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Show 9 THE CITIZEN diamond necklace tn and a cream lace I hat if wedding: supper for the family bridal party followed at Avenue. Harms home on First mantle was banked with ferns sweet peas and the supper table be and nd I OB the The and was with the brides cake centerand pink princess ed with pink roses, candles in silver candlesticks were at either end. Mrs. Oliver Alberti was room. The couin charge of the gift the coast for a wedding ple left for motor home by way of trip and will The the parks of Southern Utah. bride's travelling ensemble was of accessories to beige and brown with centered rip me k ell late let A'1 match. I otte ler-- l meanderings to OF irm--1 The i d Margaret Burke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Burke, who spent the Easter vacation in Salt Lake has MISS uft errjl rtule returned to on, D. C. I hit rhite the Mr. iela-- been 1 Trinity College, Washingt- Platt, who have Angeles for several weeks and Mrs. H. V. in Los returned home cnee during the week. ;orrti has returned to her home in San Francisco after a sojourn in Salt Lake, visiting form- Call Mrs. iohj. to er D. C. Maturin friends. mdall Frank D. MJcElhinneys and children are at home in the Belvedere apartments having returned to Salt Lake after an absence of several gthtl The vm aril ' Saint to I years. Carroll W. Burt of Los Angeles has arrived in Salt Lake for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. j; L E. Hubbard. Mrs. Burt was formerly Miss Miriam Hubbard. Mrs. ?M arms I rtsinl Word has been received in Salt Lake of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ward of Los Angeles. Mrs. Ward was formerly Miss Dorothy White, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John T. White of this city. Mrs. Lydia White Boothby, sister of Mrs. Ward, who has spent the past three months traveling in the east and through the Panama Canal, is with anaryl yellovl t ari i won nd o dveH Is ctf-- l 1 1 y GiH edtbe Mrs. Frederick C. Loofbourow left Wednesday for Helena, Montana, to visit her mother, Mrs. Francis S. Read for three weeks. WHAT HOSTESSES HAVE BEEN ABOUT LATELY. FLORENCE Doschers trosseau tea on Monday from 3 until 0 oclock at the Doscher apartment in the Buckingham was the last affair preceeding the Doscher-DEvely- n nuptials which took place on Wednesday at high noon. The tea table was decorated in a lavender and yellow color scheme carried out with iris and daffodils and yellow tapers. Mrs. F. W. of San Francisco, mother of the bridegroom and Mr. Peter Moller, Jr., of New York, sister of the bride poured and the bride was assisted by Mrs. H. W. Doscher. Twenty-fiv- e SEND IT TO THE LAUNDRY an chj fittftl rills. M was SS to ; . 1 t Uundry Distinctive Work eit alUfl :stH wort 1 tectfl ffitl Hyland 190 lyn guests called. COMPLIMENTING Miss Kathleen Charlotte Harms, whose marriage to John Luther Proctor took place Wednesday evening, Mrs. Oliver Alberti presided over a delightful luncheon and bridge on Monday in the Lounge of the Belvedere. The guests were seated at three small tables, each table being centered with a crystal basket of shell pink butterfly sweet peas, violets and lilies of the valley. Bridal and hand decorated flower place cards marked the covers for, Mrs. Herman Harms, Miss Kathleen Harms, Miss Ethelyn Hermine Harms, Mrs. Louis M. Marcus, Mrs. George E. Carpenter, Mrs. Ross Beason, Mrs. Willard Hanson, Mrs. H. W. Pickering and Mrs. Carl Porter. On Monday evening Miss Mary Gavin, who was the maid of honor at the Harms-Proc-twedding, presided over a dinner in the presidents suite at the Hotel for members of the bridal party. Green crystal held yellow jonquils and yellow candles. found ways and means and so can we. California already is reaping the benefits ours are yet to come. WOOLGROWING IN UTAH (Continued from Page 3) to cross with Rambouillet to produce a coarser wool and larger lambs and the ewe lambs from this cross is popular with a great many flock masters for breeding purposes. Hampshires and Suffolks, or black faced rams, are used by a great many sheep men who have good summer or mountain range and transportation facilities are such that lambs can be moved to market without long trails over poor range as the black face sheep are purely mutton sheep, shearing light fleeces of medium short wool. Ewe lambs from this cross are seldom, if ever, retained for breeding. By study and observation, flock masters soon learned the types best adopted to Utah and started this flow of wealth not through depletion, but harvested principally by the sheep themselves from the otherwise worthless deserts during winter, moving to the low hills in the spring and beautifying the mountain scenery, removing the weeds and brouse during the summer, changing the waste of our State into a flow of wealth and administering comfort to mankind with food and clothing. Where is the money coming from you ask? The state is already bonded to its limit for road purposes. But has not the state for the past years been creating a sinking fund for the purpose of retiring its bonds? Isnt it then quite possible, or is it, to issue more bonds against the amount the sinking fund contains and put the money therefrom obtained to just such purposes as I am attempting herein to describe? Funds of this nature, coupled with those which are increasing yearly from the gas tax and motor vehicle license, together with federal aid, should, within a few years be of sufficient amount to carry out a project of this nature. At any rate, I believe it would be to the interest of all concerned if the matter were given real serious thought and consideration by those individuals and organizations who claim to have at heart the future upbuilding and development of our great state. Modem, properly constructed concrete road connecting the Uintah Basin with Salt Lake City would be the states primier asset, producing dividends so far in excess of its cost as to cause wonder why it had not been built years ago. What that type of road has done for CalifMurray New St. Vincents church ornia it will do for Utah. That state dedicated here. Reasons why you should use UTAH SUGAR or New-hou- se UINTAH BASIN (Continued from Page 4) pense, nothing short of concrete should be used for that purpose. The distance from Orem on the Salt o paved highway is approximately 130 miles, Vernal is but 30 miles further. Popular sentiment coupled with a demand for economy will necessitate the paving of the road through Provo canyon. Utah county, rich in resources will shortly be caring for that; so what we of the basin are mostly interested in is a permanent or paved road from Heber to Vernal. Pave this and our problem is practically settled. By the end of next year, according to the present program of the state road commission, the road into the basin will be graded and all structures completed. It should then require no great amount of money to surface with say six inches of concrete, a road completed. already perhaps This done, the state would then have Lake-Prov- ictaril reaching into what would soon develop into its most productive .section. All this could be done for a tithe of what it would cost to build equip, maintain and operate a railroad and could serve equally as well if not bet- ter. D-Eve- SOCIETY a real road of low maintenance cost, her sister in Los Angeles, Dr. White having returned to Salt Lake. two-thir- ds First: It has no superior for any purpose even though the PRICE IS LOWER. Second: Cash so expended remains at home, Thrid: Farmers participate in savings effected which BENEFIT YOU. Encourage Home Consumption Encourage Growing of Sugar Beets Support of our State means PROSPERTY FOR ALL |