OCR Text |
Show FRIDAY, THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH i tiblished eiery !'; 2 . Mi. and Mis h i RUBLISIIEK - -i i -- i riday at Ray son, Utah, a city of 3,500 loyal, progress! and contented citizens. I i 'feWoleen of Proto were dnner, uge tu Cecil Jones took place sev-- i mj a . C A. Has- -1 George Kirkman and 'rein of Mr. and Mrlur-was A uoio.is a.1 s.tel guests . ug". iis. Lmma Greenhalgh motored to a,n Sunday. tr.ed to 22 guests. Mrs. Chatwin tev. do. e j) Ha e I' l iday. U .i , daugh-leiin serving by her w a- up v.t.i j 0 : Mrs. Vera I arson of Genola and ktt Griffith- - of Salt cargo." 'Jr,, honor of The Mr-- . JarviWin. guest day-- , the past week mili on d ' pun many beautiful and g in. w th he i patents, Mi. and Mrs. A. Tietjen. gifts. Tiie Payson CiiFoniele J. llAItOLI) MOUNTl'OKD, May x i evt-ia- rauuj . ered at the luri! lot Oifu at Utah County, Uavxon, I tail, an sccond-cl- a In r 6 bii'ot - Goate-- , members of the Gatherer- - of of the second v.aid M. I. A. Lima Tietjen had a outing Friday evening at Arrowhead. Tennie teams were picked Mi- -, May Taylor of Salt take and tennie contests and swimming is pending sevetal weeks at the were enjoyed, after which a Wiener home u f Mrs. David Colo. Roast was had. Thty were accompanied and chaperoned by their teacher, Mr. and Mrs. Julis Van Ausdal Cora Olson. Mrs. in Provo on business pent vi SUBSCRIPTIONS 1 returned to Saturday after spending a the guest of Thelma and 1aul.ui- M, s matter. ...ml k - a- Year Months .. . $2.00 $1.00 RATES ON APPLICATION. Mrs. Arthur Chatwin mtertained at King and daughter Colli eo of 1rovo were guests of Mr. a prettily arranged shower in honor and Mrs. George Kirkman several of her daughter Aroha, whose niarr- lays the pa.--t week. JltlSSrc fc KEN EL tvHrr 'T Arvi! -. Frank Tuckett, Mrs. lbert Larton, Rula and Jean Lar- on end Miss Blanche Carlgren to Provo Wednesday and spent Mr. and Mrs. FEED Wry hK vv n if L c. H Service ! to Serve We Aim S , r. U t we deliver ! Walter Rijbj. , g and o Service Above All hy pay mope for u Phone 107 4- - -- Mr- & Santaquin, Utah C. II. Bates, Mgr. Everything in Mill Stuff Anything in Dairy & Poultry 41 4 Feed -- ADVERTISING FLOUR EXCHANGE RITE-MA- The Hoi-e- T(h Mgr. Lady Attends 4 f mot-oii- d the day. ' WAYNE KRR dCriv books is good, but it u hand. Study is good second experience but only in preparation for life. Learning fiom lectures is good, but it lacks the freshness of reality. Too much tudy makes one dull and unfit fir living. Rooks give you facts someone e'se has chewed first, and library a.r is twice breathed air. The experience cr others tends to make us react as they have reacted. It. is the thoughts that rise from behind the sentences we read; the knowledge we must arch beyond the pages of our books to obtain, the things we discover that our lecturer has ommited, that tints our lives with color and moves them with action. It is the things that our hands touch, our eyes see, and our lips taste that strengthen our convictions. Reading a hook is good, but writing a book is Itetter. Reading o Little childrens dreams are real- ised liy the desires that can be pur-- ( 1m ed by a penny. There is not a one of us hut can remember when a nickel or a dime fulfilled our childhood wants. We all grew up and our wants grew to quarters then to dollars and we ist sight of the nickels and dime.. Our desires grew the nations increased, and we forgot there was such things as nickels or prtv-'erit- d'nii : of intellect, morality leave their possessors modest Richter tie-.