OCR Text |
Show NOVEMBER 21, 1931. T1IK JOURNAL Rites Unite Eva Jean Randolph and John Law in Marriage Mid-Novemb- SYRACUSE Kva Jean F. dress and a rose bud corsage. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Those assisting at the reception Lester Frew, became the hride of were: Mrs. Lucille Moss, Mrs. R. John Law of Clearfield in a beauti- ('. Willey, Mrs. William S. Holt, ful ceremony lead by Bishop Law- Mrs. Ray Dahl and Mrs. Zenas W. rence I. Criddle last Thursday eve- Bennett. Ran-dolp- h, ning, November ir, at 7 p.m. The ceremony was performed at the. home of Mr. and Mrs. Frew. A reception followed at the Frew home and two hundred guests called between 7:80 and 10 p.m. The new Mrs. Law chose for her marriage a light grey suit with an orchid corsage and purple accessories. Mrs. Frew chose for her daughters marriage, a purple crepe 1 KAYSVILLE s' I I 5? ifi The Explorers and MIA Maids of Davis Stake Mutual Improvement Association held a Fire Side chat the North Farmington ward chapel Sunday evening. Larry OBrien of Centerville conducted the meeting which was attended by 112 young people of the stake. Elder Dale Tingey gave an interesting talk on Yugoslavia, piano selections were rendered by Miss Connie Ball of Kaysville. and Newell Campbell played several guitar in solos. The Kaysville Art club met at the home of Mrs. Clover Sanders Monday afternoon. Assisting hostesses were Mrs. Lucille Strong and Mrs. Janice Cranney. The lesson Cradle of Art was given by Mrs. Raymond J. Ashton, who also shewed slides of her recent trip to Europe. Refreshments were served to lit members and two special guests. Howard Larkins celebrated his both birthday anniversary at his home Thursday, Nov. 1.1. Kaysville Second ward Relief society will hold their December work day session on Monday Nov. 2G at 10 a.m. Mrs. Clark Cheney will have charge of the work, which will feature Christmas home deco- rations. Johannessen To Appear With Symphony Grant Johannesen, Utahs own brilliant young pianist who has gained international acclaim for his ability at the piano, will be guest soloist for the fourth Utah Symphony concert at the Salt Lake Tabernacle. Saturday, November 21. Utah always pays tribute to its athletes and athletic teams that win national honors, and the state will take advantage of this opportunity ta pay honor to the magnificent young pianist who is now recognized as an artist of the first rank by the critics in New York City, Paris and Berlin. Johannesen appeared with the Utah Symphony last season and was brought back this year by popular request. He has a large and enthusiastic following in his home state. In Frankfort, Germany, last year he was compared with the great Gieseking himself by the Frankfurter Neue Presse. In Paris he was praised as: A pianist of the first rank. He possesses such power of seduction and such profound understanding of the works that upon hearing him one is delivered from the restraints of technique and freed from the obsession of an instrument that interposes itself between the music and us. Avery great artist. appearance has special significance for Utah fans because he is a Utli musician and the entire state is expected to be represented to pay him honor at the Saturday concert. Johannesen will play Concerto No. 4 for Piano and Orchestra by A Johannesen Saint-Saen- s. Conductor Maurice Abravanel alLeon Dallins so has scheduled D to in open the proSymphony will play also The orchestra gram. dances from the Three Cornered and Hat by Manuel de Falla Mountain French a on Symphony Air, by Vincent Dlndy. The concert is the fourth on the lb.1l .12 series. -- She was honored the evening prior to her marriage by a group of friends, Mrs. Victor Atkinson, Mrs. Beth Hayes and Mrs. Margaret Sedgwick when they entertained with a personal shower at the home of Mrs. Hayes in Bountiful. Mr. and Mrs. Law left immediately following the ceremony for a two weeks honeymoon trip. Name Contest Planned by Local Groups ry Slater; Mrs. Pearl Olsens third grade, Mrs. H. Warwick, and Mrs. Lloyd Chapman; Mrs. Cooks third grade, Mrs. Lynn Wood