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Show A ' i l TDnie Clhiipoiniacle 5c Per Copy State Board of Health Governor Aids Red Cross Banquet Held Din-- X jJ I ni (felfare. f ne cyclonic disturbances in the market have detracted from business production indices. A security at-Lu- i: domestic pay the major occur-tje- e At this writing, of 1937. seem coneconomists of majority the de-l- e of worst the ned that A very large pris over. dealers were of margin olan As BusJiped ouit in the break. is There ies Week puts it, downward spiral, IUt to every that limit seems to have been situa- approached in the present were at intervals, also Due to the in our theria were brown Indian ceremonies and pott- tepees, welcomed the guests. Mrs. Emma Wlison was toastmaster. A modem version of historical characters were given in the toasts as follows : the Mayflower, Dr. A. L. Curtis; Plymouth Rock, Mrs. Mae Dixon; the Red 'U." Men, A. K. Huish; Miles Standish, Mrs. Pearl Bigler; John Alden, J concerned, there hag been a Blaine Winters; Priscilla, Mrs. but the drop was Hazel jEbstantial drop Erlandson; the first Thankswhere near as severe as the $ giving, Mrs. Ethel Page. An InIn two months, p in stocks. dian Tableau was arranged and went down 38 Mrs. Irene whole as a lares Provstgaard in Indian J!r cent, declining to the late costume The Indian rendered level, though not to the ows concluded Love Call. Dancing 1 1932. In the same period, bus-fcthe evenings entertainment. activity dropped a little over Mrs. Nelda Reece was general I per cent. Chairman for the party assisted pA few industries notably steel by. Mrs. Emma Wilson, Mrs. One of the first to urge support of the Red Cross in Utah in Will not, in all probability, Della McClellan, Mrs. Cuba Davis enrolling a membership of over 27,000 is Governor Henry II. Blood. much of their recent losses and Mr3. Erma Shuler. Shown here he is receiving from Mrs. Donald II. Fhirfeh, a Red Cross t production for a considerable o Most industries, igth of time. nurse, a pin signifying membership in the mercy organization. fwever, hope for a good winter The predicpd spring business. P.-T.Meeting Held Missionary Party Planned ts is that this years Christmas tying will hold up well. A P. T. A. meeting was held at The third in series of parties Some specific business informa-Ip'- .i the Taylor school Wednesday nite will be held in the Third ward of interest follows: DecemThe annual Nebo Stake M. I. A. with Mrs. Floyd Harmer, Taylor recreation hall on FYiday, Commodities: Dropped in value of the in direction A. under the ber T. 10, charge. president Road Show was held Friday night P. long with comMiss committee securities, but to a in ward were talks Health by given Missionary the various wards of the Stake juch lesser extent. Belief is that Dan Dr. of school chairman; Bannister, Melba nurse, posed Johnson, and the nine wards each presented e trend in the future will be Powell and act in the Tabernacle L. D. Stewart of the school board; Jerry Bassett, Dora a Iwly upward. Proceeds from the Alene Lottie Lant. on membership, Mrs. Saturday night. The acts, built talk Power and Missvocal ward America to will is the socials A. Light: go president; around various nations of the Fersson, P. T. Instantly becoming more com fund. aecordian music, Max ionary Kerr; world, were rated by the judges solo, o ply electrified with the utility Junward, Scand- Dorothy McClellan; reading, follows: as Benjamin Qustry s output holdng to a high Huish. Amerior t The home oconomics club of the inavia; Payson Third ward, rd. New power production re-to 1st ward, Sanbaquin ica, superior; high school had a hobo party Wedhave been constantly record- Hia2nd ward, SatPayson Holland; Bates left A. Louis nesday night at the school with Mrs. The industry's net earnings, watha; excellent; Spring Lake, urday for California having been games, lunch and the room dewer, remain at practically the 32 Hawaii, Genola, Checkoslovakia, called there by the serious illness corated like a hobo den. Prize level, due to greatly increased Santa.qun 2nd ward, Switzerland, of her mother, Mrs. William Sher-me- r, for the best hobo costume was tea and higher fuel and mater-- 1 Fourth ward, Scotland, costs. Its political troubles, Payson a former resident of Payson. given to Matha Manwill, second 1st ward, The Merry Go ch as Payron Federal competition, have Round Broke Down, good. Mrs. Shermer is at the home of prize to Olive Thomas and third en a bated, and Arrretard its M. I. her daughter, Mrs. Carl Coleman prize to Donna Francom. George Q. Spencer of the 'final development. offat class the were from presided A. Superintendency by angements Retail Trade: at Corona. She is suffering Has held to a entertainment. Althea Miss final is icers and Marsden, the the fh level pneumonia and her condition throughout the country, foods instructor. bstantLally critical. surpassing the same Initiation of five new members nd in 1936. Slightest improve-en- t into the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 3 per cent has oocurred in was held Monday night at the tw York. Agricultural buying home of Mrs. If Gadys Winters, eduheavy. of the group. director cational instruction: The rise in build-f The initiation was followed with costs has at least temporarily a formal candle light tea. The Med. As a result, contracts table was covered with a lovely FALLS nave been MM' LETS rising. cloth and centered with a lace VEARCotton. THIS SATURDAY A ON This seasons exports mound of Talisman roses. Gold TMAT'S HOW MANV DAV5 AWAV-2- 1 n t 10 Per cent ahead . colored candles were in silver 22.