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Show May Thursday, Uth. THE 1936 AND SUNDAY, MAY SATURDAY trine of Dew'K grain-fe- d featur- bucking- hors ed at Las rgjs Ilelladurado Brahma Rodeo. Pure-bre- d steers Watch them buck! ... - Pinky" Gist, world pion cowboy clown trained know In 1441. let chamtwo mules. The meeting of the Fort Wall of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers was held at the camp home of Mrs. Louise Vickers on The following program May 8. was given: Singing, "Our Moun-praye- r, Nellie tain Home So Dear' Bchofield: remarks, Captain Amy Warner; vocal duet, Marion Chris-ttnse- n and Reva Vickers accompanied by Eunice Brough; Hula Daoco Aaciiat Ceremonial of Fredrick William Chap-pe- ll The hula dance, sometimes wrongwas given by Nina Chappell was the ly called the "hula hula." Hanson: reading, "A Forest Hymn' ancient ceremonial and religion topic, "Communication of the Early dance of Hawaiian. The dance Days, Charlotte Howard. Singing presented legends and mythology Practice was conducted for ten of the Inland and Interpreted the minutes and refreshments sen'ed to 33 guests. Uvea and customs of the old Hawaiian monarch. hy historians that the date and The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Bait Creek Camp met at the home of Pioneer Alice Carter, Friday. May 8ih. The history of James Mickelson was given by his daughter. Mrs. Alica M. Christiansen. Mrs. J. H. Lunt gave the lesson on "Early Communication in Utah." Refreshments were served. 17 World famoiut cowboy from all parte of the country RocorcU Columbm' Birth Oat Calvi, Corsica, has for .eenturle maintained on one of lta houses a tablet stating that Columbtis waa bom there AND place of the nativity of this great man never were revealed and recorded. Collier' Weekly. Herrick Memorial Plaque Presented to Paris IWMIIW.WKJIHIIIimWH.il. .l.Ui,4llW.illl.m'IHMH ,. ". MM r.HM " 'Xrmmmmmmfi i??? , rT'ffj.: '" I t H.l -- -v 'JfMj iMrJ Wg'gWfM)) - - . , PAGE 4 . The Chicken Creek Camp of tl Miss KnuMiiu- - rW, i. f I'i ivo of Utah Pioneres held at the home of lu-- pat en: tiieir monthly meeting Friday at Mr. am! Mrs. Krni t Sunday. the home of Mrs. J. 11. IJr.ulfeilU. Mr, and Mrs. Karl Ciadtl of Piovol The lesson was given by Mrs. soi s, Refreshments wiu' sH'iil the week end with their ena Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Morgan. strved. Mr. and Mrs. 1I.U Ciadd. Sam Mr. and Mrs. Osmond Buchanan Ila.se and Marjorie C.add of Prow Ulatne Mrs. Jackman Mr. and and the week end at the home of Ulackfoot, Idaho, spent a few silent of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Oadd. days of last week at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Parrell Wankler and E. 3. Hull, Mrs. Bryan David and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Taylor. Hiey Mrs. Clarence Hardin,' of Provoi returned home Saturday morning spent Sunday with Mrs. Flossie! Carter. Mrs. Frances Jackman returned Mr. and Mrs. John Kieliardson, home recently after spending the spent past winter in Boise. Idaho, with Celia and Thelia Rkhaiiitwn l er daughter Mrs. Nettie Jorgcnsc-Sunday and Monday m Salt Lake and family. City. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sorenson of k Lola Wood, who attending F.scalante six'nt Sunday at the school at Salt Lake City spent the home of Mr. and Mrs, George week end in Levan visiting her Christiansen. parents Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Wood. Raymond and Milton Oekey of Mrs. A. M. Jackman returned to Salt Lake City spent Mother's Day visSalt Lake City Saturday alter with their mother, Mrs, W !. iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ockey. Prank Taylor. Mrs. H. E. Wall returned SaturMrs. Kenneth Schow and child- day to here home in Eureka after ren returned home last week after spending two weeks in Nephi visspending some time in Salina with iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. O'Gara. her parent. Mrs. C. E. Horrocks and son Mr. and Mrs. Darrold Hanson and Miss Venice Malmgren of Salt Richard, of Santaquln, arc spendLake visited Saturday and Sun- ing the week at the home of Mr. day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. George Christiansen. S. E. Malmgren. Fred Gadd of Myton, spent