| Title | 117904 |
| NR ID | 98001447 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Utah County |
| City | American Fork |
| Address | 52 S 100 WEST |
| Listed Date | 1998/12/10 |
| Scanning Institution | Utah Correctional Institute |
| Holding Institution | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| Building Name | BECK, CHRISTIAN & ZILPHA, HOUSE |
| UTSHPO Collection | American Fork Historic District |
| Spatial Coverage | Utah County |
| Rights Management | Digital Image © 2023 Utah State Historic Preservation Office. All Rights Reserved. |
| Publisher | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Genre | Historic Buildings |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Date Digital | 2023-08-16 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6pnv302 |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 2334935 |
| OCR Text | Show This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. 52S 100 WEST BECK, CHRISTIAN & ZILPHA, HOUSE AMERICAN FORK, UTAH COUNTY AMERICAN FORK HISTORIC DISTRICT UTAH STATE HISTORY 1111111111111111111111111111111 1111 1111111111 1111111111111111111 3 9222 50017 8541 Christian & Zilpha Beck House 52 S. 100 West Beck, Christian & Zilpha House 52 S 100 West American Fork, Utah County ( JUt·lE 23. 1997 2 Beck, Christian & Zilpha House 52 S 100 West American Fork, Utah County ( JUNE 23. 1997 3 Beck, Christian & Zilpha House 52 S 100 West American Fork, Utah County NE, Camera Facing Sw. SE. Elevation . HISTORIC SITE FORM (UHCS version) Utah State Historic Preservation Office UHCS 10#: 1. Identification 027577 Property Name: BECK, CHRISTIAN & ZILPHA, HOUSE Address: 52 S 100 WEST City: AMERICAN FORK County: UTAH COUNTY 2. Documentation/Status Dates SUNeyed or Added to SHPO Filing System: GeneraVMiscellaneous File: I Reconnaissance Level SUNey: 081 87 Intensive Level SUNey: 07/97 Evaluation: (A) ELIGIBLE/SIGNIFICANT National Register Status: AMERICAN FORK HISTORIC DISTRICT National Register Listing Date: 981210 Delisted date: Thematic or Multiple Property Affiliation: 3. Building Information Date(s) of Construction: c.1910 Height (# stories): Original Use: RESIDENTIAL (GEN.) PlanfType: REGULAR BRICK Constr. Material(s): Architectural Style(s): 2 PERIOD REVIVAL: OTHER VICTORIAN ECLECTIC Theme(s): Comments: Outbuildings (total/contributing): 10 4. Other SHPO File Information 106 Case No.: Grant No.: HABs/HAER Record No.: State Tax Project No. (s): Federal Tax Project No.: Printout Date: 12117/98 HISTORIC SITE FORM (10-91) UTAH OFFICE OF PRESERVATION Name ofProperty: Christian and Zilpha Beck House Address: 52 S. 100 West Twnshp: 5S Range: IE Section: 23 City, County: American Fork, Utah County UTM: Current Owner Name: Tanya Nielson USGS Map Name & Date: Lehi Quad, 1975 Current Owner Address: 945 W. 1400 South Tax Number: 02:020:0017:003 Salt Lake City, Utah 84104 Legal Description (include acreage): COM 295 FT S OF NE COR BLK 9, PLAT A, AMERICAN FORK CITY SURVEY; S 84.5 FT; W 99 FT; N 84.5 FT; E 99 FT TO BEGINNING. AREA 0.19 ACRES. Property Cate~ X building(s) structure site _object Evaluation X eligible/contributing _ ineligible/non-contributing _ out-ol-period Photos: Dates X slides: June, 1997 Xprints: June, 1997 historic: andPlqns measured floor plans site sketch map Historic American Bldg. Survey original plans available at: other: Drawin~s _ _ _ _ ~ Original Use: DOMESTIC: multiple dwelling Current Use: DOMESTIC: multiple dwelling Research Sources (check all sources consulted, whether useful or not) X abstract of title X city/county histories X tax card & photo ..K...personal interviews _ building permit X USHS Library _ sewer permit X USHS Preservation Files . X Sanborn Maps X USHS Architects File X obituary index X LDS Family History Library X city directories/gazetteers ..K...locallibrary: American Fork census records ..K... university Iibrary(ies): U ofU, BYU X biographical encyclopedias X newspapers BiblioWPPhical &lerences (books, articles, interviews, etc.) Attach copies ofall research notes, title searches, obituaries, and so forth. Deseret News, Salt Lake Tribune, and AmeriCan Fork Citizen. Various editions (see research notes for dates). Nelson, Lowry. The Mormon Yillage' A Pattern ofLand Techniques and Settlement. Salt Lake City: University ofUtah Press, 1952. pp. 179-211. _ _. "Some Social and Economic Features of American Fork, Utah" Brigham Young University Studies #4. Provo: Brigham Young University, 1933. Peterson, Wanda Snow, compo Pioneer Stories of AmeriCan Fork -- The Hub ofNortb Utah County. American Fork: privately published, 1994. Sanborn Fire Insurance Company. Sanborn Maps of AmeriCan Fork. 1890, 1908, 1938. Shelley, George F. Early History ofAmerjcan Fork. With Some History of the Later Dav. American Fork: American Fork City, 1945. Reconnaissance Level Surveys of American Fork prepared by Ray Varley, 1987, and Elizabeth Egleston, 1994; Intensive Level Surveys, and General Information Files, copies on file at Utah State Historical Society. Researcher/Organization: Nelson W. Kni~ht / Smith Hyatt Architects Date: _....!J.J...... ulv.y.... ' .... 19""9'-L7_ No. Stories:_2_ Building Style/Type: ItalianatelDouble House Foundation Material:----'S""a...n""'d....s..,.to"'n..,.e_ _ _ _ __ Wall Additions:X none _ minor _ major (describe below) Material(s):_-'B~r!.£ic!l<!:k~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Alterations: _ none X minor _ major (describe below) Number ofassociated outbuildings _0_ and/or structures _0_. Briefly describe the principal building, additions or alterations and their dates, and associated outbuildings and structures. Use continuation sheets as necessary. Using the house types outlined in Thomas Carter and Peter Goss' Utah's Historic Architecture. 1847-1940, this multiple family dwelling is classified as a double house. But the two story, cube shaped Beck house also could be classified as a foursquare type house. The foursquare house type was a popular housing type in Utah in the first two decades of the 20th century. The Beck house is one of 42 such houses remaining in American Fork. The building appears to remain much as it was when built, with little alteration and no visible additions. Italianate stylistic details, such as the quoins at the comers of the building and the deep cornice complete with wood modillions, remain intact, as do the window openings and frames. Recent work has included maintenance items such as paint and new asphalt shingles. 1908 and 1938 Sanborn Maps show that two small wood outbuildings once stood along the south boundary line of the property behind the house. These were demolished at some time after 1938. There are no outbuildngs currently standing on the property. Architect/Builder: Christian Beck Date of Construction: 1904 Historic Themes: Mark themes related to this property with "S" or "c" (S = significant, C = contributing). (see instructions for details) _ Agriculture _Industry Economics ~Politics/ Invention Government Education ..£. Architecture _ Engineering _ Archeology _Landscape _Religion Art Architecture Entertainment/ Science _ Social History Recreation ~Commerce ~Law _ Ethnic Heritage Communications Literature _ Transportation _ Community Planning _ Maritime History _ Exploration! Other _ Military & Development Settlement _ Performing Arts Health/Medicine Conservation Write a chronological history of the property, focusing primarily on the original or prinCipal owners & significant events. Explain and justify any significant themes marked above. Use continuation sheets as necessary. The house described here is the second to occupy the property, as shown on Sanborn Maps. The original owners, Christian M. and Zilpha Chipman Beck, were the owners of the Grant Hotel and Livery Stables, and the also of the Pioneer Opera House. All were located on Main Street, and have been demolished. Zilpha Beck was one of25 children born to W.H. Chipman and his plural wives, Eliza (Zilpha's mother) and Sarah. The Chipman family was one of the largest and most prominent families in American Fork, and owned much of the property in town including that upon which this house now sits. Zilpha married Christian Beck, of Alpine, in 1889. After living for several years in Alpine, the couple moved to American Fork in 1895. Christian bought a livery stable and built a small wood frame house on this property. In 1898 the Becks bought the Grant Hotel, located on the comer of 100 West and Main Streets. They moved their household into the hotel, and (it is assumed) rented out the house. In 1902 the couple sold the hotel and returned with their three children to the house. Two years later, Christian, a proficient carpenter, built the house that currently stands on the property. Physical evidence differs here in several ways from information given in Beverly B. Clopton's Her Honor, the Judge, the biography of Reva Beck Bosone. The house appears to have always been a duplex, but Clopton implies that the house was occupied solely by the Becks. Similarly, Clopton writes that the house was built next to the Beck's original wood frame home. Sanborn Maps show that this house replaced the older one on the lot. Further research is needed to obtain answers to these (admittedly minor) details. The Beck family lived in their new house only for four years, then moved back into the Grant Hotel after the hotel's buyer defaulted. The house appears to have been a rental property after 1908, though no information was located on the building's tenants. Christian and Zilpha's daughter, Reva Beck Bosone, is significant in Utah's history as the first woman to be elected a judge in Utah, and also as a member of the U.s. Congress from 1949-1953. A colorful figure, Bosone spent her girlhood in American Fork, including this house. She attended Westminster College in Salt Lake City, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Utah where she obtained her law degree. She was elected to the Utah Legislature in 1932, and then was elected to a Salt Lake City judgeship in 1932, becoming the first woman to do so. In 1948 Judge Bosone was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. She served two terms, and was known as an outspoken and energetic champion of reclamation projects and American Indian policy reform. She was defeated in her reelection bid of 1952, after false charges of receiving kickbacks and being a communist sympathizer were raised against her. She returned to law, and later served as an official in the Postal Service during the Kennedy administration. She died in 1983. Although Reva Beck Bosone spent only four years in this house, she owned it from 1940-1971. It is the only property remaining in American Fork that is associated with her. Zilpha Beck willed the house to the LDS Church at her death. It passed through several owners until being purchased by the current owner, Tanya Nielson, in 1996. It is currently (as of 1997) still a rental property. I. • / : 1 : !. ,III: ; : I· .- I " 1".., . \) : r '. . . / I ! j 1 ! ' , ij. .j .. ' , ,, I j:" .I • I. -.L '. ; " 1 . ; 0 I: ' . I: , I i. N ! " \. .\ I I 1 1 I ,,) ,. ,~~ r r ~ <. I I . I -I ~ I I I II I 1 ~ : .\; \ j . . I . • o ' \' . Cs 80 ,\ II I I : 1 I I "~ o. ... 9 '. '. I ·,1 J . . .. . Eill "- . -' I , . I ~ .. I -I rr:] '. I .,' ~ \' F Ii ! 1' ; \, I II. [J ~ , -I I~ . . ..; II 1 1 ii I ,r 1: '- , I 1 .j' a· '\ II; Ii " 1 .2 <., 1 - ET -~ .. "'" 0 I i 1 ..': " '.. !'!1 --t 1890 American Fork Sanborn Map I I - .. . lJJJ l I' - . I n. .... ' ! i ;\. l j . ' i i 1 I I' . \ I . J I I ; I' 0 • J , ff.J-11 1' M.1.2il ," '.1 'j. • II ! [ I , If ! ; i . iL I, .:!\ . '~.1 ·-t ,, , i ,[ ] i I . "B " ' ~rn .: . ' y 1908 American Fork Sanborn Map . 1 .. i i, '.,'. ' ~ I . . .: . . , . i ,I, . III 1 .~ ~. .,,f i . ,. 6 " i, 1 0' '" : ! l I' ., ,. , . , ,. ~ ~: : 'i. : . .... ,. '. .j " ;, ,, . . .,, i , ! .' .' I , - . I ! . ~ ..t. ' ,. , f . ., ii. .. ;I ' I' ' ''' ti -I .,:' ; r. ; ..... .. !:, . : ~~ .1 E::= ," ' j . .' .j , : • .., ' o' / I, " • i ::~ ;f.' ; '::1- i ."; l::L t i 1 " :7<f lcl 'I('.'tt' " I I I- QA/V,.wNlUH . == i.::....-. h I, .,' , .( ' f"0.L , ! ,,' I ! !; ';-+-+---IOI-l-- UTAH ; 1938 American Fork Sanborn Map =-= ""~,:_ ~/P£ ==-z '15 I RRR NeTON: ) ,I , !I 66 'T t I .J , I \ 'J . \ ' ~,I ., ~ t I , I I \ ' I - I) ' J ~' , I ., ". 11 " ~o ~ l , ~ " - J I 1/ , i "" ,~ .. ,~ ~,' " ,U 1 ' J 6 ~~ , I , i' ' I, i H t l i " " I ~, f' I . i J ~' l ~ ~ !• l I ,', '. ! I , ", ' J r \ ,,' I U i ~ [] I , " ,~:i ~ - " , I ~ '. ," ,'" - ,j ' : ; / '~ ~ ~ I..J ~ '" : , " ,I ." I i i '! ri I .. \ ! ~ ' 1'. ' ;- ,', Ancestral File iT") - ver 4.17 INDIVIDUAL RECORD 02 JUL 1997 Page 1 ============================================================================================================================== e: Phoebe DAVIS iAFN:2bLK-IT) Born: 10 Oct 1828 Kinnerley, Shropshire, England Chr.: Sex: F Died: 13 Nov 1872 Alerican Fork, Utah, UT Bur. : City Celetery, Alerican Fork" UT FATHER: Edward DAVIS iAFN:3XB1-SB) "OTHER: Elizabeth JASPER (AFN:3XB1-TH) ;============================================================================================================================= SPOUSES 1. Stephen CHIP"AN (AFN:1P47-LX) Harried: 20 Jan 1852 Salt Lake City, , :==:===========~=============;================================================================================================ NOTES 1. Changes have been lade to this recorD. ===~=;=~====================================================================================================================== LDS ORDINANCE DATA (Dates have not been verified against official records ) B: 14 Feb 1845 E: 15 Oct 1852 SP: 15 Jun 1917 SG 5S: 15 Aug 1867 EH B=Baptized E=Endowed Parents: EdNard DAVIS (AFN:3XB1-SB) Elizabeth JASPER IAFN:3XBI-TH} Spouse: Stephen CHIPKAN (AFN:IP47-LX) SP=Sealed to Parents SS=Sealed to Spouse ==;=========================================================================================================================== ABOUT THE ANCESTRAL FILE Ancestral File is a collection of genealogical inforlation taken frot Pedigree Charts and Falily Group Records sublitted to the Falily History Departlent since 1978. The inforlation has not been verified agalnst any official records. Since the inforlation in Ancestral File is contributed, it is the responsibility of those who use the file to verify its accuracy. If you find inaccurate inforlation in Ancestral File, use the F3 Edit key to lake corrections. Save the corrections on a diskette and lail the diskette to: Falily History Departlent Attn: Ancestral File Contributions 50 East North Te.ple Street Salt Lake City, UT 84150 ============================================================================================================================== Copyright t 1987, July 1996 by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. All rights reserved. • " , • I".S"TJU", ... IIUJftMUll LUI. FOR TRB 8En' W.un AI) • , David Adamson Deseret News 5 Aug 1924, p. 8-5 CHAaoa. ."'_AO. WORD. TO TH. ~~T""-I"''''_~ . .coello., ,.,........ : ~~ .... .UVICa. ::-.:.-: '~.:! ::.:;. -;: a.,. ........... AII . . . . . ....a TIlE DESERET NEWS car . . . . . . . Phon. W.latch 660. n.. -- _._-- r~:..a.!f':, =~ ~ ~=-:;'~:-I1~~..:rc :!!!, '::~.~~=" ..'hep. .. . . : a . . I._ur.uoill c. . .1I1:: Mewlf ...,.. . .1.'tIII. . . . . ,..b. . . . . . . . . . . . . • ~r. I w ~::Ir:~n I,,"t f'pl will r~.!: whfllt for a 1'11- .. 8 :i~I::lg~~,'.. ~II~h'~I·_~~~VI~rn~~ ~'r P~h~ h.. ,V .. bb-Pomerene 1.w, Th~ poaltlon CIt thf'l ~l1vf'r prnc:!ut·· J[:-~:~ i :~·t~:"~!;::~~~~:~!;~t~~ri;.';.ltt~:~':: Imin .. ,ptrd .r. Identical In ~)ther II•. It manY Instanee •. tt,. Prot\u('tlon of (,OPDf'r In._ U13~ h •• br." h.avlJy-lnf'r.. al'f'd rr- I at a ('.ntlv an" m.,. .urr~ •• " Id to. Slrnl1ar repor'. came I'd to recor"d. I bafor • . lh. Veil, r prevloull Is over. frnm olh.r tiona •• ('lIonl of lh. ",·ut and. It the " ... f .11- i Kottliiona •• Uu· Lnnttnn alll .. tt C'on- on of hr.nC'P tlt ......lIor _. • R_... UII t Jut Mt ., ._...... .... • • • 4 • I.,.lrta•.•,,",-n ••• u. 1teeIa. . . . cal. a ....... d ~.' ...... T. w. IIA TLOR ci!Ir" 111 Boot_ 'l~. Icrwl W . .lc), .n. , • ,,..ult. In Dultlnr Ih .. D..... udled pl.A Into opu.Uon. tfnmf'IHlc prodlnn: I dU(,f'n expect. ",olonlr .. 11 p.rlol1 of .P:S:: • 't;:h;~r;,erll;)'l'~:~I!h~f'~:~~:~II~~U~~~~ o the filll'n demand' Then I. no q.,utlon I I ot lb. for.llfn n •• d nt ('opJ).r~ an1 \h~ It the ~entral EuroD~.n "ationa ('an n b" put on a ba.t. where they ('an n~re- pay for what tb.~· nu.s and w.nt ..'''.. • !"~; ~~.~~~d !;'·1~1;;~ ";.~n: n~~~[;ui:; ne.t- >duceated \ for ltlon. 'kin. monTbe Th~ h.u .... m.nt of th~ ,tatl.tlc-IIIt 1"o,.ltl,," nf ('OflJ)#r lind IIlIver h"~ u;t~n",,.rt to ~ ('ertaln .x: .. nt to lu~ antf .In('. Th,. IIlumD In autom"hl1f1 halo ",hn"'·a al.D. of paall; Inll{ antf th~ radio manufacturer",' have bren ('on.latent ("on.um,.r. Of( the non-f.rrou. mlltall1. Al.o thoe t.l •• n~h and t.l.nbo"e companl ... , . nrndurtlnn with lhl. h.ve ~bo ... n nl) Indlcatlona ot .ban,ltt_ donln • • mbitioul Drn"raDl tor n;tbat tenaton • • nd .... peD.,n". ~1I"r o tba Chicalro Stock. It • • r r • t • , • • • • a. N TAYLOR" co .. ,IT JI!. "Irat ao. • u ..... enn I" Jn~ .. ph 10:. Te,lnr. r ••. ., ••• I, .. '0 the propl. · 0' Selt lAk, Cit,. en .. \'llIhlll,. Iinoo U". W . . . .,11. ,·,nr. ~·L.f1) "'"_n,I .."." SI:tJONI • 1I"'NTO;'ll, C"4.rt .... ,.. nll·n · 1l Nil ,..,. tilt. Pbon. Mu,,..,. 4. Lt.:-IOt,JU'II" H;n~~;~."". 'U. .c..1N~. D.AD .. _II _ __ ... . CAkLQUI8T CO. Pb . . . to . • • • ,.. .ICTCLD. •• .or. Get..... · -.. f DaAJ) . . . . . . . . JI_n~ . rullllf8 I . Wid It oS • : f ----".,b'•• aALT I.AK. Wo,.... .. r •• t. C. O. , • ., :t: I-r· n4 Jehneon. '11'" _ .. ......... co.. .. .,........'''r. . M.num.atal P'rop. 1" 1DftJ"DeO) N G---.u l.n _ ...... I aDd ran,.. . . . ., ~.~:f.r-6:. i Wu. u ... ..11 . . . " WEWN°GTON 0'·1 AliTn TOP ClO. 0." . . . . " a.pA1I1I50 .... CO........ 11.~ ••• I.rt ••• ......... c ....... . ,.,. IInTOa A\'.. \ , • J l~~ :,:-,:I~} • • • I crB,::r·~:J na.. . .. ONI'.a!'lllT.... • ..-. .~DMl O'!'~~~:!;~~ :,.~.~i ~~4;:~:·;-~1II~~! ,WAI. T_ I ~ 8'I'OJL4Ga ............ tro. •• d tin. ............... NIl INn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . wll. . . . . . . . . . III ~ .r:-....~ =l'::'~•.;::.: ._ I. . . . . . ."...• • , ....."Id 8'H4e .. ...C4I.L ..... ...,.. t . . .U- .."... ITII. or nil. KaTI . . rIJl.nOOJ' 81"01U.O. co.. ••• ........ " ..... eo. . . . . . . . . . . . De ... . . . . . . lila M&at • HA,.CIA • SON .~- ~ ~ _ _ VII ....... ... rdr-t.;d;;;J;; 4 Car Loads -OF- Show Room TlIok., W..... TI.Me.la. Dewlce. LOI'ENZO ,IIITH CC. I " " 1N107. 2- D 8VO _rrmuop_L J'UKIOAT1HO ••• ... b _ _ Wbtl. . . . . .,...... ~ tea ....... or't HI' n .. ·s. LI_ .L-____ llO. I.u.T LAJm 411 • ."It ......... t. .AIlITIIIIG ... , ....... TI·W. pArNT .liATIi CO)} tJ .•. Rao. Pat . . t ""7... X. 