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Show PAGEEI; Friday, June 18, 1937 MAGNA TIMES, MAGNA, UTAH te . CLUB ittee gve-Gu- ge Over seventy five ladles and several gentlemen were served lunch. Mrs. R. C,. Parks won the prize at bridge. Beveral ladies entertained their own clubs at the party. Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Young purchased the following books Wednesday. They are now on the library shelves and the public Is cordially Invited to use them. All of them arc and the most poprecent ular books now sold. They Include: Author Book Kathleen Norris Belle Mere E. Lorlng The Trail of Conflict Shining Windows.. Kathleen Norris Kathleen Norris Walls of Oold Kathleen Norris Woman In Love E. Lorlng We Ride the Gale E. Lorlng With Banners Temple Bailey Contrary Mary Carry On, Jeeves.. P. O. Wodehouse C. A. War on Wishbone Range Seltzer S. S. The Benson Murder Case Van Dine Honore Beyond the Blue Sierra best-selle- rs Hole and Yellowstone guests. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Bland Sorenson left Gregory Splendor of Eagles. .Helen T. Miller last week for a trip to San FrancisAlice R. Colver co and the Pacific Northwest On Strangers at Sea Making 'Friends With Life... James their return home they will visit friends in Los Vegas, Nevada. Reid Zane Grey West of the Pecos Mrs. E E. McCarty was hostess to E. Lorlng Oive Me One Summer The Island of Allure Utah Power & Light Co. Wins National Award 4 ' :'i r i'- like gold, occur In waters (Continued from page I.) attempt to console the bereaved wife and daughter is a hard task. We feel sure that we are expressing the sentiments of the entire community when we say that a dearly beloved friend has gone from our midst Into a higher realm. Somehow, Mr. Boies will always serve as an exemplary example of He who said. Well done, my good and faithful servant. His life was truly well dpne. Simple, but impressive and memorable services, befitting the life of Mr. Boles, were conducted Wednesday at the Larkin Funeral Home In Salt Lake City. Rev. E. B. Pace conducted the rites. Bishop L. C. Healy spoke and related the splendid life Mr. Boles had led. He offered sincere consolation to Mrs. Boles with the thought that she had lived fifty one years happy, eventful yearswlth her dearly beloved husband. Bishop Healy also told of the high respect and regard that Mr. Boies was held by all. Such regard is not easily forgotten. H. Claude Anderson, the other speaker at the services, told of the many years he had known Mr. Boies and the many sterling characteristics he possessed. He told of working with Mrs. Boies In her many community charities and always of the helping hand that Mr. Boies extended to aid his loved partner, even though he remained in the background. Mr. Anderson offered consolation to Mrs. Boies and their daughter, Vashti, with the thought that such a fine figure of a man and the truly wonderful life he lived, was an inspiration to all. Three musical selections were given by a friend of the family from Salt Lake City. Burial was in the Pleasant Green cemetery. To iii in tf, - almost of the sea, in the earth's strata. In rocks yet Its profitable extraction Is rare. Utah Is one of the places where it occurs In abundance, comprises an important resource and supports a major industry. The Great Salt lake is the center of one of the world's greatest deposits, with enough salt to supply future generations for thousands of years. The saline content to of Its water varies from 15 25 and the brine Is so dense that the human body floats easily on its surface. It contains no life. So easily is salt obtained from the lake that there has been little Incentive to exploit the numerous beds and domes in other parts of Utah. Salt production is one of the states oldest industries. The first settlers gathered the crystals left by evaporation in the natural basins around the lake. In I860 and after, dams were built to Impound the water. As the demand Increased production was organized and much capital invested. The inland Salt Company waa formed in 18S9. succeeded lu 1899 by the Inland Crystal Salt company, which, in 1927, became the Royal Crystal Salt company. The Salt Chemical Company, a subsidiary of the Diamond Match company, began operations on the southern shore of the lake In 1916, primarily to produce potash for war purposes. The Morton Salt company took over that property In 1918 and has operated it since as a salt plant. Whether the salt in the lake originated through evaporation or volcanic action, or both, Is in dispute. The