Day at the home of his Mrs. Dulcie Francom entertained Mother's Mrs. Jane Gadd. Mr. Gadd mother, a number of relatives and friends is employed as a draftsman for the at her home last Saturday afternoon. The occasion being her birth-ca- y United States Government. anniversary. A delicious lunchMiss LaMar Hawkins, a student eon was served to sixteen guests. at the University of Utah, spent the week end in Nephi at the home The Relief Society organization of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. RusIs sponsoring a bazaar in the Relief sell Hawkins. Society building on Tuesday, May 19th. A large variety of articles Miss Nelda Cowan who Is attendwill be on sale. ing the L. D. S. Business College at Salt Lake City spent the week end at the home of of her parents HEROINE REWARDED Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Cowan. -- par-ei.t- nrrjnrinmiiiBmM T. ti tnnr fiiiiimnmn in ! i niriwi Myron Herrick, former American ambassador to France, was recently presented to the city of Paris by the Myron T. IJerrick post of the American Legion. The plaque has been placed on the wall of Ambassador Ilerrick's old office In Rue Challot. ' . HP r ake a "GET ACQUAINTED" TRIP When a T. W. A. air liner crashed recently near Uniontown, Pa., Miss Nellie Granger, the frail hostess, though Injured, pluckily dragged from the blazing wreckage the two other survivors of the fourteen persons aboard, ran to a farm house to telephone about the disaste- and returned to care for her charges. The company rewarded Nellie with two weeks' aerial vacation trip to Panama and promotion to the Sky Chief, the luxury transport plane that flies between New York and Los Angeles. - cob. cow-jrie- et Scalping by Indians The practice of scalping was not common to all the American tribes as Is often supposed. It was confined originally In North America to the territory In the lower St. Lawrence region held by the Iroquoian and Miiskhogean tribes and theii Immediate neighbors. It was absent froj. New England and much of thi Atlantic coast region and was unknown until comparatively recent times throughout t he whole interior and the plains region. It was not found on the Pacific coast, in the Canadian Xorlhwpst. the Arctic region or anywhere south of the United States with the exception of an area in the Jungle In South America. Throughout most of America the earlier trophy was the head itself. We'll hand you the keys to a new Chevrolet knowing they trill he the keys to your friendship! HYDRAULIC BRAKES POt ECONOMICAL TtANsroiTAnoN avor dvfopi GOHD1NS FISHER NO DRAFT VENTILATION IN NEW TURRET TOP BODIES fh atoff boaufihil and comhrtabtt bodit vr created for a gMng CHEVROLET vn btfttr performance lm gat end oil MOTOR CO., DETROIT, MICH. with mvn CEKESAIi MOTOKS PLAN MEMTf DHTAXL-KEN- IMPROVED GLIDING RIDE lh tmoothmst, taftri rid of off KNEE-ACTIO- SOLID STEEL one-pie- T MONTH! T PAT-- to txrrr Ton pubis c TURRET TOP o crown of beoufy, a forfntM of (ofofy SHOCKPROOF STEERING making driving easier and iafor than vr btforo ALL THF.SE rEATTTBEf AT CREVBOLET'S LOW PRICES tm AND UP. Stand-arU.I C M ATM T Pric Coup at Flint, MUAUfnw With bumpers, tpan lire and fir Lick, the 1st priem M $20 additional. t CHEVROLET it A OKNKKAl. MOTOR d 1 on Matter ModMs only, $20 additional. Prices quoted in thit advertise-wo- nt or list at Flint, Michigan, and tub- - VAl.UK n Broadbent and Snyder Inc. NEPHI, UTAH . Discontent Ma da Piogress has been man's discontent with his lot that has made all progress. Discontent alone leads to endeavor. The pioneers who settled the United States and Canada were those who rebelled against their home conditions and repression out for freedom of body and stru-and mind. Scientific advances are made solely by minds that are impatient with our limited knowledge. There Is, however, a vast difference between Die discontents and the malcontents. Detroit News. baart Ihs i SCHtNUV I II j -- - I . I of MERIT - . i . 