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Show Friday, November THE OGDEN POST 'te Proposed Calendar Change Would Give An Extra Holiday The Alpha Zeta chapter, Delphian at 2 society, met Monday afternoon room. o'clock at the Green Gables tea The subject of the lesson was The Figures and Forces Which Have Shaped Modern Europe." The leader was Mrs. Grogger, Chivalry as a A resume of the preForce. vious lesson was given by Mrs. A. C. Hyde. Others presenting topics were Mrs. J. C. Forest, Mrs. Angus Kennedy, Mrs. Oscar Kirkland, Mrs. E. P. Mills and Mrs. B. L. Neff. Mr. and Mrs. Emile Cruppc, of New York, who were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. A. II. Aland, have taken apartments in the Downing and will remain in Ogden for two months, while Mr. Gruppe, an artist, will gather material for paintings from local scenery. Mrs. Elizabeth Emery, of Lynn, Mass., d mother of Mrs. Gruppe, who Mr. and Mrs. Gruppe to Ogden, departed Wednesday for California where she will spend the remainder of the winter months. Miss Janet Farnsworth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Farnsworth of Ogden, who is a Student at the University of Nebraska, at Lincoln, will spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Farnsworth in Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Uaynle Hava gone to the Pacific coast lor a stay of several days. They will visit friends in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Fowling entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner Thursday at their home, 1240 Marilyn drive. Covers were laid for the members of the Fowling family and Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Mowc. Chrysanthemums were the attractive decorations used on the dinner table. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Barton entertained at a family dinner Thursday street. at their home, 774 Twenty-fift- h Covers were laid for the dinner hosts, and Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Barton and children and Mr. and Mrs, Carlyslo Eubank and children., So-ci- al accom-panie- I WOMENS REALM (Continued from page 3) Mrs. Dennie Smythe entertained at her tar home 550 Twenty-fift- h street Thursday at a Thanksgiving dinner Chrysanthemums were the attractive decorations used in the rooms and on the dinner table. Members of .the Smythe family from Salt Lake and Ogden were the guests. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Smalley entertained with a family dinner Thanksgiving at their home, 2925 Adams avenue. The rooms throughout the house were decorated in chrysanthemums and the dinner table with roses. The place cards were in Thanksgiving design. Miss Bessie O'Neill sailed from Juneau, Alaska, on the Princess Nora, November 26. Sho will land in Seattle November 30, and arrive in Ogden December 3. She will be the guest of her mother, Mrs. Richard P. ONeill, of the Fairview apartments, during her stay in Ogden. She will spend the Christmas holidays in Og- den. n Instructive Meeting Of the Farm Bureau Is Held at Bigelow Farm bureau community leaders with their wives and husbands met together at Hotel Bigelow on Saturday, November 23. After a delicious luncheon in the club rooms, the party adjourned to the Shakesperian room for a business meeting. Ephraim Bergeson, of Cache county, the state president of the association, was present to report on the tax situation. He warned tho farmern that this issue must be hanIn dled with brains and courage. substance, he said: Our homes and our families are our most valued asset, and we must intelligently plan to protect them. The fact that the farmer does not use business methods in going after his requirements is preventing him from gaining the standing he deserves. He must not depend on some one else to save him. The banker is interested in the farmer, yes. He doesn't wish to see the farmer fail. But his interest is purely in a business way. The bankers The money is tied up in the farm. railroads want to see the farmer prosper yes, indeed. They are very anxious that the agriculturist and the stockraiser make a success of his undertaking. The solicitude of the railway magnate too is in his own interest. He needs their produce for transportation. The farmer must not depend on outsiders who wish him well for their, benefit. He must enter into the race with an eye to business. He must protect his home and his family by intelligent business methods and cooperation with one anoth- If present agitation to make the y calendar year consist of 13 equal months is successful, we may all find ourselves with an extra holiday on our hands. The extra day, the last one of the year, would be a holiday called year day." In leap years another holiday called leap day" would be inserted in midsummer. Prof. C. F. Marvin, chief of the weather bureau of the United States