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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1952 Utah"' Payson. Santaquin News Incumbent Justice Henriod Seeks RETURN !!1 A FOG By Della Hudson Santaquin will hold a reunion Sunday at Fairmont Park in Salt Lake City on 9th East and 21st South. Everyone that is living or has lived in Santaquin is invited to attend. Everyone is to bring their own lunch. The Santaquin First ward Primary assuciatiuu will have the program in charge Sunday night in meeting. It is in commemoration of the organization of the Primary. It marks the 80th year since the organization. PriMrs. Forence mary president, Peterson is in charge. The Payson Chronicle Entered at the Post Office at Payson, Utah County, Utah as second-clas- s matter MAX R .WARNER, Editor Madoline Dixon, Local Correspondent Phone One Year 22S-- J $2.50 Re-electi- - o. -t - Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Robbins had as their guest Sunday their daughter, Mrs. Paul Ennis of Salt Lake City. flood through you but your first coherent thought Is help... doctor... the telephone. telephone call at such a time can mean the difference between painful anxiety and peace of mind, even the difference between life and death. A But your telephone is not for emergencies the everyday convenience that alone. makes your telephope one of the things you could least do without. Its steadily increasing demand for service, from people in all walks of life, is proof that your telephone 1b worth more than It oosts." y. - NEW FACES . . . These children are Greek orphans whose (aces were mutilated during civil war In Greece. Their visages have been repaired by plastic surgery. They ore enjoying a lawn party In Mount j K' A Vernon, N.Y. is often as much in not being led, as in There vu. hide-penden- not being driven. Tryon Edwards. er Too hurt even to cry. A thousand feelings - c Hovni Mrs. Howard Holladay has had her mother, Mrs. Fred Smith, Sherrie Jarvis celebrated her and sister, Miss Hazel Smith, of 9th birthday party at her home Santa Barbara, California, visit- Friday. A number of little ing her. guests were present to enjoy the party, food and fun. Danny Ferre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Ferre, is home on furThe Civic Club spent Wedneslough from the navy. day night in Trmmbolt park. and much Gravelwas A sharp rumbling earthquake work was spread to help accomplished was felt by resients of Santathe park. A weiner improve quin at 8.20 pm. Monday night, roast was enjoyed after the work July 21. It jarred houses and was finished. rattled windows but caused no known damage. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Olsen and Richard, of Santaquin, Mr. and Residents had little difficulty Mrs. J. Fenton Miller and famin recognizing the disturbance as ily, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Speck-ha- rt an earthquake. It was sharp as and family, Mr. and Mrs. any that has been felt during the Mervin Godfrey and family, Mr. past few years. Ben Simmons of Provo and a of others spent the weekMrs. Callie Okander returned group end of the 24th at Fernm reserhome Fuday from Nevada where voir. Fishing and boating was she has been attending her dauby the group. enjoyed ghter, Mrs. Freida Geist, who had a baby girl. Mr. and Mrs. LaClell Butler i and four boys of Portland, Oreg-wer- e Junior-GleanThe girls of at the home of Mr. and the Second ward MIA spent Mrs. Nes Butler last weekend. canat Monday night Santaquin has been transferred Mr. Butler yon. Included in the group were: to Chicago. They left Monday Rhoda Ann Van Ausdal, Leah Rae Armstrong, Karen Kay, La for there. Dean Lamb, Lola Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. William Hudson Rhea Ewell. MIA officers had their family members home them were Louella Sunday. A hot dinner was serKay and Alice Armstrong. ved to 25 guests. Bruce and Nolan Steadman of Frankie June Tuckett visited Tooele, are spending a vacation in Salt Lake for a week at the at the home of Mr. and Mrs. home of her cousin, Suzanne Kathle Tischner. She returned home Fowkes. t Monday, PioThe Daughters of the Utah neers, conducted Sunday evening services with both wards meeting in the First ward chapl el for the occasion. DUP captain, Julia Peterson was in charge of the program. The chapel was decorated with brightly colored hollyhocks. All native pioneers and the original pioneer were paid special tribute by Captain Peterson. Come, Come Ye was the opening song. Saints Opening prayer, Wilbur Shaw; piano selection, Jane Sylvester; tribute to pioneers, LaVina Le Baron; piano solo, Susan Adel-man- ; guest speaker, county ofCAT ADOPTS SKUNKS . . . ficer, Beatrice Moore, she is the cat with an aver-laa- d Midnight, granddaughter of Brigham Youof mother instinct, has ng; double duet, Colleen Green-halgHelen Gordon, Merle i adopted a family of aknnk kittens at the humane society in Butler, and Darlene Fowkes, acDetroit, Mich. companied by Gloria Clayson closing prayer, Bertha Dicken son. Do not criticize your neigh bor until you have walked two miles in his shoes. IEnjiT! 