lake, averaging only 15 feet in depth, Its proportion of salt varies from year to year with the rainfall. Though sodium chloride (common salt) Is the sole commercial product of the lake, steps re under way to recover BOdium sulphate, whose proportion is next to the sodium chloride, and thus establish a new industry in Utah. Variation in the density at which different cheiqjcals precipitate permits selective concentration, segregation of salt of the highest purity and the removal of magnesium, calcium and other unwanted elements. During the evaporation season, from April to brine Is pumped at the rate of 5.000 gallons a minute 24 hours a day from the lake Into a flume. From settling ponds, It passes, after five or six days, to concentrating ponds of 230 r 4 -r- acres each. The saturated brine flows by gravity to 20 crystaUlzing ponds, each of 10 acres area. Here the salt crystals form And the bitterns" (other chemicals In solution) are run off before they reach the saturation stage. A permanent floor of salt is maintained In each pond. In the late fall, after a pond has been thoroughly drained, ordinary plows drawn by tractors, loosen the new salt from the floor. With scrapers and conveyor It Is stacked by a railroad siding and until needed at the weathered mill. An average annual crop Is about four Inches of salt. The mill has a capacity of 60,000 tons a season. From a receiving storage bin the salt passes through a rotating kiln drier (heated to 300 deg.) find to a cooler, from which it goes to the stock bln. Various sets of rolls crush and size it into nine sizes, each of which occupies a separate bin. Thence It is fed automatically Into sacks andjiack-age- s for marketing. The territory served by Utah's salt industry, extends from Denver, Colorado, to Washington Oregon and part of California, covering the Black Hills, In South Dakota, and the Rocky Mountain states. It gives steady employment to more than 125 people, with a payroll of more than $200,000 a year, and spends further amounts ..for the supplies, power and fuel it requires. The bulk of flip output, going to other states, brings much new money into Utah. Ixcal salt companies pay the railroads about f million dollrrs a year for transportation. Salt is pressed Into blocks, sometimes with the addition of phos phate for livestock feeding; w b3 -- mOUNCING -- BUY AT HOME. R. M. Appliance lagna, Utah :Here are the inside facts about the wonderfc! ;NEW HEATROLA RANGE Just a glance at fi! outward appearsn1 ond youll set that this! fine new range b out of the ordtoL,. cooking appliance' Youll be delighted, with the smart, - smoked. It Is used for the complete sugar cure of meat, and with iodine, It Is recommended by the medical profession for the prevention of goiter. of Ofer 40 the school children of Utah are said to be afflicted with this thyroid deficiency. A special kind of salt is Iodized for unimals. Since the early, days of Utah, salt has been mined Jn, Sevier and Sanpete counties, where the mineral occurs in' beds overlain with ten feet or more of earth. This salt is recovered by stripping or quarry mining". Some salt was obtained from the great salt bed at Wendover, 110 miles west of Salt Lake City, but commercial production Is no longer maintained there. Intricate selling problems and the .restrictions imposed by freight rates constantly confront the industry in Utah. On their solution and friendly consideration at home depends an Important market for Libor and source of revenue. n- dem to right: celain-enam- el Blue Ribbon Bottle Beer 15C Pabst Export Can Beer 15. The annual George A. Hughes mart! for 1936, consisting of a sil rer trophy and a check for $1,000, was presented to the Utah Power b tight Company June 4th at the Edison Electrie Institute convention in Chicago. P. M. Parry, and commercial manager, snd W. A. Huckins, sales manager of the local power company, were present to receive the award. A similar award Is given each year by George A. Hughes, president of the Edison General Electric Appliance company, of Chicago, in a nation-wid- e competition, to the power company achieving the best results in developing the use of electric cooking among its Competing for the 1936 award was a large number of power companies throughout the country About 150 were eligible to enter the contest. The basis of judging the winner comprises three factors: first, the percentage of electric highest ranges connected during the year In proportion to the total number of wired homes not using electric ranges at the beginning of the year; second, creative sales