Fountain Green reoDle attended the Scandinavian reunion to Mrs. Eliza Mangelson went in Mantl Saturday evening. Salt Lake City Sunday where she is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Blackham and childMrs. Franklin Christiansen. ren of Kenllworth are visiting for a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William Bown and children Fred D. Smyth. returned to their home in Provo Monday after an extended stay in The local M. I. A. held a con Levan with her father, Hans Joint meeting last Sunday evening and presented the same program that was given at the Levan Ward The Blue Bird class of the Pri the week previous. mary were entertained Tuesday at the home of Anna Mae Sowby. Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Smyth and Refreshments were served to daughters Alice and Carol returned Monday from a three days trip to the canyons of Southern Utah. Mrs. Roy James and children re turned to their home in Tooele Mr. and Mrs. B. I. Lewis of Mur last week after an extended visit ray and Mrs. Eva B. Lewis of Mid at the home of her parents Mr. and vale spent a few days last week at Mrs. H. C. Mortensen the home of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Liv. Ingston. Mrs. Wm. Shepherd returned to her home here Saturday after sev Miss Barbara Livingston eral weeks In Ogden. She was ac home Wednesday after spending companied by her brother, Earl a week in Salt Lake City. Peterson. Ward was received by relatives of Mr. and Mrs. George Rider and the arrival of a son on August 6, to daughter Sarah Mae, Mrs. Riders Mr. and Mrs." Glen Shepherd of Mt mother of Calumet, M., Harold Lar-se- n Pleasant. and Grace Denton of Garfield spent last Wednesday at the home Miss Veda Cox is a guest this of Mrs. Annie Iverson. week at the home of Urell Jensen. No -- v V ! o Hattie Jackman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jackman Concerning Brains and Mr. Charles Brown of SpokThe statement of a Columbia proane, Washington, were married on fessor that beauty and brains Monday night, August, 15. The cergo together is not necessarily emony was performed by Bishop a reproach to beauty. Neither do E. P. Peterson. The young couple left Tuesday for Spokane to make ugliness and brains go together In every Instance, if you ask me. An their home. Miss sol-do- o extensive survey conducted by my corps of experts shows that brains have an extremely hard time finding anything suitable with which to keep company. Detroit News. Neglected Children Satan keeps school for negleeti hildren. C. H. Spureeon. To Compete In State Fair Sport Carnival are a real meal when it is too hot to cook. SPECIAL THIS WEEK 1 0c in Production Here fey 110-met- high hurdle race last spring, skipping over the sticks in 14.2 seconds. TV. a;cepted world record is 14.4. DESERET MORTUARY Why pay more for less THOMAS BAILEY, MANAGER Telephone Nephi 55 SERVICE ABOVE ALL I pkg. Sundaes 5c each ' JUST REMEMBER Here We Are To Serve Nephi Drug Co. Air Railroad High The Uspullata pass Is in the Andes' mountains, in the northwestern part of the Argentine province of Mendoza, close to the boundary of Chile. Through it and a great tunnel, at an elevation of 9,843 feet above sea level, passes the transcontinental railroad between Buenos Aires and Valparaiso. Snake' Handicap Once a snake has started to eat something It Is physically impossible for it to stop because of thg manner in which its teeth bend In. For this reason If two snakes get hold of the same piece of food that is not easily torn apart one of th snakes is quite likely te be swallowed by the other. MAKING A MOTION PICTURE The Inside Story of the FOX Picture "Rebecca of Sunnybrock Farm" Copyright, 19S2 t'ox Film Corforjtisn Chapter V Location, Studio Return a picture on location is hard work. It is like nghung war on enemy soil far from one's base of supplies. Everything, even mis takes must be foreseen since the studio, with its complex organization for mini mizing error, is out of reach. The schedule must be met just as exactly as on the home lot. ; However, plenty of fun goes with a location trip where the players and staff are in territory as unfamiliar and interesting to them as they are to the natives. Sometimes work and fun overstep each other's boundaries. ' One day while Alfred Santell was directing a bit of incidental action in "Rebecca of Sunn yb rook Farm," that did not include Marian Nixon, she strolled away through the woods, near the location. She came to a stream that might have been the original Sunnybrook. It twisted and gurgled along, over and around rocks, through the leafy undergrowth. It took but a minute to unlace the high shoes she wore, dressed as Re becca, remove the cotton stockings, lay aside the litde hat, gloves, umbrella and go wading in the swift, cool mountain stream. Clift Kling, "still" cameraman with the troupe, alert for such an opportunity, caught Marian at her play. The result was a series of "still" photographs, beautiful and true, but which, in the taking, robbed Marian of her few free 'moments from the movie camera. Another important bit of Santa Cruz action included the scenes with Alan s Hale and his rickety wagon. He was filmed as be drove singing along the leafy