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Show SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH TITR Whence Came This Gitui I of Hie Deep? Winona Theatre TODAY Sat., Jan. 4 rOMOMl FN , r. - rrtrvrs? $ PAPKE f 5T0CKBKID6S rooD Till! J. Ogden Armour once ini publicly that be in- tat fl to control the world The other day hit eUte in Chicago, llirre vi, lMilled ln to MY fmnifh i. Iv -- me J.IMI.UO. Armour's l ine it might In O.-.bI i l.ccii f,r one man , ...I id i !, up or p ri It in impoib!e hr v i . i 4.n it w.'l In? forever tin n the food pcndiwert of l ,,mIiIc w i.c luiioti lulv avail ihcnorlvet of r . ly to control ihnr own v h h i open to thrill un-- t i 'rial iarin Hoard Act i i hr I i' i ( i.od. i y.-Af- j. .!! id. .;, f,d RADIO PRESENT A Chevrolet coach carried a party cf Westerners to Point Lobos, California, to inspect the carcass of an enormous whale which is said to have been there for centuries. rOMFBDY hat The Itip-Roarin- Rib-Tickli- g ng to pay for radio In England the hmidravting. h "tniri ft pay, by an annual las on t riving trtt, and I lie Government g rii'itodt the otwration of the station. That it a tytrm eli'c'i Ainrriran would nevrr There it too much Government regulation of the tpolcen word at writ at oi print, even now. In lint country it it the adver-In- rr who pay for broadcasting. Advritung and the distributionr in i.; wt and information are a prop-iii.m non ol newspaper. Some now operate broad-c,i:n.- g v station,, and their pro-ai- c aiming the bett on the In tl e natural evolution of nr Miug. newvpaprra will aome day lakk over all broadcasting. broad-raMiii- Typically Western td-erjt- e. MUSICAL DRAMA i.cv-p-pir- Honeymoon Ranch M.v 10 WKSl.KY SAUNDERS 10 The GLENDORA GIRLS Harmony Boys Supreme LAUGHS! SONGS! DANCES! Doors Open at 7:30 Curtain at 8:15 Two old backwoods hunters were hundreds sitting over their camp-firof miles fro mclvllizatlon. Their conversation turned to cooking. I bought one of them there cookery books a few years ago," said the first man. but I couldnt make head or tall of It. To muc hfancy work about It I suppose? his companion Inquired. wheezed the first man. Yus, "You're right there. Every one of them recipes began just the same. Take a clean dish It said. That o course settled me at once. 25c and 50c STAKE ILAY READY FOR PRESENTATION A very competent cast have been working diligently on the M. I. A. Stake play. It will be ready for presentation Monday, January 6th. This is a play for everyone. It was written by Larry E. Johnson and is a three-ac- t. minute farce. The story centers about a young married couple. The wife is subject to romantic plots, which are continually placing them in drastically humorous situations. Some of thi high spots occur when a baby is kld-- , napped, the husband is forced to act as a butler, the wife adopts a DELINQUENT NOTICE and the aunt whom Lake Shore Irrigation Company, a intend to deceive finally clears they thj corporation, principal place of busi- whole affair up for them. ness. Spanish Fork, Utah Archie Williams is directing the NOTICE is hereby given that there play. The cast includes Wilma Hanare delinquent upon the following son. Mark Boyack, Edna Ludlow, described stock the several amounts Dean Jensen, Klara Bingham, Jane set opposite the names of the respect Evans, Lester W. Searles, Melvin Williams and Vivian Wilde. The play is one of swift movement and clever humor. e, j fast-movin- g, KEYSERLING, the traveler and philosopher, says that Chicago it the most typically American city. Raymond M. Hood, president of the New York Architectural League, the other told hi night that they hadn't teen any real American architecture until they had seen Chicago's new skyterap-er- t. fcllow-architec- ts Every time I go back to Chicago s if I were getting a fresh inoculation of Americanism. No other city so completely expresses the American spirit of today. In no other city of which I know do the ordinary people have so many and tuch wonderful opportunities to get the most out of hie. New York still looks to Europe and the past for its traditions and culture; Chicago is developing a culture of its own which will set the American standard for centuries to come. I feel NOT A MOTION PICTURE lAilVEimSKUF.VTI Prnnylvania railroad promise rlcvtric trains hetween Washington and New York at tpeedt of from VU to 100 mile an hour. That it a fast most commercial airplane can fly afely. Eventually all railroads will be operated electrically between important center and train speeds of ICO tniics an hour will be common. COUNT The Taylor Male Quartette .. h Htmg with the railroadt for j wen iv hve years, hut average train have not incrcated in that CHICAGO Youth and Beauty M. I. com- - It took the airplane to atimulate Ihe roadt to higher speed. The PEOPLE $82.60 credit on a New Ford car. Will eell for $70.00. Call at Press office. RAILROADS y u i DMOUILES have teen up-to-t- step-husban- d. Dont argue. You can win an argument and not get any business. You can win an argument and lose your job. You can win an argument and lose your friends. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, December 10, 1929. NOTICE is hereby given that William W. Davis, of Spanish Fork, Utah, who, on March 17, 1924, made addl. Stock Raising Homestead Entry No. 032899, for Lot 11, Sec. 7, Lots 14. 15, 16, WSEA, Section 19, Township 10 South, Range 6 East Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Eli F. Taylor, Register U. S. Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 27th day of January, 1930. Claimant names as witnesses: Glenn W. Davis, of Leland, Utah; Burtram C. Davis and Alfred Wilson of Spanish Fork, Utah, Vernon L. Davis, of Mill Fork, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. DIRIGIBLES stir man's pride in AIRPLANES achievement of what the birds have always known. Airships like the Los Angeles or the Graf Zeppelin, stir the imagination with something like awe. 1 hey resemble nothing else on earth. They might be visitors from another planet It is possible that the discovery that man can ride through the air suspended from a bubble of gas will prove in a hundred years to be more important than the invention of the airplane. Dirigibles will get bigger and bigger, safer and safer. Already they can navigate where planes are forced down. A Zeppelin 1,200 feet long is being built at Akron. That is larger than the largest waterborne ship. The dirigibles of the future will bear the same relation to the airplane that the motorbus does to the ordinary passenger automobile, or that the ocean liner does to the speed-boa- t. Perhaps a combination of the principles of the two types of aircraft may some day displace both as we now know them. .PISH A baby boy was born llecembef 29 A baby tn,y wa, burn in Mi iuil and Mrs. Glenn G. Willlum Mrs. ('hurh-left during the week for El Paso. at the L. D. J. to Mr. mid Mrs. Wrn Williams ol was Texas, where Mr. William will take Hospital, Salt Luke. Ik. ember I9th. Vim yard. Mr. William up the work of assistant manager of wu, fnri.it rly Ml VloU: iwrly Miss Lyle Robertson of this Mr. I s Mu-i- for-Mr- Mu-.l- , the Super-Mai- d Aluminum ware business. lie ha been transferred from Pocatello, Idaho. liy. Wood of this city The Ji x family brittle t and sister-- ' Parley I. Fullmer arrived home K'llhered at the old Jex home on New lay evening to spend The members of the Alta Club enday In honor of tin ir mother's Y ars wlih hi boys. Mr. Fullmer tertained their husbands at their an blilliduy. Dinner was served at 2 Is traveling agent for the Mutuul nual New Year's party last Friday p. til., a ii 1 the afiernooii spent In Co. in Idaho, evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. soclul hat. F. J. Faux. Following a period ot A Christmas dinner was given at community singing under the direcThe members of the On Wt nislan the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Morris tion of Mr. Faux, with Mrs. Fern Club t utei tallied at a New Years W oil In honor of Mrs. Arvllla Slew ttrockbank at the piano, a buffet lun- party Tuesday evening at the home art. Among those present were Mr. cheon was served by the refreshment of Mr. and Mrs. Era Warier. Or- - and Mr John IVis.-u-n and son.Chu. committee, after which the evening nival garni s were In.luV' d In an I re-- ; Meu.-iri- . Arthur Stewart. Mr. and was spent In playing rook, prize fot lit were sen i.irnlval style Mr. Earl Stewart and family, all of the high score going to Mr. and Mrs. and the even-tigmerry-makin- g was' Eureka. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Wood R. II. Andrus. Mr. and Mrs. Henry rnneluded with a dame In the bae- - and family and Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Dahlsrnd were special guests. went of the home. Anderson and family of Spanish Fork New-Year'- s j fre-dim- e 1 j 4444444m444444444444444444444444444444444444444444H44444444-y444444444444- and, in accordance with law, and an stock as may be necessary, will be sold on Friday January 24, 1900, at 2 p. m., at the Lake Shore Amusement Hall, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of MYRTLE CRUMP, the sale. Secretary and Treasurer. (AOVEBTIBEMSKT) (ADVKBTlaKilXNT) RUNNlNi CAR.S ON IS ALL RkjHT ALCOHOL if it in theyll put AMO NOT THE TANK 7HS PRIME-V- ' : : See New Ford t At Our Show Rooms From the New Deep Radia-th- e tor to Curving tip of the fender, there is an unbroken sweep of line, a loving grace of contour here thought possible on only an Expensive Auto. -t- o-fore Mow SHore Than Ever TDne Mew Ford is a Value Far Above the Price ESW, order of the board of directors, so many shares of each parcel of such 4 moth Spanish Fork, Utah t |