and advertising plans; third, method of presenting the report of the year's activities. In making the presentation, Mr. Hughes congratulated the company for the Increase it has scored in electric range sales during the year 1936 In proportion to the total number of residential customers not already having electric ranges. The winning by our company of this national recognition is Indeed gratifying to all of ns. It Is also a splendid tribute to the progressive custo-imers- r '. cabinet1 were made to order for you. Note parties-larl- y that the sul&tlon and cleanliness only; that (been cast-iro- construe n 3rd SOUTH, MAGNA STREET, MAGNA, UTAH MILK, all brands, 2 for SUGAR, cane, 10 13c lbs...... 55c 0XYD0L, large, HIRES ROOT BEER, YOUR ness of the people we serve," said George M. Gadsby, president and general manager of the Utah Power & Light company. Only twenty-fivyears ago electric cooking was an entirely new and experimental process, and the Utah Power & Light company was a pioneer In the development of Its use. Stjme of the first electric ranges eer placed in operation were connected to this company's lines. Through increased facilities, the of power plants and transmission lines to provide expansion and improvement of service, the publicizing of this method of cooking. and making it easily available to the average household, tremendous strides were taken in creating a public acceptance of it. In 1913 there were 36 electric ranges on our lines. Today we have approximately 25,000. of which 4,000 were added during 1936. "The Utah Power & Light company's aggressive sales and advertising program. Its activities in cooperating with dealers, and the work of its home service advisors In making personal contacts with home dwellers are important facg tors. said Mr. Gadsby. in and maintaining this record in the electric cooking field. It is an outstanding example, too, of loyal and efficient employees in all their efdepartments forts in bringing to the public a low-coand dependable service. Mr. Hughes, donor of the award, is widely known In the electrical Industry as the father of the electric range as a result of his Invention more than 25 years ago of the first practical electric range for domestic use. . ORDER Salt Lake Drpot Union Bus Station 7 West South Temple i Youll Get the Same GOOD QUALITY Leave Salt Lake City 7:00 a. m. 11:00 a. m. 4:00 p. m. 5:00 p. m. 9:00 p. m. Let our driver help you arrange your as If you made a personal visit n Magna Depot Raamusaen Service Station TIME TABLE Effective March 1, to our shop. We will select our best type faces suitable to your order and print it on rifle Greyhound Line. PAPERS Phone Gar. lit Leave Magna a. m. " trip via Union V u I- arranging the financing on m.t favorable terms. OUR CONmuiNG POLICY WILL SAVE YOU MATELY 40 PER CENT ON YOUR INSURANCE estab-Lsbin- ILL di t 1 f t I t mmm ' nkihi wammm mm wmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mu Mutual Creamery Co. Maid OClover Butter-Chees- e made IN UTAH n SS American Lady Baking Co. BE GLAD TO HELP YOU Fisher's Vitamin D Bread and Cake. MADE Farmers Automobile Interinsurance Exchange 7. REX HAMILTON , Dist. Mgr ' 4.62 South State SL, Murray. Utah r , Leads Them All. (No Charge tor This Service) ScnMJhiM) 9 1 -;- rhone j,,; 9-- 23c for WHITE FAWN FLOUR, 48 lb P. FINANCE SERVICE 3 Freshly Roasted delicious flavor p. m. p. m. p. m. m. rlriflc 24-o- z. S & W Coffee 1937 9:40 1:40 6:40 7:40 19c DESERET FLOUR: A New Brand. Every ck Guaranteed. Special Thi Week $1.69 We Carry a Complete Line ofS&W Products. SALT LAKE & TOOELE STAGE LINES Passengers and Express PRINTING e steel Look For Our Special Bargains Every Saturday Specials For Saturday, June 19, 1937 Magnas American Bar 1 (mellow ivory with! choice of tan or grew ftiopled panels; white! with silver-gray- .) . But look inside snd you'll see that this b a range as exactij suited to your require- - Magna Cash Market BEERS BURKE'S Mr. Hughes, Mr. Parry and Mr. Hucl(ins, chro-- mium inset door hzn- dies, the pleasing bn' tone finish of the pot-- ! CORNER Left design, the Its To Your Advantage. PABSTS Ceorge A. Hughes, president of the Edison Cenerat Electric Appliance tampan y of Chicago, presen It the Hughes award to P . A. Parry, nd commercial manager, and IP. A, 1 1 ur ins, sales manager, of the Utah Power fr Eight company, at the convention of the Edison EJectric Institute in Chicago, Co. Phone Gar. 53 J one-hal- Featuring I official heatrola agenc-y- id I ... v SALT, j - Plan! of Royal Crystal Salt Co., Salfair,-- lltehf: i By I. A. CLAYTON, JR. vJ .. 