'h. ..... PaUCl f4 ... d.......... t" Co .. mer~l DJ.... Wa. nil.. ',arta... ~K"" OARAOW -------- t.r re.L Cell' at "-, TU I ...... x.... p~::.~~ II<>ORDA A 80;:) ·w-:: :.i1J.·~ "It" r".1 ALL ... k •• Mit ..... t. _ ,."". ..f'1t . . . . . Dtv~cl vt~~~ #eM~ ~/5!-Zt.f P, b~ iNDiVIDUAL RECORD Antestral File ITMI - ver 4.17 02 JUl 1997 PaQe 1 ============================================================================================================================== Sex: F Born: 9 May 1864 AlIIerican For!:, lItan, UT Chr. : Died: 3 Sep 1913 Aaeritan Fork, Utah, UT Bur. ! City Leletary, American Fork~ Utah, UT FATHER: Stephen CHI?MAN tAFN:1P47-LX) MOTHER: Phoebe DAVIS !AFN:26LK-ITI ============================================================================================================ =====~=:========== SPOUSES 1. lutian Delancy CRANDALL tAFN:2ZZS-0C; 13 ;eo 1887 American ~ork, Utah, Dr ~arried: ~========:============================================ ======================================================================== LOS ORDINANCE DATA IDates have not been verlfied against official recorcsi B: 15 SeD 1872 E: 7 Mar 1923 SP: BIC Parents: Stechen CHIP~AN IAFN:IP41-LXI Phoebe DAVIS (AFN:26LK-lT) Soouse: Lucian Delancy CRANDALL IAFN:2Z1S-0C) SS: 15 Aug 1932 SL E=Endciieo B=Balltized SP=Sealed to Parents SS=Sealeo to Socuse ============================================================================================================================== ABOUT THE ANCESTRAL FILE Antestral File 1S a collection Ot genealogical inrormation taken from Pedigree Charts and Falily Group Retords subtitted to the Falily History Jepar:ment since 1978. The information has not been verified against any official records. Since the information in Ancestral File is contrlbuted! it is the responsibility of those who use the file to verify its accuracy. if you find lnatCUrate lnfor~ation in Ancestral File f use the F3 Edit key to make corrections. Saye the corrections on a diSKette and mail the diSKette to: Family History D!:partm!:nt Attn: Ancestral File Contributions Salt Lake City, UT 84150 ;==~======~;====~=~=;================================= ======================================================================== Copyright ~ 1987, July 1996 by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. All rights reserved. I TH,lIALT LAXE ntl'lt""lE. 5ua1f17. Aacull211.1Ml - ._._- --- . .... -,- - - -- -- ----~....:...--:-----:-----.----- .....=, Uted D. ·'nInId ~..=- _._ _ - _. Ii.lermountain Obituarie .... "~bCl : lo~1 Mdn . I tract I dixIe l, viceJan j ...r I tion. ,&lutl I Mre. APi ' fttt I Ta l • 1('a!'i ~ Sch., 1I4~ : had I : Satu ' I Mr ' ,,"oul floa t t :\a" i . : oratl Da , 4ncestrai File (TM) - ver 4.17 WDIVIDUAl RECORD 1)2 JUL 1997 ?aQe 1 ============================================================================================================================== Born: 1835 ~ ! Rngus! Scotiand Chr. : Se~: ~. Died: Bur.: FATHER: Jates ADAMSON (AF'.:2HHK-GR) MOTHER: Jane "ORRISON !AFN:2HHK-RL ==============;=========;===================================================================================================== SPOUSE~ ==:=========================================================================================================================== t~OTES 1. Changes have been lade to this recorn. ~====================================================================================================:======================== LDS ORDINANCE DATA (Date~ B: 27 Jul 198~ t: 4 Aug 1983 3P: 4 Aug 1983 NZ have not beer: veri fied against official records.; Parents: James ADAKSON (AFN:2HHK-GR) Jane "ORRISON (AFN:2HHK-RO ss: B=Baptized E=Endowed SP=Sealed to Pdrent~ SS=Sealed to Spouse ============================================================================================================================== ABOUT iHE ANCESiRAL FILE Ancestral File is a collection of genealogical infortation taken frot Pedigree Charts and Faaily Group Records subtitted to the Family History Department since 1978. The infortation has not been verified against any official records. Since the information in Ancestral File is contributed, it is the responsibility of those Mho use the file to verify its accuracy. If yeu find inaccurate infer.ation in Ancestral File, use the F3 Edit key to make corrections. Save the corrections on a diskette and lail the diskette to: Family Hi~tory Department Attn: Ancestral File Contributions 50 East North Tempie Street Salt Lake City! UT 84150 :==:====;====:=====;===================~============== ======================================================================== CopyrlQht # 1987, July 1996 by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. All rights reserved. U TAR HISTORY ENCYCLOPEDIA EDITED BY ALLAN KENT POWELL University of Utah Press Salt Lake City 48 BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS •1 Ab Jenkins's "Mormon Meteor" on Salt Flats. The Cutoff, promoted by Lansford Hastings as a faster and easier route to California, proved to be just the opposite for the ill-fated Donner-Reed party of 1846. A factor contributing to the Donner-Reed tragedy in the Sierra Nevadas was the delay the party experienced on the salt flats when their wagons became mired in the mud found just below the thin salt crust. Abandoned wagon parts from the party were present on the flats well into the 1930s, and the wheel tracks of their wagons were still visible in 1986 when archaeologists examined several sites associated with the party. The tragedy of the Donner-Reed party inhibited extensive use of the Hastings Cutoff as an overland migration trail. The salt flats did, however, yield scientific information to the expeditions of Captain Howard Stansbury in 1849 and of Captain J.H. Simpson in 1859, both with the U.S. Army Corps of Topographical Engineers. Fifty years after the Donner-Reed party slogged their way across the flats, the area's first use as raceway was conceived by publisher William Randolph Hearst in a publicity stunt. Hearst hired William Rishel of Cheyenne, Wyoming, to attempt a crossing on bicycle. Rishel completed the journey. crossing the salt flats in 22 hours. Early attempts to promote automobile racing failed until 1925 when Ab Jenkins, driving a Studebaker, beat a special excursion train by ten minutes in a race across the flats. Since that time the Bonneville Salt Flats have attracted racers from throughout the world and have become the site of numerous world land speed records. Their attraction for these racers is due to the hard, flat surface expanse-in an area so flat that from certain perspectives the curvature of the earth can actually be seen. See: Paul Clifton, The Fastest Men 01! Earth (1966); Dale L. Morgan, The Great Salt Lake (1986). Kevin B. Halloran Beck Bosone was born on 2 April 1895 to Chri ateus Beck and Zilpha Chipman Beck. who managed Hotel and the Pioneer Opera House in American The tall redhead early manifested oratorical abi considered a career in the theater but instead turned " ~.'~"''''F.' After receiving her education at Westminister and the University of California at Berkeley. 1rn",rri,'1'1 Harold G. Cutler in 1920. The marriage lasted year. She continued to teach high school in Delta Ogden until 1927 when she entered the University law school. She married classmate Joseph P. Bosone 1929. The couple had a daughter in 1930 and opened w offices the next year in Helper, Utah. They were divorced in 1939. Bosone lost her first case, but she gained recognition when she successfully defended two young men.in a well-publicized case of attempted rape. The resulting notoriety helped her secure a seat in the Utah House of Representatives in the Democratic sweep of 1932. The Bosones moved their law firm to Salt Lake City and Reva became a member of the "progressive bloc" of state legislators who sponsored New Deal reform legislation including a minimum wage and hour law for women and children. Bosone lost a bid for a seat on the Salt Lake City Commission but was reelected in 1934 to the state house. She cosponsored in Utah the Child Labor Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. which failed ratification. In 1936 she ran for a city judgeship and became the first woman to be elected a judge in Utah. She served three terms and supported efforts to establish adult alcoholism and rehabilitation programs. During World War II Bosone served on the Salt Lake County Welfare Commission and was chair of the Civilian Advisory Committee of the 9th Service Command of the Women's Army Corps, which covered women in eleven western states. She was appointed an official observer at thf 1945 organizing conference of the United Nations. In 1948 Judge Bosone was elected to the U.S. Congress. She served two terms, running in 1950 against Ivy Baker Priest, who later became U.S . Treasurer. While in Congress. Bosone became the first woman to serve on the Interior . Committee. Continuing to be outspoken and energetic. she I became involved in two major issues-reclamation projects and American Indian policy. Bosone worked behind the scenes for the Weber Basin Project and more covertly for the Small Water Projects program that included securing the terminal reservoir on Deer I Creek. She sponsored a bill which called for an investigation of the possibilities of Indians managing their own af- .1 fairs "without supervision and control by the Federal Government." The bill did not pass. but the momentum for , "termination" continued through the 1950s, resulting in a I policy which eventually proved disastrous to those Indian tribes. such as the Southern Paiutes. who were involved. Reva Bosone considered running for the Senate in 1952 EMMA LUCY GATES BOWEN .. Arthur Watkins, but decided to try again for the House. the plaster casting, the hand carving, and the windcampaign was as intense and bitter as many others across stairways. It was constructed on a rock foundation, and country in these years of Republican resurgence and "4::1h~atILlre:d adobe walls with a red pine roof attached with War paranoia. Bosone was smeared with false charges pegs. Bountiful was evacuated and its citizens sent receiving kickbacks and being a communist sympathizer. central Utah during the Utah War (1857-1858). As latter was related to her courageous vote against fund's Army approached, construction on the tabernacle halted and grain was stored in its foundation. It took six for the CIA. One of only four in the House to do so, explained that she was not willing to fund an agency to complete the structure. A two-day dedicatory serrefused to provide information about its use of on 14 and 15 March 1863 brought more than 150 visifunds. including many dignitaries. Brigham Young presided Her loss to William Dawson in the 1952 campaign left hile Heber C. Kimball offered the dedicatory prayer. The ountiful tabernacle remains the oldest chapel in continuous emotionally and financially drained. She went on to her law practice and worked as an office assistant. in the state of Utah. the return of a Democrat to the presidency in 1960 she On 14 December 1892 Bountiful was officially incorpojudicial officer of the Post Office, the highest rankby the territorial legislature. Joseph L. Holbrook served woman in that department. its first mayor. Bountiful originally included all of the Bosone retired in 1968 and spent the years until her death Davis region, but soon its area was reduced. In No1983 enjoying her family, maintaining a far flung corrember 1895 the Woods Cross and West Bountiful areas sbolndl~nce, being a willing speaker at political and commuto separate from Bountiful. Later, Centerville was inevents, and encouraging women to "raise more hell." Eventually Bountiful was reduced to an area lightly less than 10.5 square miles. See: Beverly B. Clopton, Her Honor, The Judge (1980). For more than four decades Bountiful remained a sleepy K.L. Mackay. community, but in the 1950s its close proximity to t Lake City made it an ideal residential community for commuters. Families started moving from Salt Lake City to the suburbs, causing Bountiful's population to more than double. Its demographics also changed, since many of is Utah's second settlement and was named for these new residents were professionals (doctors, lawyers, one of the ancient American cities described in the Book of educators, executives) who commuted to work in Salt Lake ormon. Bountiful was settled not long after Mormon pioCity. rs arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. Perrigrine Sessions Bountiful's growth continued throughout the 1960s and explored the Bountiful area just three days after his arrival. 1970s but slowed in the 1980s to only II percent. The 1990 Ij1 September 1847 Sessions gathered his family into their census recorded a population of 36,659 people, revealing agon and herded 300 head of cattle into the South Davis that Bountiful had fallen to the position of the second largest 81ley. Other families moved into the area and began plantcity in Davis County. Economic growth remains the city's g crops the following year. Fifty-three families had estabtop priority with downtown redevelopment as its major conlished farms in the area by 1850. cern. Because of 'repeated Indian problems, a fort was conItructed of dirt walls, three-quarters of a mile square, with See: Leslie T. Foy, The City Bountiful: Utah s Second Settletownsite being laid out within its boundaries. Each man ment from Pioneers to Present (1975); Charles Rendell Mabey, Our Fathers House: Joseph Thomas Mabey ( 1947). !from the area was required to put in a ten-hour day of labor toward its construction, and all settlers were urged to move Patricia Lyn Scott 'thin its fortified walls. Though the fort was never comI ~leted and its gates were not installed, portions of the walls EMMA LUCY GATES BOWEN , od until the tum of the century. , The settlement was first called "Session's Settlement," Emma Lucy Gates Bowen was born in St. George, Utah, 5 d later "North MiIl Creek Canyon," which was shortened November 1882, She was the daughter of Jacob F. and Susa '. "North Canyon." In 1854, the first post office was estabYoung Gates and the granddaughter of Brigham and Lucy hed and was named "Stoker" in honor of the settlement's Bigelow Young. Although she displayed an early musical nnon bishop, John Stoker. On 17 February 1855 the name precocity, she, did not study music until she was twelve, at ntiful was accepted unanimously by the people of the munity. which time she began taking both piano and violin lessons. At age fourteen she became the youngest winner in the pi,On 12 February 1857 ground was broken for Bountiful's ano competition of the Welsh Eisteddfod, held in the Salt ark five-spire LDS tabernacle. It was built at a cost of Lake Tabernacle. ltimately $60,000 using local materials and local labor. In 1898 she traveled to Goettingen, Germany, to study IUstus Farnham drew the plans for the 86-foot by 44-foot piano but transferred to vocal study, her first musical reo The best "rtisans and craftsmen were employed in · \:5osone<.) .,(Q..V~ r-8e..c k P.I Reva Beck Bosone Photo From Utah State Historical Society Files HER HONOR, THE JUDGE I I j , , I \\ the story of Reva Beck Bosone The [()W{l State University Press, Ames • 1980 BEVERLY B. CLOPTON --------~-- The Steady Begetting IN 1973 the dean of the College of Law at the University of Utah, Samuel D. Thurman, who has since retired from that post, wrote Reva Bosone, "You are my number one example of what women can accomplish in this world." To gain insight if not complete understanding as to why one woman combines so many of the winning virtues to enhance the quality of life for so many, it would be necessary to harken to her precursors. Reva's Great-grandfather Stephen Chipman (mother's side) and his wife, Amanda Washburn Chipman, were among the immigrants who began arriving in the Great Salt Lake valley during late September 1847, two months after Brigham Young made his July 24th pronouncement to his advance company (called the Pioneers): "This is the place!" The second contingent was described by Orson F. Whitney in his Popular History of Utah as including four large companies numbering 1500 men, women, and children, 560 wagons; and 5,000 head of stock. Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, had been assassinated in Illinois and Brigham Young had been made the leader of the courageous travelers. PHOTO; Tilt' Granl /loM. Aml'l'i((lll F/Jrk. Ulah. 20 Thl' Sleady Bt'jft'/1btl( 21 In due course, President Young directed the Chipmans, the Motts. and the Adamses (Maude Adams, the great actress. was a descendant) to inhabit an area that came to be known as American Fork. thirty-three miles south of Salt Lake City. The head of the Mormons was practicing polygamy, as he had before arriving in the Great Salt Lake valley, so the brethren who could afford it were taking extra wives, as their leader directed them to. although it was said there were those in the membership at that time who were not convinced of the rightness of the plural marriage precept. The advantages of this new religion were numerous: vigorous family participation. healthful doctrines. purported sainthood in this world. and the chance of reaching celestial glory in the next. But polygamy was something else-especially could it be ignoble and the greatest putdown for the first wife. Many wives cooperated, of course, but many never dreamed the "Principle" would eventually involve them! When Stephen announced one day that he had seen a pretty immigrant girl named Phoebe Davis whom he planned to marry and bring home, Amanda. of strong rockbound Massachusetts forebears. told him to go float a log. "You take an extra wife. Stephen. and come through the front door with her, and I will take my five children and go out the back door." Stephen did, and Amanda did, and never did the twain get together again. Her action was defiance of the institution of the Church in a culture with inhibited divorce laws. (Stephen. to his credit. did support his first wife and children.) Courage was in long supply for the Mormons, and problems-internal or external-had beset those whose lifestyle was radically different from the mores of the day. Historian Whitney said that Abraham Lincoln "was well-acquainted with the people who had founded Utah. having known them in Illinois, and they looked upon him as a friend. When asked, after his election in 1860, what he proposed to do with the' Mormons,' Lincoln answered: 'I propose to let them alone.' He compared the Utah question to a green hemlock log on a newly cleared frontier farm- 'too heavy to move, too knotty to split, and too wet to bum.' He proposed to 'plow around it.' .. One of Amanda's children, William Henry (Reva's grandfather), made himself wealthy in the cattle and sheep business. A widower with two children, he married Eliza Adams Filcher, daughter of one of the first school teachers in Utah. Eliza's family had emigrated from England as converts to the Church. but when her parents grew to realize they could not sustain a belief in polygamy. they deserted Zion for California. Prior to their departure. Henry had promised to follow soon with Eliza and the children. But an attractive girl on an immigration train of handcarts and 22 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE wagons gave a different perspective to his life and changed .Henry' s. min?; he made Sarah Binns his second wife and the enlarged famIly remaIned In Utah much to the everlasting regrets of Eliza's people in California. Eliza seemed to accept her life, however. She taught her husband and his second wife to read and write. Besides the care of her nine children, she accepted the responsibility of dividing the food and home supplies between the two households. At age thirty-eight she died with the birth of her tenth child, who succumbed with her. Meanwhile, back at the California ranches, Eliza's parents, three brothers and a sister prospered and were content in their new environme~ts of Auburn, Marysville, Pacific Grove, and San Francisco. Their progeny were fewer and accomplishments more pronounced. Her brother Joseph, for one (whom Reva is said to resemble), became a newspaper editor and later president of the State Board of Trad.e, represent~ng California at world's fairs. He disavowed his Mormon belIefs and demed his Utah residency because of polygamy. Reva's mother, Zilpha Ann Chipman, was number five in the family of nine and was but nine years old when her mother Eliza died. Sarah, her stepmother (or the other wife), bore four more than Eliza's ten; fourteen plus nine (one died) plus two (Henry's children from his fir~t marriage) made a houseful! Zilpha opined that she used to feel about as Important as a chicken! Nonconformity, as exemplified in Amanda and later in Reva, was showing up clearly in Zilpha, who was the only one of either set of children who did not become a devout Mormon. She continually recoiled at hearing, "If you see a woman you want to marry, marry her," or '.'If you see a man you want to marry, ask him." She d~mon~trat~d the Independence of progenitor John Howland who had arrIved In thIS country on the Mayflower. After being restrained from studying music at home, Zilpha received encouragement from a couple living across the street; they gave her access to their organ and she became proficient in organ and voice. Zilpha's father, though wealthy, did not subscribe to extensive education for his children, especially for his daughters, which resulted in his daughters' well-founded resentment later in their lives. His prejudice was most noticeable in his will, which specified that his daughters each receive 600 sheep but his sons were to receive not only more than 600 sheep each but also wealth of money and property. Ironically, the brothers' good fortune ran out in the economic panic of 1921 and the daughters enjoyed the affluence of the family. Zilpha matured believing that the development of a woman's mind gave her the edge in serving humankind. Although shy in formal education she was determined to improve herself, reading the Bible, Book of The Steady Begetting 23 Mormon and all the books of the Mormon doctrine, books on Buddhism and Mohammedanism, the Harvard Classics, H. G. Wells, Rousseau, Voltaire, Thomas Jefferson, and the newspapers, always. And for lighter reading her favorite poets were Robert Burns and Walt Whitman. Through strong-jawed discipline, she creditably educated herself. As she read, writers became her most admired class of people. She avoided novels, but relented, however, in the 1920s and read Main Street by Sinclair Lewis because she was told she resembled a main character. The dark-haired, gray-eyed Zilpha grew to womanhood gracefully. At a dance at the Opera House a handsome bachelor, Christian Mateus Beck, fixed his sights on the willowy Zilpha and demanded of a friend, "Make me acquainted with that girl with the pretty legs." Legs have always been exceptional in this family. Women for generations have been highly favored. The saying, "Legs, not diamonds, are a girl's best friend!" would be fitting here. Anyway, they stood Zilpha in good stead; in 1889, when she was twenty-one, she married Chris, thirty-three, who had not hurried his selection of a mate. They set up housekeeping in the wildly picturesque small town of Alpine, just north of American Fork. Alpine was chosen because of the Mormon bishop's aversion to polygamy. In fact, he was known to discourage the practice among the members, advising the husbands to take care of the wife they had. The Beck's first child, Clarence, was born in that foothill village. When a move to American Fork was contemplated, Zilpha offered for sale the 600 sheep left to her by her father so Chris, whose vocation was raising and training fancy horses, could buy a live!}: stable. In American Fork, Chris, who was handy with his tools, built a four-room house for his budding famil . Cnris's genealogy is rooted in Denmark, where Reva's Great-grandfather Jacob Stephenson Beck, born in Hune Hjorring, was a schoolmaster. Four of his eight children emigrated from Denmark as converts to the Mormon church: Frederic, Christian, Stephen Jensen Beck (Reva's grandfather, who was born in Salturm and was skilled as a carpenter) and a daughter, Lucy. Unbelievable adversity tagged her grandparents (Stephen and his wife Kirstine) after leaving their homeland in 1862 with their five sons, Jacob, Peter,Stephen, Theodore, and Christian (Reva's father). They made the fateful decision after listening to proselyting missionaries and were reinforced in that decision by Kirstine's conviction that they should abdicate their old way of life for a freer one in the new world. It was Kirstine, however, who felt the first flogging of fate. The ship on which the religious converts set sail, the Franklin, carried 600 passengers, and in that wash of humanity and discomfort in steerage 24 HER HONOR , THE JUDGE class, daily compromises with hopes and dreams must have been endured. Under those presumably cold, chaotic, restrictive, and always physically harsh conditions, Kirstine gave birth to her sixth son, August, who survived only briefly; malnutrition haunted that ship like an unknown sea monster. Besides lack of good food, an outbreak of measles proved devastating. Peter, Chris's older brother who was twelve at the time, related: "Over fifty deaths occurred during the sea voyage and as was customary at that time the bodies were rolled in canvas or burlap, weighted, and dumped overboard. I was a young boy and inexperienced, very homesick, and the impression made on my mind of this gruesome sight will never be erased from my memory." After the weakened family arrived in America they continued, via cattle cars, to Winter Quarters (now Florence, Nebraska), where they joined a company readying to cross the plains. Working their way past the country of the sly but generally friendly Pawnees and Sioux along the north bank of the Platte River, now known as "The Old Mormon Trail," most of the ablebodied, including Stephen and his barefoot sons, walked the thousand miles from the Missouri River to the Great Salt Lake valley. The Beck family then moved thirty-one miles south to Lehi. Having few resources, they could see that their lot would be marked by deprivation. The proposed fulfillments of the gospel made day-to-day hardships bearable. Great granddaughter Cora Beck Adamson relates an incident when Kirstine with several of her children spent long hours gleaning what heads of wheat they could,find in a field left by a farmer just to be able to make a loaf of bread for her hungry brood. Then along came the farmer and confiscated her meager bundle. Chris, at age eight, took charge of sheep at the Point of the Mountain, a windy remote bend in the straight route from Salt Lake to points southeast. The howl of the coyotes was unsettling to the gritty little boy, left on his own to stand staunch against the fears of the endless nights. The responsibility for the sheep was his contribution to the family's finances . Relieving the pressure of the solitude was the sight of an occasional stagecoach rounding the infamous bend in the distance and once an actual stagecoach robbery! The witnessing of that holdup made storytelling for his own children an exciting adventure. Stephen F. Beck tells how his father, Jacob (Chris's oldest brother), pitched hay barefoot all one summer and when he collected his due, which was paid in products instead of money, his tender consisted of one old sheep, a shotgun, and five gallons of molasses. And a bitter pill was the forfeit of one-half the molasses for a ride to his home in Lehi! Despite the religious influence that had resulted in the upheaval of spirit and body from everything familiar in Denmark, all was not placid The Steady Begetting 25 for Kirstine in Utah. After enduring trials more severe than can be imagined in a push-button society, she left the faith after two years, informing the missionaries that the Church was not as they had depicted it. The family then settled permanently in Alpine, six miles to the north, where Stephen built a stout house, still standing, and drove the mail route. Kirstine, over the years, gave birth to two more sons and one daughter- John, Dan, and Laura-the youngest two having the benefit of a substantial education which was then not the custom. Kirstine, who excelled as a seamstress, kept a rather casual house, blamed on the fact that she always had a book on her lap. But she was highly respected in the community and her children contributed much to the area's well-being. Several years after the move to American Fork, the Chris Becks had increased their family to include Horace and Reva. Wanting to build up the family income, Zilpha convinced Chris that they should invest in the Grant Hotel in American Fork, a large one for so small a town, which she would manage with the additional help of two cooks and three maids. Reva recalls at age three accompanying her mother on a visit to the hotel, which was built in 1890, when the purchase was being considered. It included a large lobby, a parlor, salesmen's conference rooms, a dining room, and twenty-five bedrooms. The previous owners had run the establishment into the red, so the Beck family moved into an apartment in the hotel to give it their full attention. Chris, meantime, had become the first manager of the Bell Telephone Company in town and the representative of Standard Oil Company in North Utah County. Zilpha's ability in hotel management and Chris's business acumen eventually netted the Becks a plenteous income. Fourth child, Filcher, named after his mother's prominent relatives in California, completed the family. By the time Reva was seven her mother and father had fortified their savings account, having built up the hotel to a prosperous status, so they decided to sell and move back to the fram e house, one-half block south. Two years later Chris built an eight-room pressed brick house beside the original home, but the family enjoyed its roominess and convenience for only four years because the Becks were forced to shift their residence back to the hotel in one of several similar moves caused by the buyers' mismanagement. Repeatedly, Mother Zilpha would pull the floundering hostelry from exhausted resources only to confront the same situation in few years. "Mother, with the business ability of the Chipman family, could roll out ten cents and have it come back twenty-five cents, always!" said Reva. William Gladstone wrote: "Any man can stand up to his opponents; give me the man who can stand up to his friends." The Becks could paraphrase the quote, "Give me the man who can stand up to his rela- 26 HER HONOR , THE JUDGE tives!" The relationship with the Chipmans would have to be documented in any biographical account of the Becks because of its impact on the family's life for several generations. In recent times, for example, with the exception of one cousin, Manda, certainly no overt support has ever been rendered Reva, the family luminary, by the Chipmans. Chris and Zilpha were leery of having the cousins privy to their income data, and rightly so, but they were helpless to do otherwise. While the hotel was prospering, Zilpha'scousins were operating the town's Big Red Store and the only bank in town. One day one of those cousins commanded Chris to sell the livery stable to a brother, Fon, or they would set up opposition. Zilpha, realizing they were being squeezed out of American Fork's livery stable business, called the cousin what he was. Reva says, "Mother and Harry Truman concurred in calling a spade a spade." Zilpha was not irrthe slightest impressed by the Chipman worldly goods. Chris felt compelled to sell, but being an expert carpenter, he and his wife agreed that he should construct another livery across town. In time, Fon found he was no match for the competition. Later Chris leased a comer lot across the street from the hotel and once again built a livery stable-for the convenience of the guests. When the ten-year lease expired, the bank cousins again called in Chris. They explained that they had a chance to sell the ground but if he wanted to buy it for $3,000, he had the option. In those days, $3,000 amounted to a bigtime double cross. Reva has a vivid recollection of her parents in agitated discussion at the hotel over this outrageous turn of events! "Chris, what about the lot back of the hotel?" Zilpha was pondering the size for a proposed livery. After a measuring job, they concluded it was big enough and Chris commenced to tear down the livery stable on the comer and build behind the Grant Hotel. The anxious expression on the faces of the Chipman cousins as they watched each two-by-four being yanked away is well etched in Reva's memory. The bank received the consequences-a vacant lot which remained that way for ten years! The Becks would have preferred to heed the old English proverb paraphrased, "If a man plays you a dirty trick, shame on him. If he does it the second time, shame on you." But the cousins controlled the only bank in town. Eventually another bank, Peoples State Bank, opened its door and the Becks then divided their deposits; however, the mouthwash of time, almost three generations, has not dissipated the bitter taste. Reva was just a tot when the Becks saw an opportunity to buy the Pioneer Opera House, an impressive structure with thick adobe-lined walls and an expansive stage, second only in size in Utah to the venerable Salt Lake Theatre. With roomy dressing rooms, a gallery, and an audience floor that could be raised to meet the stage level for town dances, then lowered to accommodate an orchestra, it had been the hub of all rn",",l1nitv ~ntertainment even before Reva was born. After the Becks The Steady Begetting 27 acquired it, Chris managed it successfully for fifteen years and renowned theatrical companies would schedule American Fork appearances there because of its eminent reputation. Throughout Reva's young life she danced, sang, and acted in hometown productions in this opera house. How did this shy girl whose hair and height made her so vulnerable rise above remarks such as, "Get in the back of the line, Red!" and "You big lummox!" to perform in public? The foremost reason was that Reva, being no dummy, knew she was good-far and away above the competition. Requiring little direction, she was classified a natural, adept at learning anything quickly-lines, dance steps, song verse. In fact, her memorizing abilities were judged phenomenal! When a woman vaudeville director visiting from New York heard that nine-year-old Reva had learned sixteen dance steps in one afternoon in preparation for an appearance before her, she urged her mother to allow Reva to accompany her back to New York City for a career in dancing, an offer Mrs. Beck sensibly declined since her daughter's heart was incapable of such strain. Reva's love affaip with the theatre was strengthened after an occurrence when she was twelve. Gilmore Brown, who later became famous as the manager of the Pasadena Playhouse in California, arrived in town with his company for an engagement at the Pioneer Opera House, Staying at Mrs. Beck's Grant Hotel, he bemoaned the sudden loss of one of his leading ladies who had left the cast of "Pygmalion" because of a death in her family. Brown's mother, who was acting as his manager, inquired of Mrs. Beck the availability of any local talent who could substitute on such short notice. Recognizing a golden opportunity for her only daughter she suggested Reva. "Why she's just a child-how could she?" Mrs. Brown was incredulous. "But she's tall," countered Zilpha Beck. "Arrange her red hair on top of her head and put her in a long dress-she'll look the part!" And knowing the drive of her multitalented offspring, she proclaimed, "I guarantee she will know the part by tomorrow night!" Mrs. Brown really had no options. Besides, she was intrigued, so it was a deal. With the supreme willpower this youngster possessed, she sequestered herself in her room until each line was performance perfect. And she carried it off with such finesse that Gilmore Brown suggested that Zilpha Beck send Reva to him for tutoring-wherever he was on the road, that is-after she had finished her schooling which was to include the American School of Dramatic Art in New York City. However, nine years later Reva lost her faculty for quick memorization, influencing her choice of another career. You,.,. Abilities Young Abilities THE TEENS INTRODUCED a new world; the stultifying self-consciousness disappeared as Reva's face showed beautiful beginnings and her body filled out in the appropriate places. Red hair became a distinctive feature. Freckles tended to fade, revealing a delicate complexion that was to her advantage a whole lifetime. A surprisingly vibrant personality emerged; free of cloying hangups, she concentrated on relationships with people. Soon she found herself with the lead reins in her hand, serving as Girls' Association president and vice-president of her high school, winning the first debating cup for her high schoo~ even directing the senior play-with the approval of the students-while taking the leading role! Academically, Reva learned easily and with her spirited, compassionate manner she related well to her instructors. Her first boyfriend, Bert Duncan, was also cerebrally well endowed-school was just a walkaway for Bert, who felt no necessity for home study even for top grades. PHOTO: A 16-year-oid "queen." 28 .. 