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Show IDVALE WILL JOIN IN MURRAY'S CIVIC CELEBRATION ON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1926 Midvale Utah, Thursday, August 26,1926. Co munitY Club Day at _S ltair Very Successful James Finch Turner, 94, wellknown L. D. S. churchman and Utah pioneer died Sunday at his home in Midvale. Mr. Turnet" was born on October 15, 1841, in the county of Kent, England. He was a son of James Turner and Mary Ann Finch. In 1854 he emigrated with his parent~ to Salt Lake. He participated in the early Indian campaigns while he was a lad of 16. He worked at hauling ~ranite from C-ottonwood canyon for the Salt Lake temple, and for a time was a teamster engaged in bringing passengers from the Missouri river to Utah. In 1898 he went to England on a mission for the L. D. S. church. For seven years he was a school trustee in the Jordan district and f-or four years was a constable. He is survived by his wiclow, Martha Sainsbury Turner, and the following children: William L. Turner, Joseph E. Turner and Hyrum Turner of Murray; Mrs. James R. Lane and Mrs. Frank Bagley of Sandy and Mrs. E. B. Tripp of Los Angeles, Ca.l There are thirty-six grandlthildl'en and twenty great-grand-children. Funeral services were held at the ward house, Thursday. At the regular sacrament meeti ing Sunday, the Relief Society of Midvale ward was reorganized. Mrs. Wm. C. Miller was chosen president, 1\frs. E. L. Cropper and Mrs. Wm. Nelson counselors, Mrs. H. C. Aylett and Mrs. W. B. Jenkins were retained as secretary and assistant, respectively. Mrs. W. R. Thomas was chosen choister am<l Mrs. Lorenz~ Richardson organist. Mrs. Elfreda Jensen, Mrs. Mary Fitzgerald and Mrs. Janet Muir of the Stake Relief Society presidency were present. Mrs. The retiring .officers are: John Jen~en, president; Mrs. Youngs Cutler and Mrs. J. A. Aylett, counselors; Mrs. lone Poulson, choister and Mrs. Earl Smickle, organist. Bishop John A. Aylett spoke in high terms of the work and service of the out--going officers as did also the stake visitors. The newly elected officers ·spoke briefly during the meeting. Hand Painted Calet'ldar Miss Dorothy Cox AsFor You At Journal Of· ANNUAL FLOWER sists Band in Concert OF FEATURE SHOW fice-Supply Limited Last Saturday Night LOCAL COM. CLUB Elaborate plans are being laid for a Rodeo in Bingham Canyon Labor Day and the day following. J. L. Ewing of the Bingham News Printery was a caller at the Journal office Wednesday, getting prices on dodgers and window cards for the mammoth event. Bucking bronchoes, wildwest shows hip dray shooting, dancing, etc., will feature the entertainment. Bingham can show you a &'Ood time. t~e out-~ JENSEN REUNION TO Committee in charge of ing at Saltair Thursday, August 19, should be congratulated on the com- · The • plete success -of the . affair. 1 schedule of the party was, bathlng (Special to the Journal) ... in the late afternoon, lunch at 6 o'A reunion of the descendants of clock, followed by all the fun the Auto accommoda- the Jensen family will be held at the resort offered. tions were arranged for all ami the Midvale ward house on Wednesd.ay, entertainment committee had entire September 1, 1926. All members desiring to attend this charge of the lunch, whlch was servare requested to report at reunion decoraThe ed at one long table. house promptly at 5 o'clock ward the ,gold tions were in the club colors time a business meetwhich at m. p. and blue, favors being marigolds tied with blue ribbons, and placed at ing will be held. Following this business session, lnterval!i,. along the table were baskets of marigolds and larkspurs gathered lunch will .be serv:<f and at 6:30 a from the club flower garden at the program w11l be g1ven. All details of the program have not yet been arLibr.ary corner. The lunch was a triumph of cul- r_anged, hence we are unable to pub~ . inary art, the main courses of which hsh sa~e. . about 8:30 enJoyed be wlll Dan~mg a cantaloupe were fried chlcken and pro&-ram. the followmg ' la mode. Call R. R. Gilbert, phone Midvale Club members possess that procressive and experimental complex 246, Comer Meat and Grocery for enableing them to try anything <mce, further particular£. consequently there was something doing wheJt the rounds of the concessions were made. The fun house of eourse proved the most popular place. Tall and short, 'large and small tried everything from going through the barrel to finding Mabel in the dark room. The day ended without misJust stop in front