says the department of agriculture, fixed calendar make the to proposal and perpetual by giving nonweekday names to year day" and leap day is believed by a number of students who have investigated the history of the calendar to be in reality an effort to follow the ancient Mosaic plan to begin every year on the same day of the week. For this purpose, he explains, the day we now call Pentecost was combined by Moses with the preceding day as one prolonged Sabbath day, in commemoration of the great events of the exodus which occurred when the children of Israel were before Mount Sinai and received the commandments of the Lord. According to this view, Moses cet up the first perpetual" calendar in his tory, eayh year beginning on the same week day, at or near the vernal equinox. The first five months contained 80 days each, the sixth month had 33 days, and tho first half year 183 days. The second half year, similar to the first, began near the autumnal equinox. DIANE ESMONDE FINDS THE ANSWER TO WHAT A WOMAN WANTS AS SHE ADMIRES THE MAGIC -- 28-da- TWIST vrjnnr? ATT TR AT. G AS R ATSftTPQ ALLIANCE ACTIVE There is a well defined movement on foot to antagonize the cigarettes. AlliIt is called the ance. Their first effort is now being directed toward getting the Smoot bill passed, which is intended to operate to eliminate all lying cigarette and tobacco advertising. Their next movement will probably be an effort to prohibit the sale of cigarette. In fact we think there are two states now where their sale is prohibited, but the laws in that regard are not very strictly enforced. The dining cars on the roads passing through those states advertise no sale of cigarettes within those states. It is a remarkable thing how those little things which were considered so Injurious a few years ago, and which were so bitterly assailed by people everywhere, have wormed their way into the affections and the habits of millions. That they are bad, goes without saying. The same way, generally, with tho use of tobacco. A New England Life Insurance company a few yean ago made an investigation, from 180,000 policyholders and covering a period of 60 years, and they found that where the maximum of expected deaths was 100, of tobacco abstainers only 59 died, of rare users, only 71 died, of temperate users, only 84 died and of moderate users, 93 died. Excessive users were not accepted by the company. We would advise boys and girls to leave it alone. It's a dirty, expensive and harmful habit. Boys, do you notice that the athletes do not use tobacco when they are training for a hard contest? A word to the wise, etc. THE ANTI-CIGAUETT- E Anti-Cigaret- te - : Notice of Meeting of Board of Equalization Miss Diane Esmonde, popular star appearing at the Playhouse, Salt Lake, in What a Woman Wants, finds that cooking is a pleasure cn the Magic Chef. She is shown with the Patrician model of The New Vogue in Natural Gas Ranges. When it comes to furnishing of a modeled handle and lifted the cover. Natural gas has revolutionized the kitchen, says Miss Diane Esmonde, My first surprise was the ease with heating and . cooking problem in Salt Review popular leading lady of the Metro- which tho cover lifted and folded back. Lake, Ogden and other Utah towns politan Players, I don't think theres My second surprise was to see the where this new fuel is available. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that any question about What a Woman clean, convenient cooking surface reThough the Magic Chef is very the undersigned have been duly ap- Wants most. She wants beauty and vealed, all ready to work. and looks more like a handcharming pointed the Board of Equalization and attractiveness and convenience not I wanted a Magic Chef some cabinet than a gas range, it is Naturally, Review in Paving District No. 154, and forgetting economy and Im sure that in ray kitchen. What woman wouldnt? practical in every way. notice is hereby further given that the the moment she sets eyes on the When not in use, this marvelous crea- thoroughly Like its name, the Magic Chef renlint of the property in said tax district Magic Chef she will experience that tion is a beautiful cabinet ders a cooking that gives desubject to tax and the amount of tax thrill which comes only when one has of most attractive design and coloring. liciously cookedwizardry foods with an elimifound the perfect answer to her It can easily be the most noticed and nation of has been completed. worries. cooking The undersigned, as the Board of wishes. most admired thing in the kitchen, The Chef is made in two I thrilled, let me assure you. I being a combination of beauty and models Magic Equalization and Review, will meet will blend with any color that at the office of the Mayor in the City saw a beautiful cabinet standing advanced cooking service. combination in the kitchen. The