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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1929 B.R.M.S Junior Prom' Garland Personals Fielding I Friday, March 22,1920 NOTICE scheme was of yellow and white for the shirt instead of blending, as they the approaching of Easter. At mid- did last year. Whereas it was formerUkon Water Company Howell night a luncheon was served to the ly considered smart to wear, say, blue At a meeting of the directors f.' -- I - foUowing: Les Rock, Paul Fonnes- chalcedony cuff links with a blue the Ukon Water Company, held JanuMrs. Russell Allen of Salt Lake is beck, Dallas Wood, Dan Douglas and shirt, a contrasting colored stone, ary 28, 1929, the date, set for the' Fors- such as a garnet or topaz, is now visiting at the home of her parents, the Misses Lida Wood, CoraMildred of assessed stock to cover the. Colored enamel links, sale preferred. gren, Hazel Bassett and Mr. and Mrs. C C. Shriber. of Assessment No. 2 on delinquency Wood. commore ornamental the by grown C. E. Gunnell has returned to his was unanimously deeM-e- d it said stock, bination black of with bright red, to extend the said date 60 days. ranch here after spending the past faand blue, are still greatly winter in Logan. T and Sticks Are green vored for sports wear, except by the 27-- Sales date March 29, 1929. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Nessen an- Stickpins DAVID LARSON, Secretary. who have gone quite very wealthy, nounce the arrival of a baby boy at Popular mad over the new crystal links with their home March 14. Mother and Calvin A. Fleming. 70 years' old. figures of animals, birds, boats or baby are doing nicely. his Model A Ford touring ear. drives club in of the recent return victorious The yacht pennants shimmering Miss Lola Gunnell, who is attendThese links are the re- from St Paul, Minn., to his Louisiana, their a been or has depths. scarfpin stickpin great school is River at Bear ing High, effort on the part of plantation, 20 miles south of New Orhome on account of the illness of her surprise to many haberdashers, who, sult of laborious who carve the figure leans, in four days. He has never' had six of were jewelry artists, months the opinonly ago, C. B. GunnelL mother, Mrs. out back of of the the crystal and a puncture on the ousted had trip. collar that ion the soft pin Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Wood were Sunthen paint it in the realistic colors, forever. neckwear from male smart it home Mr. and of at the guests day Now, the two appear to be running and they are, therefore, very expenMrs. George Wood. neck and neck, so to speak, although sive. C. Wood J. H. Forsgren and J. With the recent introduction of the scarfpin seemed to gain a trifle, made a business trip to Salt Lake rush modern the if shopping anything, designs in cuff links, silver during Tuesday. C. L. Williams and P. J. Hansen of last Christmas, when so many has suddenly assumed great importwere Tremonton visitors this week. ' women were buying gifts for their ance. Sterling silver links, chased, the same engraved and engine-turne- d Mrs. Nephi Nessen of Tremonton is men relatives. in While much as has its the are the collar gold, Mr. pin home and Mrs. proving enormously the of at staying . Dance at Elwood March 29. Benefit new ward chapel. Everybody invited. Thursday evening, March 14, the members of the Bridge club entertained their husbands at the home of Mrs. J. M. Gad-diSupper was served and the evening spent at bridge. Thursday afternoon a number of friends of Mrs. F. L. Nye gave a stork shower in honor of the new son. About 40 ladies were present and many beautiful articles were received. Friday" evening twelve members of the Lions club and their partners motored to Richmond to be present at their charter night. A good time was reported by all who attended. Saturday night the friends and neighbors of Mrs. C. D. Barfuss gave her an birthday surprise party. The evening was spent in games and dainty re- -. freshments were served., evening at the home of Mr.' una Mrs. Charles Munns the Daughters of the Pioneers of the Garland camp entertained their husbands. The ladies furnished them with a full evening of spicy entertainment, consisting of program, games and stunts. A tray luncheon was served at the conclusion and a good time had by all. Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Hansen of Tremonton entertained at a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Wynn Hansen. A large number of friends attended and a good time was had by all. Frank Driggs motored to,iSalt Lake Wednesday. Bishop W. W. Richards went to Salt Lake Saturday, returning in the evening with a new Whippet sedan. Miss Isabell Worthen spent the week-en- d in Salt Lake with her parents. Phyllis Haws and Melba Nye mo tored to Brigham Saturday and spent the day with Mrs. Glen Baron. Mrs. Jane Hughes was in Ogden Saturday. Leo Hunsaker of Satt Lake and a number of workmen are repainting and decorating the tabernacle and ward chapel. Sunday evening the infant son of Laurence Wortley passed to the great beyond, the baby's mother having preceded him to the grave about four Mr. Wortley had re- months ago. pied to his work m Belle Fourche, v., and the children were staying: 'the home of their errandDarents. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. E. King. -- The sympathy of the entire community goes out to these friends in their hour of trouble. Mrs. Alfred Michaelis underwent a very serious operation at the Garland hospital Monday, Dr. Hatch of Salt Lake doing the operating. At last report Mrs. Michaelis was doing nicely. The state convention of Women's Federated clubs will be held in Logan April 18, 19, and 20. All club ladies should plan to be in attendance. Mrs. Sherman, a former national president, will be the main speaker. Bishop and Mrs. W. W. Richards and family motored to Logan Sunday afternoon to visit with Bishop Richards' mother, Who has been seriously ill. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Bigler spent Thursday in Ogden. Louise Manning came over from Preston, Idaho, Sunday and visited with her mother, Mrs. Rose Manning. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Walker returned Tuesday from Pleasant Grove after visiting with relatives. Rhea and Blaine Winters spent the week-en- d with their parents,-Mr- . and Mrs. 0. L. Winters. Virginia Webb was visiting in Ogden Sunday. Gladys Tyson went to Salt Lake Saturday to see her mother, who is ill rA the L. D. S. hospital. : Garland-Tremont- on e. . ed and-musi- ' c fyonday -- Le-la- - Thursday afternoon of last week Mrs. Leo Earl entertained the members of the Social Development club at their regular meeting. Mrs. Gertrude Hansen presided. The program consisted of community singing, learning the American creed and social hour. Luncheon was served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs. Jesse Earl, Miss Madge Earl, and Mrs. Gertrude Hansen. Mrs. M. A. Gam and Mrs. Dewey Wood were hostesses to the Relief Society members at the home of Mrs. Garn Tuesday afternoon of last week. Thirty-seve- n members were present and the time was spent in sewing, business, and singing. Luncheon was served. Mrs. Marvin Welling and Mrs. W. K. Welling assisted in serving. Sunday evening the Relief Society gave a splendid program at the regular ward sacrament meeting. The program given commemorated the anniversary of that organization. After the opening exercises two short plays were given. Mrs. Fanny W. Gam is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Capener at Garland. Mrs. H. J. Marcco and daughter Patricia- of Salt Lake City are visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0. A. Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. David Wood and Mr. and Mrs. George H. Coombs visited with realtfves in Farmington last week-en- : 'o - d. Mrs. C. W. Farnsworth and Miss Nettie Godfrey were visitors in Brig-ha- ...WANT COLUMN.. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nealey, Miss Lulu Packer, Miss Jane Alleman, Miss Rebecca Roskelly and Miss Grace Jensen spent last week-en- d in Brigham City. Mrs. Gertrude Hansen, Mrs. Clifford Welling, Mrs. Dan Garn, Mrs. J. H. Smith, Mrs. Leo Earl, Mrs. Jesse Earl, Mrs. Vera Bourne and Mrs. Frank Wood attended the meeting of the Ladies' Self Culture club at the home of Mrs. J. W. Chambers of Garland Friday afternoon of last week. DIAMOND CHICKS ARE CHICKS of quality at low cost. Wonderful new brooder, coal brooder, fountains, feeder, Diamond chick mash (the perfect feed) feeders all Poultry supplies. Two color book FREE come or write me. Ogden Hatchery, John Landvatter, Mgr., 2262 N. Washington St., Ogden, Utah m Cityaturday. HOUSEHOLD HINTS To remove iron rust, fruit or ink stains, rub the spots well with lemon, then cover with salt and place in the sun. If the spots are obstinate, repeat this process several times. To rlfian the white Itpvc tha piauv, iuu wiui paste intuit; 01 wnuen-in- g and lemon juice. Bring your home table up to the standard of the tables of the hotel, restaurant and club by making a salad a daily occurrence. Not only will this add a tasty dish, but if will almost invariably add an excellent baking dish for fruits and