29 The two students were ambling down the hill from American Fork High one afternoon. The building, looking down on the to\Y1l, hasn't changed much from the sturdy three-story red brick building constructed in 1912-except for a few additions to the east. It has other uses these days, but the expansive view of Mahogany Mountain, spread directly in front of Timpanogos to the north, and silvery Utah Lake, three miles to the south, is still there. And the same locust and maple trees stand at the entrance. This day the two teenagers, engrossed in conversation, looked down at their shoes shuffling in the dropped poplar leaves that frisked in the air at the motion. It was their once-a-day opportunity to settle the great issues of the world-often in heated argument. Bert, with six strapped library books slung over his shoulder, looked up and out toward the far peak of Mt. Nebo. "You have to remember the Greek citizen in the great age had to have a certain amount of leisure to pursue knowledge." "Sure, and do you know what Euripedes said?" "Tell me." " 'A slave is he who cannot speak his thought.' " Reflecting on the somber meaning, Reva added, "We never want to be slaves, Bert, to anybody. Submission to a potentate-how horrible! The ancient Egyptians were so suppressed." "In a world of the spirit," Bert explained. "Instead of in a world of reason." "Well, it can't happen here, Reva, in our democracy." "It would be more difficult right around here, anyway, in our Rocky Mountains," quipped Reva, "because rebels could hide out and absolute monarchs don't like that. They like a flatter land, they say, where they can watch over and whip their subjects into shape." "You have a point. You know, the ancient Greeks just loved life. Art .. ." "And sports," which led into a rollicking discussion of the Olympics. And quite suddenly they found themselves at the turning of their separate ways. "See you tomorrow." Now, walking solo, Reva caught herself up short and mouthed, "Huh, we didn't argue even once!" Having an insatiable curiosity, it is likely she drew the best from her teachers, one of whom was E. A. Morgan, one of those rare individuals students revere through their lives. Reva has felt gratitude that their paths crossed, she as his student. A tiny man with the inspirational grandeur of Mt. Timpanogos, says Reva, he instilled a devotion for English and American literature in his high school students that was hard to match in any college. He later moved to Brigham Young University, owned and operated by the Mormons, to continue his profession with in- 30 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE ordinate dedication. Unfortunately for the youth of Utah, he died just a few years later. Reva's first experience with sex discrimination arose when she ran for president of the school against one of the outstanding students, Marc Clark. The contest was tough-Reva assumed she was the first girl in Utah courageous enough to run for that high school office. The word "first" meant incentive, stimulus, ambition, and it carried a big stick in Reva's world. She witnessed fervent support in her campaign; even the townspeople got into the act with unprecedented interest and enthusiasm. Then Principal Whittaker, a kindly man but of the "old school," called a meeting of the candidates and leading students explaining in halting tones that it just wouldn't do to have a girl president. It would be just too peculiar, boys and girls! Reva elbow-poked her girl friend, "This is it!" The principal then outlined his suggestion as a compromise-Donald Vance (a third party) as president and Reva as vice-president. Whatever happened to Marc Clark in this wide sweep of the system Reva can't remember. Anyway, there was no arguing with an administrator who was staunch in his double-standard beliefs, so his suggestion/decision became final. Reva wasn't all that dejected because she felt confident of her influence among the students-eventually she would run the affairs of the student body, anyway! Hijinks are always an inseparable part of student life, whether they are streaking, stuffing phone booths, panty raiding, or other antics less flamboyant but more mischievous. The American Fork High School seniors arranged a party, sans chaperones (now a word from the archives), one night in the domestic science rooms. As it was ending the boys claimed they knew where there was a supply of chickens and would fetch them if the girls would cook them. One of the spokesmen lived near the high school and claimed the chickens belonged to his father. When they returned with fowl of tremendous size, the girls' suspicions were aroused; Reva and the others quizzed the boys, giving them a vote of doubt. The boys stuck to their story, however. But it was decided not to cook the chickens in school-in fact, not to cook them anywhere! After the party-goers debated all over town what to do with them, the chickens were ditched under a bridge, and mum was the big word! Next day the mayor of the town lodged a furious complaint that his prize chickens had disappeared. Seeing spills of blood at the school entrance and on the floor of the hall, the principal called a hasty conference of his top students for a grill session but no one squealed. When the heat was off, it was a boy who told and Reva says, "When anyone says a woman can' t keep a secret, that's eyewash. My experience proves the opposite!" Young Abilities 31 In her senior year, Reva supplied the high tone of the American Fork High School debating team. In the competition between her school and Lehi High, the subject: "Should the United States Have a Strong Military Set-up?" had Reva arguing the negative side. Her instructor made the comment before the event that if Reva got angry she would be victorious. And the debater, topped by shining red hair, obliged in about the middle of the contest, which prompted the teacher to exclaim to his wife, "We have now won the debate!" Reva's efforts clinched the silver loving cup for A. F. High. THE BECK family always considered American Fork more distinguished than most small towns in the country. A matter of pride, perhaps, but it does look up at the august Mt. Timpanogos (Sleeping Maiden), 11,750 feet high in the famed Wasatch Mountains of Utah. Its grandeur has inspired artists since before Pioneer days. On 1-15 from Salt Lake City, past the Point of the Mountain, are Lehi, north of which are the rugged Alpine Canyon and Box Elder Peak, then continuing south, American Fork, Pleasant Grove, Orem, Provo, Springville, and Spanish Fork, all running more or less parallel to Utah Lake and all firmly rooted in Mormon might and strength. U nti! just a few years ago these towns had a uniquely similar appearance; however, the building boom and the expansion of Brigham Young University have resulted in a rather drastic alteration of the contour of the countryside. American Fork, named after a fork in the local river, was settled by Mormons and reflects the energy of those folk who were responsible for the first indomitable industries that sprang up on the Wasatch Frontsugar beet factories, woolen mills, mines, banks, and department stores. One of the outstanding scenic drives in America is reputed to be on the American Fork canyon " loop." The smooth highway of today is quite different from the original road, but Reva's father, Christian Beck, took credit for assisting to design the forerunner of this majestically beautiful route. As the way winds upward, aspens send up their golden torches on a lush mountainside of oak brush and fir rouged by the crimson mountain maple. The granite cliffs of the craggy canyons brand this area The Rockies just as birches stamp the mien of New England. Living in a hotel may have given Reva a head start in her awareness of the intricacies of human nature. The large dining room with six at a table was a most appropriate setting for story swapping. Many times a redheaded youngster was on hand, listening with wide ears while loquacious salesmen and rough, tough prospectors gave verbal form to their exploits between bites of apple pie. The thought of mining prospectors, a genre generally removed from 32 HER HONOR , THE JUDGE the current computer culture, links Reva with the good old days. Many of the older prospectors were permanent guests at her mother's hotel. Old man Hawkins and old man Osburn, stalwarts of the mountains, were "big, strong, honest, moral, and profane!" And they spoke their minds! Old man Osburn joshed Reva one day on seeing her with a wide ribbon around her hair tied in a large bow above the forehead, " My God, do you have a headache?" No one knew why intelligent Mr. Hines preferred to be a hermit most of the year; he made the Grant Hotel his home when the heavy snows drove him out of the hills. And a bachelor guest, Mr. Dan, on his way to the local San Pedro station to catch a train would always swing Reva in the air, set her down gently, and present her with a whopping twenty-five cents, leaving behind an adoring girl. (After all, a night's lodging cost only 50 cents.) At times the employes rather than the guests provided the intrigue. A pleasant competent cook was found to be stirring up more than soup and biscuits. Chris reported to his wife that town gossip described the nefarious visits with men of all ages in her hotel bedroom at night. Well, scandal was certainly to be avoided, but the Becks could not fire their cook because of gossip-they needed proof. Her room was situated at the head of a flight of outside stairs, and, sure enough, by surreptitious observation one dark night of her clientele traipsing up and down those stairs, Chris decided the cook they were so fond of was expendable. But it wasn't without their regret and considerable embarrassment for the fiftyyear-old femme fatale. As Saki said in Reginald, "The cook was a good cook, as cooks go: and as cooks go she went." Another cook in the hotel's history, Mr. Parker, whose extracurricular life was not as involved as that of the lady cook of the night, was memorable for turning out the fancy cakes for Reva's birthdays; and Sena, one of the maids who was Reva's nurse when Mother Zilpha traveled to California, left behind kind memories. The strenuous profanity-and in the early rural surroundings of physically straining work and the never-ending duel with nature there was no short supply-never became pedestrian for young Reva. Although she loved those mountain men and took for granted their speech patterns, she found difficulty in condoning it elsewhere; as a young person, she stayed conservative. On being informed that a modern novel is shot through dozens of times with the word " fuck, " the old-fashioned Judge winces. Not only does she move away from obscene words and jokes, she dislikes seeing a girl flaunt the absolute line of the breast in a scant-cut, form-fitting dress. In her youth, the "ruffle front" was a standard, especially for the flatchested woman. Although an early snapshot of her in one of those unbecoming flaw- Young Abilities 33 revealing, low thigh-length wool bathing suits-undoubtedly clammy when wet-shows a most respectable figure with well-rounded proportions, Reva considered herself small busted and so a ruffle front in street dress became the perfect camouflage. Nowadays she hoots at the exaggerations considered "fashion" then. Years have mellowed her stance on profanity, too, and long ago she accepted the fact that well-meaning intelligent people may utter vulgar and foul language for no apparent reason. She grew tolerant in judging others while holding herself detached. The one indiscretion she allowed herself was the occasional'use of the classic "damn" and "hell" ; these remain her most potent words in a tense atmosphere. Used with the right timing, she says, these words are guaranteed to relax any uptight individual uncertain in mixed company conversational manners. Her liberal view on those two four-letter words evolved over the years, however, since she mentally condemned any contemporary who 'used them. But her attitude boomeranged. Once mistaken for being ten years older because bf her dignified and precise demeanor, Reva reacted like any other sixteen-year-old-with indignation. She did not want to be twenty-six, yet! THE YEAR before Reva graduated from high school, she and her future sister-in-law, Hazel, daughter of former Governor of Utah John C. Cutler, asked permission of their parents to take a summer trip to Yellowstone National Park. Reva was older than the high school student of today because of the later starting age in elementary school and because the family had moved to Salt Lake City one year, which had upset the grade classification. The girls considered themselves mature enough to be on their own. Both girls' parents shared an opinion that money spent on lavish clothes or whims was foolery while expenditures on books or trips for their educational advantage were worthwhile. Also heartily approved was attendance at theatre plays and musical events, and frequently the Becks would board the Interurban (or "Bamberger" train) for Salt Lake City and an afternoon or-evening of culture_Hazel's folks, living in Salt Lake City, always held a box at the Salt Lake Theatre. So the girls' wish was granted and Reva and Hazel, whom Reva referred to as her beautiful friend, were allowed to tour the park in a horsedrawn stagecoach, the last year of stagecoaches before the incipience of the automobile bus for tourist travel. It was also one of the last seasons when all the beautiful hotels were in operation. Since the auto buses "whizzed" through the park in three days, a few of those hotels were forced to shutter their windows and doors for lack of patronage. Deluxe accommodations and sumptuous food made each overnight 34 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE stay in the world's most famous national park. a glorio~s holiday, and the dress-up dances to a live orchestra every evenmg were Just what the teenagers ordered. On their return, the vivacious travelers agreed that a more pleasurable vacation did not exist. Mother Zilpha EARLY IN THE 1900s, sparsely sprinkled among the saturated populace of Latter Day Saints were the Protestants. It wasn't an easy life being a nonbeliever in a predominately one-church community, but Reva's mother was an example of the complimentary association with the church one woman could have-even standing alone. Her intelligence and sincerity impressed the townspeople who accepted her in the Church's activities. The Mormons, with a reputation for hospitality and kindness, were in turn respected by Zilpha Beck. The Chris Becks paid their assessments to the Church when the Second Ward chapel and the tabernacle were built, regarding the buildings as civic improvements. The goodwill on both sides was appreciated. Zilpha's daughter was always treated graciously and requested to present her dramatic readings at many missionary farewells and homecomings. Included on picnics and camping trips, Reva keeps a poignant memory of the Church's generosity during an impressionable period of her life. Fun-loving Reva, having escaped from her childhood cocoon of anxieties, was pulled into the nucleus of many groups. Her innovative mind never shut down. Once on a week's outing in PHOTOS: Zilpha Chipman Beck and Christian Mateus Beck. 35 36 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE American Fork Canyon with a number of girls of the Mutual Improvement Association, Reva and a coconspirator planned to overturn the tedium. So one night when all the vacationers were silent in their long line of beds on the screened porch, the two jokesters sprang out of bed shouting, "A rat!" Shrieks, screams, bedlam! Benightied girls leaped around on that porch as though it were a red-hot stove top. After a few noisy moments, someone noticed two of their members lying comfortably in bed laughing a lot and the others suddenly realized that tonight the joke was on them. Chuckling, they crawled into bed again and were soon asleep. But one wonders whether Reva's lifelong aversion to the rodent family is penance. Zilpha Beck was a member of the first order of pragmatists; her childrearing pr"inciples were unique and workable. As a child, Reva remembers being peeved at her mother one day,so with a pair of scissors she snipped off a hunk of her own hair above the forehead, quite sure it would cause consternation. But her mother played the entire scene like a dowager duchess, totally ignoring the flaunted ragged tresses; a daughter's simmering temper had to cool down all by itself and a hot head had to grow more hair. As a high school girl subject to the whims and fancies of teenagers, Reva wistfully remarked to her mother one spring day as she looked out the hotel window and saw three of her friends walking by, "Ruby, Reba, and Dorothy each have on a new silk dress. I don't have one and yet we can afford it more than they can!" Her mother responded, "Well, I believe in dressing up the mind." This remark, which was to linger all her life, pacified Reva who had been assured she would be going away to college while her friends would not. Mother Zilpha, surely an early advocate of the principles of women's liberation, operated a tight ship regarding her children and attendance at college. No question about it-all four were scheduled for complete educations! When friends, in the early part of the century, expressed puzzlement at sending a daughter to an institution of higher learning, Zilpha would reply, "You bet I am! Too many women have to make their own way and rear children who are not prepared to do so." Zilpha, being the dominant member of the Beck duo, took the initiative in child-rearing principles. Although they would announce, "My children are not going to work for the other guy," the Chris Becks as employers and landlords let their sympathy run with the employe and the one who had to rent. Fairness and equal opportunity were key words in their family; they forever championed labor's rights. The Equal Rights Amendment would have set well with Zilpha. In her estimation there was no separate man's work or woman's work; it Mother Zilpha 37 was everybody's work. Many times, for instance, her sons were put to the task of mopping the hotel floors when the maids were too weary, or Reva was appointed to change the faucet washers. Rap sessions at the dinner table were to be counted on and every family member became involved. Chris and Zilpha, well informect on the news of the day, praised Teddy Roosevelt for his courageous and progressive legislation and, over the years, Senators Norris of Nebraska, Johnson of California, Borah of Idaho, La Follette of Wisconsin, and, on the local scene, Governors Cutler and Bamberger. And those who had failed to carry out a public trust were noisily denounced-"elevated scrub" were two well-polished words in Zilpha's vocabulary. Subjects of numerous discussions, public lands and power would absorb as much as three hours at the dinner table. In matters of discipline the offspring received their share but they were never hush-hushed, so they felt safe in saying whatever was on their minds. Reva was present when her mother lay in bed recuperating from an illness; brother Horace came in to talk and