OCR Text |
Show FRIDAY THE BULLETIN JANUARY 6 1939 THE SUGARHOUSE BULLETIN 174 8 Wawtcb 4611 COAL CO. SNOW WHITE CLOTHES (Continued from Page 1) Hyland 2182- We arc of the opinion hat some of the European nations which have an egotistical idea of ruling the whole world will find that the immigrants which came to America and took out citizenship papers became real Americans, will not look with favor on the dictators who think that the whole, common people were born only to be 'slaves. - self-appoint- ed HAMILTON BROS. DAIRY Britain in her campaign for Peace a, any price has gone back the to days prior to the building of the Suez, canal. She only sees "SAFE MILK" ahead of her nose and does, not have the view of the future. just Office Plant There will come a time when the seat of BritislJ rule wil be 1014 Elm Ave. in the interior of Canada for' the reason that other European nat4000 So. 7th E. Ph. Hy. 5654 ions .vvll be powerful enough to force such a move: Ph. Mur. 313-- remodeled for Ladies and Gentlemen W Pressing 1060 East 21st South Cleaning MM ZE2 WELDING? emergency use in fire fighting by the county forest service, will build fire trails, motorways and firebreaks, as well as erosion control and reforestation. Oklahoma Dam Will Create Huge Lake ! j 9-1- Granite Welding & Wire Works Hyland 458 I CUT FLOWERS K Funeral Designs Corsages KING'S Forget Me Not -- -- FLORAL "Flowers That Satisfy" 2157 Highland Drive Hyland 8199 ot MIRRORS Complete New Line from 59c to $59.00 USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN TOE PAINT POT the World Brighter' i Hy. 8739 1074 E. 21st So. "We Blake egg; Buy Only GOOD COAL Call Hyland CASTLE GATE U CI.F.AR CREEK B ABERDEEN a KING COAL Forestry Camp Is Set Up To Assist Wayward Boys Agents for Sentinel Stokera Stoker Coal -- LOBE'S ON THE JOB" SUGAR HOUSE !191 COAL GO. Hy. M20 Hlghlnnd Drive ITi'toric Wedding SALINAS. CALIF.-T- he recfrs ished that the errvey hrt W has werfd-n- quently have difficulty persuading their sons to attend dancing schools because the average boy between the ages of 11 and 14 is shorter than the average girl, according to Dr. $20,-000,0- 00 Cut 2021 Sooth 11th DISNEY, OKLA. The new dam being built on Grand river in northeastern Oklahoma is rapidly taking form. Seven contracts, aggregating, more than $10,000,000 have been awarded. The excavation for the, spillway has been completed and. core drillings have been taken to determine what kind of rock is avail-- ; able for the huge dam's foundations. A small railroad and a transmls-- . sion line have been built to the dam. site. At present about 275 men are employed on the dam, but officials1 estimate that when the pouring of concrete begins between 1,600 and 3,000 laborers will be needed. Contract for the construction of the streamlined, 6,100-fomultiple- arch dam was awarded to the Mass- -' man Construction company of Kansas City. The Massman company bid $9,322,060 for the Job and promised to have the structure completed in 18 months. The Grand River Dam authority also has ordered $1,338,760 worth of turbines, generators and other electrical equipment, which is to be delivered on January 1, 1940. The dam will create a lake 57 miles long stretching across four counties in northeastern Oklahoma. Several small towns will be inundated and will be relocated. The power plant to be constructed in connection with the dam will be capable of producing 200,000,000 kilowatts of electricity annually. The power will be sold to towns and cities in the area and the money will be used to retire bonds wnich were issued to pay for the dam. Land in the area is selling at a Town lots in Disney premium. which a few months ago had little or no value are selling at prices ranging as high as $1,000 each. h:s-tcri- cal establ- of Americans 1.1 California was in 184S in what was known as the "First1 Maritime District of Alta California," the principals being Mary Peterson, 16, of Jackson county. Mo., and James Williams, 31, of Cape Girardeau county. Mo. LOS ANGELES. As an aid to the rehabilitation of wayward youths who have completed terms in forest service camps maintained by the Los Angeles county probation department, juvenile court and depart-men- t of forestry, a "junior CCC camp" has been established in the Malibu mountains. of the Through the three agencies the camp will care for 30 youths between 17 and 20 years of age, patterned closely along the lines of the federal camps. Boys who otherwise would be forced to return to surroundings that might counteract the character-buildin- g effects of the juvenile detention camps will be admitted and will be paid $1 a day. Should their families be on relief rolls or definitely in need of funds, part of the earnings will be paid them. In other instances the money will be saved for the boys and given them when they complete their enlistments of six months or a year. The youths will be available for ! Josephine Kenyon of New York. "One fact that very few parents realize is that boys and girls grow differently," she told the Fifth Institute on the Exceptional Child here. "Until they are eight years old, the growth is the same, but the adolescent spurt starts for the girl when she is nine and for the boy when he is 12. "So while the