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Show Mrs. Llllla Bosh, Mrs. Roy Story i"(Jec)rge J. JIUler, Jlr. Uld llrll Miss Zelia Aggard all of Midand Poore 0. Olc:ll 111'1. and were the dinner guests Thursvale, Lake villtOI'II the early part day of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Alger. WEST JORDAN By Lucile Bateman Mr. and Mrs. George Parker of Provo, Mr. 'and Mrs. ReP.d Gardner Headquarters For Quality Groceries Groceries that you know to be clean, wholesome and fresh add to your meal~ a zest that means better'health. We combme quality service and value. That's why we are gr~cery headquarters for housewives who know. Our stock is complete in every · detail. Canned goods package articles, fresh fruits and vegetabies to suit the most fastidious. Phone and delivery service, of course. P. C. RASMUSSEN • UTAH MIDVALE •• 3 LOAVES tOe . Each of our stores of this district are selling 3 loaves (assorted) of our own baked bread all this week for 10 cents. One 15c loaf Raisin, one 10c loaf Health and one lOc loaf White Bread all for 10 cents every day this week. We know you will cease to bake and be dissatisfied with the eating qualities of any other baker's bread after using our bread all this week. FIGURE IT FOR YOURSELF With flour costing 7 Y2 to 8 cents per pound, how can you afford to bil.lte bread when you can buy our 16 oz. (full pound) loaf regularly after this week at 5 cents for the White and Brown and 10 cents for the Raisin? There are other 5 cent loaves on this market but none of the 0. P. Skaggs Baking Company's quality and but few th:at weigh a pound. Get your 3 loaves assorted every day this week for a dime, and then you'll eat our nutricious, cleanly baked bread regularly. of American Fork were guests OfMr. and Mrs. J. C. Hansen Sunday. Miss Helen Hansen is spe_nding several weeks visiting in American Fork Mrs. Wanda Pratt and little son of Salt Lake are guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. T. Bateman. Mrs. Lavern Egbert and daughter, Jean, spent the week at the home m Mr. and Mrs. Glen Hogan. Mrs. Hogan is improving after being serious• ly ill. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Bateman, Mrs. Lydia Bateman and Lucile Bateman motored to Magna Thursday after·• noon and attended a dinner party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Bateman. Covers were laid for eight. Mrs. 0. H. Bateman and son, Blair, accompanied them home and spent the week visiting here. Veloy Egbert of Salt Lake visited here Friday. Miss <;arab Haun of Salt Lake visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haun Friday. Sa~ah will graduate from the St. Marks hospital training school for nurses, May 23rd. Miss Roxine Conkle entertained at a party Thursday night. Games were played and luncheon served to the fol lowing guests; Max and Page Dwight Jack, Don and Harold Spencer, Roland Yates, Richard Conkle, Vyrle Lundquist, Leola Hackmanson, Ellen Trane, · Mary Pixton, Ruth Sheen, Effie Furse, June Richardson, Ben McAllister, Mer! Silcox, Louise Webber, Lavell Richardson, Margaret Squires, Sammie Tuttle. Mrs. Edla Hawks and daughter, Phyllis, of American Fork, are guest of Mrs. Milo Pearson. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith have moved back to the ward to make their home. Hershel Egbert of Riverton is spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Egbert, his wife and two children are visiting friends in Denver. On May 23rd at 8:15 p. m. the Relief Society stake board will entertain in the second ward amusement hall at Riverton for ail Ladies in the Stake who are eligible to be associated with the Relief Society and there companions . A program of music, readings and a one act play will be enjoyed also a social hour will conclude the evening's !lCtivities. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Radden of Salt Lake were dinner guests of Mr. ·and Mrs. Henry Egbert, Friday. Miss Alta Hogan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. c. E._ Hogan who received her State diploma with a 90 per cent efficiency has been employed at the Strand as Marceller and now invites all her friends to met her at Booths where she is employed as an all around cosmetician. Mrs. J. C. Hansen entertained in honor of her daughter, Helen's 12th anniversary Saturday afternoon of last week. Games and refreshments were enjoyed by twenty five little girl friends. The following students of West Jor dan won their credits and graduated from Jordan High School this year: Blaine Anderson, Vernon Bateman, Edna R. Booth, Theo Dwight, Grandale Finlayson, Leona Fife, Alta Hogan, Donald Hogan, Gladys Rundquist, Grace Sabey, Grace Squires and Randal Walker. HERRIMAN ITEMS By Mrtl. Spencer Miller Mr. and Mrs. M. Fitzgerald, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Smith and two small daughters, Wanda and Veritta of Draper were the guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. James IQdd. Mrs. Daniel Peterson entertained at a children's party at her home on Saturday, in honor of the sixth birth day anniversary of her lltUe lOll, Louis: games were played and refreshments were served. Love's Tribute To you mra who spent wea17 months In balnen, rloomy trainfna camps lD remoneleu drudgery. To rou who weat over Mal aud under murderous fire and alckenint torturfnc ru. Dever fa:tered ot failed. To you lada who defied submarhlet ond • nameleas l'rave ID the ocellll and landecl our army In France. To those who are still aufferinc from wouoda and raa. shell shock and disease. To those who died. Our prayers, our lov1 aDd our tean. is the seaaon when God's acre. I to This use a name fa1·ored by the Pilgrim Fathers, Is at Its loveliest. Nature Is kintl to en~n the meanest and most neglected tmr)·ing place, carpeting the sunl;en grave with the softest green and glorifying the crumbling bead· stone with clinging vlrie and fragrant blo~som. This is the season when the well·k~pt cemeteries are bowers of beauty, and the Gracelands, the Greenwood~. the Woodmeres, of the great citie~. are visited by musing multi tudes who do not forget to remember. All over this land of ours are patriots' gr·uves. The heroes of five wars rest In the soil of the country for which they died. Linked together inseparably is the youngest who died in the World war with the oldest who ga1e his all In the War of the Revo· lutlon. Ros:es and lilies; fuchsias and lilacs; flags and insignia; songs of thrush nnd cardinal; bugles sounding taps;- thin wavering line of the veter· ans of the Grand Army of the Republic; strong, stur(ly and youthful veter· nns of the lust great conflict-what memories MellliJrial day brings, how costly is a nation's achievements In brain and brawn and blood I It is a good and wise thing to muse amid tire mouuments and memorials where sleep those who loved the na· tion well enough to defend Its prln· ciples and die for the 1Jreservation of its integrity. A journey to Mount Vernon just to stand five minutes before the tomb of Washington Is worth all that it cos:ts in time, money, even to those who lh·e clear across the country. A pilgrimage to Springfield to dream by the hillside where the dust of Lincoln rests amidst the pruiries that he loved and In the old town where his children used to play, is an education for the heart. What lessons at the patriot's grave for those of us who live-lessons of loyalty, sac· rifice, and high service I Visiting Graves ol Brave Men They LeJ The American lads lying beneath the crosses in France received their measure of commemoration In the observance of Memorial day last year. General Pershing, their commander. Marshal Foch, Ambassador Herrick, high olflclals of the French govern- EAST MIDVALE By Mrs. Lester Forbush Mr. and Mrs. Carl Liljeblad were dinner guests Thursday afternoon of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Feller. Little Miss Phyllis Atwood of Salt Lake has returned to her home after spending the past five weeks with her aunt Mrs. Lester Forbush. Master Ross Cook small ~on of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cook of Salt Lake, formerly of this ward, underwent an operation Jor removal of his tonsils at the Midvale Hospital last