included a dirty story he had picked up on the corner. A neighbor visiting Mrs. Beck at the time expressed shock that a mother would permit her son such an indulgence, and Zilpha replied, "How else would I know what the young people are talking about up on the comer if my sons didn't feel free to tell me?" Zilpha also encouraged her brood to attend the church of their choice for the moral values and self-control stressed. And at the dinner discussions Reva's ideas rated as high as the boys'. Consequently, they grew up with respect for each other, a healthy regard for women's abilities, and a tolerant view of churches. Having grown up in that atmosphere, Reva has declared in public life, "Show me a man who has a smart and intelligent wife or sister or mother and I'll show you a man who believes in the ability of women. Generally speaking, men who refuse to recognize a qualified woman on their staff or as their opponent or in public office suffer from an inferiority cOIl!plex. Show me an intelligent man and I'll show you a fairminded one." Reva's father was one who respected an intelligent and enterprising woman and he always conferred with his wife whenever business changes were in the offing. Although occasional chuckholes pitted the smooth road of their marriage, the union was firmly based on mutual admiration. To KEEP in step with progress, Chris Beck made necessary changes in the opera house by installing new seats for the first motion picture theatre in town. Shortly thereafter, a townsman wanting a piece of the profitable action set up a similar but smaller operation. He just happened to be a livery stable competitor. ~01.o71 38 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE Reva had been enrolled as a student at Westminster College in Salt Lake City just three days when she received the crushing news that the opera house had burned to the ground! With eyes filled to overflowing she learned that at three in the morning a man had screamed outside the Grant Hotel, "Mr. Beck, the opera house is on fire!" The Becks awakened to brilliant orange and red flashes piercing the black sky. The heavens were lightning bright. Chris and Zilpha threw on their clothes and dashed to the site just down the road from the hotel where furious flames were lashing from the roof over the stage-the huge stock of scenery was plainly enriched fodder for the ravenous blaze. The owners could do nothing but stand by helplessly with aching hearts. The friend who had alerted them reported that he was passing the building and smelled smoke. After investigating, he found the back door ajar. The fire was pushing toward the ceiling of the stage and he smelled kerosene! As Zilpha watched the fiery demolition of the beloved structure, the man she suspected of arson returned to the scene of the crime and spoke to her. "You did a good job!" she cried. He merely turned and walked away. The heavy bare walls-all that was left after the holocaust-became part of a large garage and later were converted into store space. It had been more an institution than a building, Reva says, "seasoned with innumerable sweet memories." Gone forever is a tradition now only tucked away in affectionate sentimental remembrance. Westminster College figures prominently in Reva's life-it was there that her career goal veered from one direction, acting, to another, public service. She, who had been blessed with an ability to recite from memory material she had read only once or twice, found that in attempting to learn her part in the school play she not only was unable to accomplish this unusual feat but she was unable to memorize-period! A professor at the University of California later explained this as not uncommon when young minds are overloaded with intensive mental activity and concentration; Reva had amassed eighty-one credits, or the equivalent of three years of study, in two years. At last her love of learning had been her undoing. At least in a sense. In another respect, an observer might say that her profound ability, exhibited lifelong, to ad\ib-a staple for a statesman and politician-was compensation. In the fall of 1974, Westminster began its 100th year and its centennial celebration. The institution had been established to provide high school and junior college education for Protestant young people in the Utah Territory, but today the four-year college is interdenominational. A recent newspaper article carried plaudits from the Judge-she has long advocated the college's present policy: Mother Zilpha 39 Westminster's innovative alternative degree program evaluates a person's total life experience and awards credit for specific, documented learning experiences acquired throughout the individual's lifetime. It recognizes off-campus learning and growth and, supplemented with personalized on-campus classes, makes possible the attainment of a college degree. During her first year at Westminster, which was housed in just two buildings-Ferry Hall and Converse Hall-Reva won the Fourth Annual Prohibition Oratorical Contest (worth $15) sponsored by the Third Presbyterian Church with her oration, "Temperance in Utah," perhaps a presentiment of her history-making program in the field of alcoholism. Publicity of her award showed paradoxically a photo of a sweet, wideeyed, beribboned Reva accompanying a report of the prize oration, which was packed full of fire and pathos to the last paragraph: As we scan the pages of history, it is shown where empires have passed away, nations have been forgotten, and great cities have been swept into oblivion. Reform upon reform has been established but yet intemperance goes on, the deadliest scourge that has ever darkened the pathway of man. The kingdom of alcohol has had control of the world to a certain degree since the time of Noah. Every generation ~nd stake of civilization has known the sting of such a pestilence, and It has been left to us of the twentieth century to stand firm and united in the effort to propagate the greatest moral issue of the ages. . . . But the evils of intemperance do not stop with the moderate drinker. If we should paint the black pictures of the thousands of drink-cursed homes in our cities we would be called radical. In truth we glance at one that is typical. See-the stormy night, the wan, worn-out mother nestling her dear ones close to her, who are tugging at her faded dress for bread-no home but a hovel-no clothes but rags-no warmth but in the cold stove. All at once the mother sits up frightened, she hears an unsteady shamble, a bang at the door; .the husband-the father-staggers in. He is drunk. What inspiration is there for that family to live on when their very support has been wasted and shattered by that demon called alcohol. . . . But what is the state of Utah doing for the unfortunate baby tugging at the withered breast of its broken-hearted mother whose husband has been coaxed to nurse an appetite for alcohol dispensed by virtue and under the protection of the laws of Utah? . . . When the prohibition petition was presented to the legislature in 1913, it wa~ absolutely ignored, although the majority of the people were speakmg through the sacred right of petition. However, in 1915, the le~slatur~ ~ucceeded in passing a prohibition bill by an overwhelmmg ma)onty; but through some boss-ridden fluke in the Utah statutes, the governor was able to defeat the sovereign will of the people. And when the women of Utah sought to be heard, the same 40 HER HONOR, THE JUDGE bi-partisan persons turned the deaf ear of an adder to the appeal of the destitute women and children_ . . . The liquor clique of this state is a composition of ignorance, selfishness, avarice and stupidity to be equalled only by the same composition to be found in the hills of Kentucky, converting God's golden grain into hell's legal tender. So, if you want to be a hearty supporter of everyone and everything that is corrupt, and of the poor houses, asylums and prisons, patronize the breweries, distilleries and saloons by allowing them to live. It remains for those who seek a higher degree of civilization, a better humanity, and a stronger love for God to put shoulder to shoulder, break the shackles of bondage, and stop the onslaught of alcoholism. A recent reading of the over-sixty-year-old oration set off explosive hoots of laughter from the Judge. "I'll tell you, Carrie Nation had nothing on me!" Little did the world-or Reva-suspect that the future proponent of Alcoholics Anonymous had been the unwitting victim of alcohol in her own past when, as a teenager, she had regularly gulped down her spoonsful of Peruna for anemia. The patent medicine, a brownish liquid, was found to be a goodly percent proof! In June 1917 Reva graduated from the junior college with which she associated a few traumatic memories but also many touching ones of forming special friendships and achieving top grades. In August she entrained for the University of California at Berkeley, an institution long revered by her mother. Zilpha Beck had envisioned one of her children becoming a UC alumnus ever since she had visited with her Uncle Joe Filcher in California. Clarence had degrees from Brigham Young University and the University of Utah. Horace, enamored of the stage, had become a song and dance man on Broadway for a short time-perhaps the only male from American Fork to make good on Broadway. He had also been a player on the Ellison-White Chautauqua system. After returning to Salt Lake, he took his law degree at the "U." Filcher, the youngest, was later slated to study at Westminster and the "U." So it was Reva's destiny to fulfill her mother's dream. Reva stayed the first night in Berkeley at the Shattuck Hotel, the Hilton of its day. That evening, suffering from a severe cold, she remembers applying for medication at the hotel drugstore. As she was waiting by the counter, a distinguished-looking man inquired whether she would be a student at the university. Hearing that she would, he kindly expressed the hope for her happiness there. Even though groggy from the effects of the cold, Reva, greatly impressed by his hospitality, kept an eye out for the gentleman who was Mother Zilpha 41 stamped in her memory. During the orientation days that followed, she discovered the gracious stranger was none other than the president of the university, Benjamin Ide Wheeler. One Saturday afternoon on campus, as she approached the Campanile, she was stopped by President Wheeler, whom she recalled as handsome as he sat on his sleek black horse. Their lengthy conversation overwhelmed Reva who was conscious of the compliment this erudite educator/administrator was paying a mere student. Soon after arriving in Berkeley she applied at the registrar's tables, which were set under the trees on the university grounds, and found that a clerk had slashed her three-year credit accumulation to a sophomore rating. At the moment, Reva had the slight consolation that most of the transfer students' credits were being cut-even those from Smith College-and she didn't mind too much not being rated a senior. But to be demoted to a sophomore was shattering! That night, in a strange city with no friends, she struggled with pent-up emotions. The thought of three more years when plans for her life were bursting to be tried, let alone the difficulty of the extra expense, was bearing down on her like a rockslide. The sympathetic manager of Chapelhurst, a women's dorm where Reva had moved from the hotel, encouraged her to call the registrar at home. After raking up the nerve to phone him, she explained her predicament in despairing tones, and he suggested that she meet him in his office the following morning at eight 0' clock. In the morning the queue of students waiting to see the registrar extended from his office three flights down and to the entrance of the building. When Dr. Wood saw Reva through the glass-paneled door, he motioned her in and asked his secretary to inform the waiting line that because of his indisposition, the students should return the next day. In his ill health, he decided to see only Reva. She then showed him the catalog of Westminster College, of which he had never heard. She pled her cause with great effect, giving hint of her forensic expertise of the future, and Dr. Wood became one of the many to look upon Reva Beck as a talent out of the ordinary. He made her a provisional junior. She knew she would prove his faith in her, making the grade with her customary ease; since then Westminster students have had no problem matriculating at UC. A professor who impressed Reva with the clarity of her high school teacher, Morgan, was Charles Mills Gayley, an authority on Shakespeare. Even though his class drew hundreds of students, the warmth and sympathy of his personality embraced every student before him. A tall man with large, expressive brown eyes, it was said that he bought so many United States bonds that he couldn't afford new clothes, appearing day after day in the same shoddy green suit. "On my membership certificate, 'The Mayflower Descendants of 42 HER HONOR , THE JUDGE America' the signature of Charles Mills Gayley is there as an officer in the California organization," Reva said. "When I practiced law in Salt Lake City, I often looked up at the framed certificate which brought back fond memories of a great man at the University of California. "One never knows just how much the contact with inspirational human beings means to a young person," Reva affirms. "I have always felt that these particular men set valuable examples in my life-that my work and decisions may have followed unconsciously the light their image shed on my life as a young person. How can one measure the value of that touch of warmth and sympathetic gentle intellectuality that doubtlessly trickled down to every student on the campus at that time? It isn't the facts one learns in school that are important, but the interpretation of those facts by a spirit who understands their worth." One who in a few years hence would be regarded as a distinguished teacher was summing up the influential effects of her favorite educators. The period spent at the University of California was memorable, too, for a severe affliction; Reva was not left out in the national flu epidemic, which was responsible for widespread devastation of life and comfort. Reva's bout was especially enervating, perhaps because her health status during her youth always fell short of being hale and hearty. The heart condition was not pampered but contemplated in her daily routine; anemia was a hindrance to sustained physical activity; and a susceptibility to colds and chest infections would occasionally cause her much distress. During her illness at UC, dormmates demonstrated much devotion, caring for her night and day. Eileen Bowling and Kathryn Collins were singled out as special friends with whom Reva has corresponded from Woodrow Wilson days to the present. And although she had seen another college friend only once since 1919, she exchanged Christmas cards every year with Grace McMinn, the girl who didn't bother to wear a mask when she nursed Reva fifty-nine years ago! After the summer break at home, the well-dressed senior was waved off to UC again by several relatives at the Union Pacific depot in Salt Lake. A snapshot of the day shows her wearing a jacket cut to midthigh length, a matching walking skirt ten inches above ground topped by a silk waist accented with a chain and pendant, a wide crowned velvet hat, and pointy shoes. In evidence were sailors and doughboys in transit; the Armistice was three months in the future. Resuming her studies and establishing a good record for her final year, Reva returned to Utah from the prestigious university with her sheepskin denoting a B.A. and infinite hopes in the summer of 1919. Teacher-Then Student HAVING BEEN ADVISED by her oldest brother to put on a few years before tackling the profession of law, which would lead her into the process of legislation, Reva decided to teach high school after she obtained her undergraduate degree. Offered contracts without solicitation at American Fork High and Westminster, she chose the former for its proximity to home. And the hometown girl, supported by an enthusiastic principal, soon felt exhilaration in. teaching side by side with her former instructors. A year of teaching classes in English, gym, and public speaking and directing school and community plays passed pleasantly and quickly-in her public life, that is. In her personal life she was weathering some turmoil. Late in the summer of 1921 a marriage of one year between Reva and Harold G. Cutler went amiss. A brother of her sister-in-law Hazel, Harold was a tall, attractive young man Reva had met while of high school age, but although both were of admirable character, even a casual observer could note that PHOTO: High school teacher, Ogden, Utah. 43 JOB _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Smith Hyatt Architects SHEETNO. _ __ 845 South Main Street BOUNTIFUL, UTAH 84010 (801) 298-1666 FAX (801) 298-1677 _ _ _ _ _ OF _ _ _ _ _ __ CALCULATEDBY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ _ __ ttLcWmLJ... .. . CHECKEDBY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ _ __ SCALE 1.] ................ . ,. . . . . . . .. ......... ,....,.. TiL ...... . ..... , ........ ..... . · .,- ICleftw.,~Lt$·J . ~iW","~ · ,p~4++i·~ · i ,,~·· ·;eJ~·· . . . .'.<a. . . . ~.. .~... '. . ... .~ :. .... ...:. J.•.~ ...:.. ... ~... .~ .:-= : l:.. ;.·. i l.. ~u.·..: ~.!L! . ~ : ~ "j I j1 "L·T~·j· ; • j . . - . . II . . "tcly .r~~~r i . . 0~: ~~: ~ ~ .dtaU. S~'J~L ([~Ukck\~, ~~~t-~~ I~R~~ t. ......... ~ . . . ~~~c..-? ; I~7.."$ : . .. .) .. , ............. .... PRODUCT2Q4-1 ISingIeS/lOOls) ~I IPadded) /-7., '«... GrokJn. _. OI 47 1. ToOn!trPlOiETIlUFREE 1-IIO-22H380 ............... ·. . . ......... ... : L · . 0 => \)t) :::E u eI> E. J. WARD & SONS CO. All Kinds of Planing Mill Work, Stairs &Store Fixtures 160 R. L. POLK 8c ::I I:) CI ALPINE - • o a: = e» om =9 ~Z AMERICAN FORK e» E c o = CIRCU LARS ADDRESSED W R I T E MAILING R. L. POLK &CO. LISTS OF SALT LAKE CITY ALL KINDS SPANISH FORK~<'-YY UTAHl?~) UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER Phone 169 PROMPT CALLS DAY AND NIGHT AMERICAN .... -= Jo h n T . S pencer C<'.'S Iy 1I(~\\'S IJ[I\Jf.'I' -- TIJe Citizell, Exp \\ 'e lls Fargo &, Co untl Alllcrican. 1\ lO\\'1I in the Ilurlhl'rll parL uf Tel \V U. • Lung dif;Lunce Lele_ N CQ LJ ta II Cl)un ty, JU IIIi1es !:iUU theasl jlll/llle s(~l'\·ic(' .. Jus 11 Clurke, IJosLeI> ~ '.I f Salt Lake Cily, 20 Illiles nfJrth- master. C I:) .: ..c \\"I~st 1)[ 1'1'UHI, (h e cuunty S(!ut alld ALel Mrs Mary E, CiLy Trca s , Cily nil I:) c. !J IlOl'l It of ,\mel'ican 1"llrk (he eI> 1I a ll. Q; bankillg alld s hipping' lluiJlI.. Lung ,\UUIlI SUll 1\rthUI' C, p llllur . E I - db(allce ll'lepi1ulle anu a local ex eI> e lJall g·p. ""pIJlatiIJn 7UO, Mail Adalll>;1I1I Mary (wid lJyrum), (;() I til'. en .; daily by II F j) fI 'UIlI AnlL'I'ic un .