of the Journal hap of any sort and was voted an window and cast your optics over the enJoyable ·one by all present. In ad- new band painted 1927 calendar dition to affording a pleasant recrea- fresh from Japan. tion the affair promoted a fine spirit To every subscriber of the Jour-. of comradship among the members nal we give one of these handsome and stimulated ~n Interest in club calendars, i. e., provided they sub-· m.atters in general. scribe to the Journal for one year in advance. • I The Journal, being. well worth the' money, you are getting a 75c value 1927 handsome hand painted panel calendar absolutely free. Hurry but . don't crowd. The supply is limited. Clyde Canning ,energetic chief of the Midvale Firemen's Association was elected second vice pl'esident of the State Fireme 's organization at the conventi~ . 1ch was held at Sunday, August 29th, a conference Park City ea•• y last week. While of the Midvale ward will be held, beClyde could undoubtedly hold down a bigger job, }li~ale should appre- ginning at 12:15 p. m. A good · atciate having a member on the exe- tendance of officers and members cutive board of the State Firemen's of the ward organizations is desired. Association. After laboring 29 months in the FOR RENT-Frame house, 4 rooms Central States mission, Glen Smith 1-t arrived home Wednesday, August 25. at 119-3rd Ave., Midvale. BE HELD AT MIDVALE WARD Chief Canning Gets I Row Billet On Executive Announcement Interesting Facts A bout .. "The House I Live In" :..----r:~..-----BY FUNERAL SERVICES UTAH PIONEER DIES NEW OFFICERS FOR OF WEST JORDAN AT MIDVALE HOME: RELIEF SOCIETY CHOSEN 84 YEARS OF AGE GIRL IMPRESSIVE DR. GEORGE A. COLE------- _...; body going and in furnishing po:wet· for .his work and hls play. When thls ••• .A fever is a' rise in bodily tern- residue has accumulated in all the perature accompanied by a quickened 1 highways and byways of his body, the pulse and a general disturbance of body starts a general cleaning up. ,. His temperat.ure rises: his pulse also the bodily ll.rocesses. The three principal c$lses ~of speeds up; h1s stomach refuses to be fever are: (1) an unbalanced heat 1 b.othere~ with any more food f~tr the mechanism;! (2) an irlterference ; ttme bemg; he goes to bed f-or. a few with the escape of bodily heat· and days or a few weeks, depend1xag on (3) an effort -of the body to cl~anse whether. he has a simple fevet" or a itself of some unsatisfactory condi- rheumatic fever. When his little body is thoroughly tion. • The heat-regulating apparatus of renovated, .when every cell is washed the body can be thrown out of hal- clean, he s1ts up, gets up, and .starts ance and run away with itself as a for ~he pantry. ¥erhaps Johnnie is deficient in result of a blow on the back of the and mental growth. On<> physical it, paralyzes that head, or a poison into his mother with a comes he day .~r 11ome strong emotional excitement flushed face and a rapid heart. She .eausing one to "lose hls head." W-orry, grief, anger or any other puts him to bed. She explains to the :strong mental strain may draw the doctor that she does not know what body into a knot, so to speak, and is wrong. He has not eaten anythlng contract the arteries and veins at the to give him fever and he has not takaurface and so force the blood ilfto en cold. In two or three days a whole the interior, where it accumul~s abscess comes out through his ear or heat until the internal organs are his nose. His body had grown tired eouerted into raging furnaces even of carrying that hurtful abscess athough the face and hands and feet round and had decided to get rid of it: Then watch out for Johnnie on the are cold. The idea of interference with the playground or in the classroom. With ~aeape of heat is well illustrated by that abscess out of the way, he is now th fact that a man makes more sur· a going concern, and a growing con, 'Plus heat climbing the stairs of a cern. A scrap of paper swallowed with :tixteen story ·ilding than Is generated in a J_ase . of ?neumonia; but ~ bite. of candy and lodged in an in 1M has no fe~ r lf h1s sweat glands mtestmal fold can start a fever that :are workin&' prcw .dy to let the heat will end only when the oft'ending paper has been washed out in a flood of , eut. diarrhoea. M()st of our·4evers are remedial. If Ji>hnnie pricks his finger with his Mothers to this day tell their ravenous boys the old, old story i>f mother's needle or whacks it with the Johnnie who ate too much jam and hammer, the local fever that sets in had a fever