'Vv - BACK. Attending the annual Holm-stea- d reunion in Saratoga Sunday from here were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Armtrong and family, and Mr. and Mrs Albert Hudson and family. The t, - Court Justice F. Supreme Henri Henriod announced his intention to succeed himself in the office of Judge of the Utah Supreme Court, which he has heid by appointment for the past He is a native Utahn, year. born in 1905, at American Fork, Utah County, son of F. A. ana Selena & m WORRYING AND Wtt Q C.sp of experience JARL W. KOUBA, Gieen Bay, Wise.-- for the first time in 20 years was to be out of a job He had vvorked up to treasurer of the company, and because the business had been sold he was to find that these 20 years of progress in the company had terminated He was alone in the general office'-latone afternoon and had just ma le some of the final entries so that the .business could be turned over in the morning As he switched off the lights and turned the kty in th6 door for the last time, he came face to face with theold George Bogue. He too was making the final round but he had a smile on his face and he noticed that Carl didnt as he said, Well George, this is it. And then George ans vered him" with something he says Re v ill never forget. As a matter of fact, it is something for all of us to remember. Carl, said the older man, you have been planto g your civp for 20 years. If you planted a good crop you will lind a lot of feople wanting Jo buy your harvest. There should be lo's of people wanting to buy the things that you have been g. a.. lug You justhave to tell them about it Then he shook Carls hand a - i lc 't r Carl says he found C urge lAgue was right. It became a real pleasure to think of tha harvest of 20 years for sale and not just be looking for a j b. And it worked. He sat down and wrote out what he had b'.n panting; then he got out and told of the kind of a crop he to offer. In that one minute aft r n 'night lie learned a valuable truth. In selling your crop of e .pei icrtee, if it is good there will be a lot of peope looking for it. , e night-watchma- oL-im- n, g hJ The word independence is unite to the ideas of dignity and virtue; the word dependence, to the ideas of inferiority and corruption. Jeremy Bentham. I Let all your views in life be diiected to a solid, however withmoderate, independence; out it ho man can be happy, nor even honest. Junius. , lew West Ward h, The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co, on G. Henriod. He is nt Mi ACROSS FROM MILLET RANCH 2 MILES WEST OF PAYSON Crosley Research Foundation FRIDAY, AUGUST says: 1 Monte Taylors Band to Start Playing at 6:00 P. M. PROGRAM BEGINS AT 7 P. M. BISHOP JOSEPH L. WnTKLI3 Principal Speaker THESE 4 RADIOS ARE TUNED TO There will be plenty of food to be sold Cafetera Style Barbecued Sandwiches - Chicken Pies Ice Cream Pies - Cakes and Everything Else Good to Eat. This radio Is funed to ona of tha othar Certainly I didnt mind giving blood I hardly felt it. But tha big thing la I know Ivs dons Central Utah Statlona something unselfish I've a wounded fighting man. Maybe Ive saved his life. Youll never know what a thrill it is until you give so that a man helped THANKS TO THE LISTI1ERS OF CENTRAL UTAH may five. : FOR PREFERRING KOVO 4 TO 1 WHAT IAHKXE) TOTIATFUTCf 960 Oil YOUR DIAL YOU BLCC3 WIXI CCTCS TO CIVS? COUNTRY STORE EVERYTHIHG You May Find Just the Thing BRING THE a grandson of Eugene A. Henriod, first free pulic school teacher in the State, a grandnephew of the late Judge Joshua Greenwood, and a great grandson of Erastus Snow, early settler. He obtained his education in the elementary schools of Salt Lake City, the Universities ol Utah, Georgetown and Harvard. He is a past and Commissioner of the Utah Bar Association, past President of the Utah junior Bar Association, and former member of the Legal Aid Board. He served three years in the Air Corps and Judge Advocate branrhea of the Army in World, War II, and was active as a Captain in the North African, Sicilian and Italian campaigns, where he re- ceived official recognition for his work. In seeking office on the high court. Judge Henriod stated: The year I have been on the Supreme Court has been one of rich experience, and I am grateful for the privilege of having served the people of this State. I conscientiously have tried to arrive at decisions fairly, honestly and as I see the cases presented to us. I have made effort, without delay, to serve the lawyers and their clients and to shorten opinions so as to lessen the staggering costs that confront attorneys and others who must spend their valuable time and money purchasing and reading the opinions we write. Any accomplishment I have made in the oast vear or any lack of it is open for public examination, which I invite. If the voter feel I have carried, with fidelity. fairness and a reasonable measure of efficiency the burdens of the high office to which I again aspire, I shall be profoundly grateful for any vote of confidence they give me next November under the nonpartisan law governing the selection of Judges. FOB SALE You Nave Been Leaking For! WHOLE FAMILY |