\dkill >; E L (LIJ!:r ie Hou se) . CD . (I) !:'tH'k. ~ AIl'lIlc Publishillg Cu The , L \V .... Uaisl'lIrd IllgT, IJulJs Thc Cili~ ,\lpiJll~ CI',~allll' I 'y CU,.J J Deck pr es, ZC!II, Lt:l1i Halillcr aud Pluas~ Alpine AnluO'('IIII.'llt Cu, J .J Heel;. alit Gruyc Hevicw. u prc;,;, Geo Dunsdun scc -lI'cu!:i . Stake (L D S), E J Clayson :a Betk J .J, pres ,\Ipin e CrearlleI'Y Alpine elk. ;a. Cu and llla yur', Alpine SLake Tabernacle. CO Burgess Oeo E , juslice of peace. AlIlcrican Express Co, G \V Mc~ Carlisle Lincoln, hotel. I>()nalu agL, S P, L A & S L Clarl, Fred & Suns, liye stock. Depulo l&J Debois lOco, prill Alpine School. DUllsdon (Jr.'o, f;cc-treas Alpille AMERICAN FORK BAKERY, D H U II cy\\'uuu Prupl', The Sallitary Z Amusement Co. Baker'y, HeadquarLers for e:( Fork Arthur, orchestra. Good Things Lo Eat, Full Line FULLMER BENJAMIN, Bishop L of Confectionery and Pastry _ ::> D S Church, COlltraeLur anu Goods, "(JualiLy and a Satis~ Builucr. fied Customer" Uur Mollo, U f/) Hall E E, 11I1, s nlilh. Tel 1 U. Z Hcaly Brus, liYe sLuck. American Fork Bollling \Vk s, H S - Lillie J Z eX Sons, cunLrs. ltaslTlussen propl'. Q) ,~ l\lcDaniel F 0, town treasurer. American Fork Co-operative In~ III l\lain &. Sons, live stock. stituLion, \V H Chipman pres .... 0 Marsh Jos F, iJarber, Hans Christensen v-pre s M ...... Z Marsh &. Sons, gen mdse. E B e zzant sec, J H St~rrs SlIlith Bro s , li ve stock. treas and mgr. Slrong D C (Alpin e Creamery Co) . AMERICAN FORK DRUG CO Al~ ... Strong Fred, town r e corder. phonso Chipman Pres' and .... I Yance Jas \\T, Lishop Alpine \Vard. Mgr, Wholesale anu Hetail, C f/) _ Walton T H,_ cal'l'ier It F D.__ __ __ _ Prcscription Specia li sts If ils in lhe Drug Line we Have it, Tel 5. (See adv). American Fork Opera House C G Purrington mgr. ' C W Population 3,300. An incor- ArncI'ican Fork Post Officc, J H _ porated town ill the northcrll part Clarke, postmaster, e" of Utah counly on the Salt Lake Amcr'ican Fork Public S c hool Lie:( Bu ule , Sail Lake ,\ Utah and lJ eX Lrary, E A Nielsen librar'ian. e" It G R R, 12 miles northwest of Anderson Bros (Warren and I- Provo, the county seat. !las L f) S Stephen), undertakers. a: and Presbyterian e hur ches, good Anderson Carl, wool growcr. puhlie s c hools, a hank, sevcml Anderson Stcphen (Anderson ~ f'ub"tanlinl sto r es e lc , and a weekBros) . c :5! ·S 1915 -Ito ~ILI~""..!....- FORK DIREOTORY-1915-16 . 161 American Fork Drug Co. DRUGS AND SUNDRY ARTICLES EASTMAN KODAKS AND EDISON TALKING MACHINES TELEPHONE SUPPLIES AND SUPPLIES AMERICAN 5 FORK, UTAH Alldersoll \Val'l'c n (Allderson BLOOMQUIST BROS (INC) (Axel and Ellen H '1' ), Paints, Oils, Brus ) . Ulass, Vamishes, \\'all Paper Apollu lIall, Earl Varlley lllgr, etc, PicturE'S ant! Pic[ure Bakcl' lOeo '1', apairisL Frames, Tel 2i- W, (SeE Balik uf A!llCrican Furk, Jas Chipp 1(2 ) . . I!lall pres, Jas Chip!lJaIl jr v - BLOOMQUIST EBEN R T (Bloom· pres , \\' S Chip!lJan cashr, quist Bros ) . Bates Benj, ea\'1'iage mkl'. Boley Elisha II, grocer and meats BECK CHRISTIAN M, Livery, Fee BoIl'Y Warren C (Buley & Buck, untl 'l'1'ulIsl'ei' ::>talJles, Tels . 23-W nnd 23-J. (See adv) . Boleywaller) & BuckwalLel' (\\' C Bolcy Bcck eJal'CllCe M, lawyer. A \V Buckwaller), woo Beck Jacob, live stock. grower·s. eCK 1\11'S Zilp.hia CGmn[ lolCl) , Briggs Lawrence H (Briggs Phar Bl'zza nL !\1:u'k 1<:, sec , '\11)(11' Fork macy Co). Co-op lnst. Briggs Pharmacy Co (L II Briggs Binns John, live stock. Bromley Lue, asst postmaster. Binns HuLt, li ve stock. Bromley Willis 1\1 , marshal, Cit BLOOMQUIST AXEL (Bloomquist Hall. 13l'os) , Papcr lIangcr and BROWN FRANK M, Druggist, Pre DecoraLor, Sign \\' I'iling and scI'iptions Carefully Com AutOllJobilc Painting- a Spec pounded, Toilet Articles ially, OlIice E Main, Tel 24- \V Cunfecliollel'Y, etc, 36 EMail Hes County I'd COl' 5th East, Tel 65, r 31 N 1st East, '1', 'J'eI7!l-J. (Seep 1( 2). 113. C. M. BECK Livery, Transfer and Feed Stables HANDSOME, COMFORTABLE Telephones 23-W and 23-J. Ch~s. AND STYLISH TURNOUTS AMERICAN FORK, UTI Peterson, SIGNS ONE 20 Richards St. Salt Lake City OR 10, 0 00 \~\r'l~ ."'a W• H• RAY ..,... .- - . --_. _ - - -- ;! ALPINE Real Estate, Loans, Farms, Ranelles, Renlals 182 W CENTER ST. -- Iff",d ,'lIhlil: sdwuls. lwu hanks, several slJiJ :d lllltilil sl"!'t.'~. (·Lt', it WI!ckly IIcWslt:lvcr. Telephone 74-J. Carll!le Unroln. h(ltel. SHOP, CHURCH ST. ~an L.ake Glly, ~o (pi::, Hates 8enJ. mayur. Clark Fred 6; Son~. Jive stf)f:k. CLARK JAM.I HI POllm ••ter. (Jebols (ieo . prln AII,lne Sr.hl. rJ6vey Laurence, lfen mdse. FfJrbes Arthur, ul'l'h(' stra. /laU E E. blksmlh . Healey \Vm, constabl~. ifp.aly Bros, Jh'e stock. Little J Z I: Sons, ('untr!. ~(cDanlel .~ 0 , town treasurer. ~::~~h ~o~O~,sb~~b~r~tOCk, Marsh &: Son s, gt'n m,lge, 8ro~ , Ih'e stork. Stronl' Don C, pre! Alpine (.;I'earner-y. Strong "rank, Justice, Strong rre(l, town recorder. Vance Jas \V, bishop Alplnp. \Vard. ~~~~~g~. ~NI;'J~,I:t~f~!. F 0 , f:omlth AMERICAN FORK population 3,300. An Incorporated town In northern part of Utah rounty on the Salt Lake Roule. Sail Lake I< Ulah and D I< 1\ 0 R R t 2 rnlles north,,'est of Provo, the county seat. nas LOS and Presbyterian churches, AME~I~eA~.~ft~~ ~~~:~~ J:''::':;t:r,:,,~J; r.~~:~,/W~f~i~.tf' .r~i~f r.~I(I~~~:~!~~~r.art~~ 'llul II S;lIl~rh·tI ClIstlllllel'" 0111' Mutto, Tel 27-1 . .'",ert f:ltn Fork Bottling \Vk ~ (II S HasIIIlIlSlil'n). AMERIOAN FORI( OO-oPERATIVE IN8TITU- TION, \V H I:lllplII,lII I're3, II rm ~ Chl'l:'tensen V-Pres, M E Benant Sec, I H ~:~r~T(!~~t~n~~:~'tlt~~k~ f~I~I~I~';d ~~: American Fork Garage (Paul Vun lJyke) . American Fork lIIg-h S,.- honf, P 'I Nielsen prln, Ameri can Fork Post omt:(I, J II 1: lal'kr. post- mastel'. AMERICAN FORI( 8HOE REPAIRING CO (Geo H \Vehb. ,..:dwd J;fJt llh I.• Expert Shoe Repalrlnr. Model'n Machinery. ~h~s n eel ll'eel While You \-Vult, !'tllthtnl' lJut est of Material UHeli. Anderson Bros ( \VatreD and Stephen), undertakers. Anderson Carl, wool grower. Anderson Stephen (AnderSOn Bros). Anderson \Vorren (Anderson Bro~). Apollo HaU, Earl varney rnrr. Aydelotte J P, water lupt. Baker geo T, aplarlot. . Bank or American Fork. lU Chipman pres, Jas Chipman Jr v-pres. W 5 I;hlplJlan cashr. Phone 18-W. P. O. Box 155. WE GO ANYWHERE, ANY TIME, AND PHOTOGRAPH !'NY THING FOR ANY.ODY, AND 8ATI8FY EVERYBODY. U-Need-A Photo Art Co. YOUIt PHOTOGRAPH DAY OR NIGHT, RAIN OR 8HINE. EXPERT KODAK FINISHING. BaUatacUon Quarant.Md--llalr.e the Appointment To-d.,. 110 Ea8t MaIn Street.--Oppoalle Stake Tabernacle. AmerIcan Fork, Utah. EDWIIII S. POULSON, Photographer. COISOLIDITED WA801 & MACHIIE CO. Agrlcullural MachInery. 255 WEST CENTER ST. Carrlage8 and Wagon. PROVO, UTAH Phone 8S8 PROVO, UTAH AMERICAN FORI( DlREOTORY-1917-1S. TIlt: CItIl.{!II, E_xl' \\'d l ~ FIII'gu &: Co and Alllel'h'IHI, Tp,1 \V p, 1.1I115f fli:-4t:IIlf'1! tel· el,hullI! :O;('n'il'c. Jus II Clar'kf!, ".,:,tiflasler. mll(!s northwest or Abel MI':J Mary E, Cit}' Tl'clI:oJ. City lIall, I"'(J\'o, the f;ounty seat Ilnd ~ north or Arnerkan Fork the banking and shipping point. :~~:~~~o~ ~~ nrLO~~I~lfJ!rS~)I.n), cunCI'. I.ull« dl~tance teJe{)hone and a local ex- AII,lne I'ubllshlnl' Co The, L \V Gaisford "harilre. Uas L IJ S church. l'opulaUon mlCr, l)Ub~ The CIUzen and !'leRsant 75u. :\1_11 dilly by R F IJ rrom American (it'uVe Hcvlew . • ' 01'11:. Stare tu Anlt,' tlt'." "'ork Canyon. I H Clark, Po~tma!ter . ~:&:~: ~:~hkO:1 sJ)~g ~I J \~1!~'~~ns~f~: . AlpIne Stake Tabernlcle. Alpine Creamery. (I G SU'onr pl'es. ;\ tuwn. se tlh:d tn 1853, In 'he lIor\hel'n Clllh CUllnty. 30 IIIlh!~ SOlJtheast (Iart (lr .. r ?\l~Uuc~ Provo Consolidated Real Estate Co. 78 N. Academy Av., Provo R. L. POLl( ... CO'8 1118 N .G.u-. I (I) e FARMS, RANCHES. REAL ESTATE, LOANS INSURANCE 1117 Orders SolicIted. AXEL BLOOMQUIST, Painter HOUSE AND AUTOMOBILE PAINTING, DECORATING, ART AND SCENIO PAINTING. SIGN WRITING A SPECIALTY. Prices Reasonable. All Work Guaranteed. AMERICAN FORK. , BAXTER II E, Propr Bron __ Th.atre. ,=" t-(:T"::'-~~,!"d road Beck Ferre, luot/ce, r Hlrhl.nd. supr. ftecHNl-"~T~lock . ll:eJ",,~~w.;~· J,':..~I ·o . op In". Dlnns John. live stOck, IUOII! nobt, II Ye ~tCl e k, BLOOMQUIST AXEL, HOUI., 81g" and Auto rn~~'ct~c~e~g~~~~gs:.tI~efC~~~~. P(I~!; adv). 80ley Bros (Roy and Vern), woolgrowe!'!!, Boley Elisha If, I'rocer. Boley lIoy (lloley Bros). Boley Vern (Boley IIros) . DonnevtJIe Lumber Co E W Paxman mgr. g~l~rs ~t:::.~~e 'l:o(ilrr.rsB~I~ars'l'.acy Co). .ltofx TM.A~E, R ~ B . . ~ropr, High Class Mollon Plclure Thealre. (See adv). t., .RO~a~er:r~:~o::p~~~8:~~\:.r::oA~~:Jre"s~ Conrecllonery, EIC, 36 E Main. Tel 65. r 31 N lSI East, Tel 113. Drown J8!\ W . woolgl'ower. Bush Frank, eontr. Cen&ral Auto Co, Jos F Walton ml'r. BRONX ChadWick EI'nest, rtorl~t. Chipman Abner, woolgTOwel', ChlpmDn Ida (M &: I Chlp.".n) . Chipman las. pres Bank of Amer Ftwk and Chipman Merc Co, r Sail L.ke CII), . ChJP~~ ~~lpJ~ari-~~~~ ~~~k of Amel' Fu t'k Chlpmon Leonard L, woolg-rower. Chipman Manda (M &. I Chipman). Chipman Mercantile Co, JI'LS Chipman llJ'{"~ . Jas Chipman Jr v-pres, '\V S Chlpmlln sec, S L Chipman treas'mlT, len mn~e, r.hlpman M I< I (Manda and Ida). mllllnel's. Chllunan Reuben B, wooll'r ower. Chll'man Stephen L. tre:t:l·lUlfr Ch1rllli1U Mere Co. Chipman S W, councUmn. Chipman T I, mrr Utah Lake Resorl. Chipman Washburn S, cuhr BanlE of Amer ChIP~~~k\v~eeH, ~~~:"t::.e::~::; F~~ic Co·op Insl, v-pres Peoples S,"le Bank. Chlpman's Stur Huller Mitt!!, E S Greenwood m.r. Chrlslensen Allanllc. denllsl. Christensen Bernard N, mIT Con \VII'Dn &: Mac'h Go. Chrl!ltensen Hans, v-pres American Co-op Inst and councllmn, Fork THEATRE HIGH CLASS MOTION PICTURES ScreaminSl Funnies HiSlh Class Dramas Educallonal Traveloltues and Cartoons, Etc. NOTHING BUT THE BEST R. E. BAXTER, PROP. AMERICAN FORK, UTAH GOOD EATS CAFE 48 W. Cenler St., Provo ," .. ::u 0 0 < ...0 =- ~ 0 PI ii. z c: 'II- c -I J> :J: "9t ~ - -< ~ :u r0 c \~Z.o ~llL\A~'t w. H. RAY FARMS, RANCHES REAL ESTATE, LOANS LIBERTY BONDS, INSURANCE 78 N. Academy Av., Provo STANDARD COAL COMPANY L?~) USE "STANDARD COAL" MINED IN UTAH Oeneral Offices 818-822 Kearne Building, Salt. Lake Clt.y ALPINE--AMERICAN FORK DIREOTORY-1920. 149 ____________________________~--------------------------- 148 R. L. POLK .. CO'S ----.~:---=--~------=-~---- Wunderly Ernest E .. b 387 E 3d No. Wunderly Lena (wid Rudolph) r 387 E 3d No. Wunderly Meta M moved to Salt Lake City Wunderly Olga tchr B Y U b 387 E 3d No .. Wunderly Rose student b 387 E 3d No. Wunderly R':ldolph L clk b 387 E 3d No. Wyman Mane bkpr U P & L Co rms 190 N 3d East. y Yarman Oscar lab r 330 S Academy avo York Adelbert farmer r Provo Bench. York Asa B r 407 E 3d So. York Esther V r Provo Bench. York Lettie r Provo Bench. York Levi farmer r Provo Bench York Vern H farmer r Pleasant View. York Wm farmer r Provo Bench. . Agts, 182 W Center, Tel 688. Young Alice (wid Howard S) r 272 E 6th No Young Anna M (wid Oscar B) r 38 W 4th No Young Ardis E stUdent b 690 W Hh No. . Young OreLLa tchr BY U rms 653 N 2d East ~oung Francis M prin 'l'impanogos Schl r 690 W 4th No Young Fred farmer r Provo Bench. . • Young Geo H lab r 193 N 10th West Young Karl E student b 690 W Hh No Young Leth~ (wid Alfred) r 160 W 2d No. Young Mamie P r Pleasant View Young Marie student rms 286 E '2d So Young Richd D farmer r Provo Bench .. Young Verne famerr r Pleasant View Young Virgie clk rms 367 N 2d East. . Younger Vernon firmn Provo Steam Lndry r Pleasant View. z Zabr~sk~e Alva M r 575 N 5th West. Arnold H clk b 575 N 5th West. Zabnskle Emma b 575 N 5th West Zabriskie Irwin forfin Provo F & M Co r 426 S 4th East Zabr!sk~e t' :I • II i d .. ~=o:;;;;~ ZION'S ~O-OPERATIVE MERCANTILE INSTITUTION, F D Casslty Mgr, Wholesale Grocers 389 S Academy Av Tel . , B ranch Exchange 33. Zobell Hans J lab r 854 W 1st No. Zobell Harvey .farmer r Provo Bench. Zutavern Mattlee T tchr High Schl r 184 W Center. TELLURIDE MOTOR CO. Dlstrlbut.ors Bulcks, Oldsmoblles Nat.lonals O· ... C T· . k Parrett Tr~oto..,. , . . . ru~ s, . ! , .. C i r:; YORKSHIRE INS CO (York England), Provo Con Real Est. Co ~ .w American Fork 111gb Scbool P M Nielsen .0 prln. ALPINE. American Fork Post ocnce J H Clark pon· • A town, settled In 1853. In tbe notbern master. .. 0 part oC Utah County, 30 miles soutbeast American Fork Sboe RepalrlnJr Co (Oeo B M oC Salt Lake City, 20 miles nortbwest oC Webb Edwd Smltb). Provo, the county seat and 5 nortb oC Am· Anderson Bros (Warren and Stephen) erlcan Fork the banking and sblpplng pOint. undertakers Long distance telephone and a local ex- Anderson Carl wool grower ~ change. Has L D S churcb. Population Anderson \Yarren (Anderson Brbs) '750. Mall dally by R F D Cram American Anderson Stephen (Anderson Bros) Fork. Stage to AmerIcan Fork Canyon. J H Apollo Hall Roy Greenwood mgr Clark Postmaster. Apollo Orchestra Vern Walker mgr B &. M Garage (Vhn Boban Edwd Martin). Alpine Creamery, D C Strong pres. :I Baker Geo T apIarIst. Bates BenJ mayor. Carlisle Llncoll., hotel. Bank oC AmerIcan Fork Jas Chipman pres Clark Fred &. sons, live stock. Jas Chipman Jr v-pres W S Chipman cashr. . CLARK .JAMES H, Poatmaa'er. Debo'i s Geo, prln Alpine Schl. Btf ax~ t er~.!! • .!= • ..!l!~C contr. Devey Laurence, gen mdse. Cul'J._.. ..verl". J Forbes Artbur orcbestra. Bec Clarence M lawyer o Hall E E, blksmtb. Deck Jacob live stock Dezzant M E sec Amer Fork Co-op. 1Iealey Dros, live stock. Ohms John lI\'e stock. Healey Wm, constable. ~ Bloomquist Axel painter. LUlIe J Z &. Sons, contrs. Bohan Wm (B &. III Garage). IIlcDanlel F 0, Town Treas. iI Ooley Bros (Roy &. Vern) ""oolgrowera Main &. Sons, live stoc)[. Daley Hoy (Doley Dros) • Marsb Jos F. barber. Boley Vern (Boley Bros). Marsh &. Sons. gen mdse. P •• RLESS OOAL 00, 1108-1107 Newhou .. Bonnevlle Lumber Co E W Paxman mn Bldg, Salt Lake City, Long Distance Driggs Lawrence H (BrIggs Pbarmac~ Co) Briggs Pharmacy Co (L H BrIggs) 1'el Wasatcb 6120. Bromley Wm marshal. . S~th Bros, live Itock. Bronx Tbeatre ChB! Knott min' Strong Don C, pres Alpine Creamery. Brown Jas W wool grower. • Strong Frank, Justice. Bush Frank contr. Strong Fred, town recorder. Carlisle :'rhos F Justice. Vance, Jas W, bishop Alpine Ward. Cassity Leland (Utab Lake Resort). Walton T H,carrler R F D. ChadwIck Ernest florIst Whitby Alvin, Justice. Chipman Abner wool grower. ChIpman Ida (M &. I Chipman). Chipman Jas pres Bank of American Fork AMERICAN FORK. pres Chipman !IIerc Co r Salt Lake City. Jas Jr v-pres Bank oC 'AmerIcan population 3,300 . An Incorporated town Chlpmnn Fork v-pres Chipman Merc Co. In northern part of Utah county on the Salt Chipman Leonard L wool grower Lake Route. Salt Lake &. Utah and D II R 0 Chipman Manda (M &. I ChIpman). R R 12 miles northwest oC Provo, the county Cblpman JIIerc Co Ja9 Chipman pres Jal seat. Jlas L D S and Presbyterian churches, Chipman Jr v-pres 'Y S Chipman sec .good public schools, two banks, several S L Cblpman treas-mgr. substantial stores, etc, a weekly newspaper, Chipman M &. I (Manda and Ida) mlllIners ~be CItizen. Exp American. Tel W U. Chipman Reuben B wool grower. Long dIstance telephone servIce. Jas II Chipman Stephen L treas-mgr Chipman Clarke, postmaster. lIIE'rc Co. Chll'man S ,V councllm3n. Abel IIIrs Mary E City Treas Chipman Washburn S c85hr nank of Amer 01 Adamson lIIary (wid Hyrum) confr Ican Fork sec Chipman PteTc Co. ,. AlpIne Publishing Co L W GalsCord mgr ChIpman Wm H pres Amer Fork Co-op. ~ pubs The CItizen and Pleasant Grove ChIpman W H v-pres People's State Bank .. Review. ... AlpIne School DistrIct Jas II Walker Supt ChrIstensen Atlantic dentist. Christensen Bernard N mgr Can Wagon &. ~ AlpIne Stake (L D S) E J Clayson clk mach Co. ~ :AlpIne Stake Tabernacle • 1"11 AmerIcan Fork Bakery (ArthUr Pattrldge) ChrIstensen Homer dentist CItizen The The AlpIne Pub Co pulls L VI AMERICAN FORK CO-OPERATIVE INSTITUiGalsCord edltor-mmgr. TION, W H Chipman Pres, Jas H Clarke V-Pres, 1\1 E Bezzant Sec, J H City Jail nr city Hall. Storrs IIIgr, carryIng A Complete Oen- Clarke Jas H v-pres Amer Fork Co-op. eral lIIercbandlse Stock, Tel 2 and 120. Clark ·Ja9 H postmaster. " CO.il PROVO RUBBER SALES IATES IPlI TIRES RIIOI"e Mul"-lltne OOrd and •• va T ..te4 OOuntr, lOLl ROM TIre. and Tube.. • .'per' Vuloanlllntl and Tlr. RepaIrIng em" at'!anF'MYav.. PHONE 849 l I'iZL CONCRKTE AND BRICI( &TORAGE WAREHOUSE 'folic... ~ ~E~T~R~A!D C:R~C~!?U~~~S-~~.e~~~~~IS!:~: ! IN MOTOR YANS-ANY WEATHER. TELS. 148, 11170-.1, 388-.1 27 N,. SECOND WEST, PRDYO r:===:"'71 R. L. POLl( A CD'S 182 ALPINE_MER'CAN \ flUllg Ja~ E llIach rIll' I:;,!\ :1(1 \\" ',"\. Ja~ E candYIII),r 1'111, 15 E 'oIh "" John ,\ Ichr r 37 E 6th 1" 0. JUlI') !chI' Hi g h Se hl rll\s Hul'" n"herls . Lawl'I.' n"" lah b IOOr. N Ullh"r,ily av. Young l\1~Ttl O ( wid \'erJl!' ) HlIl ' SP 1 ;,()~. \\' Ct .' nlpl' !'fil S sanll ~. Youllgc r' Li,"la stud e lll h '1'1,,'1''' '' ' YOIlIlf.!"'· . Young e r /loyal elk IJ TIt,,," ,sa YOlllI!"''''. Younger Theresa (wid E I'ick j I' ""'as alll View. Y'JUn g er Tran'luild alld!. M"nirll lI"s!, II TIt ~ I''' ' a Y"lIlIg,' I' . YnuTlf.!CI' '~r>rIHHI fil'lllll Tl'nr I.lldl'Y ,. Th"I'''''' Y""I1 g-I"· . \oung Young Y"ung Y'lung -I·~== a:::» z ""- Zabri s kie Ah'a M Itlpr ]>1'11"'" Flld,'y ,\ M Co r :;,5 N 5lh West. rlll ~ !i7:; N 5lh i Zabriskie Arnold II dd"!'I' WIO M norylallce Co 'Vcsl. Zabri s kie ClalJd~ ,, 1;;11111 I; I' & L Cri ;' AII""' io:all FIJl'k. Zabriskie Elllrna s Umo II 5i" N 5lh V ·",l. Zahr' i s ki~ (;'! O M f!i (! ct.n II !;7ri 1'\ !; I It \\ ,. , I . Zabri s kie Irwill fOI'IIIII I'roH' Flldl'~' .\ ~I I:" I' " ~ r; ~ :;d I';" ,, \. Znl1d skil'! .'Iurky (\PrllYII JlIJ~ f :ll1g CO l I' .\IJII'I ' jl : an Fork, i L.I... i Zirlllllf~ nnall Bulh E (wid Andw ,I ) l' 7;' .'1 E !jIll ~II , ZION'S CO-OPERATIVE MERCANTILE INSTITUTION, F D Cas :-:ily l\I~ I' , \\' IIII"'~all' (;I 'IH ' I.'l'S , ~~H~I ~ l ! l1iYl'r'~ ity Av, Tel IIra""I, Exchang-" 3:J. 11/ ' 7,01)('11 Aar o n farn1t! r h P d t'!' 7.01>,,11 . a: Zobel! Clar e nce fa, ·me,· h P"l.c r 7.oh c ll . 0 , 7."1,,,11 Errll' sl farm e r" 1'1'11'" ZIIIII'II . ;I,(ll>,.Jllla,,~ J I' 111 \\' 3d ~u. i 7.oh r ll Harr-y farmflr r Lak " View . ;'f,'h"" Ho",,' " ""P" M"r"dilh Cr,:11' C" I' Lal,l' Yi v\\,. Z Zub"'l Pel,.,. farlll r r I' Lake Vlrw. 11/ ;I,,,b .. 11 ~yl\"ain ,LU L"'''t. h ",.11'1' ZIII)I'II. ~I Zllil ~ I>apr"o John di"d ,\pr 8 ' !! t a" .. 31. I t; i 1- \ l en 10 Il a:lt-. I or Snll L il k l! I :lty , ~u lu i k ..; l1ol'thw c ..;l tlf Provo. tll ~ ' ·O llnl.'· ~ (' :l1 ,lIltl :,", n(Jl'lh o r Am - l~I~~lIlli-lt ~'~~;III. ~~ p /,J';::'\:I\~lt~{~ "I;!!1~ti:11Jlil~~~}t~~~I-, challgc . lias L I . :-\ "hu r d1. I 'u lliliali on ; aO. )1 ;111 Ilaay h,r It F I t rnllll AlIIl'rit',1I1 . ·ol'k. ~ ta ~ t' to :\llt !." l'b'all F.llk l : all,\'OIl, J II Clark, 110:H III:J iH P.1' . Alpinl"' r.: I'f' ;lIller,' · n Uat<'s 11f'I1J mayor. 