and Mrs. Clarence Bushnell, Mr. Seiserts fourth grade; Mrs. Hawley Reid and Mrs. Leonard Harmon, Mrs. Coopers fourth grade, Mrs. Joshua Ashton and Mrs. Morck Hancock, Mr. Ellis fifth grade; Mrs. Elmo Bird and Mrs. Arthur Mayfield; .Mrs. M. Hancocks fifth grade, Mrs Ralph Green and Mrs. George Hewitt, Mrs. Stevens sixth grade, Mrs. Virgil Hilton and Mrs. Lyman Schencks, Mr. Scofields sixth grade. Mrs. Frank Mowers and Mrs. Wayne Saxey. The Christmas program was announced to be held Tuesday, Dec. IN in the North Davis Junior High REAL ESTATE er Owner must sell. shake, full basement, gas heat. Asking Will consider any reasonable offer. Can handle for approximately si. .100.00 down. Lovelv SFNSET fiame. Attached garage, nicely landscaped lot. Good location near church and bus line. .Steel kitchen cabinets in brightly colored kitchen. A real buy at $s, Kmi.oo. Nice two - bedroom LAYTON frame. Automatic gas heat, extra large garage in rear with attach- ed apartment under construction and almost enough material for completion. Good location near school and church. Ask- school. ing $!,1(M.nu. $2,mmuk down, balance like rent. KAYSVILLE New CLEARFIELD Nice two-bedroo- m $!.-7.1- two-bedroo- 0. m three-bed-roo- The JOURNAL A weekly newspaper published k the interests of the residents of l)ais County, at Layton, Utah. matter at Entered as second-clas- s under Act of the Layton. Utah, March 8, 1879. - Published Bv INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 ASSOCIATION UTAH STATE NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Study Schools m N'atl Advertising Representative shake. Attached garage. eduFARMINGTON Board of loveNewspaper Advertising Service. This for Ready occupancy. cation authorities are 222 No. Michigan Ave. studying l.v home has over 1,100 sq. ft. Can Clinin school facilities the plant Chicago, 111. be purchased for approximately South and school Sunset Weber $2 SIMM Ml down. Good east loca- - ton, districts for future modernization. Subscription: $1.00 Per Year tion. club FARMINGTON Payable in Advance. SALT LAKE CITY Attractive new In combination with member or wool grower in this home. Extra large The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. area may find himself 10 dollars lot, assorted fruit trees, berries;1 richer next January 22. iriigation water. Total price In a contest announced recently $N,710. Lloyd E. Anderson LAYTON A little bundle of joy by officials of the Salt Lake Union Editor Manager club arrived at the Dee'hospital in OgStockyards, the FFA and Lona U. Parrish BARLOW REALTY den Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. Ed members in the state will compete News Editor Defense Bonds for two 1 Stromberg. They have two other . . . Phone Kays. 7.1.1 Layton Memchildren who will welcome their J. V. Woolsey donated by that organization. ! II ; Beck Barlow, 8il7-.little sister home. bers of the Utah Wool Growers AsDisplay Advertising Manager 1 Sibhett, 733; Mitchell sociation will also compete for a -- 4-- H two-bedroo- Stork Talk m II 8.13-1- il 180-J- bond. The purpose of the contest is to select names for three outstanding purebred Rambouillet rams to be used in a research project conducted by the Utah Agricultural Experiment station. One of the rams will be named by the FFA. and the other by one by the members of the wool association. The three rams, along with approximately NO Rambouillet ewes, will be used in a project designed to condition and improve the open-fac- e increase the length of wool in Rambouillet sheep. The research project has been made possible largely through a $21,000 research grant which the 10-doll- ar 1, Kennecott Copper Corporation gave to the Utah Agricultural Experi- ment station. It is planned that a portion of this grant will be used to purchase outstanding open-face- d WISE INVESTORS are buying Real Estate, how about you? Are you looking ahead? Give your family the security and comfort realized by home OWNERS in Davis County. Fruit Heights, KAYSVILLE 2 bdrm. Brick rambler, full bsmt., large rooms throught, interior decorating will suit any taste. Coved. linoleum in kitchen and dinnett, full bsmt., radiant heat. Pt acres of ground. Priced at 811,(hio.oo approx. $1,ooo.oo will handle. Make your offer today. KAYSVILLE East side, 8. Bdrm. brick, attached garage, home has been lived in three months, owner transferred. $2,100.00 will handle, priced at $14,300.00. 