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Show MAY 9, 1933. TIIE JOURNAL 2 Prisoners of War Exchanged Expect 65,000 at Birthday Party Figure Flattery i I r i i I i t! JiU v'. h,ViK ihrtiTirliyiiVitaiifrf irif S ' fy Y,rjwi (ffriinflntiiifi?fti On June 28, Methodist churches around the PHILADELPHIA, PA. By VERA WINSTON NAVY sheer crepe is used for a dress that would be an excellent choice for the more mature figure. There is bust in the detail flattering which is bow encrusted draped ribbon. accented with grosgrain Ribbon marks the surplice closing that continues down to the hem in a diagonal line that is so slenderizing. Bracelet length cuffed sleeves and slit pockets are other features. The belt is of grosgrain and the buttons are bone. or less-than-sli- m -- world will observe the 250th anniversary of the birth of John Wesley. Largest American observance will be in Philadelphia where 10,000 official delegates from all parts of the United States will stage a three day convocation. The climatic service of the convocation is to be held in Franklin Field where approximately 60,000 additional people from the Philadelphia area will join in a dramatic service in the football stadium. Speakers will include Methodist leaders from all parts of the world. I I; ' jj I ; 5 PANMUNJOM, KOREA on right for processing. News About Folks in It is planned that this meeting will initiate a great evangelistic program for all Methodist churches. Dr. Joseph Edge reports that every mail brings additional registrations of delegates to his evangelism office in Nashville, Tenn. General view as prisoners of war were unloaded from ambulances to tents LAYTON r Mrs. Maggie Simmons Correspondent Phone 0219-J- 1 I.-- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Green. Miss Patricia Green, Miss Wilma Neville and Miss Connie Day attended the wedding reception of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Clark at Clinton Thursday Newest Portrait evening. Mrs. Clark was the for- were among those who served. mer Colleen Parker. Patricia was The Layton Second ward choig1 Specialty cooking, home freezer will present the program at meet-- ; preparation methods and clinics on ing in West Tremonton on Sunday t j interior decorating are included in May 17th. the packed schedule of activities ( along with entertainment by some o. hih uc uciu of the nations top entertainers. Ex- ciat 8 p.m. at the Layton 1st war'll perts in the various fields will be chapel according to I. Haven Bar-on hand to advise visitors with inStake President. Apostlo low, dividual problems, Kimball and Mark e an attendant and Connie and Wilma Spencer Peterson from Salt Lake will he h attendance. tn-uncoun- j 1 I Secretaries Across the Nation Honored During Special Week When you crochet it is a good idea to wear a black (or at least a dark) apron. It will make a good background on which to place your work so that you can follow the pattern more easily. The JOURNAL A weekly newspaper published in the interests of the residents of Davis County, at Layton, Utah. matter at Entered as second-clas- s under the Act of Layton, Utah, March 8, 1879. LATiSl portrait of Britains Queen Elizabeth II oy Baron is a serious, pose. The queen is wearing a pale pink evening gown of n:& pre-coronati- on full-leng- th Published By INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 SIM UTAH lW NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Natl Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service. 222 No. Michigan Ave. Chicago, 111. Subscription: $1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance. In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year Lloyd E. Anderson Editor Manager Mary B. Bowring News Editor J. V. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager ; needlework lace over tulle. The sash is the Blue Ribbon of the Garter. Her jewelry consists of a Russian fringe diamond necklace, diamond drop earrings, two diamond bracelets and her diamond wedding ring. The diamond drop brooch at the top of the Blue Rib-bo- D is a family heirloom pre- viously. worn by the late Queen Mary. On. the queens head is a diamond diadem, the headband of which Is composed of a row of diamonds between two rows of pearls. (International) SECRETARY OF COMMERCE Sinclair Weeks (center) met in Washington, D. C., with C. King Woodbridge, chairman of the National Secretaries Week Council and president of Dictaphone of the Council Corporation, and Mrs. Mary II. Barrett, and president of the National Secretaries Association, to officially launch the second annual National Secretaries Week. A Tribute To The American Secretary in the form of a colorful scroll was signed and issued for display throughout the country. The second annual observance profession, the tribute says. of National Secretaries Week, Frequently, the efforts of these skilled office workers are taken designated to honor The American Secretary . . . The First Lady for granted. Their many contribuof Business, was officially set for tions to the nations progress are 0 at a meeting in the unsung. To honor the secretaries May office of Sinclair Weeks, Secretary already doing their jobs with diliof Commerce in Washington. gence, and to encourage others Wednesday, May 27, was set as into entering this worthy career, National Secretaries Day. it is essential that rightful recogAttending the meeting with nition be given. The concept of a designated Secretary Weeks were C. King week during which secretaries Woodbridge, of New York, chairwould receive national recognition man of the National Secretaries Week Council and president of for their indispensable contribuDictaphone Corporation, and Mrs. tion originated last year with Mr. Mary H. Barrett, of Pittsburgh, Woodbridge. There are now, says Mr. of the National Pa., Secretaries Week Council and Woodbridge, .approximately secretaries in the United president of the National Secretaries Association. States, but there are still more secretarial j6bs than there are Keynote for 1953 is stated on-scroll entitled, A Tribute To The secretaries. The Council is keenly interested in nation-wid- e observAmerican Secretary. Secretaries throughout the ance to give secretaries greater United States are shouldering pride in their wrork and to envital responsibilities in keeping courage girls to take up secrewith the best traditions of their tarial work as a career. an 24-3- an Odd Fact Stealing Into a Greensboro, N C. hotel room, on burglary bent, a private from a nearby army base found he had picked the room being occupied by two military police from the same base. n THIS WHISKEY IS 4 YEARS OLD J STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY I 86 PROOF NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROD. C0RP.. N. Y. ; t |