-- and-prou- McKay was hostess to of the O. N. 0. Club 7 hui'day evening at her home. Special gue-t- s were I,a Priel Kay and Byrl Wall. A dainty lunch was served K members and guests. High score ''ll- - won by Ethel Wadsworth and the cut prize by Drucilla Johnson. memU-r- Mi i. J. J. Smith returned home upper Dashes and Bacon Rinds: after spending several They laughed when I sat down to Saturday wee s in Salt Lake her daugh play. Dj you inhale? Eliminate Ik 0. . Iat Rue Rice and family. Theies a pot of gold at the end of ter 1 Mr. Put-It-O- ff Putting off necessary minor plumbing and heating repairs today paves the way for major catastrophes to- .Mi-s- this luinbo,,. It pays to look well. Mrs. Austin Carter entertained at R. Tonight tomorrow alright. a hr nr and social Friday evening Look at your hat eieiylmdy else does. Theyre milder and they taste it honor of Charles Sanft, who left bettir. They had to be good to get Saturday for a two years mission to his native land, the Tangan Islands. where are. N. morrow. they Dont wait. Let us fix And the farmer hauled away. Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Clark and another load children and Mrs. Vera Olson and on t Saturday for a two week GP to Southern California. em now, while they- re small, rather than later, when theyre big and expensive! Phone 28W Santaquin News Mr?. Emma Greenhalgh left Mon day for Salt Lake where she expect to be the guest of her son David and Mrs. Mahle Horton was hostess to for a months time. the members of the Elite Club Friday family afternoon at her home. Bridge was Miss Kirksel Openshaw of Salt played afU r which lunch was served Lake the past week end with to 12 members. her parents Mr. and Mrs. John S Openshaw. v Mrs. Mary Openshaw Greenhalgh to slip Miss Faye Openshaw spent the past aged 77 had the on the wet pavement Sunday after- week in Provo visiting her sister Mrs. noon, breaking her leg just below the Max Powelson. hip. The latest reports are that she Mr. and Mrs. Arvil King and daugh doing as well as can be expected. (By Mrs. Ina Tietjen) Quality1 Always Maintaining the quality of our products is one trust that we guard with the utmost care. It is our desire that each customer we serve shall be absolutely satisfied with the quality of his purchase. Why not make use of this policy the next time you buy lumber? customer-assured-satisfacti- Plumbing & Heating Payson, Utah on Chase Lumber & Coal FRANKKERR EVERYTHING IN LUMBER Co. ANYTHING IN SEK RE PHONE 127 BliEiiaeaSISEEEBaKS;EE2223EKaEEaflEEE'i:SOL3C2ESiX5:"'lPi:r::L:.-f.cC- mis-fortu- OOOOOOOOOOCOOOOC-OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC'OOOOOOCOOOC'OOOOCO- 0 0 u H . even prosperity cannot endure forct r. The dollars became more distant a'ul illusive. Soon we lost all sight, of them and our attention has bum forcefully called to the fact that like it nicki Is are money again was when we were chiblren. The g significance of the nickel and clime ha taken the place of that of The Heritage American Room Ri, pur-cha- si the dollar. Tlat the thing depressions they give the value of money U doll! -- is and a dime ink, take it ! nk-k- in Jmton Mr-- ,. tin- do 0 O'i 0 a 0 0 No. 2 Treatment of the Walls By CARL HECK Consulting Art Director, Bigelow Weavers well appointed room noth- the valancea which decrease the IN ANY of the room, ao we remove this ing la mora Important than the height molding entirely. wall. furnished the by background d A wallpaper in a light Accordingly, the first step In the alter- tone replaces the old rooms monotreation of our typical room la the onous dark yellowish tan paper. d decoration of the wall to provide a These papers give a new background for the furnishings. room an essential feeling of airiness, Draperies, wallpaper, woodwork all while wallpapers full of large figmust be considered in the rejuvena- ures have a tendency to make rooms tion of this room. appear smaller. Another Important touch in the Among the most important changes . H small-figure- Oi FARMERS small-figure- to a not like some of away front the ji For Friday and Saturday ' BEET