vegetables,which make up most of the salad ingredients, are almost invariably alkaline foods that balance the diet The salad may be an elaborate one, or it may be the most simple combination imaginable. Orange segments, mixed with slices from red apples, pieces of grapefruit, dates stuffed with walnuts, shredded cabbage, or chopped Here are five celery and apples. salads to choose from. A few crisp lettuce leaves, and a little French salad dressing for the cabbage-orang- e and that 's all there is to it. n-- Oil-OnSt- at DIAMOND STATE-ACCREDITE- D CHICKS Diamond Chicks and products are profitable. We are one of a chain of 16 hatcheries in the east of oldest and most reliable Pure Bred concerns. Ogden Hatchery is equipped with four Mammoth Electric Incubators. Capacity 60,000. We are operating one machine after April 1st for turkey eggs. Will do custom hatching. Our chicks are from 225 to 325 egg trap nested flocks. Our prices are reasonable. Write for free catalog, or come and see us. OGDEN HATCHERY 2262 Washington Avenue John Landvatter, Manager. FOR RENT Furnished rooms. Call J. H. Brown, Tremonton, Utah. 21tf Bargain in an Edison phonograph and 61 records. This is a snap. Call at The Leader office. State-Accredit- PLENTY OF MONEY to lend on the right kind of real estate. NOR- MAN LEE, Brigham City. 7tf favor in point of convenience, being very useful in holding a recalcitrant soft collar in place, the scarfpin is more ornamental, and men have begun to be vastly swayed by this factor in choosing their accessories. Who could have predicted a couple of years ago, for example, that the masculine wrist would take kindly, even enthusiastically, to a watch set in a gold mesh bracelet, or that business men would be carrying their paper currency neatly folded in a gold bill clip, set with a large central crystal or opal ? Yet no one is prepared to deny that it is the bracelet which usually sells the watch nowadays, and the crystal or opal which sells the bill clip! But to return to scarfpins the new ones have much larger stones, or pearls, as the case may be, than the variety, and hence provide a frankly decorative note to the tie. Worn below the knot, they hold the folds of the tie securely in place, which also tends to hold the collar down- - in front; and it is noticeable that' to most men a toch of color in this position is very becoming, since it accentuates the brilliance of the eyes. The tie should provide a dark background, of course, as the majority of ties do this season, for is the whole tie is a blaze of color the eyes have little chance. Men are beginning to appreciate these fine nuances of dress try it on your own mirror! In addition to pearls, always the men most popular with middle-age- d and conservative types, most of the n stones are Dresented in the new pins garnets, amethysts, aquamarines, bloodstones, chalcedony, lapis lazuli, crystal, to-- ! paz and various shades of quartz. In the most expensive class are emeralds, and 'Usually the stone, uncut, sometimes engraved, is set in a narrow chased platinum or gold border. It is the size of a large, pea, and, curiously enough, this largeness gives it a sturdy masculine character. Since color contrasts are the vogue in men's apparel this season, and the colors are dark compared to those worn last year and the year before, brilliant accessories are naturally fashionable. The scarfpin should form an abrupt contrast with the color of the tie a garnet against dark green, for example; lapis against tan; emerald or green quartz against wine-rean amethyst against dark green again; a topaz against dark blue. The same stones and the same contrasts are likewise the mode with cuff HnksJ These may match the scarfpin, but should form a color contrast with ed well-know- semi-precio- star-rubi- star-sapphir- cats-eye- s; es ' full-gro- d; FOR SALE Good buildinsr lime o $12.00 per . ion. Sugar 18tfd Co., Garland, Utah. Easter Lilies and fine assortment of potted plants suitable for Easter. Max Kloerig, Garland Phone 52.a-Greenhouse. 