boy is still slowing down, the girl is shooting upward so rapidly that before long she outstrips him and for three full years girls art actually taller than boys of the same age." Doctor Kenyon said that a boy's "adolescent spurt" is well under way by the time that he is 14, while many girls have reached their full height when 16. Boys continue to grow until they are 21, when the average youth is slightly more than four and a half inches taller than the avezaifi-di- '. L Pink Bollworm i Invades South Menace to Cotton Industry Seen If U. S. Does Not Check Pest. - Mc-Alle- The extensive Now Located at 1119 East 21st South Bones and Artifacts of Pre- Aleuts Found in Isles of Far North. Hyland 364 n, 193C. eradication Vessel Sails Around the World on Peace Cruise Carrying a "mystery" crew of three, the yawl Lena left recently on a "peace cruise" around the world. Built by her captain and owner, a little old man known only as "Mr. Chips," the Lena will spread the gospel of peace to the seaports of the earth, rather than the lecture halls of metropolitan centers. BOSTON. 34-fo- ot The adventures of Mr. Chips, for the most part, have to do with war, which is probably the chief reason for him wanting to round out his life preaching peace to a d pro- season to Kleberg, Nueces and San Statistics: Bea Wain, a soloist at the International Casino, had a few minutes to spare the other evening about 11:15, the time theaters were leaving out, so she spent them digging up some figures for this de inter partment. In the val between light changes, 85 every one filled, rolled along Forty-fift- h street. On Broadway. cabs sped by at the rate of 210 in a Pedestrians period. edged along eight in a row and they passed Miss Wain at the rate of about 250 in three minutes. Most of those in the cabs were dressed for mally but she counted 29 top hats among the walkers. And all this on an ordinary weekday night. Russo-Japane- se Tax on Pitcairn Island Only 12 Cent Annually An island colony pre-Aleut- s, Hobbies: New York, the city that speeds along under and above ground and saves seconds by risking life and limb in crossing streets against lights, still has time for hob bies, according to Dave Elman, whose mail always shows that a preponderance of hobbists live in the metropolis. There is the prac ticing physician who spends ' his spare time collecting penny banks and has 3,000 of them now, and the fellow who paints faces on egg' shells. Other New York hobbies as recorded by Elman: Composing music on leaves, collecting b'ricks from historical homes, raising creating greeting cards from chicken wishbones, and as for the New Yorkers who collect books, stamps and matchbook covers, they run into big figures. cat-erpillar- s, ., Added Item: The collectors include Ernie Fiorito, band leader, whose specialty is antique pipes. At a stiff price, he recently acquired a Dutch pipe with a history dating back to the good burghers of old New Amsterdam. Returning to his home in Jackson Heights, the other afternoon, he saw fiis niece, Tessie, aged four, blowing soap bubbles from a window, his prized Dutch pipe in her tiny hand. He dashed into the house, grabbed the pipe and shouted: "Never do that you'll break uncle's pipe!" And so agitated was he, the pipe slipped through his fingers and shattered on the where they cannot cook or spell, floor. but the only tax is 12 cents a year. That is the picture of the lonely Broadway: A crowd watching the Pitcairn Island colony, founded by the mutineers of H. M. S. Bounty in building of a new garage, while 30 stories above, a window cleaner 1790 on an isolated dot of land midperilously from a ledge unhangs Zeabetween and New Panama way A noticed sidewalk land, in a report just published in starers at Forty-eight-hgroup ofstreet beLondon by the colonial office. The the fact that are moaning girls report is the work of J. S. Neill and wearing coats again . . . Window Dr. Duncan Cook. The brightest light in the whole cigar makers drawing a crowd by to see which can turn out a report is the news that the "arms racing first Policemen still cigar on Pitcairn Island is a gun tax" raincoats . . . license fee of 12 cents a year, and wearing Seven boys in white sweaters each that is the only tax levied. with a letter on his back . . . and the letters spell out the name of a (Thanks to Andre Baruch.) Sea food display in a restaurant movie. WNU Servlci. C Bell ... old-sty- window looking like a work of art . . . With brook trout as the centerBet they don't taste like piece the trout cooked with bacon beside g stream . . With some the scent of pine and balsam in the A group of girls all wearing air those hats with a feather sticking up like a spear . . . Makes me want to give an Indian war shoop . . . roaming Buyers from the wholesale district . . . They get . But they trips to New York . work every minute of their stay . . . If they want to hold their jobs . . . Shoe models entering a Seventh avenue establishment . . . and they have looks as well as perfect feet . . . Seventh avenue in the garment district no place for one in a hurry . . . Gesticulating crowds make sidewalk progress difficult. ... swift-flowin- . ... n WASHINGTON. A laree collet- -' tion of skulls, bones, and artifacts