next day until the doc- to clear up the wreckage is termed tor came and gave him some bitter an inflammation. If Johnnie falls ofr his roller coaster and breaks his arm medicine. it takes a whole setting of fever to all of Johnnies later and Other absorb the bruised tissues. today are life of ages and conditions The one thing in the form of fever taking no more jam and other good things to eat than they can make use that scares the doctor is to have a of; a iii the fevers and the doctors patient, ordinarily an aged patient. are helping them to get rid of the with a broken leg or a case of pneumonia or of rheumatism or of typhoid liUrplus. Let u.s assume that Johnnie eats fever, but without sufficient vitality judiciously, but that his kidneys are to raise a fever to make a fight. He n9t doing their work sufficiently looks upon a good high fever as a well to clear up the residue, the friend, an ally that he can control and waste matter of the jam that he has direct until the tide of battle has tum· ~t ute tf in koepittr fire• of his ed and the patient convaleacent. SOME CAUSES OF FEVER I Mrs. Agnes Youngdell Spencer, ~ resident of thls place, who died in the St. Marks hospital came as a shock to her many friends. She was bom in Fairview, Sanpete County, March 10, 1893. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Niels J. Youngdell, her husband and the following child"ren: Gladys, Harold, Jack, Don, Douglas, Albert J. and an infant son three days old; also three brothers and one sister. The funeral services were ·held in the West Jordan chapel Wednesday, August 25th with Bishop Wm. Leak in charge. Under the direction of Charles Smith, the choir sang "0 My Father," "I Need Thee Every Hour," and "Sometime we'll Understand." A solo, "My Father Knows," was reodered by c. 1. Goff d~1et "Jesus, Lover of My Soul," by Chales Smith and l<;lsie Dahl. Speakers were Emma Gardner, Albert Olsen, A. F. Rund'quist an;d Bishop Wm. J. Leak. The invocation by David M. Haun and the benediction by Henry W. Cooley. Interment was made in the Whitefoot Cemetery. The large number who attended the funeral services and the ,many beautiful flowers shower the love and sympat~y of the community. The annual flower show featured by the Community Club will be conducted Saturday between the hours of 4 and 6 p. m. at the Library building. Th area of the city has been divided into two districts each of which is entitled to a first and second prize. In all, four prizes will be given. The district dividing line is the D. & R. G. W. railroad tracks. All those who received seed from the committee in the spring are elegible for entry. (Signed) Mrs. C. M. Burg, Chairman of Committee. AN APPRFX,1ATION Wm. M. Cox was a caller at the Journal office yesterday. His mission was in the nature of an appreciation visit. Mr. Cox desires that the J.oumal broadcast to the world that he is deeply grateful for the wonderful cooperation of Midvale Baseball Club. Band, in fact all organizations and individuals who contributed so gener,ously to the benefits in his behalf. He has suffered considerably dn the past month, and it will be months yet "before his mouth and teeth get back to a normal feeling. But he is for Midvale now more than ever. He states emphatically that he intends to continue to work for us and with us in whatever way he can best accomplish results. Altho he was not overly joyful about being the recipient of "benefits" and he had nothing to do with the sponsoring of them. But looking beyond the word benefit to the nobler and higher things behind them, he feela that no finer appreciation of a man's work in a community could be given. Journal readers will remember that Mr. Cox was hit in the mouth by a baseball bat at American For~ knocking out seven teeth ~nd C\ltting hls mouth severely• The Hub Theatre management announces a very attractive special attraction for Saturday and Sunday nights at 9:00 p. m., in the form of a dancing "Revue" by twelve of Miss Auderie Imlay's pupils. Miss Imlay's studio is located in the LaFrance apartments, Salt Lake at 258 West 3rd St;mth. Miss Imlay is one of Utah's best dancing instructors. Those taking part in the "Variety Revue" are as follows: Mary Snyder, Gertrude Rossetta, Flora Long, Beth McEwan, Evelyn Crowther, Ruth Crowther, Irene Yates, Lottie Woodhead Blanch Imlay, Margaret McEwan, Dorothy Everley and Tommy Imlay. This will be a real treat Saturday and Sunday. Courtesy and good entertainment are always our aim. The management. Mrs. D. W. Jessup and