thoroughfares of the countryside, keeping his eye out for farm implements of the neighbors to "lift," just as Zion Simpson did in the book. Under the pretense of merely wanting a ride, Marian, in the part of Rebecca, was called upon to sit beside Hale on the driver's seat as the wagon rolled along. Dropping her pretense, she was soon trying to convince Hale that he should accept the wedding ring she had wheedled from Dr. Ladd for the unwed Mrs. Simpson, mother. He resented her interference. Reaching a crossing in the San Lorenzo, a small stream near Santa Cruz, just as the argument reached its height, Hale, furious, pushed Miss Nixon from the seat into the water, as called for in the scenario. Director Santell, appreciative of the difficulties entailed in filming the action, had provided a double to take the ducking for Marian, but he had not counted on the zeal with which the earnest little star was interpreting Rebecca. She chose to take the fall herself. Accordingly, the camera was set up, and Leon Roberts, company costumer, stood ready with a duplicate dress for Marian which she would have to wear for the second "take" of the scene. When the horse stopped in the middle of the stream. Hale brutally shoved Marian backwards into the water. She sat down hard too amazed to make an outcry, got up, tried to shake the water from her dress and walked out of the scene. The camera had caught everything. Just then Marian screamed with A property boy pointed to an fright. eel swimming in the water where Rebecca fell. -i- ILMING rl odd-job- to signify his intention of competing in the State AMONG the first carnival is Byron (Buck) Grant, former University of Utah star. Grant twice surpassed the world record in the Argentina, who won the marathon race In the Olympic games at Loi Angeles. Be set a new record, covering the 20 miles, 385 yards in 2 hours 81 minutes 30 seconds. heat, that is your "cue" to keep cool at our fountain. Our FAMOUS MALTED MILKS5-- s H Juan Zabala, young athlete from COOL When nature insists that you suffer from the Er-m- ::x' Let-U- p KEEP 's Santeil congratulated himself that he did not lava to ak for a retake of that scene! Dr. Adam LaJJ, as portrayed by Ralph Bellamy in tiie film version, entered the story u'.- -r tlie introduction of Rebecca, but once their scenes together started, the curio.;-- , reives of Santa Cruz who car..e o::- - erch day to watch progress of the i.ln.uu; were doubly for their paciencc. Bellamy wisely ciiosc to make of Dr. Ladd a kindly, human, understandable man. Accordingly, he dressed in loose tweeds, smoked a pipe and did not neglect to smile. Ladd, in the story was a practising physician who met Rebecca as she came to Riverboro on the bus of Jeremiah Cobb, a character played by Alphonz Ethier. From the meeting, occasioned when the bus broke down, their acquaintance ripened quickly into firm friendship, bordering from the start on love. Thereafter, they were filmed together along the shady walks of Santa Cruz, under blossoming trees, in romantic interludes. The finish of the picture was even filmed while on location. When Bellamy lifted the frail figure of Rebecca in his arms, and kissed her, it was therefore a happy ending in more ways than one. It marked the beginning of the end of the company's stay away from Movietone City. There remained just one day of "pick up" shots, according to Adele Pruett, Santell's secretary and script clerk, who for six years and more than twenty feature pictures has kept close watch on every detail. These scattered odds and ends of shooting must be "in the bag" by the next night, so that the company could entrain for Hollywood where all the interiors, the winter scenes, and the dramatic climax were to be filmed. Early Monday morning, following the return to the studios over the week end, the Santell company was listed on the schedule as being "Interior Saywer home Stage No. 6 Movietone City 9 AM. Miss Nixon, Mr. Bellamy, Mae Marsh, Louise Clossee Hale extra and bit players as called." There, in the lovely, stately halls of the mansion, Rebecca skated on Aunt Miranda's precious floors crept under the covers of the big in th daytime, to weep at her cold reception slid down the drain pipe to steal away for a walk with Dr. Ladd made friends with sympathetic, loveable Aunt Jane, whom Mae Marsh created. And in the living room of Dr. Ladd's cozy home, warmed by his crackling fireplace, cheered by his understanding of her, Rebecca had her cry out and won the battle with herself when tempted to leave the coldness of her aunt's home and return to the friendliness of her beloved Sunnybrook. Busy days stretched into a week, "ffw twentv-hou- r sixteen, sometimes dava were telling on Santell. He was sus" tained. howwM Kv ( .... ! Ki r,nnri 9 coming from die cutting rooms, pleased wun ine entnusiasm ot his players, and happy in the knowledge that he was still "shooting on schedule." Oniy the winter sequences and the drarr.au'c climax remained to be filmed. Ther,, for the cast, rest; for him, ten days of highly concentrated study of the two hundred odd thousand feet of exposed negative from which the thousand feet of "Rebecca" were to be cut and edited. d four-poste- r, eit-h- (To be continued) |