1I ;:It:s 1."011011'11 I~ ~II· IJII !.'" IlI'e ~ . ~;·I;I . ~~~~I~II,~,'TI~ 1;~I('I't. IIl1lse. (;ltrJl ~ h! Lltle/dl! Il v te!. Clink FI'('tl &.: :-'-'H1 ii JI\'f! stk . OLARK JAMES H, Po.'ma"or. t'OI'III':"; Art (tI ' dl(~ sl r il . fiall E E IIlk :-: lIlllI. He a ley Uros stle ]Iunlt'" Hullt c ' fl lI ~ llIhlf' . Lilli!! J Z k. ~1I 11 :-; n ,lll,.!', IIt ' zza!!! tl'('a:; ." r u rl. \1111'1' 11':1 11 1111111ill .... '.\III1I~::· '.!~t'PI!I:k \III"I:~'''::l~'' F~:~~~ \\"k ~ til Itil !'- S C(lll1l1l1'l l'ia l CIIlIi n S t .\II I1" ! lI' illl lIi).:1I :-; 1'11110 1 I ' 1'111"1\ I'" .. t 111"I"t.·" .I " 10'0 :..; 11'" " AMERICAN FORK. ~~ :U r, ; 1'lIhl ll' I.Ihl':try EIIII1I;1 . :\IlU'rl enll Fork ~hll(> Hl'J' K Co ( UI'f) 11 "'l'lll! FII\\"II Smith ) . .\III f' I' ic' illl Fll r k :-" lln ' l' Ha llil 1-:1"11 (':'; ' 1':1XIII:m II ' a,Ii'r . ;:~~I~~~;~I~~.Y ~:~~~:;;E~~ (j (~~~';~~gtF ;"i1"1 111 1 11 Ind I.) , 1, 11 ' 1' 11 " ,' ,1 EI11I);lllllI'l' =", :Il1tl ., 3 (I :=I r; I ~ *I .~· ::::tl ' r.~lt" .!·~i,~:'.~'· 1 ;.~ r~\1 a 1 , ',"I~r' \,:~'II;~:~~ ~'; ' ~; ~ \ f'II" ( .... 1'11 atlvl . " UII Carl f a l'lIl!' /' , .\ t :\II I1'I' It':l1I . \ 11 11 " 1' ,,;"11 1; 1I ~ 1:1»). 0 F , II ' k ~ :ttllll" I ' ) ' ANDERSON STEPHEN L (Anderson Bros) I 'I't'l IUti -J, .4NDERSON WARREN F (Ander.on Bros), T r l JO G· ) . :-'-all ~~~:'!':!:! I';:,I,I, IJ ~'~';;I~llnAI t ;!:~~~.~' ;:~';; i.~III~·I~;~'~~: !!::~,J:~t :1 (~~'llIlh~~~~lr:l~I" \V =...._ T('I I I. I."II~ cll :, l:tnc' 1,'I"pho ne :;' ('I·\·l c. ~-I:~ n .E ~...:o.~I"" cr.>.,.. .."' o~ lIl~ry,.u.;c~..... J:as 11 Cla r kf' . I'tH trna ~ t el' , riif~·~ r~~~;¥~'~ '~~lmkr Clly, Abel ~11 '!oI ." aIT F I : ity TI'P:'Is . '.. H " I'k J llI'IIh )h'p !'tk, Alpine l'II"II~hin~ Co I. \\. (jal s ront mJl'r nt ~ nllf'\ tt J L t"!' lIo bur-her J 1\ C rook~tnn . Jlllb:-: TI\(' ( ~ lIl z l'n P lt! ;I!'ant GI'U\'4~ '11t·Z1. i1l1t :\1:II'k lI' p a ~ ncl o r Erllf(':llton Alpine n e vl e w, ~ I ' hl 111 .. 1. :;'f'C :\1111 ' 1' FIIl'k e n · Ot"' . I Embalmers and Funeral Directors Automobile Service UNDERTAKERS' SUPPLIES Salt Lake City ~ E»"0 11111"11, ANDERSON BROTHERS 'FARMS AND RANCHES FOR SALE fit ~ C lark Jlltsl - ' \1,,, 11 11 lIall 1111)' f 11'P P lI\\'1l11l1 II1J~T, I'h PIII ;: ti fl ll :1,:11111 . :\11 1111 ' 01'1" 11' :111' 11 IIIWII .\1101111 IJITht '~ tlll '""1'11 \\' alk(~ I' Il'ad!'!'. In 1}0,' 1111'1'1I 1';11"1 ti l' 1:1;,11 (' IIllIlly nil 111(' Sail > \~"It111 Orin f01'l1l1l 1: 111111 I'OWI' I' &. Lt Co, tak e 11 0 111" , I. a l( t' &. nail allll J) k. n n \H i:kf' I' fi pn T 1I10 \'c ll Ii) P inta , n n, 1:1 !IIi II' , nlll'lh\\'· .. 1 "r l' I·U\'I1 . 1111' lIallk .. r Aml'ric'all Furk ,la s Chipman JlI ' I ' ~ {'Olllll\' !'w al. II;! :-: I. II ~ ;11111 l'rt!s lt\'l c l'l il lI JiI:o\ CllIl'lIIall 11' \' - JlI ' I'~ \V S Chil'lIl :t1l ('1t1l 1'I'iu~ ="" I(ll o il poltlh' !;I' l!nnlil. two' hl1nk~, (' ashl', TELEPHONE 106-J T~~ntal~~D~!ry s~~ce~~rOY:W:~!I~~~ EI1 . i '" :-\ 1(' 1.""11 11/ % IRUSSON INVESTMENT GO-.~~~:eei::.~~:7 ~~ ~ Co· npt"·:ll i \· p Ill :' t \V II Chlp - Fu rk r g a. 1:= a. ... .\lIi1'ri c illl Fork :;adlll c l'," CII (11 ,\ Alllh'I' :,on) Mt' !J:I1IIPl r II 10 WII I rea!'. Main &. S,,",;,; Ih'I' ~ fk, Marsh J tI~ I" h al' t)!' /', ) Iil l'!'- IJ & ~" "" j!I ' U IlIeI ... ", SlnHh HI'II:"; /".,. ~ tk . S irong I"dl C 1'\'1· .. ,\Jpill t' 1: 1'1·:lnu ' r ,\". ~IJ'OnJ.;' rJ alii, jll .. til 'I', S lrulIK !-' I'I'cl III WII 1I' I'onl, ' I' , YUIW (! Ja ~ W 11 1..:1111)) I. I) S. WhltlJr Ah' l ll JII 5 th'I' , AMERICAN FORK (I ~t' I' · 111 :1 11 1'J't' s J II Cl al'k \" ' Jl l't~ S ~I E [It'z , z an' ~I'I" J II ~ llIl'I' s IIIJ.!T ~PI1 Itltl:'c. ·.\III1. /::::~~:I'~':lIl'k I}vc I- I!I::' ~Iakl' d. I' ~ ) EJ t:Ja~'~vlI I"Ik . Ig a: :~::;:,"l· rl'iI~I ,:.~:;.~rt~~:~':'(~:~~~· I~·latlllll (;\ 11 :111 I' lel' , !:cn .... 1\ \V II .\ llIllln :,·) , N" iii o I·: ·.\I)lilll ' .\IIU't\'tl~ :11111· ~' I ' II anti 11/ Q FOR~'I~,I.~E~:~~~::9~~. "r E"'"';I';"" J;I.18,: ALPINE. pa~t \~tIL i~;;:" ;::~u::~:r~ ~ ~;: ' li.'IIIT!~f! ~~~i,'~!:::~'~': Import.ant Towns In Utah Order the TRIBUNE from the Local Agt. , i (I ;' Iell> e ~ &. = t; G) CO ., CD a. Vi .,..een,,'f 18\&11\1 ANSON HATCH, Mor\lclan LILA M. HATCH, A .. HATCH FUNERAL HOME A FULL LINE OF BURIAL SUPPLIES - AUTO> EQUIPMENT COURTESY AND SERVICE Parlor 160 N. University Av. ....= en CD - iii Co» g~ 0 III). CD c.:» U• - i:I III > Zlll OZ zO A,E Z = g~ III .Z .,J ... _111- ~lI:~ :a: U I: !Dill C» E~ C~=I Oa .. z J,t • -- -...= ... ftI U c» :IE J,i Z a:~ 111 0 a). C III Za Ca: Ec a:~ =a: EO •::- "'u 0 I- A. ~t ·111 z.,J .,J ·0 III ~ n:======.!.1 fl. 20': L . Phone 632 POUI • Provo, Ukh, Foster Mrs Emma ll11rn. U~(;k Hurace aclor. Uezzant Mark E seQ Arner Fork C0 40P IoU. I-=- R. . '&CIir. Thu CUllen. Gardnel' JIlS T bi shop 1st \Vd nnel Couq1J a =m~~Px'~J~~~~. 1I~"'Il. -Fourth \vct Mtg HSI1 E S Gr~enwood bishop Flrlnago J Leonllr(j mgr J C Penney Co. Flrmago \Vm r:al'rll~ r P O. Forbes School nay D Nlchol!\ prln. Oalsror<J L \V Jlllfr Alpine Pull Co edUor Gour~~m'ii.Vld g~~~ ~ifsta(I~~~ ~~~l ';l~~~ls. wooIg-rowers. I oran'~~~irence Boley IiOy (Holey Dros) . BOley Vern (Boley Bros). Bonne\lllle Lb .. Co E \Y Paxman mIT. Briggs 'L:rwrenco H (Urllf~S Pharmacy). BrlgJ"S Pbarm~y (L If Diggs) . 8uckwaUer A W mlfr Mutua) Coni Co. lJush .·rank contr. Ca""rey Harry M (ilome Bakery). Chadwick J E pos tmaster. Chr.enp.y nus (CobbJp. Stono S er S'3) . ChllHnan Almer wool grower. Cblpman Jas pres Da.nk oC Amer Fork, Chipman Leonard I. woolgrowcr, Cblpman l\lerr. Co Jns Chll)man pre~ \Vm ChIpman v-pres W S Chipman sec S L Chipman nea8·rngr ,en rndst. Chtpmiln Reuben B wool grower. Chipman StophCD L treas - mgr Chipman .Mere Co. CbJpman washburn S c3.shr Bank of Amer Fork. Chlpman \Vm v·pres Chipman !\I e re Co. Chipman W H pre~ Arncr Fork Coop lnst. ChrHttnsr.n AtLlnttc dentist. t:hrlsten.Cfen Bernard N. Cllllen The AlpIne PUb Co pubs L W Oals· ford edltor-mrr. City H:&11 Jesse M Walker mayor Mrs MItfJ E Abel neas 0 F Sbe.lly clk and ree· order \Valter Durant marshal J L Pratt ehf fIre d.ept. Ctty .Ia.1l nr City Hall. cny Marke\ PM Wighl) ~ro . Clark .las H v·prM Amer Fork Coop Insl biShop 'd ward. Clawson AnmJd N u81 S L &. U R Rand Amer Ry ExP. C'Jaw!JOf: Mrs Thora a!lSt agt S 'L It U n n. Clayson Ell J elk Alpin" Stakp,. Cobble Stone Ser St. (Otis Cheney). COddlnglon Tho! r.ounr.llman. C:ommunlty Hospital P ~, Kelly .!uPt. Crookston John n barber. Cryst'Ll Jas S wool grower. Oean Saml water supt. Oem'or &: RIo Grande \Vestn R n C A Ple1'son alrt. nun,.nn W E patrol. (Juranl \valter marshDI. EJsmore \V G (Elsmore &. Kelly), Elsrnnrc & KellY ('V G Elsmore J A Kelly) barbers. ?"lr~t PreSbyterian Church. First W(f Mtg H~e (L n S) J T Oudner bl!lbop. StlPt Alpine Selll 01,\ ,Bd A mgT Grnnt's Emporium. ' Grant Franr.ls L (QUick Lunch Care) . Grant Hotel (j'l1rs Zelpha Deck). Grant JIIS 'til chlro. Grant Lillian clk \Yrn Thornton Drug CO. Grant's .EmlJOrlum C A Grant mgr ren mdse GreenwofJu Enrl S bishop 4th \Vd IIl8'r I'copll!'s Milt Ii Elev Co. Gr ee nwood Joslr~ sllpvr A.lplno Schl Dlst .. Jree nwood Hoy mgr Apollo lIali. , JI' f! enWflfH..I \,"In S CorulII ;,futual Creamer, Co. Judmull(lscn Abe J~·Jr. !fallldOlY \V n (Sanitary Me a.t lit Gro). H3r1'ln~ton L S (Tllllp3nOR'O!l Se r Sta). lIarrlllH"tun ScliooJ Sarah 'Pa.rker prln. Hatch Ira S (Pitts lit Hatch Motor Co) . . Hawkins Ell D l'jllnrlst. lien raid Eugene E s urveyor . Hindley J '1\ bl>hop 3d Wd. !lome Bakery (H M Cawrey). Homer \V A dentist. tlopkJn.'4 elias II1U~ tchr r Lehl. Hunter \vrn Justtce and IIcp.nse Insp. Ingor.'4olJ J E rest . Johnson Henry C blcpr Dank of Amer Fort. ~elly Jas A (Els more &. Kelly) . kelly '.;eona apr Tel Co. Kelly Philemon M phys. Laursen Mae (Baker &. LaurSen). Lee Thos contr . Los Angeles &. Salt Lake R n R J Stice 181. LOVELESS WM D, Quality prlnt.r, Am.rlean Fork. Tel 41 . tfcDonalft Geo sexton. McTarue Ea.rl slsmn. MactCfen Morrts contr . Martin Jas Jwlr. Moyers John W mR"r Tel Co. \loCCeU Denj councilman. MoCCen 8 F C~cd mill . Alountaln Statc i Tel &: Tel Co J W Meyer. mg-r. "utual Coal A \V BUckwlllter mgr. \tutual Creamery C W Parker mS'f'. Nelson &. Ricks Crcarnr.ry Leonard Pelt ml1' Nichols Ray 0 prln Forbcs 8chL ~Ielsen Adolph hosesho{'r. Nielsen Martin autos. Sieisen P M mO\'ed to Tooele. NlrJsen na~mus blksmth. "-oyes J Frank ph:rs and pres reople's State Bank. ?lIrkcr C \V mlfr Mutual Creamery Co. rarker ~Rr8.h 1)rtn Harrtn8"ton 5ch!. Paxman Ernest mus tchr. HARPER BROTHERS 44~ :::::CC'P-I :-r:r. ':OMMERCIAL PRINTERS LOftG DISTIUIOE WASATCH'_ TRAINED OFFICE HELP, CALL L. D. S. Business College SALT LAKE CITY TEL. WASATCH 3951 AMERICAN 00'8 Barren Tbo! councilman. Barrett W H. Uates Denj blkslnlh. Buter R E electn. Heck Fll chrr elk Grant Hau-I. FOR FORK O\.INTON DIREOTORY '824 paxman E \V rngr Donn cvt1lo Lbr Co. Penney J C Co J L Flrmage mgT dry ,115. People' .. Mill &: F.lev Co F. 5 Orc('n\\'oOd mgr PeoplOS Stat~ Dank J Jo' Noyes pres W H c.;hLDlllan v-pros C E Young CD,Sbr. lit ntck~ Pett I.ennon! mgr Nclson . ppllee'r' ~nc~a~ ~~~c~ . &. n G' \V R nand \V BENJAMIN Populatton 400. A flar statton OD "tbe LA&' S I. n R, In Utah county. t 7 miles ~ollthw('st o£ Provo, tho (:oul1ty !ll~ at, ." rnlle~ north DC payson, tbe nearest bankIng point and 5 mil e s W(lSt of SpanIsh I;ul"k. lias LOS churl' h. rIno publlr sdlOol. an up~to·datc dt'plrUnent !ltore, a \\"l'1! ('quipped r:re-amcry, etc. LOng DisU PIUS CI~:1 MCO('Pltts &. Hatch Motor Co). tance telephono service. n F 0 trom Pitts &. lI:lt(h Motur Co (C M Pilts Jra B Spo.nl!lh Fork. llo&lrerllc')e' see Arner Fork POSt Office. POSl PraU I L cbr rtre dept. Pulley Jas It contr . Quick Lunch Cafe (F L Orant). 1\asmllsSen It S tAmer fork lJottltng Wkl) (~~t~b~:~r~ Benjamin Cash Store (John Johnson) . Benjamtn \vard Mtr Uso 10hn Johnson blsllop . Dln8"ham J II 8"3raro. lIatlll J 1I &. Sons (J II Heber Jas nna :El'nest) bri<'k mCr! ~~~~~kl'l;t ~'~ ~ C~I:l~I[~~~:: Real F M White mgr. Huberts Lore nzo Ih'e stk . !tone F.dlth tnll~ tchl'. Roberts \\'m lIyo 9tk. Jnllns on John hl~hoJl L n S. Robin son J 1\ (sanitary Meat k. Gro) . Il.tnrl~troTT1 GlIS blk5.rnth . Robinson Marton C (Royal Clothing Store) LIIIJlnw P:llIl ronrr. HolJlnsoll need councllmon. J.urllow T g woolgl'ow e r. Royal ClothIng Storo (M r. I\obtnson) PEA.Y F A. Juatle>e of the PNC • . S It Lak e &: Utah 1\ nAN Clawson agt. nlehnrd!'()11 \\'In \V hotel and live sUe. s:nttary Ment &:. Oro (\V f\ 1I1l1lidlY J II She-vhel'd John apiarist . .Roblnson . ~:~~:'~n~~~I'~~tS~ ~::tlf[ ' D S) J II Storr! blsllop . Shea John optometrist . ShellY 0 F city clk and recorder. ~~~r~l \~~~.~ r~~~~' Fork Shoe Repg CO). Stlf'{' It J nkt L 1\ & ' 8 l. n n. Smtihrr 8 aml tailor StorrS Jus II mlfr Arner Fork coop lnst. Taylor GAroge Kinley Taylor rngr. Taylor Kinley mgr Taylor Garage. Third Wd Mig lise J R Hindley blsllop . Tborntoll tlyde J drug!!t Wm Thornton flrllg Co . Thornton Simon C contr. Thornton \Vm (\Vrn Thornton Dru, Co). CASTILUI SPRINGS A hMlth r080rt anet flag station 00 th~ D &. n G \V R R. In Utah county, t 7 mile! ~outhcnst oC Provo, In county seat, and t2 from Sprln~ylJle, the nearest banking place tL'IOflhono connection . ..11 Is celebrated Cor the Ilte fll ". fli propcrtleS oC Its springs . Mall 10 Tlllslle. Ca~ttlla 1I0t Sprln~s Co hotel gen store and mlnerRI baths. CEDAR VALLEY A to\\ n In the northwestr"rn part DC Utah county on Cedar Fort creek. 3! ml1~!1 ton) Prescription SpecialiSts, • (Ten northweSt oC provo, ,he county seat, t () 'BusY Stores", AlTWJflcan Fork (i), .outhv.'(':st of Lehl, tho b:mklnR' point. and ,Murray. Pro YO, l'leasont Grove, Delta, , Crom Cedur Fort Statton on the Salt Lake Salt Lake, Brigham City. O,den ana 'Route thE'! nl'81· (':!;t "hlrJlln~ Ilntn" lin' "'reston, Id'ho, Tels 3 and 5. L D S' Church Stage dally 10 Leht. Farl' Tlmpanogos Ser Sta (L S lIarrlngton) . • t . 00. and Fairfield, Fare ISc . PopulltUtah Po","'(\r at Light Co Orin Asb,on ror· lion 200 . F N Berry postmallter . BERRY F N, Po.tmuter . VOJ1I~~~er Fire Dept I L Pratt chid. Chalnberlaln Jas hotel . Walker Jesse M mayor. Ce(far Fort Band. Walker Vern mUSD. Cook Mrs CarolInE' mll~lr. tchr. Walter Evan IIYO stk Walton J ... flk Alplnc Sehl Dlst . . Western Union Tel Co C A Pierson a,l. White ,"'rank M mgr Real ArC Theatre. CLINTON I Wight a, (Clly MkO. I A MnUnn on the Mary~vale branch or Illf~ Wll tl Moroni A constablo . D &. R 0 \V In the southern ,part oC l1t31' Young C ..: cashr Peopl es State Bank. THORNTON WIll DRUG CO (Wm Thorn- c z ;It < "/II" i!li~ z/lloi Z -<0 \III .. ~ OIex C&I /II . Z C '"-< 8= ;itO I ,.; '..:='-'-===::::i '" THE SALT LAKE TELEGRAM lIT.!IH'S \fIlDEPi.:NOE;',IT r~EWSPAPER 20c v,~~~ Por carrl;!rl Jackson Motor Car Co. ';' .~,-,-'_" _' " It. L Shephard lohn R F D I. Shumway Brad a F D ~. Sbumway 8 a . F D I. Sbumway Wm a PD •• Simons Blain. a F D 3. SJobioRl lobn L a . F D I. Sklnn.r Alld a F D I. Sklnoor Bro. a F D I. Skinner David a F D I. Sklnn.r E y a p D I. Sklnn.r H A a F D I .- g::~:~ :":;;'W' aa : DD I ~. Slack H L R PD • . Smllb I •••• Lap D I. smllh I A R F D I . ~ol::'~ ~ D I. Smllh W D R F D I . Snel.on Dewey R. F D .3. Snow Annl. E R F D I . Snow Harry R F D I . Snow Rlcbd a F D 8. Snyder Albl F R F D 3. Snyder Elvin R P D a . Sor.n •• n ChriS R F D 3. Sorensen Elias a P D I . Soren.en lohn B a P D I. Sor.n ••n W W R F D 3. Soren.on· A X R P D I . Sorenlon Fr.d W R F D I. Sor.nlon 101 0 a F D I. Sorenaon 0110 R F D I. Soull.r Danl R F D I. g:l::: :. ~~~:I:~ :'~'t ~ ~ ~f:::lnf rr~~ :t R.... ~. t . slartTn Fr.d R F D 3. ~~::m gr~h:"p '\, P••D SIan. Ann 0 a P D I. SIan. Cloyd R P D I . Slone I WaF D I. Slone lOR F D I. . t. ~~~~~::rfog~7: ~ ~ 'i. Slrallon lOR F D I. SlroRt D.a .. a F D I . Stubba A 0 a P D I . Slubba I .... 0 a F D I. Slubbl I A R F D 3. Slubba Ralph a F D 3. ~~:~g: ~~rro~lRDR 3F D I. Sumn.r I B R F D I. 8ym.a H Lap D I . Tann.r Arl L a F D I. Taylor Olen R F D , . Taylor 8coll A R F D I . Tarlor Wall.r Hap D I. Taylor Wm I a F D 3. T.llurld. Pow.r Stlllon R PD •• T.rry Ch •• D R P D I . T.rry Willis a P D I. Thack.r T Map D I . Tback.r W Tap D I. co'. Tbomal Dan P R F D I. Thomal Elisha R F D I. Thornlon I A R F D 3. Tolton W Lap D I . Vance lobn A R F D I. Varley Wm R F D t •. Vlklund Victor C a F D I. Vlnc'''1 Danl L R F D 3. Vlncenl Danl P R F D 3. Vlnc.nt Lynn R F D 3. Vlnc.nl M p a p D 3 . Wall... Thol R F D I. Walton I a a PD •. Ward lobn a F D I. Ward I A R FDa . Warn.r L. o A a FDa. Wllhburn A V R F D t. WallJburn I A R P D I. Walklnl A V a F D •. Walll:ln. Ray R F D I . W.el.r 0 P R F D I. Weul 000 F R F D I. · W.II. R D a F D 2. \Ventz Frank R F D t. Wenlz 0 II R F D 3. Wenlz Lilli. R F D t. Wenlz Ray V R F D ! . WenlZ R C R F D 2. WblleAllaFDI. Whltln, L I R F D 3. Wilkinson lohn W R F D I. Wllklnlon 10. A R F D I. Wilkinson NOle II F D t. Wllklnlon 8 B R F D I . Willard C I R F D 3. Willard W 0 R F D 3. William. Oad H a F D 3. Wllllims H.nry I R F D 8. William. Leah R F D I. Williams T H R F D I. William. V.rn a ·F D I. William. W 0 a P D I. William. W 0 Jr a F D S. Williamson E WaF D 8. Williamson F a F D I . Williamson H.nry R F D S. Williamson Marl R r D I. WIIUam.on W C R F D 3. WII.on David R F D I . WUaon 1 II R F D 2. WUson T W R F D t. Woods I L R F D S. WoOd. R W R F D I. Wrlrhl A I R F D 2. Wrlrhl CblS R F D 3. Wrl,hl Nary I R F D 3. York Adelb.rl R F D I. York L.vl R F D • . York V.rn R F D I. Youn, Fred R F ·D I. Youn, Wm P R FDa. Zob.1I Clarenc. a F D S. _ Zobell Harry R F D 3. Zob.1I Peter R F D 3. Zobell SII".n R F D ,. Zob.1I Wm E a F D S. - -- ,- ---- --I !~!!~I!~.!!e~&~~ !ra!~~. d~~. .!:~a: J . o 00- POLK 10 o!! Car. Wa.hed and PolI.h.d - Aooessor.lel. - Suppll •• . 208 S. U..,ly.rsl&, Ay. Phone 125 ' .. Provo, _ _ Utah_ ALPINE ANDERSON STEPHEN L (And .... on .'01, Ante rl r an Fork : Amh'rson 4: Co, SpllnA town se tUrd In t At.J, In 'h (~ northern hdl Fork). r :Spllnt sll .'ork, T t l It 9 . plrt or Utah County, 30 miles south enst ANDER80N WARREN F (And.,.on .roo, or Snit Luke Clt~'. 20 mllel' northw esl or Anu' ,'lrnn Fork; :\nd('rson &. Co, SpanProvo, th e cou n ty Rp.at Dnd 5 mil es n orth I!lh f' ul'k) T el IOG·J. or Ame r lf:RII Fork. th e uUllkln8' and ~hlp :\!\hton 01"111 rurmn U P&' I. Co. plnr poillt, Long dlstftTII ~e telt'phot1 r and nnk er' ,\flll m:nr. • loc al p XI: hllllgl!. 1l 11!ol t 0 S church. Fu r k JR~ Chlpmnn pres Popul:ttlo n 7 5 0. Moll l1ally by 1\ •• 0 111111" S urI. AlIIl'l'iI'nn Chlpmal1 Y' I'I'f' S \\' :0; CIIIJllll8n from AIUp.rIc IHl Fo rk , SLugI..' In Alll f' l'kaJl clls hr', Furk CUllY o n, 11111'1" ' 1.1 Tho! A ("uunrllm:m . Unit> III'0s (Elll1 ~ 1' and IIcht'1' Datt) gros. Alpine Creamery 0 C Stl'on8' pres. Rut ~ HebE'r (nnte 14ros). Bates I.eonll'd gen III else, IIW IIc'lwl' (nille I,,'(llt ). Carlisle UHf.olll hotel. lIatl's 1I('IIJ (1I1'lIj n il"'!" 6: ~nn~) . Chadwi ck John ~. IIl1l1~ s lIenJ V (ulmJ Hll t f!s k :-OUII!'!.). Clark "'r~d &" Sun~ IIvr. stk. H"H~lI IJ r'lIj k. ~(lII ~ (n v And F It nntl'S) CROOklTON JESIIE P, ••U Carrier. 8111<1 rel"' ~. .'orhe s AN nr c lJ c ~tJ' a. Un l l's Fl'lIuk It (111mJ lI"t ('~ k S Oli!). Hln E ~ lJ l kslllth. Ihutf"f' 1\ 1-: elec tn . Hunter Hob' constnbl e, LUlle J Z & Sons contI's. lIcOanl e l F 0 mal'or, So(,', Marsh J o!oC F hrtrhc.'. A"II SUII Ch n g I' !"h op. r r pr. U Gi I . i i i SI i ~r.~~~ ~~II~':;!~~~=fihm.Rtlon )lush &. Sons R"en n l( l ~e. Smith 1I"os lin' stk. Smith \ V In 0 U VP.' stk . Strollg !lon C 11I'f'!ol AlfJlll f' C I't-tUnl'l,),. Stl'(l1I1' Frank Just!f:e. Strong "I'C'd tOWIi I',' r lll'de T'. Vance Jal' W hl :4h Op L lJ S. WhUhy Alvi n Justice. AMERICAN PoplIlIIUon 3,500. In nOI' th(,I'n lUll" or ,\11 Inrurporntf'd to\\'1I tltllh r'nullty nn till' Salt I.uke (tontr., Salt Lake &. Utllh and IJ & R 0 \V R n, f 5 mil e s nm'Ihwesi o r Provu, the county sell. Has L 1J Sind Prellby· terllD ch u rches, kood publlc scho o ls, Iwo banks, seven. subSla r.Ual slores. e t c , a weekly newspaper , Tile CItizen. Ex., Am· erlcan. Tel \\1 U. I.onl' d istance lele· phon" servi ce, J F. ChAdwlC"k, po~tlt1;l.!ltpr. AheJ U f-:dwd IIHI PROVO! DRUG CO. i le'IIn Fork tu'u m8'r Ch ipman Mer Co. F J Hedquist i Mgr. 1IIIIIIII ltlllist '\ xl~ 1 p nlili e r . Hule')' li l'U:i ( lttl,r illld V " r n ) wf)ulgr (l w (' I'!lO . Elisha If Jl'TtI lI ud OWilt!'! . Itllh'r no.\' ( no!j ~y UI ' n~ 1. IIlIh'.\' V j' l' n (Dult' y Il l'lI=' l . nult~ ~· litlllll"\' IIIt' 1.111111)1' 1' UriggS l.nWI'f'n Cl' II CII cuurH~lIrn8llo, r. \\' American Fork Do uling \Vkl' (II S n ag· mu ssen) . AmericAn "'ork Cornl CllIh J n )' n,'krl' ~I'{'. Amerh.~ an Fork £:o·op In~n \V II Chlpmnn pres J " Clark v - pr'es Eugene NlcllO:as sec J H S torl'S rn(tr Iten rnd.!le. American . 'Ol'k Post OfCl ce J F. Chnd wl ck postmas te r , American FOl'k Pub Uhry Ml's Emrnn r os- .~mE'r~~~nll~~? F.xp Cn J J [-;lItlll' I' I:III<1 lift't . American FU l'k :-;nddl r.I'~' (0 A And(' t'!oIOII). Aillerlc un Fo rk Shoe HeJl:llr Cn ( Oeo " \Vellh F.dwd Smith ) . ANDERION 8ROI (Warren , and Itephen Chlfllllllll Jus pl'e ~ Ii.w ,k nr .