HOES 9 inch 0 ys a X 8 inch 95c 10 inch $1.05 $1.15 0 T: s are so much like people. nrl jS o s 0 Al- - 2 ver type of human kind has its rpart in the tree life of this There are beautiful trees and trees; strong trees and weak mo', a 0 3 2 6 01 ugly t: ccs trees that a:e tall and straight a: a! .ajestic. and trees that are gr.ar-n- d led crooked and stunted; well nour' hed trees and trees that are half iarved; useful trees and trees that :re seemingly u!o?; generous tree ever giving of their abundance of I ade and fruit and wood, and tree so selfish that nothing much else ;n grow near them. 0 2 i OS 0 a 0 a oi 0 HOUSEWIVES IRONING BOARD and COVER C INCH W HIT EN A PPI E S , o Aii M Fu' then there are family trees. h is thror.Ing SALAD BOWLS, Decorated GRAY ENAMELED SAUCE that thing that hears the thrush from within the song' ss egg. Tu' !e sciaps may he converted into man;, things including divorces. E yone wants to relieve prison tion, but when the convicts try cong it we discourage them. Gambling is a game of chance Therefore marriage eant be a gamble. Because w hat chance has a man ? Suspicion mind. always haunts the guilty we make is the substitution of short, draperies, topped with valances, for the long, straight draperies of the old room. The horizontal lines of the valances have a tendency to lower the celling, giving better proportion to the room, while the vertical lines of the old draperies had exaggerated the room's height. For the aake of Interest in the window treatment, flowered chintz supdamask plants the dark, In the old room. With glass curtains of peach, this flowered chintz is used in draperies and valances. The new draperies hang only to the bottom of the wooden apron under the sill, with the glass curtains ending a quarter of an inch above the tied-bac- k self-figur- sill. Charms, which like flowers, lie on the surface and always glitter, easily produce vanity; hence women, wits, to players, soldiers, are vain, owing On dress. and their presence figure, the contrary, other excellence, which lie down like gold and are discovered with difficulty, strength, profound- - i 01 Woodwork Repainted When we come to the dark varnished woodwork we find that the wonderful improvement can be worked hore by repainting it in a finish. The piclight ivory, ture molding that ran around the walls of the room a foot below the ceiling Is rendered unnecessary by egg-she- ll treatment of walls Is the placing of plotures. In addition to their decorative function, pictures have the effect of rounding out a grouping of furniture against the wall. In our Heritage American room we place two small pictures between the windows and right above the sofa, helping to tie pictures between the windows. Pictures at Eye Level To avoid any stairstepping, which Is a common mistake, we hang our pictures one directly above the other. A picture should be hung eo that it center Is very slightly above eye level. With a group of two small pictures, apply this rule to the lower one and it. place the other right above At the right of our room we build up an Interesting wall group conslat-ln- g of the little pot of Ivy with two pictures on either side. The ivy, hanging downward toward the small drop leaf table, ties the table and the accessories on it to the wall. With our walls taken care of we are now ready to consider our color Our next article will treat scheme. of color In the room. H j" I oS o be each 25c CiC-- i !5c eaca PANS $1.90 o! j o 2 0 a 0 2 ALUMINUM PIE PLATES GREEN SHERBETS 2 for 25c 01 5c each GREEN PLATES, 8 inch GREEN SUGAR and CREAMER oS 2 for 15c AEE COPPER BOILER. M0. (I. 15c pair Was $7.73, now $3.50 Q a 0 0 0 o i i 01 0 0 in .an 00 33!. '' CATEDS0 S S 2s $3.00 FOOD CHOPPER, Keen Kutter No. 21 M W o 0000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000 oi 2!a a a a a oi Oi ' |