1 A Yf The Relief Society of the Spencer Ward he'd its regular literary les-o- n on Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. V. D. Schow was the leader. Plans were made for a party to be held at the aardhou.se Tuesday afternoon. June 29th All the Relief Society ladies are urged to attend. v yh I CLAIMS THE LIFE OF D.F. BOIES for a honeymoon trip to Jackson National Park Announcement of the nuptials will be read with considerable Interest as the young couple are well known and highly regarded In this community They plan to make their home In Garfield. Complimentary to the bride-elec- t. Morrow Misses Erma Peay, Wilma Bennett, The Long Quest. . . ,C. W. Parmenter and Mrs. Gladys Albean and Irene Oraoe Richmond Farnsworth will entertain at a kitSherry Square chen shower this Friday evening at The Adventures of Jimmy Dale Packard the Peay home In Garfield. Arrangements are being made for twelve Crooks in the Sunshine.. E. P. ? w vTr l RAYMOND ORTON Mr. and Mrs. James Orton of Garfield announce the engagement of their daughter, Illene to John W. Haymond, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Haymond, also of Garfield, uniting two of the most prominent families of this city. The young couple will be married the latter part of this month and leave Immedlatejy after iw.'"' . at Jack OBrien a group of friends at a luncheon Silver Chief afternoon. on home her Thursday Roller" Skates Ruth Sawyer The Return to Religion. . .Henry C. Link GRIM REAPER Green Light Lloyd Douglas GARFIELD NOTES nan. M. A. Ward, Jack R. Schultz, John McLachlaa, a ! Grose, J. P. Palme,, ' worth, James Duke W MIm Robin lone Knight, daughj tv H. Konold. R, j. C. and grandKnight of ter Raymond daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Weggeland, C. S. BrunerW?? Smith and Miss Jean Pederson, Park. Harold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. at will dance of all Magna, Pederson, the Jefferson Ward Chapel In Salt A group of former Magna Lake City Wednesday evening. Miss denta gave a formal dinner dant Evelyn Smith will direct the two Thursday evening, June 10 in girls at the program. or of Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Mrs. Ikezoe was formerly " Margaret Pederson celebrated sakff sako or Magna; her sixteenth birthday last ThursThe dinner dance was held day at her home. Guests from Salt it tu Lake and Magna were present A Club Deauville In San Franciscos and was served games music furnished by Prank late luncheon played, prizes being awarded to Miss orchestra. The guests included uJ Marjory Bohne and Miss Elva Kin- Celma Nichols, Mr. Michael i der. Browning, Mrs. Charles L Bam, (Miss Nichols sister,), Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Madsen enterMr. and Mrs. C. E. Berry, tained at a lovely arranged party at ry was formerly Miss Alice (Mjxfc Mechsni their home in Midvale last Friday, Miss Bernice Peterson and Mr tS. complimenting foremen of the Utah mas Razovkh. Copper Company. The following were The table waa lovely with talk, present: A. C. Ensign, George W. Smith, Ross Anthon, C. B. Ashby, O. man rosea and engraved place ezr H. Stewart, C. B. Duckworth, A. J. for each guest Congratulations sst Fitzgerald, Wallace Farmer, J. S. best wishes were extended to tla Powell, W. V. Robbins,. O. A. Sonne, couple who had been married Fred Barton, Lee Self, W. E. Heffer- - year. MAGNA NOTES WEST BUYS UTAH SALT the Nit Club at her home last Man Control... Helen Relllley LIBRARY PARTY IS Dead .Har-rleThursday evening. A midnight lunThe Porcelain Fish Mystery, cheon was served. Covers were laid R. Campbell Mrs. Mary Ensign, Mrs. Gene for BIG SUCCESS AT Valient, Dog of the Tlmberllne.... Wallace, Mrs. Glen Drown, Mrs. Cleo Jack OBrien Mrs. Len Hubbard, Mrs. Grace WOMENS How to Win Friends and Influence Blood, Mrs. Bert Richardson and Mrs. Flint, People.,.. Dale Carnegie D. J. Long. High score at bridge was . . Like Alone and It. .Marjorie The luncheon, followed by a card Live to Mri Lynn Hubbard. awarded 11 H lei party, sponsored last Friday by the Carroll to the beneSky..01adys Neighbor Magna Womens Club for the Mr. and Mrs. Vic Anderson and Lloyd Douglas fit of the Magna Public Library, White Banners sons have returned from an extend. .Joproved a definite success. Mrs. Agnes The Street of the Fishing Cat. ed visit In coastal cities and Arizona. Foldes han Williams. Mrs. Valeria Young and The Wind From the Mountains. Try-- Mrs. W. B. Boucher were the comm- . r.n Doula FaJvo, manager 42 AND WE The IN UTAH Fresh Daily WILL BE GLAD TO DELIA! Store With The Big Stock $ |