lo'riday. Mrs. Ann;e Simper was a guzst on Monday evening or Mr. and Mra. Alonzo Norton of Murray. Mr. Clemon Kemp of Idaho Is spending an Indefinite time with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Liljeblad. We are pleased to announce that East Midvale ward M. I. A. Dramatic Club won first place In the Stake Try out held in the Crescent Ward Chapel Monday evening. Special mention by the Judges were given Arva and Kenneth and Clarence Mlllerberg Mrs. Mamie Tholen, Emery Brady, and Clarence Millerberg. Others in the cast were Nell Sharp, Margie M. Stone, Leonard Millerberg and P. A. Swenson and Bill Sotfe. We certainly wish to congratulate them on their success and wish them lots of luck in the Final Try Outs to be held at Mill Creek May 25th at 5:45. Miss Vaur Sharp entertained the Officers of the Ward Sunday School at her home Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Simper and son Stanley, of Salt Lake, were dinner guests Sunday of Mrs. Annie Simper. The Unity Club met Fnday with Mrs. Lester Forbush. Special business matters were taken up followed by discussions. A very dainty luncheon was served to Mrs. 0. Brown, of Salt Lake, Mrs. Carrie Coombers and Mrs. Rose Greer of Union, Mrs. Harold Bishop and Mrs. Clarence Sharp. Miss Beatrice Simper attended a dinner dance given by the Kappa Gamma Psi Musical Fraternity of the University of Utah, at the Elks Club in Salt Lake Monday evening. She reports a wonderful time. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Ashment attended their Card Club In Salt Lake Tuesday evening. Miss Beth Soffe has been confined to her bed for over three weeks suffering from the "flu" and complica· tions. The Midvale Junior High School pleasantly entertained the members of the Eighth Grade Tuesday evening. The following pupils from this Ward enjoyed the affair; Marian Ashment; Orpha Soffe: Wanda Butterfield; Edna Glover: Fern Jacobsen: Gertie Johnson and Elmer Glover. Mr. and Mrs. E. Allen Bateman attended the Salt Lake Theatre Sat· urday evening. Mrs. Ray Greenwood entertained at dinner Tuesday for Mrs. Charlie Greenwood of Union. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bateman and children, Mr. and Mrs. Hans Jensen of Union, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thorn ton, Miss Mirla Greenwood, Don and Foster Greenwood and T. F. Green" wood entertained at dinner Sunday evening for their Mother, Mrs. T. F. Greenwood. Covers were laid for 20 guests. Mrs. Arvilla Greenwood entertained at dinner Sunday afternoon for her mother, Mrs. Orson Hansen of Murray. Miss Fern Larsen has returned home from Northvale, Colorado, wher she has been teaching school. She expects to teach in the Monticello Coming to Salt Lake City DR~ MELLENTHIN & COMPANY Denver & Rio Grande Western Prize Winning Salt Lake Shop SPECIALISTS Midvale School Auditorium at nine o'clock p. m. Admission· fifty cents per couple Extra Ladies FREE! ment and representatives of the American, French and British veterans' societies joined In honoring the hero dead. A special service was held In the American cathedral In Purls and slm· liar ceremonies In the American churches In other cities and towns. The French joined with the AmerIcans In decking with flowers all the Americau war cemeteries. Photograph shows Marshal Foch and General Pershing laspectlng graves of American heroes in the cemetery at Suresnes. Australia Has Unique War Horses' Memorial ~· 7:30 to 8:30 p. m. Comer Main & Center Streets Free Prizes at the Dance The Illustration shows a Purple cross memorial to war horses erected at VIctoria, Australia, The PurjJle cross Is an organization to help dumb animals. The memorial Is a granite watering trough with a t!m!lll dish for dogs at one end. It Is surmounted by an electric globe on which Is figured a purple cross. The motto of the l!oclety Is, ''Handle horses bu· manely." In Internal Medicine for the past fifteen years DO NOT OPEMTE Will be at CULLEN HOTEL the home of Mrs. Flora Curtla Frl4&7 In Salt Lake at the Kaynell Aptll. Mrs. Vivian A. Sharp had as her guests Tuesday, Kra. John Hammer l!Jld Mrs. James