children have returned from Brighton. Mrs. J. W. Johnson entertained at dinner Monday evening for her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Torrence and daughter, Koneta of Ely, Nevada Mrs. M. T. Duval and Mr. and Mrs. Torrence Duval of Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Torrence and daughter are returning t() their home from a visit in Denver. Mrs. W, B. Jones and children of Hiawatha are guests nt the home of Mrs. Jone's sister, Mrs. James W. Nibley, A pleasing innovation at the band concert Saturday evening was the solo work of Miss Dorothy Cox. While on a mission in California Miss Cox did much work along the line of singing in public. The numbers given Saturday were splendid and highly appreciated. Salt Lake County Feeders Have Purchased 15,000 Lambs Rodeo Celebration In Bingham Sept. 6 & 7 Wm. Waters, City Attorney, Returns Mr. Waters, City Attorney returned last week after spending the greater part of the month in Chlcago. At a meeting of the Salt Lake Coun· While there ·he attended, as a delety Farm Bureau Executive ('ommittee, gate, the various sessions of the Naheld I<'rlday at th(' offi<'e of the ('ounty tional Convention of the K. P. Lodge. Agrleultura l Agl'nt, , a report of prog· ress made lu the securing of feed(•r lambs through the Salt Lake County I<'eeders' Association, was made by Thos. A. Butterfield, president and manager of the reeders association. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Wright are :\Ir. Butterfiehl , stat<'d that he had visiting relatives in Evanston, Wyo. definitely purchased, for members of Mrs. Alton Whitmore and Miss the association, o,·er 15,000 head of Esther Whltmore spent Thursday in feeder lambs and that a cash advance Bingham, the guests of Mrs. Wm. of $1.00 per head had been made. Yr. Irvine. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Smith recentlv Butterfield also stated that he was Portland, Ore., have decided t~ of leaving soon for Price, Utah, where he expects to make additional purchases make Midvale their home and are on tor other· members of the organization established in the new apartments Center Street. who hn ve just made their wants known. Saturday evening of last week Mrs. Some of the locnl feeders have been entertained at Bridge ruther slow in definitely authorizing J. W. Johnson to Mrs. Glen of Balin compLiment the association to purchase their lambs timore, Md., who is visiting here. and us the demnnd has been strong, Miss Arnold of Baltimore was also prices have advanced somewhat. In guest. the earlier purchases it was possible Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Goff and family to have included some ewe lambs and were dinner guests SundaYc of Miss tat lambs at ten cents but at present Leah Trazier of Salt Lake. sheepmen are asking 10c to 10~c for Miss Dorothy Cox of Salt Lake was lambs. feeder straight a dinner guest Saturday of last week l\lr. Butterfil.'ld reported that he had at the home of Mr. and Mrs. K. A. met with the officials· of the Denver Carlson. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Bower, Mr. & Ulo Grande R. R. Co. and hnd been • successful in securing a reduction in and Mrs. Leo Anderson and Mr. and the freight rate of $19.50 pt>r car on Mrs. N. Glen LindaU returned last and sheep shipments from Price and Col- week from a trip to Moon Lake Duchesne. ton to common points in Salt Lake Mrs. K. A. Ohlson and children reCounty. turned Monday to their home in Ashton, daho after spending some time at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Neils Lind. Miss Bertha Lind accompanied them and will spend her vacation in Ashton. It seems that many contestants ar~ Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Newbold of out for the various elective offices to Pocatello, Idaho were guests Tuesbe filled at the coming election but day of Mr. Newbold's sister, Mrs. none of them care to spend a few Leo Kemp. hard earned dollars to tell the public Miss Violet Olson of Afum, Wyo., of their claims. So far, we have heard from but is at the home of Mrs. C. M. Burg one candidate, I. Lester, ,of Murray, for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cushman and a Midvale and Sandy, a candidate for are visiting relatives at Green party nomination of County Commissioner. Altho one can hear pessimistic de- River, Wwoming. