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Show . THE BOX ELDER NEWS, taNUARY 3, 1933.' ScaST s D- - Junns, National Bank Bldg. st pnoneNo 43 PHILLIPS jw. BONDS Adjustments Fpf settlements. farai ryan, d. d. s. pentist Jgt National Bank Bldg. tphone No. 31 am City. Utah ;rMAN LEE Abstractor ed Lte. insurance. Ss. BONDS. Forest Street City. Utah jFest ham I BARGERON k FIRE INSURANCE iURETY BONDS, ETC. ifli, kary Public alM feclate your I phone 8 mil l: trar ifc I to it ,( M .11 New Jerseya more or less famous Sky farms' nudist colony an aggregation of the original, non- commercial nudists of the United has shut up shop for the States going into hibernation, as it were. Officials of the organization want it known, however, that whatever capitulation the news may suggest to biased minds the reason is the rigors of the new season and not to the conventionalities of society. Indeed, the members are Just as much nudists at heart and by inclination as ever, it is stated, and the new spring will find them holding forth in their original birth day suits as defiantly as ever at the same old stand. Some attempt will be made to carry on through the winter In fact, a Manhattan gymnasium has been rented by the society and here a half a hundred men and women of the colony plan to gather two nights a week to swim and work off by calisthenics the avoir dupots that mars a perfect nudist Wear Bathing Suits. it is no use taking any Because chances," according to Carl Becker, founder and secretary of the organization, they wear bathing suits. But camp near Sky farms, their Liberty Corners, N. J., is open all year, and though members go there through the winter chiefly to get out In the country, on warm days the hardier ones do a little nude sun bath- I National Bank Annex JPhose t-jiam City. Utah - The Sky farms nudists are incorporated in New Jersey as the American League for Physical Culture. They have only pity for the rival nudists of the Olympian league, and although Camp Olympia, which- flourished last summer near Highland, N. Y., had 400 acres and its own private lake, they consider that It was com merclal from the outset. We are the oldest and the biggest nudist organization," said Mr. Becker, a German in the importing and exWe are a private porting business. club, equally for the benefit of all members. Nobody makes any money. We dont admit the press even when reporters are willing to go nudist, too. Naturally we want our idea to spread, but It cant go like wildfire. We have to educate the public, but we also have to look out for the privacy of our members." The group has 220 members In the metropolitan district, Mr. Becker said : It would be more than 500 if the depression had not caused many to drop out. Asked why the depression would affect a cult which means lesa wear and tear on clothes, Mr. Becker laughed gently and said there were dues to pay and the matter of railroad fare to Liberty Corners. Our purpose is the promotion of cleaner relations between the sexes by eliminating perhaps the greatest evil of western civilization, sex curiosity," he went on. This can be done by bringing both sexes together in a perfect state of nudity, providing the proper place can be found a secluded farm where all kinds of sports, swimming, and general camp life can be indulged la Build Own Quarters. Mr. Becker founded the league three years ago after a visit to Germany, where he got the idea." That summer the nudists camped out in the Catskills. Since then they have had rented farms in New Jersey and In Rockland county, N. Y. Police descended on the latter, but the nudists were freed in court Last winter, with the treasury comfortably full, they bought the plot of dense woods, with running brook at Liberty Corners. In May they moved out In tents ; by July 4 they had built with their own hands most of & dormitory with sleeping accommodations for 48. Now they have just finished a swimming pool' An architect and several carpenters among the membership led in the building operations. A plumber member put up an outdoor shower for use until the pool was finished. There are also 12 bungalows which members built themselves on plots they rented from the league for from $10 to $25 a year, and several jobless nudists are living In their bungalows all winter. Next year they plan a social hall, tennis courts, an archery field and other facilities for sports, and a restaurant At present cooking is done camp fashion. Would-b- e members are looked over by a membership committee which is so adept that In three years only four persons have been expelled. "They did not do anything, they were just uncongenial, Mr. Becker said, and the rules are even stricter now. No one Is admitted to the camp until the membership committee has approved, then the applicant is taken ont to , and if he Sky Farms for a likes It his membership Is assured. - r i, 13 me 1AL! nr "V i i 1 get your m permanent for the holidays. lovo Oil Wave uiar $5), Now I $4.00 Duart $3.00 proved quinole Wave -- 12.0 1 Appointment early! Beauty ady Shop j hone No. 71 for GOOD COAL and Kindling Wood L. D. S. Aments smer Wt, FIat....