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Show &unfl&to0catf PAGE SIXTEEN Last Squad Club To Helper Legion Starts Americanization Week Hold First Reunion The Helper American Legion post No. 21 has named W. H. Wardell, principal of the Helper Junior High sdsool, to head a committee to plan for a week of patriotic activities to take place early in November. The The first annual reunion of the Last Squad Club of the American Legion will be held in the Helper Civic auditorium on November 12, 1941, the day after Armistice Day, at 7:30 p. m. This will be the first meeting of the group since its organization last t spring. The safe will be locked at this meeting never to be opened again until only eight of the original members are still alive. Member Legionnaires are asked to bring any messages or tokens that they want to place in the safe, since this will be their last chance to do so. The program will include a reum ion, banquet, toasts to the departed members who have died since the clubs founding, marking the charter, a floor show and one good speaker. week will be known as Americanization Week." This observance will be planned in connection with Educa- National tion week, begin- f n" I ning on November W. H. Wardell 10, and will also include the celebration of Armistice Day. Patriotic programs in local schools and appropriate activities in service and civic organizations will be featured during U the week. ROYAL NEWS By LaRene Bradshaw Miss Hilda Varhaaran, Miss Helen Nezos and Leonard Nezos of Salt Lake City were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nezos. Miss Rhona Bradshaw spent the week end in Spanish Fork. Mrs. Mary Elder of Springville is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Bill Un-gric- Miss Maijorie Latturner has returned to Salt Lake City after spending a few days here with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Christensen are in Salt Lake City with his father, who is seriously ill. Mr .and Mrs. August Beebe and family have moved here from Myton. Barney Bertogho spent Saturday and Sunday in Springville with his mother. H4 I I I I 8 I I It II H M Mil fr M-t--4 EACH PAYMENT CHOPS OFF 1 PART 0FY0UR PLAN Save and Have a Home . TTTT1 ii FIRST FEDERAL 1 SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION t ;J Taken from the files of the Eastern Utah Advocate of October 26, 1911). Fire that originated in the office of the Carbon County News last Saturday morning destroyed property on the west side of Main street estimated at between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars. Helper Republicans met last night and naminated Joseph Barboglio for president of the town board. Buried In Salt Lake City j Funeral services for Mrs. Florence Shaw, 34, prominent clubwoman of Carbon county and wife of Albert Shaw, engineer for the Rains Coal company, were conducted Monday afternoon at the Mitchell funeral chapel under the direction of the Order' of Eastern Star. Burial was in a Salt Lake City cemetery. Mrs. Shaw died Friday at 7:00 p. m. at her home in Rains of carcinoma after an illness of four months. A native of Salt Lake City, she was Markll J and Caml Barney Grosso and Annie Bertot SUNNYSIDE both of Sunnyside were licensed to tie Gate and. through Carbon county wed this week. by announcing his marriage on the 23rd of September. The bride is the Mrs. Amel Denison and Irene and Captain John F. Cory this week daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gaughan of Mrs. Francis Denison attended the surprised his legion of friends at Cas' Chanute, Kansas. NEWS' -- fcr Mra-ass- Work On Reservoir Continues Through Bad Weather Spell Bad weather in the form of rain and snow failed to halt work on the Millers Flat reservoir in the high Wasatch mountains of Emery county and the project is still going on according to schedule, a report from that place said this week. Two operators worked shifts with a big caterpillar tractor through the stormy period of the last week, under direction of William Rasmussen of Lawrence, a director of the Canal and Reservoir association which is building the project. Several teams and single hands also are employed in clearing away rock. Considerable work has been done the last several weeks in the river bed across which the dam will be built. Not all of the stripping to bedrock can be finished this season, but an excellent start has been made on the projects and work can proceed at a faster pace after the snow disappears next spring. Reservoir officials added that even if bad weather forces an end to the job at an early date, it is up to schedule, with seven weeks of work finished. The project was started on September 7, and has continued without interruption since then, despite several severe storms in that area near the summit of Wasatch range, about 10,000 feet altitude. Price Woman Buried In Springville Plot TTTT or Thirty Years Ago November 7, 1906, a daughter uterud in Of. and Florence Boud Butter-wort- h, angeville Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel r and received her education in Salt Lake City schools, graduating Mr and Mrs. Thomas estoa Sunday in Bingham. from West High school. Dell She had resided in Carbon county week Peterson hom from St. la an was active 10 and years for about he has been taking mefe11 member in the Order of Eastern Star for three months. treaty jand had served as president of the association Rains Parent-Teach- er She is survived by her husband and M, parents; a son, Trevor Shaw of Rains; Jeanne Gilligan of priP(l two brothers, Wallace E. Butterworth and Edwin Butterworth, Jr.; a sister, week end with Pauline RSpent Mary Aileen Ukatos Mrs. Fullmer H. Latter, and her maternal grandfather, John W. Boud, Penovich visited in Nation all of Salt Lake City. 'born on Prominent Club Woman of Edwin PRICE 68 W. Main St. TeL 350 PRICE, UTAH Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Lucretia Gay Lambson, 62, of Price, who died Saturday in the Price City hospital, were conducted Monday at 2:00 p. m. in the Wallace funeral chapel by Bishop Orson Nelson of the Price L. D. S. Third ward. Additional services were conducted Tuesday at 2:00 p. m. in the Wheeler funeral chapel in Springville. i! Burial was in the Springville cemetery. Mrs. Lambson was the wife of Delbert Lambson of this city. She was born on May 29, 1879, at Spanish Fork, a daughter of Moses Brigham and Amelia Priscilla Lewis Gay. Survivors include her husband, two sons, Bert and Lavell Lambson of Price; three brothers, Lewis B., Eugene and R. E. Gay of Los Angeles, California; two sisters, Mrs. Lily Pearson of Sacramento, California; and Mrs. Nellie Jones of Salt Lake City, and three grandchildren. (0 FASHION CREATORS TELL YOU TO WEAR IT WHERE ITS MOST BECOMING TO YOUR FIGURE AND HEIGHT: AND THEY SEND US DRESSES LIKE THESE. TWO BASQUE SILHOUETTES, BOW TRIMMED LIKE A SOUTH AMERICAN DANCERS COSTUMES: A TAILORED WOOL WITH UPPED WAISTLINE; AND A MIDDY SILHOUETTE WITH EMPHASIS. ONE IS JUST RIGHT Where Do You Wear Your Waistline? R L FOR YOU. HOP D 29 East Main Price NOW A Profitable Investment Your home or other property that produces income is the safest kind of an investment. No matter what happens to your other funds, your realty is always there to fall back on will always keep a "roof over your head. In a pinch you can always sell a modern home. If it becomes necessary to rent, you can count on a well repaired home bringing welcome rental income. Your home is probably your largest single investmake it a valuable asset by keeping it fn good ment repair. Why not call us today for helpful suggestions for making it bright and cheerful inside and out? Lumber Tri-Stat- e South Carbon Avenue Price A delicious and refreshing drink . . . with life, sparkle and Coca-Coltaste that everybody likes. That's It's one of the pleasant things of life . . . pure, wholesome refreshment. ice-co- Ch Phone lOTUfO 122 UNDER AUTHORITY OP THE ld COCA-COI- a. A COMPANY BY SOUTHERN UTAH BOTTLING CO. UTAH HELPER, COCA-COL- A You truSt ,tS CUaHiy |