of a hitherto unknown race, probably ancestral to some of the American Indian tribes, is being studied by: Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, Smithsonian curator cf physical anthro- -' oology. This material has been col- lected by Doctor nraucxa auring th nat three vears in the Aleutian V. islands, stretching like a many- spanned bridge from wortn America to Asia. The greatest number cf the remains came from an enormous mound on the island of Umnak. From these skulls and bones it will be possible to reconstruct a picture of those people who occupied the Aleutians for many generations before the later inhabitants, the Aleuts, who differed from the older stock in many details, and who evidently were moving slowly westward over a period of some centuries. The older people can be dated, Doctor Hrdlicka says, only very roughly. Their remains go back about 2,000 years. Related to Pacific Tribes. There is no reason to believe, he says, that they were ancestors of Indians in general. Rather, he believes, they were at least closely related to the ancestors of the tribes found occupying the Pacific coast at the time of the first white explorations, including the California Indians. There is no evidence that they d'ed out in the Aleutians. They must hive moved on, and that eastward. The Aleuts seem to have come and their predecessors to have left without any wholesale massacres. The two races may in fact have lived on ; together for a few generations. The according to the; evidence gathered by Doctor Hrd--: licka, seem to have been the descendants of earlier perhaps much earlier migrants out of Asia into Alaska. They probably came by way of the Kuriles islands and the Aleutian chain. The inhabitants of the. islands practiced in part mummification of their dead, but most of their skeletal material secured Hrdlicka was from burials.) The Aleuts may have picked up the; mummy technique from them, for. in a few places Aleut and mummies were found together. The Aleut remains thin out as one goes, westward, indicating probably the direction of their progress. The remains of the older people, says Doctor Hrdlicka,' tie up closly with those discovered by him previously in the lowest levels of a large old village site on Kodiak island. Here they were wiped out in a great slaughter by some invading people. The escaped such fate, but as a distinct people they have disappeared. nigh Primitive Culture. They were, says Doctor Hrdlicka, a race of relatively high primitive culture considering the materials', they had to work with driftwood,; bone and poor stone. They had no' native ivory such as characterized the cultural life of the earliest Eskimo. Many of their artifacts, especially large stone pots used for cooking food, are close to some found along the northwest coast. The finding of the remains of this people brings to an end 10 summers of exploration in the Far North by Doctor Hrdlicka and his associates. He has demonstrated that Alaska has been a veritable racial le with at least five, and possibly six, anthropologically different peoples crossing and recrossing each other's paths. All of them contributed in some way to the blood of the native tribes of both North and South America. . five-minu- te conflict-trouble- world. He saw service as a lieutenant in the Russian navy during the war. When the revolution broke out, Chips was forced to flee his native land. The Lena will carry 24,000 postcards bearing a peace symbol, which will be mailed from all ports of call to friends of Mr. Chips in Boston and vicinity. .... le Syndicate. Two New Guns Perfected For National Defenses WASHINGTON. The war department announced perfection of two new guns a powerful antiaircraft g antitank gun and an cannon which will be major items in the program to strengthen national defenses. Both guns have been standardized. Large scale production is expected to begin as soon as the next congress appropriates the necessary money. In announcing completion of tests of the guns, the war department said that both emphasize speed and mobility and can be towed by trucks over highways or rough ground. Field tests proved them "highly efarmor-piercin- pre-Ale- ut r pre-Ale- ut pre-Aleu- ts cats-crad- Ohio of 300 Years Ago Called 'No Man's Land' CINCINNATI, OHIO. The Ohio country, once a rich hunting ground for 12,000 to 15,000 Indians, was vir- imhu iMlillliawiKU 1U1 BCVC1 CLA UCv" ades about 300 years ago, according to Dr. Beverley W. Bond, University of Cincinnati professor of history. Ohio became a "no man's land" as a result of wars between New York State Iroquois and the Ohio Erie nation in the middle of the Seventeenth century. The Eries were defeated and almost destroyed. More tribes came to this area about 1680 seeking new hunting grounds, Dr. Bond said. Have 67 Grandchildren MONT. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Verwolf, married 48 years ago at Harrison, S. D., and the parents of 12 children, can now count a total of 56 grandchildren and 11 MANHATTAN, great-grandchildr- fective." d traffic officer on That street during the duty on Forty-fifttheater hour . . . Works with a smile and a pleasant word now and then . . . and gets results even . . . and a lone from gray-haire- h taxi-drive- gram followed the discovery of the bollworm several years ago in the Big Bend country of Texas and it spread in 1936 in the lower Rio Grande valley of Texas and Mexico. Del Curto said it had not been learned how the pest had spread last Variation: In the mail came this invitation from a bridge club operator, who is also a playwright: "Average players winning for a change! During the sessions we have held thus far, players winning some share of the prizes who haven't won in ages. Been playing in those 'dog fight' duplicates and been torn, figuratively, limb from limb! Nice No and quiet at our duplicates. no screaming and vituperation; roaring. And no hungry players who must win regardless. Hope to see you soon." The invitation was not accepted. There must be a catch to it somewhere. taxi-cab- s, ng I f one-minu- te 175 val- ley. There has been no infestation between the valley and the new counties. Until recently the United States counwas the only in from world the the free try pink bollworm. Unless the pest is controlled, entomologists assert, an entirely new economic crisis will face the South. The worm is so destructive that a serious infestation, sufficient to cause "commercial damage," will destroy as much as 80 to 85 per cent of an entire crop. LONDON. Partial TEXAS. McALLEN, economic ruin of the South's cotton industry by pink bollworm is visualized by federal and state entomologists unless effective measures are adopted to curb infestation in Texas and Arizona. The bollworm, which feeds on cotton bolls, was discovered in the lower Rio Grande valley only two years ago in gin trash, having spread from the Big Bend country of Texas. Extensive precautions were taken to eradicate the pest, but the bollworm attacked growing cotton during the last season in Kleberg,' Nueces and San Patricio counties, outside the valley. Stalks Cleared Away. South Texas farmers cleared their fields of cotton stalks under supervision of C. M. McEachern of head of the federal-stat- e quarantine office of the valley. State Entomologist J. M. Del Curto of Austin said that the Rio Grande valley cotton industry "could not stand a 30 per cent increase in the cost of production, cut staple and stained lint all eventualities of infested areas." Del Curto pointed out that unless farmers follow federal regulations for cleaning every field cf stalks-o- nly breeding places of the pink bollworm establishment of a "noncot-to- n zone" might result. Entomologists say that the bollworm is one of the seven most destructive pests known to agriculture and is one of the most difficult to eradicate because of its life cycle. Seriousness of the threat to Southern agriculture is indicated by stern efforts of the government to eradicate the pest. Spread la Patricio counties, which lie miles from infested areas in the cotton-produci- Growing Spurt for Girls Project Brings Prosperity Set at From 2 Years To Wide Section. LANGHORNE, PA. Mothers fre- "Just Bring In the Pieces" i i East 21st South Street COMMENTS Peerless Laundry THE TAILOR Suits made to order and STEVENSON hair-raisin- 8 F. W. KIEPE L.L Eerie: On occasions, the "Public Notices" columns of local newspaI. If. CONNIFF, Publisher pers come out with something that intrigues my interest and excites Advertising Rates on Application t my fancy. For instance, this one Business Office and Plant at 1119 East 21st South which appeared recently in an afternoon paper: "Haunted house needMust have subed immediately. to events Bulletin" "The ef Interest Phone copy for news Items and stantial background, guaranteed or Commercial Printing Company Hyland 864. g spooks." Bequantity of fore seeing that ad, my idea was .1.50 that there was no market for hauntSubscription Pric e One year (52 weeks), in advance ed houses and that instead of being wanted, they were avoided, especially at night. But then, as has been said before, anything can happen in New York. a 1184 East 21st So. 1119 by Sugarhauae. Utah MURRAY STORE Hyland 490 and BI 111 West 3rd South Printed at , and Feed HAXFIELD FEED Lights of NewVbrk A WEEKLY PUBLICATION BEST PRICES ' on Baby Chicks and Turkeys Mound Reveals 'Unknown' Race rs peddler of bachelor buttons . . . He gets as much for a blue bloom as the gardenia seller does for a A panhandler with white one a beautiful black eye . . . Maybe it's only a part of his make up . . . As years come on me, I grow more A bewildered suspicious Frenchman tryin.c. q. gel. talQIPM- - ... ... The new antiaircraft gun is of mm. caliber, automatic type, mounted on an fire, trailer. The unit has a tread and wheelbase, a weighs about 5,000 pounds. The tank cannon, also of 37 mm. caliber, is mounted on a carriage that d can be towed by trucks or hauled short distances by mann crew is propower. The tected by armor. The unit is about 12 feet long, 5 feet wide, 3 feet high and weighs about 950 pounds. 37 all-arou- four-whe- el 120-in- 58-in- ch high-spee- two-ma- ch Whisker Disinfection Enforced in Sweden STOCKHOLM. Travelers entering Sweden from Denmark are required to wash their hands in disinfectant and submit their clothes for dry cleaning. It was an experiment in control cf hoof and mouth disease. Bearded travelers were required to wash their faces in disinfectant. |