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. O'Brien are clarations on every side concerning a week at Casper, Wyo. spending it yet Lester, Mayor of the chances of relatives and friends number A bird early remains a fact that the Mr. Leslie Lind to Salt accompanied gets the wo·rm and when you think when he left for Wednesday Lake, the Mayor is not working night and in the Pacific w"ork missionary his day, you are sadly mistaken. Sentiment is rolling up in hls favor Islands. Elder Lind will sail fo# if the change of political winds are Honolulu on the S. S. Colawaii which leaves Los Angeles Saturday, Augany criterion. However, the Journal circulates, ust 28. with its sister publication, the• MurMembers of the U. A. Club were ray Eagle, thoroughly in South Salt entertained Wednesday at the home Lake C-ounty. of Mrs. A. L. Anderson. RefreshYou scratch our back and we'll ments were served. Special guests scratch you all over. were Mrs. J. W. Johnson and Mrs. Norval Vincent. GREEN VEGETABLES FOR SALE FOR SALE~Piano, near Midvale. Quality piano to be sold at once. Big discount · and terms. $10..00 15e TOMATOES-SOc per bu; Corn, to good party. If intermonthly per doz; Cauliflower, 4 to lOc per write Baldwin particulars, in ested lb. On Geo. Gardner Farm, West · S-t Piano <;o., Denver, ~o. ,Jordan, Phone Midvale '1•-RS. 1-t Midvale News. Politicians Hibernating As Time Rolls On 5c PER WEEK OESERET MORTUARY SERVICE CERTIFICATES EXPLODE LIKE BOMBSHEll UNDER FIRE • A'rl'ORNEY GENERAL. GIVES OPINION CONCERNING GUARANTEE TO SECURE VALUE OF CERTIFICATES Acting on the advice of Harvey H. Cluff, attorney general, the securities commission Friday notified the Deseret Mortuary company to cease selling its burial service certificate until such time as it shall have been approved by the commission. A committ~e representing the Deseret Mortuary company waited on the securities commission Monday and asked that the commission rescind its action holding the company's installment funeral and burial certificate plan to be subject to the commission's regulations. The commission refusea to rescind judgment, there could be no special its action but allowed the company objection, but if any considerable until tomorrow to prepare a brief sum is paid for it there should be setting forth reasons why it should some sort of guarantee other than apnot be brought under the "blue sky" pears from the papers you furnished me that the service will be forthlaw. A Journal reporter, in talking with coming whenever needed. It is not holders of these certificates and like a company that is dealing in a others in the South end of Salt Lake commodity that is used every day County, finds that their contents are such as gasoline for example, where not thoroughly understood and in the holder of the certificate might some instances there is a gross mis- daily .secure the benefits. Commission has Jurisdiction understanding as to what the service In view of all the facts in concertificate entitles the holder to en· nection with this company, the projoy. of the Articles of Incorporavisions Un· the that We must remember dertakers in each community have an I ~ion and the certificate. V:hich is beestablished business in most in• mg sold, I am of the opm10n that the stances a substa.ntial investment II same does come within the provisthat they must be on the job 24 hour; ions of said Section of our Law above a day in order that their service may 1 referred to, and that the Commission j should assume jurisdiction over this be rendered promptly. company. of favor in aside them To cast Yours truly, . placing and idea some new fangled Harvey H. Cluff, (S1gned) of hands the in their loved ones Attorney General." strangers, without due consideration of the merits of the question, would be folly indeed. The question can best be discussed by quoting from a letter written b~ the Attorney General of Utah to the State Securities Commission, dated J. Eugene Fordham and wife moAugust 20, 1926: to the Strawberry last Friday tored "Mr. H. C. Hicks, up at the Geo. Madsen camp. put and Director, Utah State Securities Madsen as guide, the Elmer .With Commission, 1 50 pounds of landed Fordhams Building. . natives. Dear Sir: Mr. Fordham states that a 100 Replying to your letter of August 18th in which you call my attention pounder took hook, line and sinker, to the Articles of Incorporati,on of but of course, this is the usual fish the Deseret Mortuary Company and story. Getting gack to selling fruit trees, the certificate of service said comstock of all kinds, Mr. Fordnursery pany is selling, and ask for my opinnow at ·home and can give is ham ion as to whether or not thls service service to the trade. personal