4. barrel of a get you bottle quality in every i t Old Quaker sticks to all the rules of fine distilling, thougSi it's sold at a friendly price Old Quaker knows you want good straight whiskey what rich, mellow straight whiskey. And Old Quaker knows there's just one way to give it to you. Stick to every rule offine distilling! At you prefer in BOURBON -- or RYE PINT No. 167 (RYE) 4 rfU ucHTHr; No. 64 (BOURBON) QUART No. 63 (BOURBON) No. ICS (RYE) .tV-- c . - 00 f SOOf STRAIGHT WHISK FY C. 19367 THE OLD QUAKER C, Lawrenceburg, Ind. Division of Scheniey Products Co.. Inc. Destructive Nothing could be more subtly destructive to the Integrity of Indl vidua! and social life than the at tempt to educate primarily In the Interests either of nation or of class. s. s. Area of Philadelphia urea of Philadelphia la 120.714 square miles. From north to south it is approximately 22 miles; and from east to west It varies from sis to ten miles. The fa. " -- 1 I 1 I X $2 r .: : g- -, CL, H J.it.fiV5liBi -" mil I. n irr- - I -- i or-- i tLT - V "' !Ut. M I ,wir It k low-pric- ENGINE VALVE-IN-HEA- D things that will make your motoring hours safer, more comfortable and more enjoyable, if you haven't experienced the many outstanding advantages of the new 1936 Chevrolet!' Prove this by taking a "get acquainted trip in this only complete car without any obligation. Well be glad to have you drive it any time you wish. Come in today! (Dooblc-Actln- tofnf and nnooffiwr J You are missing a whole lot of MEW VEBnCTED fc cffg rails??' i?Jrn 1 t you'd really call in June. The Ladies Literary Club entertained at a successful ''Mother's Day Social" at the home of Mrs. W. C. Andrews. Alice Belliston, Fay Barnes, and Maurine Steph-eso- n, accompanied by Shirley Irons sang "That Wonderful Mother or Mine." Mrs. G. R. Judd and Miss Ora Judd rendered two piano duets and Marion Christensen gave a vocal solo "An Old Refrain." A delicious two course luncheon was members and served to twenty-tw- o the following Invited mothers: Mrst Etta Tranter, Mrs. Jane Vickers, Mrs. Eizabeth Cowan, Mrs. Harriet Brough, Mrs. Mary Belliston, Mrs. Emma Olsen, Mrs. A. C. Nelson, Mrs. Sarah Brown, Mrs. Mary A. Pexton, Mrs. Alice Riches, Mrs. S. G. Ord, Mrs. Florence Chase, Mrs. Nellie Schofield, Mrs. Itha Parkes, Mrs. J. A. Booth and Mrs. R. F. Nilsson. N... r leU .r, Mrs. Legrand Thompson of Preston, Idaho stopped on her way home from California to visit witn her sister Mrs. Frank R. Wilson for a few days. Miss Eunice Brough spent the wek end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brough. Miss Brougtt will graduate from a normal course at the Brigham Young University This bronze memorial plaque of SEVEN Levari News! Local andSocial SatSpecial for children urday 25 cent: Sunday 40c. Grandstand . 25 cenU extra. itu-lud- . Tickets for ad alls, 85c tax. 16 Calf Roping Bareback Hone Riding Boys' Steer Riding Hrcnc Riding Brahma Steer Riding Bulldogging Jack in dip. lOMA NF.P11I, UTAH TIMES-NEW- Reactions of Plants The reactions of plants are sire liar In many ways to those of animals, writes C. II. Ouimet, Chestnut Hill, Mass., in Collier's Weekly. Plants are benumbed by cold, stupefied by chloroform, Intoxicated by alcohol, exciteJ by electrical stimulus, hurt by external blows and killed by poison. A vase of carnations, placed near a dance orchestra, will, after several hours, be found leaDing away from It of Liberty Worst War and fe.nr of war have always been the worst enemies of liberty. s The automotive world sets lubrication a furious new pace .EVOLUTIONS PER MINUTE MM the new cars give you up to 88 per cent more HOW canwith the same size engines? The big reason is higher engine speedst Nine hundred Revolutions per Minute more than in the 1930 cars is today's pace, with compressions, temperatures, piston speeds and bearing pressures all higher, higher, higher 1 That's what has changed the motor oil picture. Great heats, great pressures and great speeds burn up xls tear them to pieces. "RPM" Meets Every Test. RPM Motor Oil is a completely new oil, developed in the Standard Oil Research Laboratories to defy all this punishment. A study of 146 crude oil stocks from the United States and other countries led to specifications that combine all their best attributes. "R P M" is a great oil for any car. It is unsurpassed in motoring performance. Fill your crankcase now with this fine new lubricant and prove It for yourself. "RPM" is wittered MOTOR OIL unsurpassed C A QUART at any pries can give you more and belter lubrication. No motor oil trode-mar-h n NEW STnUDURD OZli PRODUCT |