\lIu' rh'lI T1 Fo rk f: hflllllAn Mf' l' Cu . I:hllll1ll1l1 I.j'Ullill·cI, I. wU(lIIlI'UWI'I'. I:hlllll1UII Mr'l' eo Jn ~ GhlplJI:1Il IlI't"~ \\'m Chipman y . pl'e s \V S Chipman Sl' C ~ L Chipman Irf'l.!l. mtfr ren md se , Chlprnlln Reuben B \\'ooJ~rower. Chllunan Slephen L Y· pres Bank o r Arner - I I I ! Chl,'man \Vm Y-l'reS Chllllllall Aie-r Co , C:hlllllllUi \V II III'PoS A"wrlrnn FUJ'k Gn-op C:1J111I~~~ \~I"'~ I~I~I~~~~'~ 8:~~~" ~~IIII~rnrl'ICnn Tel. Cll. 50 Cltl1.eu The AII,lne Puh Cu IHlhs A F Gal!'llrord Jr t'dUo r . Clt~· II nll Thos Cudl1 ln gton m ny o r 'Irl' MAI'~· J 1. lInnlnglHIIH l' lt~' U'l'il~ n ... ~ h('lty elk and 1" ' C"(lI'drr ,,' nttt'l' IHII'tlllt mnl'slln) I I. PI'AU flr'e chief, Cl8rkp. J:l S II Y· pl't's "mf""lc:," F ork r.o -op In s l ,'pnl pst hl ~ IHlp 2<1 " 'd . Claws on & Elsmo re J ll w~·e l'S . Coddington Thos n1l1:\'o l'. g::::::~I~IJ~~;:1 ~~Il~!::::t/. " ~lIllf. M l\ {'lIy Crunk lHon Mrs Ath~ (" M hf':HIlY JIll'. C'·lIoks t lln nYl'o n hlll'h f' l'. Cl'llok ~t nn Cl y <1f' p II s~ 1 " II "l1r P popt(1" n allie: . ~:;ec~~~~I~S~~~;~:>BJ:~;~' ~e:."~u~~I~~~:~ ~ri~'I~ :I~:~I~:~' ~"I~o~::r.~~\\;r;'lt\' tl'rn~ vll'e, J-; Al Ain S t , Tl"l IOG-J ( Sr'j' II AV l s ll.n.'l d IMt IHlltom lint's ) , Anderson Gus A (Amel·te rm Fork Sndd l ery } nlJt'I', I'h:1I' nu.ry l. nl'lllll~ ). Fl'llIIk c'un tl'. (:Iuu lwkk J E IIU ~ UIID ~ t f' r. H" ~ h AIPlnih~lIgttT~enA 1~;ldG n~1~'~~~Jl{r G~I~!:f! Jl:~~~ CI1l'1!'~~'~:f!,~e~ tI~~~r~lci~II:II:[ view , l'ilXlll lUl t HI'IJt'g!'\ Hl'ltcll.lO I'lllu'lIlury ( I. II FORI( ~Lkl/fc D R NASH AND AJAX AUTOMOBILES "D.p.ndablll&, Regardl... of Profl&" 145 N. Unly....I&' Ay. Phon. 85S Provo, Utah (' lIr(' , . , 1Ir.1I11 !4:HnJ WaH'r " Ullt. Dec' s J ewelry Cn ( I) E 0Isf'n). ~t:ll'" Evsrythlng In Drugs Stationery Perfumell . Eto· IEIR°t.~r~~~ADlsr I leo---------------u----. - ------.. 23 N UnlverI slty Av. WE USE UTAH COUNTY HARD WHEAT FLOUR Provo, Utah I"\'Z.~ ii i i i i I I I II i I -.--'- --'- ' Telluride Motor Co. REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE - LOANS - INVESTMENTS DISTRIBUTORS BUICK AUTomOBILES AND INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS 67-71 Wesl Cenler SL. R. 234 L. Illcal lias p.;'(r IHUI'fC. I 'rJPu htl(,n ;50. I. Mall S church. I) r1l1l1y rr'om Ame-rlt"fln Fl)rk. by R F 0 Alpine CrcRmery D C Strong pres. \:plne ~r.hnol. r.arll~JE' Un co ln hotel. t:luk ,.' rpd &. ~nll~ IIvp. slk. CI:trk ItllfJfjR tehr. f:1'(Jflk~t I JII J,'!'!'!'" J' mall carrieI', "'fI"hr'~ A 1"1 orrhestr"a. lIall E E hlksmth . ....... a ;... II DiI • lit • II I0 ... :;:) III i ... •i!i ~. :~::~: 7;gnF.FJrst~~~~rtR) Jan High Schl , ,\ 11("11 l.p.wl!!: F. hlpr HomE" R"kcry . ~Iary ~tenn Chlpman~ . ~tudent. .\bel Melhley AheI14L~r}~o~-\ -'<lams An'ln (rrnnc(~s) (I.f'vlna) "darns Alvin F. ~'d"lfI Oonllovllle rarmer. Mums E~lIh . \dllms Frank J (Pearl) Adlml Gpo rarm .. r. Adami Howard !ltudenl. ,\dams Ja:oJ rarmr·e. ••• •• • (VirgIe; American Fork ••••• U •••• U U •• Benjamin Garalle GAS OILS BI!NMlMIN. UTAH c. A. Chrlaten .. n _ MPAIRI "LL WORK GUAR"NTEED ACCUSORIU I::: ~l~~er ?Jinr~I~;If~~i<r Bite Mrs Oertrude L. Bale Honald If st.udent. 0 I' gkalf~' · BII(>S BenJ (nenJ DUes &. !;ons). Bates DenJ &. Sons (nenJ and F R) luto B3te:ef~:ilk R (D"nJ I:~rer ?ohll~r~oved \0 BaUer \Vrn Beach Lois fleach \Vm Berk .. loyl1 Dates &. Sons) . Salt "ake City. shoe I'epr. student. R (Ad('lalct~) 1\ lab. (SIIMn ) lah . U4 J!luod JII~ (I'hll(' hn ) lal). mum! Lnu!'a !(tmlent. lI1uod MBne-If' ~tlldellt . IIluud IInY . Hlufltlllilifst 1\11"" s \II(lonL. U1ntllll(IIII~\ lIa r ley patntr.r . 8100mqulst lIelruar (lalruer . Bluumqulst 111111111. I\Ioonulu l5t Jol1n :\ Ihunn . B n~:l~~,s Vrt~~ ~1~~I\t~;t~a?(II~r,ll,~r~'~·~·5 H I!Itudent. ::~~:n-~J~~n:~ CW:dl~el C~o. (Carl F. II ~~~~'~IC rS~~~~ '~~~llT ..\merle-an Fork IIllfh Sthl. S (Maud) mlt'r J r. 1'(,TlneY U ral"ntC1' . (I.t'.tlo M: nl'IR"R"!It Lluyd I: studrnt. ~~~~l: ~\~~':~a;y 9:~cli:1tilrlB'rS). Briggs Stanrord. drugs\ BriggS Pharmacy. Briggs Slanl.!.'. IHHttlll Clull"lotte M. Rennen M) s bocmkr. grower. Berrett E H tchr American Fork High 8cbl Blncb Charlotte (wid Ilenry J) . R:::~~~~nl~~C~?IC~ bab('ZllIa) dcntlst. Brockbank MrI!I Zina C. ur()lUl~y Adair (Margt) Inll. II I'umley AI't'h lab. Hl"Ullllcy ClaJ'lce student. Bromley Mrs Mllrgt O. Uromley \VllIIs M (Sarah E) PARAGON PRINTING CO. 124 W 2d SO. Inr. nurl!' Sl~~:(.r COIl> Mutual Crcamery . Ul"ltS"~· :t ::~~:~~ ~I:~V~I ~ E~w:na~h(g~~~~: wool nnlry'~ Driggs Lawrcnce S. Bennett Karl Berr Vida. Pfl'!iI: ' Onley mltr. BonnevlJle Lbr Co E W Paxman mgr. UIJu1.l1 LIIII 'III C ( wid \Vay ne C) t cllr .·orbes 1'1I81·mU(·.y) • (Bennett-\Verner RadIo CO). Bens~~"g}~BS \\~eJ"1<'~~~nce!l ~1:~I~:~ ~ill~~~!~la~~ r!~:al'~t'll) Bole\' MarJol'le 1' . Unlt'l' Mnr-v A. IWlry MelisSR C sludent. (JI)I E"Y ~ltlnrall C ~tlld(mt. Huley My.-on M. Doh.!y Roy ( Boh~ y Bro!l). Brl(fg:l I.IlW""tlrl ~ 8ennett ~ Cart Berg J E (Nellie) (:\f 1\11E"1 f.). 11011:'1' nlp.11 M lab. l:\oit'1' IIrnry n !illudellt . CIl. ==b~:" ~1\1~Ulti-y. Sail Lake Olty Propri. A llIuott I-'I'ltllk ~ (:\mr.II:t) pUIlItI')' . R~l~l: ~;~~;e~e !Iowd ent. H. F. Thoma. Normln Thoml' John C herdel' . ::::r(~~~iiR~t'gr::I~a ~It "S9t lah. J. R:~~ 'he~~DJ'd 1'" (c(~r~~Jor\~~·. Frank H. ANDERSON WARREN F (MIIII.; And.,_ Dros. Amel"lcitli "",·k : Anoolt{on l Co. Spanlsb Fork). Tel tOO. • I '('rkln~ . lIoll'1' 01('11 r31"m(' I·. F. (Allr.c) rarmer • c sUld('Jlt. A city clk nnd rpr.ord"r . A Jr clk Chlpmftn'!I. (Orne) slgllln. student. Berk Juhn. Elll'n U. GOODYEAR TIRES U t3h poultry Prod E. I'ct'k JBY v American Fork; Andenon & Co. Span· Ish fork) , r SpanJ~h "ork. Tel tie . u. J C ng:~~ 1:'·~)t~h~~~Uy aIHI Vern) \\'0111 grnwrr:4 . :!!~I:~ ~:II~~Sa If (Erln~) 111,1' nnlp),'s lur.. =:~~ 1!~nV.9 ANDUSON STEPHEN L (Andareon-iiros, . 4 U. UU T (EII7.) rnrmer . rail FUl"k ~1('I'hen L Chlprnnn Chlpmlln -Y ' l'rrs Hod cashr. P~andler S~hoo1. And CI'!lnn Ellen L . Adams John (Marie) lab. ...... I•. Andenon 1IIII"0ld student. Anderson John II elk Chlprnan'S. Anderson Jos \V (I'~ilrl) hrmmtkr American Fork 8addJrry. carll. -"dams Junius (Pearl) lab. Adams J Delos. Adams p;f rs Kate R. Hl l' k ""ok top lines) . Anderson Carl (MaI'Y) wool groweI'. A.ntlerKnJl ehas J II.('onl,l.) rut·nu'I·. Andel'son Ella (wid Nell). /I. nrrtt :n!:~ C'tl::;~~ ~~/(I{,"k L) , Llcemu!'<1 EmlHllmet's and Funeral Soddlel'Y) . A. stu(h~nt . Ilirk Sal'all V dk P O . ntuod DIlI1I lall. Olrcrton, Funer'lll Supplies, Auto Ser. vlcc. E Main St. Tel lOG. (~cc rlgbl Anderson Gus .~dams Mrs Caroline. CI"I':lI1U·I·Y . 1{('IUlrth. "Irk Louis IIb'·II. "MERIC"N FORK SADDLERY (G " And ... 5011) . lIarncss 311t1 Soddl~s, (.lIanvu, Tent!il:, Shcf!prncil 's Suppllc:;, .-\tu crlcln For k . TE"l fH)-\V. Am("rlcan Fork Shoe Repg Co (OeD H Webb, t:dwd Smllh) . Amerl C31l Fork Third Wd Mt~ Hse. American By E:q, Co \V L Johnson Igt . ANDERSON BROS (War,on F .nd lIt.ph .. Anderson T. HI I'd Kennl'th J (L.oIR) tdll' ,\nll'lle an furk III,h :-;dll. I\lrk AJht (COI'a.) rarnH'r . Jsahel. Anderson E\'a M . Adnm:l Arza L. Adctms Caroline. EIIf.'1I ~t. Oillns Lr.una poultry . AmerlclITJ FOl"k Motor Co Lee Holstrom mIT Am erl('an Fork 011 Cn (D D Smith) oU dlrs ond auto ser sla. Amerh:-:III Fork I'ulJ I.lIn), Mrs F.mllU' Foster ..\II<1(l rSOIl MI's Jllnns hla t~:::~: \~)j;';n~' Ml:'1m g lIuIJf'l1 It lIIflHlrnt. ,\dAms Rnthrnrrl Ii stlldp.l1t. Adilms :-:;hprmiln (Ff'rll 11111. Artnmson I>lIl"fI.lll.V ~tud(mt. .\dmason F;rllla. .\(Ialllson F;lully K. ,\ damson tipn r y I. rarmer . Arnerl('on I'"ork lIIR"h l'm~r Ry. Tel \V U. Lon" DlstRnce Tele phone service, J E Chadwick, pOliltmaster. . \ hp.1 F.tta sllu1ent. Ahel FranciS B. :\bf'1 r?r~~ "~s~~.ary E) drh-e r Utah Poullry IJlnns ~lI11I1S M) . ~t'Hlfmt . Alpine 1'uh Co A F Gllll!lrOI'd nurr pub. Th" GI1I7.('1I and l'l l'a:ta ll\ Grove Re. \'lew. Amerlc:ln Fork nonllng Wk.! Art Dye mIT Am p. rlcan Fork Co-op Ins I Jus II Slorn prcs Jss II Clark "roc Eugene Nichola 'reas·l!Iupt. American Fnl'k tat Ward Meettnr House, .\llIerlt'an F(JI"k Hh \Vard Mr.r.Ung House. nros live Itk. "MERICAN FORK J'oplllllllon 3,500. An Incorflorated town In north(>rn part or Utah county on the ~1I11 l.ake Route, Slllt take &. Ut'Lb and D 6; n r; \V n R, 15 miles northwest or Provtl, thA county !leal. HIS L D S and Presby~ tcrlan churches, good pUblic schools, two hanks . a hotel, several BuhstantJal Btores. f!lr', a w~f'kly newspaper, The Cltl zen. EIP :\lwl F.. :\11(>nF~r~ ~1~~r.IR~Chl. Ol'n C pl'ln AlPIne Scill. VMIl"e JIlS \V hlAhop L n .\d lml.!' 1lP.11t11 .-\rtBIIISItIi " 'Bltcr T lah. .\ JJen A Iht II (lIort"lIse) :"mlth \"rn fJ live stk. "trollg rJon C prp~ Alpin!! Crr."m~rj'. ~u'cmg Frllnk JU!ltlC8. ~lrOnR' Frpd town recorder. \\'hlfhy Alvin Justice. Ad :uJl !l! J.ula A. :\tliltn!l! H:aymnlld ;\IIi1I1I !IHI HIlI'nll H. FI OI'r.nce tehr. 1. &: ~III1S contr!. ~lcOanlf'1 F 0 mayor. Manh JO!l! F b:uber. '11I1'~h &: ~nn!\ gf"n mds~. 1.I1t1r J Provo, Ulah 11111115 J~aac PIIlP ~111l!1I11 MIIIIfI!!!f)1I MRhrl \\" . Aflnlll~nll I',:t,"· C rlll'lJllH' . Ilramll'1I I.I·on l Il' hr, u• Thornton In!l \V loh. . \ damsoll Lewis A rarmor. .\d a lll~1I1I I.II1YcI II (UI.at; prln Sc: hl. .\rt :ufI!!!nn I urllllnl"' elk nrlglf:\ 1I1I1I1t' .. Itflill CUII!4t:lhle. ~r.un Tel 36 cO's At1l1lr1~R~,~~r:U1dp. r.RJUUer Utah Poultry pr~.l.n<le!'!U'~ .'\d~Hnson I\rtilm~nn JIII1P ~ ~mlth a POLK or ~\mf! lr'cl1n Fork. the bankJn, And ship· ping pnlnt. 1.0nM' dl!tLlnce tt>lephone and 1\ 100 N Unlverslly Av. ULah "LPINE ..\ t ')W I! !'rltled In I 8 r, 3, In tbe northern r:II ' ~ of l:t311 (;ounty. :lO milE'S suutll cas t or Snit I.llkp. City, 21') mil",!! northw('.H or J'rr".'(I. tll~ ,:IHrnt.y '~ill ,Hid 5 mile ! north H. F. Thomas Abstract Co. HOMEiAND~· REALn COMPANY· poultry. CATALOO WORK BOOKLETS AND LOOSE LEAF DEVICES S T R A C T S Conveyanoes Examination of Title 214 W. Canlar Pro YO. ULah TITLE SEARCH FORM (Obtain information from title abstract books at County Recorder's Office) Address: ?"Z 'S. /Dr> ~} City:A.....vi~ ~, V4-~Ce. Tax Number: OZ'OZO\OOtl':t!>t)"!. Legal Description (include acreage): Current Owner: TAM". N,'"leAddress: ''IS W.I'/8o ,. . . TRANSACTION ~J t,)\- t-(Co&f DATES GRANTOR (SELLER) TYPE OF DOLLAR TRANSACTION AMOUNT GRANTEE (BUYER) ~ ~ '}--~~~ CorP. o~?Je'>~.\.\-.~~~~"'1 Ira4""~ .... L \' t-./ l~I,~h~ Z . lpkP-~J'Jf ~eo!>1~\sl.e"D LP;. Ckr.J... &/lO /71 l ' I ~- ~J"R /1/ C L1 Itt:> /I.{l) ';;-:Sl·j01{ ~~~rk~q~L~~~J t " C.p{.~ l'Dv;Jc.~ It1liu/a> ... v l.£L-bv, I ~ ..... I .kJ~l~/.17:l70 v ~ ~~ 12: .,., ~p ac..17 IN'C/ C . M. ' 'Bec..k. w"D rJu.~. . h.aM-~~d- LJv L I ! ~-s Z ~"S (,p,-"'r\ /-.f:- ~ . . t "3 I~ ---, _~ ~I- " 2- /' ~c:o-rJ.J ~c. d4" .r'-t- (...j/ \...... .., . . .::s. "2" I ~ I /"D I ~6. '1.~ ..... "l p,{.p \ A&-.~~~~ tJD . '1bk.-t. cS. ~1'.-v Il·p. Date: Atl jz; fIHI /Pf At! (o.f ./ '\ ~ ~ tA-4A"I';.-b ~fN'" ,. Researcher: ~. ~ 2\Jl~o..~& .-/ ,t;; ~t5/70 I I .4/?l.k ~A.<1?_ J ~p ~ {j. \' vL- ClA{?""! ~~ a;.v~ ~ Zil~~ 16..~ \ J D\ ~ ~e. CJ~\.l ~/~/t> 'f , ID/&'-f./~~ I COf+1ENTS ~ z. z * * * LIDP Land Information Display System * * * Year: 1997 ••• Tax District 060 Acres: 0.19 *: Property Serial Number: 02:020:0017:003 Locator/Old Serial No.: C 1 C-132-A ----------------------------- Owner Infor.ation: ------------------------------Na.e& " Nalle: Address: NIELSON, TANYA 1997 ••• 945 W 1400 SOUTH SALT LAKE CITY UT 84104-2143 ---------------------------- Property Information: ----------------------------52 S 100 WEST AMERICAN FORK UT 84003-2351 Address: Date Deleted: 00/00/00 Property Class: 100 Date Effective: 01/26/96 01/26/96 Date Created: 12/31/77 Date Updated: 05/15/96 Date Recorded: 6885;96 Previous Serial Nu.ber: Last Entry *: ----------------- Taxing Description: (Not For Legal Docu.ents) -------------- COM 295 FT S OF NE COR BLK 9, PLAT A, AMERICAN FORK CITY SUR; S 84.5 FT; W 99 FT ; N 84.5 FT; E 99 FT TO BEG. Screen Printed: 06/11/97 Requested By: INFO at T27203 10: 18:56 ABSC * * * * * * Land Information Display System * * * * * * Parcel IndeH for 02:020:0017 Beginning September 3, 1985 manual abstracting was discontinued Grantor: Entry no Inst date Consideration 1 Grantee: Book Page Rec date Satisfaction I Koi Ti.e Tie .nu.ber 1 NIELSON, TANYA 01/23/9& t10.001 &885;9& NIELSON, TANYA 3873 075 01/2&/9& 1 C WD 04 : 03 ; 00 J NIELSON, TANYA 6884;96 01/19/9& t134,900.001 MISSION HILLS MORTGAGE CORPORATION 3873 0&7 01/26/96 A 4062 626 J D TR 04:02 ;00 1 DRASCHIL, CHERYL Y 6883;96 01/23/96 t10.001 3873 06& 01/26/96 J NIELSON, TANYA WD 04:02 ;00 I UTAH COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 7&84&;95 11/06/95 I WHOM OF INTEREST 3811 791 11/08/95 J RESOL 09:14 i0~ I FARNSWORTH, ETHEL 71290;95 10/05/88 $10.001 FARNSWORTH, LEE W TEE 3795 848 10/20/95 J ET AL QCD 10: 17 ; 00 J * * * Press XMT to continue search Screen Printed: 06/11/97 Requested By: INFO at T27203 10: 19:2& * * * ABSC * * * Land Infor.ation Display Syste. * * * * * * Parcel Index for 02:020:0017 * * * Beginning Septe.ber 3, 1985 .anual abstracting was discontinued Grantor: Entry no Inst date Consideration Grantee: Book Page Rec date Satisfaction Koi Ti.e Tie nu.ber ORASCHIL, CHERYL Y 03/05/93 13380;93 .88,229.00 FORD CONSUMER FINANCE COMPANY INC 3099 338 03/08/93 R 3990 061 TR D 11:47 ;00 DRASCHIL, CHERYL Y TEE ET AL 03/05/93 13379;93 .10.00 ORASCHIL, CHERYL Y 03/08/93 3099 337 ;00 WO 11:47 01/08/93 $2,300.00 ORASCHEL, CHERYL Y 2857;93 01/19/93 INTERMOUNTAIN LIEN SERVICES ET AL 3073 479 R 3104 021 ;00 N LN 01 :34 06/04/92 DRASCHIL, CHERYL L TEE 27927;92 $3,571.11 06/08/92 2946 578 BRYANT, JEAN F R 3103 814 10:27 ;00 TR 0 06/04/92 $27,529.89 DRASCHIL, CHERYL Y TEE 27926;92 06/08/92 2946 577 R 3103 812 FARNSWORTH, ETHEL ___ ._. __ ._ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:.---..:...:..:--=-_ ;00 10:27 TR D _ ...:..._-=~::.:...--..:..------I.=:...--..:.... * * * Press XMT to continue search Screen Printed: 06/11/97 Requested By: INFO at T27203 10:19:50 * * * ABSC * * * Land Infor.ation Display Syste. * * * * * * Parcel Index for 02:020:0017 * * * Beginning September 3, 1985 .anual abstracting was discontinued Grantor: Entry no Inst date Consideration Grantee: Book Page Rec date Satisfaction Koi Time Tie number BRYANT, JEAN F 27925;92 06/04/92 f10.00 DRASCHIL, CHERYL Y TEE 2946 576 06/08/92 WD 10:27 ;00 FARNSWORTH, LEE W TEE ET AL 27924;92 OS/29/92 BRYANT, JEAN F 2946 575 06/08/92 QCD 10:27 ;00 WOODCOX, LINDA TEE 06/04/92 $10.00 ET AL 27923;92 BRYANT, JEAN F 06/08/92 2946 574 QCD 10:26 ;00 FARNSWORTH, ETHEL 10/05/88 32692;88 $10.00 FARNSWORTH, LEE W TEE 10/27/88 ET AL 2553 090 QCD 18732;77 02: 13 FARNSWORTH, WALTER JAMES 10/29/86 DEC 42069;86 WHOM OF INTEREST 12/09/86 2364 028 X 1557 534 * 18732;77 AF DC 09:12 * * * Search Completed SCl"een Printed: 06/11/97 Requested By: INFO at T27203 * * * 10120:01 LlCA' 3664 IV S£ " ' PROVO 14 MI. !\LE 1:24000 Heavy-duty 6000 7000 FEET 4000 5000 3000 ==~==al==~====C=~1 Medium-dut INTERVAL 20 FEET :PRESENT 5 FOOT CONTOURS INTENSIVE LEVEL SURVEYS AMERICAN FORK, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH SMITI-! 1-1 Y ATT ARCI-!ITECTS MILE o .5 LEGEND D D &4!:J &ouLh Mot'" &trsst 6ounUiul. Utah ~10 (801) 2~·1666 FAX: (801) 2~·16" 1 COUNTY: UT~H D QUAD: LEHI. UTAH 1975 USGS 7.5 MIN Beck, Christian & Zilpha House 52 S 100 West American Fork, Utah County Beck, Christian & Zilpha House 52 S 100 West American Fork, Utah County EVALUATION SHEET Intensive Level Survey Utah Office of Preservation Number of Properties Surveyed: 29 Addresses of Properties Surveyed: Date of Survey: July 1997 (Submitted in October) See attached Survey Conducted For: American Fork CLG By: Nelson Knight. Smith Hyatt Architects Evaluated By: lL Julie Osborne Date: November 9, 1997 Approved Approved with Recommendations (see below) Returned for Corrections/Additional Information (see below) Checklist of items required for each surveyed property: 1. lL. Completed Historic Site Form (clearly handwritten or typed) 2. lL. Photographs (at least two color slides or black-and-white prints) 3. lL. Completed title search form 4. lL. Completed Biographical Research Form (or equivalent) for each principal resident from the 5. 6. 7. lL. .2L .2L historic period (or adequately documented history for non-residential buildings) Photocopy of USGS map with location of building marked Photocopies of all research materials Separate file for each property (letter size) Recommended but not required: 8. 9. 10. 11 . Measured drawing(s} of floor plan(s} and field measurements Sketch plan of the property (required if there are outbuildings) Photographs (B&W and slides) of all exterior elevations and significant architectural details on the exterior and interior Old photographs of the building Comments/Recommendations: Overall, the surveyed buildings are well researched and documented. and the ILS's are nicely packaged with clear. complete information. For future reference, the historical narrative should discuss all available (and pertinent) information concerning the owners/occupants of the buildings. Obituaries are needed for each and every person who owned and/or lived in the building (for some period of time) during the historic period. Photographs should not be mounted (not archival). /william & Haydee Thornton House_ 88 S 100 West _ /Bernard & Maud Christensen House Ol...l0DO 154 S 100 West ~ans & Maren ClH¥.Heft210 S 100 West 01.-.1. '10 ~ ~arley & Malissa Hansen House 96-98 S. Center -g 7) (') '2..-10 .. ' Feathersone-Webb House 01.71 (p 96 S. 100 East l\ _ v " Abraham & Hettie GundrnundsonHouse 98 S. 100 West 01.-'1~C5Jo v Mark & Pearl Bezzant House 163 S. 100 West 01..-"144-10 ,.thomas & Emily Chipman House '/ 219 S 100 West o'2-.....,~~1 William Chipman-Abner Chipman House 279 S 100 West O'Ll~t{ ,Dr. James & Elva Chadwick House - 40 S. Center 0 '7..-1 ~o ~ John & Cora Chadwick House '-<~5 S Center <9 '1.:1 ~ ~ Dr. Guy & Roxie Rich~ds House 50 S Center 0'1..-1 ~Olp Isaac & Sadie Wagstaff House OL1~D 148 S. Center JOseph & Lillian Brown Ho!!§e 51 S 100 East O'1.;1.~ "l? '..........Crystal-Anderson House 60 N 200 West o'£.,1e£...-1 Leonard Harrington House l'7'V1'1 97 S 100 East v ,Webb-Preston House 49 N 200 West 01..-'1 ~~ v--:fackson-Anderson House 146 S 100 East ~ . 1 ,- James Dunkley House 26 S 200 West 0'"1'50! Vfuseph & Sarah Elsmo~e House 64 E 100 South : " '- Margaret Wild House 37 S. 200 West OL,..\ '5~ \. . . . George & Mary Spratley House 29 E 100 South 0'2..LCo \ 10 Joseph & Laura Dunkley House 40 S 200 West O£..-"1 '?Cj"'Z/ John & Ann Green House o"'Ll 54 S 200 West c??? ./ Reuben & Adeline Chipman House tJ'L-, '11 {o 38 S 100 West 'v ry:,- ' Christian & Zilpha Beck House 52 S 100 West 00'" c;;"11 ~oseph Y_H_O_U_se_~.oE-.:....:::~ BJ). & Elizabeth ShiPle__ 1.0""48 W 100 South ._ ___ - . J Lucian & Olive Crandall House '-'158 W 100 South 02'1 t?'7"B & Amanda Chipman House 186 W 100 South () -z."1 t1 ~Stephen - '11 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pnv302 |