certificate can be classed as a security under the state law. I beg to advise you as follows: No Voiee in Affairs I have given this careful consideraMrs. A. L. Hess, 19, and Miss tion and have also studied over the said the of Mabel Bryan, 23, of Bountiful, reArticles of Incorporation company. I find from the articles ceived cuts and bruises about their and the certificate that the holder of heads when their car driven by Mr. such certificate has no voice what- Hess collided head-on with the car ever in the management of the affairs of R. 0. Davis of Midvale, Sunday, of the company, and it is provided in on the Bingham highway. The inarticle 13 of the Articles of Incorpor- jured were treated at the Utah Copation of the said company that "it per company hospital at Bingham may by an affirmative vote of a ma- and were removed to the St. Mark's jority of the outstanding stock made hospital where their condition is reat any regular meeting or special ported fair. T·he accident occurred near the ball meeting held for the purpose sell, assign, mortgage, convey or other- park at Bingham, according to Mr. wise dispose of all the property and Hess, who filed a report with the sheriff's office, Monday. Mr. Davis assets of the corporation." The articles also provide that the who was driving west, attempted to private property of the stockholders pass a team and wagon proceeding not be liable for the debts of in the same direction when the collision occurred. His view was obthe corporation. structed by a third car which passed Company Fixes Costs The certificate of service, a sample the wagon immediately ahead of him, of which you submitted, gives the according to the report. owner thereof a right to receive all services, materials, and supplies, except clothing, required in connection with funeral, burial, or removal of the human dead, on the "cost basis" . The Bootery will open for business plus ten per cent plan. Of course, at No. 11 north.l.fain street, Midvale, the company has the right to fix the Utah next wee~. The Bootery is an exclusive shoe cost and also to say what the service is worth. Thls certificPte therefore 1 store and will handle Endicott-Johnis, in my opinion, an evidence of in- son shoes for the entire family. Watch for big announc~ment -~ debtedness or of interest in a profit sharing agreement. In other words, the next issue of the Journal. Mr. A. Riegert will man~e the the company issuing this certificate is bound to furnish the holder with' establishment. He has had years of the thlngs above mentioned at cost experience in the shoe business and plus ten per cent so that the cert.i- 1 can give you prompt and efficient ficate is an evidence of interest m 1 service in his line. the company at least and is to that Murray City is making plans to extent a security for the holder to hold a gigantic civic celebration in secure the things agreed upon. Murray, September 6, Labor, Day, Certificates May be Worthless The holder of this certificate may commemorating the opening of the wait any number of years ,twenty- State Street paving project, the dedifive, thirty, or even more before he cation of the new Swimming Pool, would have occasion to call upon the and a general jollification over the company for his rights and privileges general prosperity that reigns in under the certificate and if, in the Murray City. All organizations of meantime, the company were to do ' the city are co-operating to the end as its articles authorized, namely: that it shall be Murray's greatest Dispose of all its assets and go out community celebration. From a primeval hut in the bleak of business, this certificate would be absolutely worthless~ There seems and barren sands of Old Mexico to to be no basic assets back of the cer- thP bright light on the Great White tificate except the hope or promise Way, traveled Rudolph Valentino in that the company will continue the 10 short years. His death Monday, business and be able to perform the in :few York ended the career of one promises and agreemen stintehlaa,- of America's most brilliant movie promises and agreements in the cer- stars. Arbor Camp No. 815, W. 0. W., tificate. will meet Thursday, August 26. All One Dollar Ample Consideration If the certificate were sold for a members are requested to attend. nominal fee of say $1.00 which would Initiation address by Dist. Organizer, be ample consideration for it in my JR. Runzell. Refreshments. Fordhams Make Good Catch At Strawberry Tries To Pass Wagon; Two Hurt ANNOUNCEMENT I I |