model Hall on December 9, 10 and 11, 1929, there. If I had not known, I couldn't Miss Esmonde is one of many Salt illustrated is the P&trician, with Italall dates inclusive, between the hours have believed it was a gas range. Its Lake women who have enthused over ian antique finish and old ivory of ten (10) o'clock A. M. and twelve so different, so amazingly different the Magic Chef, the new vogue in trim.grand Tho handles are of onyx green on said and oclock noon, days from any other range I had ever seen, natural (12) The Jonquil model can be ranges, now being shown bake-litwill hear and cinsidcr any and all ob- that I was skeptical (even though 1 by the gas Wasatch Gas company. In had in old ivory with peacock green of such to the levying tax, knew, of course) that it could really fact, everyone who has seen it has trim. Both models are all jections enameled. and will make any changes or correc- be a range. voiced sincere praise of its appearother the features of this Among as assessment tions in said proposed But 1 took hold of the exquisitely ance and its convenient features. remaikable gas range are the follow to the said Board shall seem just and equitable. Jefferson Avenue; also bounded on was levied on the issued and outstand- No. 3 will be conveyed a distance of That on the dates specified said the north hy Sixteenth Street, on the ing stock of the corporation, payable 1800 ft.' and the water from Spring list and plats shall be open to pub- west by Washington Avenue, on tho immediately to Joseph E. Storey, Sec- No. 4 will bo conveyed a distance of lic inspection from nine oclock A. M. south by Seventeenth Street, and on retary, at 278 25th Street, Ogden, 700 ft. where it will be to five oclock P. M. of each of said the east by Jefferson Avenue; also Utah, any stock upon which this as- and used from April 1st commingled to October sessment may remain unpaid at the 1st of each year as a days continuously at the Mayors of- bounded on the north by Twenty-firsupplemental fice in the City Hall Street, on the west by Iancoln Ave- close of the business on Tuesday, De- supply for the irrigation of 4S0 acres cember 17, 1929, will be delinquent of land embraced in the The property to be affected by said nue, on the south by Twenty-thir- d NtaNWK. tax is as follows: Both sides of Doxcy Street and on the east by Washington and advertised for sale at public auc- SEKNWU, SViSWil XEttSW, Street, between Jackson and Van Avenue; also bounded on the north tion, and unless payment thereof is Sec. 16; SSEU Sec. 17, 21; S Buren Avenues; both sides of Ches- by Twenty-thir-d made on the west before, will be sold on Wednes- T. 7 N., R. 1 Street, S. L. B. & M. As ter Street, between Washington and by Monroe Avenue, on the south by day, the 6th day of January, 1929, much water asW., be may will Jefferson Avenues; both sides of Pin-gr- Twenty-fourt- h Street, and on the east at the hour of 2:00 P. M. to pay de- be used during the entirenecessary dofor year and by Jackson Avenue; also bounded on linquent assessment, together with mestic purposes. Avenue, between Twenty-fir- st er." Twenty-secon- d Streets; both sides of the north by Twentieth Street, on the the costs of advertising and the exThis application is designated in the Weber County President G. F. Seventeenth Street, between Washing- west by Wall Avenue, on the south pense of sale. the chairman as for acted Engineers Office as File No. Stallings ton and Jefferson Avenues; both sides JOSEPH E. STOREY, Twenty-secon- d Street, and on the 1O1 2. occasion. At the luncheon he express- of Canyon Road, between Washington by east Secretary, Lackawanna Mining Washington Avenue. ed his appreciation of the attendance and Jefferson Avenues; both sides of BYbyORDER All protests against the OF THE BOARD OF Co. granting of of the members, and explained that Grant Avenue, between Twenty-firsaid Publication dates November 22, 29; AND REVIEW. application, the reasons stating EQUALIZATION the main purpose of the farm bu- and Twenty-thir- d thereto, must be by affidavit in e, Streets; both sides Dated, this, the 25th day of No- December 6, 13, 1929. reau movement is to outline a pro- of Quincy Avenue, between Twenty-thir- d vember, 1929. accompanied with a fee of 61X0, and filed in this office within and Twenty-fourt- h gram that will give them a more satand Streets; (Signed) Notice isfactory home environment, lie both sides of Twenty-firthirty (39) days after the completion FRANK FRANCIS. Street, bestated that a careful analysis is being tween Washington and Wall Avenues of the publication of this notice. HARMAN W. PEERY. made of farming methods and means to the entire depth back therefrom FRED E. WILLIAMS, GEO. M. BACON, No. 10772 of improvement. not exceeding, however, 830 feet and Board of Equalization and Review. State Engineers Office, state Engineer. Date