C. AtldDson ot Mur· ray. High School next fall. Special Mothers Day ~ercl8es were held in Primary meeting Tueaday afternoon. A scng and dialogue "Mother" was given by the Blue Bird girls. Readings by Katherine Johnson, Paul Miller, Helen Nelson and Lucille Glov er. PiaD? Solo, Mrs. Myrtle McNamara: voal solo, Ethel Millerberg: Each mother present was given a large red tulip. Mrs. W. J. McNamara attended the meeting of the D. 0. V. E. Club at Miss Lavon Gardner and Grace Lan caster who have .spent the last year In California are spending a month visiting their parents, llrs. John An• derson and Mr. and Krs. William Lancaster. Ye ·Store Gossip C. 0. W.=:o:::::.::=:= ===By (With Apololies to K. C. B.) Maybe They'll Grin And Bear It DO in Winter when there A TRAVELING Salesman, WITH HIM to raise FIG • • • • • • • • • • • • FIG Trees and WHAT will • • • • • • THE GIRLS DO? Until • • • • • • SOME KIND friend comes in • • • • • • TELLS us the TREES. He says the way ANSWER to that problem FASHIONS are going in WE THINK maybe we will WOMEN'S CLOTHES the * • * • * • LEAVES will soon be in great • • * • • • DEMAND. What worries KEEP ON Sticking to the • • • • • • DRUG business, but we • • • • • • DO have our eye on a US though is what we will LIKELY looking piece of * * * • * * ARE NO LEAVES on the OF THE FOUR Hundred ... .. * * * • • • WHO CALLED on us the .. OTHER DAY, wants us to * * * * • • QUIT this business and go in • * * * • * • * • * * • AND • • • • • • • • • • • • * • • * * * * • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • LAND for our GROVE. • MORAL: (This is not a moral tale). MIDVALE DRUG COMPANY· Phone Jdiclnle 1U "The Busy Corner" ----- SANDY MIDVALE MURRAY "Ice Will Not Get Out Of Order" I. LESTER ARTIFICIAL ICE OFFICE: 6500 State Street Residence Phone: MURRAY 445 LOWEST COST REFRIGERATION Overhead in Power or Extra Equipment EUMINATED USED LUMBER And Building Materials We are wrecking part of the U. S. Smelter Mill Plant at Midvale, Utah, and have a large selection.of used lumber, corrugated iron, sash and building mater· ials for sale on the job. Also, kindling for sale by thle truck load or carload. The job is located two blocks South and two blocks west of Main and Center S'reets, Midvale, Utah. Write or see our Mr. A. F. Antrobus at the Smelter mill job or at 14 South Main Street, Midvale, Utah. The Friedman Lumber Co 5th South and 3rd West, Tel. Wasateh 1311 Salt Lake City, Utah. -------~- Thursday, Friday and Saturday IBay Slst, June 1 and 2nd Office Hours: 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. THREE DAYS ONLY No charge for consultation The specialist of Dr. Mellenthin &: Co. Is a regular graduate In medicine and surgery and Is licensed by the state of UTAH. He visits professionally the more important towns and cities and of· fers to all who call on this trip free consultation, except the expense of treatment when desired. According to his method of treat ment he does not operate for chro nic appendicitis, gall stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsils or adenoids. He has to his credit wonderful results In diseases of the stomach, liver, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney, bladder, bed wetting catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rectail ailments. If you have been ailing for any length of time and do not ~t any better, do not fail to call, as Improper measures rather than disease are very often the cause of your long standing trouble. Remember above date, that consultation on this trip will be free and that his treatment is different. Married women must be accompanied by their husbands. Address: 224 Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles, California. --- -·--- USED CABS B ETTER cars-better buys-bet· ter come and look them over now if you want to be sure of the pick! They are reconditioned and repainted when necessary-and all are backed by the Tourssen reputa· tlon. Typical Tourssen Bargains at OUR LOT On Bingham highway Next door to MIDVALE DRUG Dependable Terms To Reapoll8lble People TOURSSEN Headquarters.--465 Soutlt Main |