-2- 3 SAW. WILLIE. DO you THINK seasons. Domestic con- -' holders. The colors, gold sorority THAT WAS LOUD EH0U6H las been satisfactory, and black, were employed in the startling. Raw cotton refreshment details. The members f3 ve been flrm initiated were Miss Orpha Law of The farmers cash Ruth Hill, Provo, Crista Olson, thls year "ill be the larg-oJ- 7 Jean Marie McKell and Marion t yars and may touch Willett. Old members present The special sess- were Thelma Vest, chairman of has been confj installation; Lois Powell, rush r a(tdtional farm-ai- d . (vr, captain and chairman of the Tea; permanent rather than Inez Ott, Edith Elmer, Florence goncy nature. Thus, far- - Pickering, Ruth Snow, Kathleen wb!e are in an Cly ha Simons and Mrs. Winters of Pay-soCora Vest and Edith Russell ' pcace tweon negotiations of Provo. I Sc far as industrial production Sawmill To Be Operated In Connection With Church Security Plan ss er Annual Road Show A. Held Friday Night isin i te ds rj Wont ! SEE-CHRIS- unus-positio- ii. o n; n. i W8S anticiPated Ixrentlv brken down f, complet- Duke Page returned home Tuesday night from an International Jer. infer-lab0- r ely warfare Harvester Convention in Chicago S lnevtablAlso able and a visit to the companys fact mre demand ory. hieh vTmS I be &ges and shorter hours, kr strik if em-An 8. pound baby boy was Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mendenborn to : II is impossible hall Sunday November 4. The of mother was formerly Miss Helen adustrJy importance tear!. ,, accounts for Tuckett and it is their first child. ' ro Per Cen fceorr.e he national A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. t W ... out, Max Mendenhall on November 1. of &need from last The children are grandsons - ar in-f- cr iCS . (ConHn II? i o P,ge 8) Mrs Vina MendenhalL TMAS Be Long - dip- in some counties, the State Board of Health is urging all parents to hae their children immunized againct diptheria. They also recommend the children who have had only one dose of diptheria toxoid be immunized again. The greatest danger is in the child under 5 years of age. Because of this fact, the L. D. S. Relief Societies of Payson are sponsoring a immunizing program for the infant over 6 to 9 months and the preschool child. The first of two innoculations will be given November 22 at 9:30 a. m. at the Stake house. The second will be given a month later, December 22 at the same time and place. Local physicians will be assisted in the program by Miss Melba Johnson, district public health nurse and members of the Relief Society. decorated in yellow. Mrs. Ida A. Huish, club president was master of prevalence of state and the fact that it has reached epidemic ery dishes of fruit. The favors were tiny ships and the program covers Car-Tru- ck Crash Near Spring Lake Against Diptheria AAHAA':' , it'Ara t wj The outstanding social event of the past week was the annual Cultus Club banquet Wednesday night in the Second ward hall, attended by club members and their partners. The table was arranged in a U and the deviations were in brown and yellow. A boat shaped pumpkin was filled with fruit and represented a minatuer Mayflower with yellow cellophane sails. Brown cellophane holders with yellow princess can- j activity at the bottom, wiped jpse that, of some values to the tune dles has been far and r;0o0, 900,000 Per Year In Advance Urges Immunization Wednesday Night that Affect the Dividend Checks and Individual BjU, of Every Pro-)!eInternational svjonal and Local from Inseparable Two Killed In $2.00 j Wayland R. Wightman, president of Nebo Stake, Bishop C. D. Greenhalgih and Mr. Carlgren of Santaquin; Bishop Robert L. Wilson, Parley Jensen and T. E. Reece of Payson, went to Nephi Saturday to confer with L. D. S. church security workers of Juab Stake on the matter of operating a sawmill Jointly in the two Stakes. The project is in connection with the church security plan and also the church beautification plan to permit barns, fences and premises generally to be improved. A portable sawmill is available for use and the plan as discussed would be to have one community get a quantity of logs in readiness and then move the sawmill The mill was to that locality. Zions Nafrom moved recently tional Park to Nephi by the men and one truck in three days. A committee will confer with the general church authorities in Salt Lake City in the near future. Members of the Nebo Stake Relief Society Board went to Provo recently for a social afternoon in honor of Mi's. Elizabeth C. White Lunch was taken by the ladies and a general social enjoyed. Now ! Fourth Ward Plans Carnival and Dance Saturday Evening Elaborate prepartions are being made for the First ward Carnival and Dance to le held in the Jr. high school, Saturday, Novemlier 20. Every organization in the ward is working on some feature of the entertainment and the genet al public is invited. Doors will open at 7 p. m. and the concession booths will be open from then until the dose