of first publication Nov. 15, 1929. County Agent A. L. Christiansen all within the district bounded on the Published November 29, 1929. Lake Salt City. Utah, Date of completion of publication, gave some interesting statistics from north by Twenty-sevent- h No ember 7, 1929. Street, on Published in The Ogden Post. the department of agriculture. the west by Jackson Avenue, on the district No. 154. Notice is hereby given that the Sid- December 12, 1929. Paving Mrs. J. W. Jensen made a report south by Twenty-eight-h Street, and ney Stevens Implement Company, of the organization training school at on the east by Van Buren Avenue; whose principal place of business is of from the Utah Agricultural college, Summons also bounded on the north by Seventh Ogden, Utah, has made application in which she recently returned. She Street, on the west by Washington accordance with the requirements of showed how the budgeting system, Avenue, on the south by Cross Street, LACKAWANNA MINING COM- the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 to ,N TI!.m'-SJR,CroLRT OF WEBER STATE OF UTAH parlimentary proceedings and public- and on the east by Jefferson Avenue; PANY, a corporation of the State of 1929 inclusive, to appropriate .24 c.f.s. ity methods were studied there. Or- also bounded on the north by Twenty-f- Utah, with its principal place of of water from two springs in Weber Plaintiff; vu. Walter Adams. stresswas consciousness irst ganization, Street, on the west by Wall business at 273 25th Street, Ogden County, Utah. Said water is to be Thr Stats of Utah to said Defendant: ed, and the fact maintained that home Avenue, on the south by Twenty-secon- d Utah. diverted a follows: From Spring No. umnurl to appear twen-in- ir life must be systematized if we are Notice is hereby given that at a i at a point 2449 ft. W. and Street, and on the east by Lin2140 ft. r? aftfr scryirt of this summons upon to succeed in public organization. coln Avenue; also bounded on the meeting of tho Board of Directors of S. and from served within tho Count in which Spring No. 4 at n point The Misses Zcsta Taylor and north by Canyon Road, on the west the Lackawanna. Mining Co., held on 2090 ft. S. and brou,hli within Uiir-450 ft. W. from the Genevieve Larkins entertained with by Washington Avenue, on the south the lfth day of November, 1929, n S4 cor. of Sec. 9, T. 7 X., R. 1 v , i&s-musical numbers. . by Ogden River, and on tho east by assessment No. 2, uf cent per share - b. M. The water from Spiing and . e. st ing: The oven is equipped with the famous Lorain red wheel oven heat regulator that watches the baking while youre away. The cooking-to- p cover is easy to oputensils may be erate. Unsightly is quickly covered. The oven itself large and heavily insualted. It keeps the kitchen cooler when baking and makes the cooking bill surprisingly small. Pipes, valves and all bolts are entirely concealed.. The roomy service drawer , operates on rollers. Even work though heavily loaded, it will easily. In a word, the Magic Chef is indeed the new vogue in natural gas ranges. To appreciate its outstanding beauty and utility you really must see it H is on display at the showrooms of the Ogden Gas company, Ogden, Utaa. spring-balance- st du-Pt- - to Water Usejs st Notice Assessment I- 1 i :rsv s d, with the which has been filed court Clerk of This action is brought for the pmp diseriring securing a decree of divorce heretofore bonds of matrimony now and is ting between plaintiff and defendant. W. R. SKEEN. Plaintiffs j Attorney. P. O. address 2S75 Kissel Avenue, Ofden. Utah. m Publication dates November 8. is. ind December 6, 1929. Summons ec 1 I'V: 29. 1929 IN THE DISTRICT OF THE JUDICIAL DISTRKT OF T1W UTAH IN AND FOR THE COlS WEBER ffoF Pi D. H. Peer Estate, a (rporetton- es. Samuel Stiekney, If living. unknown heirs, hta unknown dewes. known legatees, and his unknown c SB- - and alto all other persons ""known or 1 any right title, estate, lien the eomj 1'oUa real property described in any verve to plaintiff's ownership, or upon plaintiff's title thrrrta.Defendant! The State of Uuh to said Yon are hereby summoned to ia twenty days after service of tthla upon you. if served within is brought; otherwise which action thirty 'days after service; in ease f yw above entitled action; and . failure so to do. Judgment win be the against you according to the filed complaint, which has been cf of said court This action to brought for the Wto the juk-tintitle in the plaintiff to Icscribed real estate situated in OS"" tor County, Utah : Bind corner Beginning at the fry. -- A.-Northgut of 10. Lot 10. Plat then co South 201 feet: thence West pt. (hence North 60 feet; thence Ess thence North 165 feet: thence East t..e to the plaee of beginning. SAMUEL C. POWELL. ihl riaintifTs P. O. address. inir. Oilrn, Utah. 614-61- 5 David S1 n RBai |