2 Bdrm. frame, full LAYTON bsmt., hmdscaped lot, gas heat, attached garage, clean throught, this is the one you have been waiting for. $3100.00 down, total Rambouillets in Utah and in other states. club members in FFA and price $11,000.00. this area can get their entry blanks LAYTON 2 bdrm brick, attachfor the contest at the county ed garage, gas heat, fenced lot. agents office or from their instrucOne year old, 1 min. drive from tor of vocational agriculture. MemHill Field, $2,100.00 down. Total bers of Utah Wool Growers Asprice $11,000.00. sociation will receive their entry blanks in the mail. S. Winners of the contest will be 4.1th Annual Wool announced at the Growers Convention in Salt Lake Real Estate and Construction City, January 22, 1012. PHONE 1S4 LAYTON', UTAH and Sunday . . . Evenings 4-- H A Farm I'M Plan for Machinery Replacement THATS NO PROBLEM OLD AND ON OUR FARM. THE BOSS KEEPS TIRED... MY DAYS ARE NUMBERED BUT MY BOSS HASNT SAVED ANY MONEY FOR A NEW TRACTOR A REPLACEMENT FUND IN US. DEFENSE BONDS. THATS WHY HIS MACHINERY IS FIRST CLASS SHAPE. WHAT'LL ALWAYS IN Hg DO WHEN I'M GONE? m (wV te Clarence CALL KAYS. Local Rites Set For Mrs. Green BOARD and room in the She was born January 10, 1S71 , at Kaysville, Utah, a daughter of George and Caroline Adams Stod- dard, early Utah pioneers. She married James Green, July 108(5. Six children were born to the couple, four of whom survive: Wm. J. Green and Mrs. Marie Blockman, Oakland, California, Mrs. Edna Broberg, Reno, Nevada, Arnold Green, Susanville, California: 11 grandchildren, 1 also, a sister Mrs. Elizabeth Ruben Egbert, San Francisco. May 10. 180(5, Mr. and Mrs. Green, with team and wagon, cows and personal belongings, moved to Gentile Valley, Idaho, homesteading 1(50 acres of land near Grace. They hauled water from Bear River, 3 miles away, for domestic use. After clearing the land of brush and building a home, they sold their property, and returned to Kaysville in 1080. great-grandchildre- n; Services will be conducted Friday, November 23, in the Kaysville Third ward chapel, Church of Jesus Christ of LDS. Services will be conducted by Bishop C. LaVirl Stewart. Clear-field-Layt- on Contact Earl J. Newlsch. Phone Clearfield 44(5-- J LV tN A 1. M fjfo 1 1 W vicinity. cations following a broken hip. He died March, 513-- Jl WANTED KAYSVILLE Caroline Rebecca Green, SO, died Monday, Nov. 10, in an Oakland hospital of compli- 10, 1880. Simmons m 'dl m my i to Q ffcoiD GEd Qa? Qp 3B33b ladohoS7 005 Nite Is Success Back to school CLEARFIELD held members of the was by night last WednesWasatch school day, Nov. 14, at the Wasatch school building. The evening was divided into three periods so that parent scholars could visit that many classes. The meeting was in charge of vice president Mrs. Joe Knight during the absence of President Mrs. James Beech due to illness. Room representatives under the direction of chairman Mrs. Rex Bolschweiler were introduced to parents as follows: Mrs. Flints morning class, Mrs. L. 0. Johnson and her afternoon class, Mrs. Myron Wilcox, Mrs. Gunnells morning first grade, Mrs. Myron Bodily, her afternoon class; Mrs. R. A. Isaack-soMrs. Blackhands second grade, Mrs. Chesley Madsen and Mrs. Golden Lane, Mrs. Fannie Clarks second grade. Mrs. Harvey Broad-ben- t, Mrs. Tulleys second grade, I!. Treseder and Mrs. Ilen- E. Mrs. P-T- A n, M , i. III Y Cfrfiflicgy QBffiHqjHio (Bffi O (HD QiEMlEED Oo 0o GGGCD0G fl OOG3O0 msm (ESmays. "What makes a worker want to get ahead? He wants to nrn more, and live better. So he tries harder, and does a better ob. That's what's known as incentive. But when income taxes go up and up, and the more we earn the more we pay, we begin to wonder, fust how much incentive is left to try to get ahead. BOO GHRIEJ &00KNOO(5H) j |