OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN I 2llllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMf BINGHAM GARFIELD I RAILWAY j 1 i AND S 5 The Scenic Line to ! UlUINIIIIIIIIUMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimilUIIIIIIIIHIIHIIilllNUUIIIUlHIIUIIIIIUIIUUIIIW I I s BINGHAM I Where Copper is King" s PASSENGER TRAIN SCHEDULE NOW IN EFFECT Leave Salt Lake City 6:55 a.m. 2:15 p.m. No. 109 No. Ill No. No. No. No. No. No. Arrive Bingham 109 8:25 a.m. 3:35 p.m. Ill Leave Bingham 110 8:45 a.m. 112 5:00 p.m. Arrive Salt Lake City 110 10:05 a.m. 112 5:30 p.m. o S s s s s H. W. STOUTENBOROUGH, Assist. General Passenger Agent, 1207 Deseret Bank Bldg. Phone Was. 140 ' Salt Lake City, Utah 5 riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin: SOCIETY I THE Miss Gladys daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wedding of Abram Hatch, to Lynn G. Bywater, took place Wednesday evening at the home of the brides parents on North First West street. Bishop Alvin Beesley performed the ceremony, after which a reception was held. Miss Hatch was attired in a gown of white satin and a tulle veil caught with She carried a orange blossoms. shower of brides roses and lilies of the valley and wore a strand of pearls, the gift of the bridegroom. Miss Florence Hatch, sister of the bride, was bridesmaid. Her frock was of pink crepe de chine and she carried pink roses. Virgil B. Anderson was best man. A color scheme of pink was carried out in the dining room. The table was centered with a wicker basket filled with pink roses and tied with pink tulle, and at the four corners of the table were crystal candlesticks holding pink cathedral candles. Assisting in receiving were J. G. Bywater and Miss Gladys Bywater, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Foreman and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Evans. Music was furnished by the troubadours. After December 10 Mr. and Mrs. Bywater will be at home in the Oster-lo- h apartments. 2 5 of ACTIVE and alumnae chapters Univer- Epsilon sorority, sity of Utah, held their ninth annual NORWALK birthday banquet Wednesday evening at the Newhouse hotel. The guests were seated at one long table, centered with a low wicker basket filled High Pressure Casings and Tubes with violets and Cecil Brunner roses. Extending to the candelebra at each end of the table were festoons of smi-laPlace cards bore the sorority seal. Miss Beth Keate was toastmistress and toasts were responded to by Misses Ruth Wlscomb, Violet Bolognese, Paloma Brown, Ramona James, and Mary Margaret 'Smurthwaite Hughes. The freshman members of the sorority gave a stunt and musical numbers were furnished by Misses Ruth Shipp, Faye King, Avon Rich and Lucile Booth. Guarantee Tire & Rubber Company 451 South Main Street Phone Was. 2222 Salt Lake City, Utah WE PRINT THE CITIZEN OUR CRAFTSMANSHIP SPEAKS FOR ITSELF Century printing Company J. Q. RYAN W. G ROMNEY CENTURY BUILDING EDISON STREET Wasatch 1801 Printers. Binders, Designers, Linetypera family dinner at their new home on Eleventh East street. Judge and Mrs. Harold M. Stephens entertained at. the University club, as did Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cameron, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Truman and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hanson. Dr. and Mrs. Albert S. Bower gave a family dinner party at their home on East First South street and Mr. and Mrs. William Brother entertained at their home on D street. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Snyder presided over a party at the University club, in honor of Mrs. E. P. LeCompte of dance was given by the Masonic club Wednesday The guests' evening at the Odeon. were received by Edgar A. Rogers, president of the club, who was assisted by the following members: J. H. Cornwall, chairman of the arrangements committee; Frank Erath, E. J. Shields, Howard M. Jones, L.. M. Brumbaugh, Robert- - E. Abbott and R. R. Roberts. The floor committee included Roy E. Harris, Fred Morrison, II. S. Harper and Paul Banker. A PRE-HOLIDA- Y dinners were MANY Thanksgiving at various homes and Mrs. A. H. S. Bird entertained at a dinner at the McCornick home on Center street and Judge Le Grande Young and Miss Afton Young gave a clubs. MARMON 34 Marmon RS. RAYMOND C. NAYLOR has returned from an extended eastern trip, having visited her husband, who is with the war claims board, Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Naylor spent some weeks with their sons, Jack Raymond and Alfred McCune Naylor, who are in the Stanton Military academy at Stanton, Va. Mrs. Naylor was in New York for two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. McCune, who will sail in the near future for Lima, Peru, where they will spend the winter. Before returning to Salt Lake Mrs. Naylor visited her sister, Mrs. J. A. Quealy of Forest Hills, San Francisco. student body of the of Utah entertained at a dancing party Thursday evening at the Newhouse hotel, in honor of the Utah Agricultural college and University of Utah football teams, following the Thanksgiving game at the university. Faculty members and their Wendell wives were the patrons. THE - was chairman of arrangements and a reception committee included officers of the student body Jake Shafesky, Miss Amy Silver, Miss Edna Williams, Roy Simmons and Don Wood. Lyman HALLORAN and his daugh- Mrs. William Lewis Sowles, have returned from a months eastern trip. Miss Florence Sowles, automatic system of lubrication and oilless bearings reduce its care to a fraction of that which other cars demand. Park City. x. 231 Phase 9 IHEWK.LOVERINGCQ. We called the roll on bread Jack shouted, "ROYAL BREAD for mine; and "Midge nodded approval. Dad hesitated; hed always praised Mothers baking, and he didnt want to hurt her pride now. But Mother knew that no woman in an ordinary kitchen could expect ever to bake like ROYAL bakers, with their scientific knowledge and improved She methods and machinery. made a dozen loaves a week ROYAL bakers are turning out more than a thousand times that number each day. So Dad and Mother voted for WJ. who accompanied them, visited in Philadelphia for two weeks and will spend Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Meyer in Omaha. M'CORNICK and Mrs. MRS. LEWIS D. Donoher left for California to spend Thanksgiving with their young daughters, Margaret McCornick and Jean Donoher, who are attending school at Menlo Park. . VARSITY PLA YERS DURING the coming week the will present their fifth production of the current season at the Social Hall Theatre. Eugene Walters graphic story of the Canadian Northwest "The Wolf has been selected by Professor Babcock as the next offering. "The Wolf is a story of the Canadian Hudson Bay country, full of color and action, inspiring in its theme, thrilling in its situations and declared to be one of the most perfect constructed plays on the stage. It de- - Players ROYAL BREAD Tha hrtid that madeRd pBsl mother stop bakiiiq Ihoal 1 picts life in the locale of the story as it could be depicted only by one intimately acquainted with the passions, impulses and motives which inspire men deep in the hearts of nature. Of much interest to the Social Hall following is the announcement that David Lindley will assume the leadmale role in the Varsity ing "The beginning with production, Mr. Lindley was last with Wolf. Walker Whitesides in The Little Brother Company. He supported Martha Hedman, Charlotte Walker, Walter Hampton and other Broadway stars. Edyth Barlow, Franklin Rasmussen, Earl Adams, Jos. F. Smith, and D. Angus Boyer will also appear in the cast of "The Wolf, which will be given every night during the week with matinees Thursday and Saturday at 2:30. |