OCR Text |
Show JULY THE JOURNAL 12 7, 1951. News About Folks in at my. From heie he will go to Kuiope for future duty. BOX OFFICE Mr. and Mrs. Etsil Fisher and Friday and 7:30 I. M. hildren au spending the week in JOI'EN Mrs. Kathryn Jennings Saturday Show Starts . Idaho visiting with relatives. Correspondent $1.00 CAR 8:30 I. M. Mr. (I. Q. Knowlton will leturn Mr. Ricky Robinson is visiting from Los Angeles, in a few with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. where he days been visiting with has Hap Robinson, lie has been sta- Mr. and Mrs. Jim Knowlton and Caroally vanishing from the American tioned in Fort Bragg, North of the two small sons. scene, is still busy at 80 years of lina, with the artillery unit George Broschinshy, son of Mr. age. She admits, however, that the and Mrs. Walt Broschinsky will atjob is not as glamorous as it used to tend the musical clinic upon special PHONE 501 be. tequest, at the U. S. A. C. in LoMiss Duff is said to be the oldest LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED gan for tw'o weeks. His special inworking public stenographer in New IIKiHWAY NO. 01 . . . NORTH OF LAYTON terests are the trombone and York city. And she doesnt know when she will retire. I cant, she Theres no one to take i explains. over my work. Oldest Public Steno Recalls 0. Henry , FARMINGTON WEU45HESTRB Friday and Saturday JULY G and 7 FAMILY N HI I IT $1.00 PER CAR many famous and interesting personalities. The hotel was at one time a gathering spot for writers, and one she knew well, and served often, was the novelist Emerson Hough. She typed his w'hole manuscript for a The Magnificent Adventure, story of the Lewis and Clark ex w pedition. She was also the first to hear and read the impassioned temperance lectures of John L. Sullivan, boxer turned crusader, for it was to her that he dictated them. Once, she was even included in a story written by one of her custom ers. The author, a silent little man, always brought in his stories written on yellow paper in a clean, beautiful hand. Once he handed her a By the manuscript, remarking, way, I put you in this story. As she typed the passage in O. Henrys The Face in the Circle that told of a public stenographer, she was writing a description of herself. SHORT C 2 COLOR CARTOONS Friday Nij hi Alidnijht Show Starts at 12:00 RELEASE RE CLARK delmeTdaves wth DANE play by D.lm.r D.vM and Aibart Malta From an Original Story by Stava Flahar Muale by Frana Waaman Bor.n JULY S and SUNDAY and .MONDAY 0 . . . 1(1 climb mm the Highest Mountain 'san m am TECHNICOLOR hlCINIlHU IPX PLUS starring SSKSk tf &' lf V 4'i 7." 10, 11 and "WHAT full-blood- "ole-urvivin- good sweeper is have around for heavy broom got 29, a Walgreen drugstore porter, into plenty of trouble. Forrest was held to a grand jury on a larceny charge. Police said he swept out more than $60,000 worth of candy and cigarettes from the drugstore. Also held to the grand jury was Forrests half brother, John Cobbs, who police said told of hauling away the sweepings over a period of months. CHICAGO A a good man to a janitor, but a Abe Forrest, d audTerrific! Warner Bros, present SSWfW-SgoRSlTAgGNEPLUS ooA Sfe sa. t ALSO COLOR CARTOON , answer. She says maybe I got a hundred men, he relates. She peels off a 160 bill and tells me to divide it among my men. Its then I tell her t got 130. She gives me $50 more. The next night same time, same place, same routine. Kotelas had Work For You men, the lady gave him $135 and lso gave the recruits on the train l fine pep talk. The petty officer ;hen had a heart to heart talk with the WANT-AD- S AT A NEWS CONFERENCE generous donor and discovered that she was Mrs. Muriel McCormick Hubbard, sister of Chicago Fowler McCormick and granddaughter of the late John D. Rockefeller. Blended whiskey. 86 Layton News Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Nalder arc visiting in Shelly and Rexburg, Idaho with relatives. proof. 70 grain neutral spirits. Hiram Walker & Sons Inc, Peoria, 11L In Wash- ington, Lt. Gen. Elwood D. Quesada presents a lengthy report on the 1951 atomic weapons tests at Atoll in the Pacific. Quesada, who commanded the trials, and top atomic officials revealed that the experiments have given the United to build the States the know-ho- w bomb. ) International ( hydrogen Eni-wet- ok ttimm Walker quality lars and pep talks to navy recruits has been brought to light by a chief petty officer who received $150 from the lady to distribute among a contingent of 130 bound for Newport, R.I. Petty Officer Steven Kotelas, Sr., Bridgeport, Conn., was approached by a woman asking how many men be had in his charge. Not knowing who she might be, he refused to 135 Let the Reflex and Journal Quesada -- NEW YORK The mystery of the woman who happily passed out dol- PATRICIA R D. for old time Navy Chief Solves Mystery Of Woman Free With Dollars 1t It. Gen. Elwood Law Investigates Sweepings V 12 Torpedo-Packe- Marins KOREA NEEDS," lay frontfrom home J. Robert Ward, Sgt. line duty on 35 days rotation leave, "i more CARE food and clothing package to lave civilian live and booit morale. fighting Sgt. Ward, 25, a t 1 Cherokee, whoe home i at 2381 4 Wt California, 93rd Street, Lo Angele 44, made headline by asking hi mother to son ' g release him from the rule which would have kept him out of the front line. Hi two brother were killed in World War II. He enlisted in 1942, ha a wife, Bettye, 21, and a daughter, Bobbie Linda, 2, (in picture!. in civilian condition Ward describe of Trail Korea a a new "Cherokee Tear." Contribution for CARE package or may be ent to CARE lo Angele, CARE San Francisco. A-Te- sts One Broom Swept Heavily; ALSO COLOR CARTOON JULY Tells of She points out that few stenographers in these modem times are willing to gamble on earning an Income on an hourly fee basis. Miss Duff operates in the same cubbyhole office in the Old Prince George hotel where she started many years ago and she has a memory list of clients that includes |