of the dance. A fine program will begin at 7:30 and will include numbers from the B. Y. U. The dance will conclude the festivities. Music will be furnished by the Y nine piece orchestra. The small admission price will include the program and dance and concessions will be sold. o Third Victim Near Death Following Collision Head-O- n Two young people were killed, critically injured and two others were hurt in an automobile accident between Spring Lake and Santaquin Wednesday night. Vaughn Sheffield 22, of Payson, and Miss Ramona Smith 16, of Santaquin were instantly killed. Paul Nelson 20, of Spring Lake la in a critical condition at the Payson Hospital with a fractured skull, broken bones and serious body injuries. one Alta Ewell, 15, of Santaquin and Simmons 18, of Spring Lake suffered bad cuts and bruises over their entire bodies. Miss Ewell is at the Payson Hospital and Mr. Simmons was treated at the Oldroyd Hospital and then taken to his home. Don The five yeung people were in a small coupe, owned and driven by Vaughn Sheffield. They were Dies travelling North midway between Santaquin and Spring Lake when Arrowhead-Percy W. Hanks, 53, for many they crashed into an freight truck going years a mining engineer at Eur- Alliance eka, died at a Salt Ioake City from Salt Lake to Los Angeles. hospital Monday afternoon after The heavy load included a horse. A. Samuelson, 32, was the driver a lingering illness He i3 survived by his widow, and F R. Bush, 27, his partner Mrs. Rowena Barney Hanks, a re- was in the sleeping berth. Both sident of Payson previous to her are from 4057 S. Main Street, Los Angeles. They were uninjurmarriage; a daughter, Helen llanks; and a son, Howard Hanks ed but the truck was forced from the . highway by the impact and ' all of Eureka. Funeral services were conducted Ivadly damaged. The coupe was completely demolished. Thursday at 1 p. m. in Eureka. Interment was in the Payson City Lenn Huff and Dick Chappie of he Payson police department went cemetery. at once to the scene and1 were joined later by Reuben Christensen of the Utah County sheriffs i ffice and Charley Allred, state After an investigation patrolman. Called they planned for an inquest to be held Thursday. Lars Henry Keeler, 93, oldest Vaughn Sheffield was bom at resident of Payson, died Thursday Salem, April 16, 1915, a son of afternoon at his home, 192 South, ohn L. and Minnie Crook Shef1st West Street. Death was from field. He married Alta Lose of the infirmities of age. Santaquin on August 10, 1935. He was born March 26, 1844 Surviving are his widow and a in Saxe, Dcnmatk, a son of John 1 old daughter, Barbara Heinrich Micolai and Lid-- e Marie Sheffield; his parents; two sisters, I.- arson Keeler. He married Elma Irene and Lois Sheffield, all of Nelson in Denmark and they emi- Payson; four brothers, John Irvgrated to Utah and located in ing and Melvin Sheffield, Los Nephi in 1877. She died Decemb- Angeles. Wendall and Jack Shefer 10, 1901. In 1910, Mr. Keeler field, Payson. moved to Payson and on DecemRamona Simith, 16, was born in ber 10, 1910 he married bis second wife, Hetty Keeler, who sur- Santaquin, June 7, 1921, a daught. vives. She was also a native of r of Jesse and Ella May Thanay Smith. She was a student at Denmark. Mr. Keeler retired from farming Payson high school ami was active in the Santaquin Second ward L. in 1910 and he later wmrked as at the Central school for I. S. organizations. Mining Engineer At Eureka on Lars Henry Keeler By Death janitor ovm ytars. He was a high priest Surviving are her parents, two the Second ward and an active ( sters, Verecn and Veraetta chunh worker. Smith; two brothers, Bernell and Besides his widow he is surviv-i- d Wayne Smith all of Santaquin. by three sons, M. W. Keeler and The bodies are at the Deseret J. L. Kevler of Angeles; W. pending funeral arrange-- l Mortuary II. Keeler of Salt Lake City; nts. three daughters, .Mrs. Rodney Swaisey of Mi nu; Mrs. George Seeley of Flureka, Mrs. Leo Pendleton of Nampa, Idaho; one stepson, Augu'-- t Keeler of Tracy, Califand 1 ornia; 32 grandchildren hildren. grtat grande Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 1 p. m. in the Second ward (hurth with A. C. Page of the ward bishopric in charge. The opening song wa.s a vocal solo "Stranger of Galilee, by Miss covered in our fPtthlf Ruth Snow; invocation, Sidney A. That is what it Newt Rtvitw feature each week. Coray; vocal solo oy request, "That It it so interpretation of the event Silver Haired Daddy of Mine", of each week that art makic the Irene Provstgaard; remarks by hiitory of the nation and the world. Bisheip John Nielson of Mona; remarks, Bishop Jasper Hill; violin It it prepared by Edward W. Pickard, ooa of the highly trained newspabenediction, solo, F'errin Sager; per obtervera of the nation, and in was Burial HareFng. ryndieated to a limited number of the Mona Cemetery uneler the newspapers in the different state. direction of the Deseret Mortuary. The grave was dedicated by CounIt if the best feature of this character that foes to American reader selor Elkrison of the Mona bishfrom any aource. You can make it opric. the foundation of your diaeue-tio- n Thoi-were on the program of world events with friend. largely old friends of the Keeler family in Mona. in Is History in the MAKING |