28 Utah-Idah- 2. popular with the majority, who might hesitate to pay the price of gold ones. They are especially appropriate when the wearer habitually carries a silver cigarette case and lighter1 a combination favored by a great many business men. (Some of the new silver links have very narrow dark, colored enameled borders, which match enameled cigarette cases or colored leather lighters..' The demand for lighters this season appears to be almost as huge as that of last year, when it looked as if every man in the United States must have purchased or been presented with one. Although prices have slump ed considerably, the standard mini mum for a really good lighter, made of something better than tin, is five dollars. This is a poular gift pride, but in the Fifth Avenue and Madison avenue shops, where cases are finely wrought and frequently jeweled or set with a small perfectly good watch, the prices run up into the hundreds of dollars. It is interesting to note how frequently lighters have begun to appear in our popular detective and adventure stories. What a help they are to heroes suddenly dropped into a strange house in the dark! Think whfit Robinson Crusoe missed by not inventing one! Smoking sets in colored enamels, consisting of six pieces, are also proving tremendously popular as gifts. These are of bright red, green or blue enamel, decorated with black borders, and include a long cigarette box, a short cigarette box, a cylindrical humidor, a cylindrical table lighter and a with lighter attached. There are also three-piec-e smoking sets, consisting of a humidor, a cigarette box and a .table lighter, in finely chased sterling silver. An unusual business is being done this year in walking sticks, with gold d or tops. Perhaps it is prosperity, or perhaps it is travel abroad, but American men are rapidly with losing their regard to this fashionable appurte nance. More and more sticks are be. ing seen on the streets of our large cities, and such is the savior faire with which they are carried that it is no longer possible for this writer to spot an Englishman coming far down the block. cigar-hold- er Come and see our Extra Specials on display at . the store. i M. J. B. Coffee 49c pound Chipso, FOR SALE modern house State Mission society with in Tremonton. reunion Chas. double garage, Ehmann, 1216 28th St., Ogden, Saturday evening, April 6, at 8:30 or Sanitary Market, Tremonton. 29p of the Smith sharp on the roof semi-annu- al 5. National Majestic Week, March 2430 . JL Jfjf sill LADIES' FARM BUREAU TO MEET The home management training class of the Ladies Farm Bureau will hold a meeting in the Commercial club rooms March 28 from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. All ladies are invited to attend. Over Eleven Hundred people visited our Grocery and Meat depart; ment last Saturday-- 4There was a Reason! Watch for our Extra Specials this week. "Buy for Cash and Pay Less,. Phone 33 Tremonton For you younger men who will have nothing but the authentic university-typ- e model. IHIall Suits 'IPrepton fa tlie ... . . Motcliecl ILaiiol ftHoclel rmilESE Prepton Hall Suits, two-JJ- L button and have of the expensall the ive clothes worn by smartly-dresse- d g university men. The lapel is so the coat looks well either three-butto- n, soft-rollin- lal a a WggBm buttoned, DUmW MMOriiW War.' I I BfrHtMSilMMk fl J j 3 l, IS) iM partly-buttone- d or entirely unbuttoned. Tailored in Shadow-Strip- e Narrow-Herringbone- Door 1 I T Dtaama' NauM OriolalWah.il I wbk Bull Walaal aa4 BtrfVer Maple Praal s, Diagonals and Pinchecks, 82S With two trousers. Others from $20 to $30. COOMBS & PERSSON Phone i o 1 GEPHART'S "ear-mark- s" aL 39c silver-rimme- oft-mulli- ng Romance 19c 37 c large package 10 P. & G. Soap .. for 2 lbs. Oleomargarine ... ... for ANNUAL REUNION The Eastern will hold their garden Memorial building, L. D. S. High FOR SALE Good turkey gobblers. school, Salt Lake Ctiy. All interestCall 5.y-ltd R. I. P. ed in Eastern States mission are corWhen speeder tries to beat a train t Victor Orthophonic phonograph with dially invited. The wheels his body greases. 15 records, new 8 months ago. $135 The careful guy may Rest In Peace Ambition and push are the prime machine sacrificed at $40. Peck's But speeders Rest in Pieces. motives for success. Electric Shop, Garland. tf . " 1409-mi- le Edgar Nessen. Fred Douglas is spending a few days at Wellsville this week. Mrs. E. P. Sorenson has been on the sick list this week. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Stark and daughter Joyce, who have been vistheir iting at Bothwell, returned home here Monday evening. Herman Fonnesbeck, who has been attending the U. A. C. at Logan, has returned to his father's ranch here. Miss Estella Wheatley was the guest of Mrs. J. C. Wood - Tuesday evening. Alma Munk of Salt Lake has reMiss Lyla Welling of Salt Lake turned to his ranch here for the sumCity was the Sunday guest of Miss mer. Tressa Garn. Tuesday evening Dan Douglas enMrs. E. O. Wilcox spent last weekat a card party. The color end and Sunday.at the home of her tertained parents iflMidvale. - 2t PECK'S ELECTRIC SHOP mi "Quality Clothiers" Garland Phone 70 llMtL. oa J.CP. J-t- ti. ,, i- - |