$ .89 Wt, Rib .98 limn 155 Wt, Rib Wt, Rib, Ecru 155 W Wt, Rib 155 IJI Wt, Rib, Ecru 155 Heavy, Rib 155 i Heavy, Rib, Ecru 155 j Wt, Part Wool 2.75 Wt, Part Wool 855 58 i ... 1.50 If Man or Lady) Prepaid Anywhere M.S.A. 'Return Any Pair Satisfactory. nd y state Size Pay More? Hansen II Srs! Man with ait Jf iTABUSHED iCtSE ! I week-end- ?rman lee Citv. Utah SgJS Sertice SUITS -- Aurora, Kan. Lady Luck ceriafnlj is on good terms with Med Cote th.si-days- . , Pressed SERVICE pS SUITS lifetf1-0.I0DERN bdable Cleaners No. 86 60c 0 Cote, farmer living near her, saw dark clouds approaching as he wa In the field. Deciding to quit wi-he started driving his team hum. Suddenly he remembered leavm.- coat in the field. He went bark leaving the horses. In his mmi absence a lightning boil atm-team. Three horses were k'll recelved only a alight shock - DETROIT, Mich. Five million man hours of labor are furnished the Bteel industry by every 100,000 Chevrolet Sixes delivered to consumers, Paul and general MackalJ, sales manager of the Bethlehem Steel company, reports. His statement was one of a number wired to H. J. Klingler, and general sales manager of the Chevrolet Motor company, from prominent suppliers of the automobile Industry reflecting their views on the between increased automobile buying and general business improvement. Excerpts from some of the wires SEE ONE OF THE COUNTRYS GREATEST EXHIBITS first page) OF LIVESTOCK MANTUA J. Jensen, rf C. Rasmussen, G. T. F. P. l If . W. Nelson, c H. Jensen, rg A. Jensen, lg B. 1 0 l 0 Laver, rg ....0 2 4 0 2 2 4 At the 14th Annual 112 10 2 11 0 0 0 2 3 11 Ogden Livestock Show 4 10 COLISEUM OGDEN, - - UTAH SIXTH WARD Jan. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 vice-preside- nt Poultry and Seed Exhibits vice-preside- nt inter-relati- follow J. Williams, president Weirton C. No other Industry Steel company: can contribute as quickly nor ns widely to a further Improvement as the automobile Industry, due to their widely diversified requirements and quick consuming ability. Unquestionably the greatest values ever obtainable are offered today by the automobile industry and coupled with the fact that the purchase of no other article produces as much benefit for the general welfare, I look forward to the industry duplicating its performance of 1921 and contributing Immediately and materially to further relief of our unemployment condition by supplying business that will permit of further increased operation and of idle labor. B. F. Fairless, acting president, In Republic Steel Corporation: creased automobile buying would provide the impetus the steel industry needs. Our business would reflect any upturn immediately by substantial gain in operations and number of men employed. E. T. Weir, chairman, National Steel industry Steel Corporation: now almost 50 per cent above low point of last summer. Inasmuch as automobile industry is one of the largest consumers of steel, increased automobile buying would have the immediate effect of stimulating our operations and materially increasing employment. The automobile indus try can go a long way in bringing us all out of this depression. William L. Ward, president Russell Burdsall & Ward Bolt and Nut comas automobile manupany: facturers take biggest percentage of our total output, an increase in automobile buying would have immediate good effect on our industry. Thanks to recent orders received from your company our production at all plants has increased 50 per cent with consequent increase in the employment of labor." L. R. Smith, president A. O. Smith Business outlook is Corporation: better and the automobile trade will play a very important part in return business conditions. to satisfactory Releases for the new (Chevrolet) models have already added materially to the employment of our people. Any Increase in buying of Chevrolets would mean an Immediate increase in our plant operations. Mr. Mackalls complete wire follows: Automobile industry is a leading customer of steel mills, purchasing 18 per cent of the total steel produced. Successful start of automobile year will greatly assist the upturn in steel employment, especially in bars, sheets, wire and strip. Three years of delayed buying by purchasers of motor vehicles promises activity for the future. One hundred thousand Chevrolet cars delivered to consumers provides five million man hours of labor in steel Industry. Your program is a constructive one for employment and business progress in all allied industries. ... UTAHS rOLO TEAM In the interest of making polo a competitive Rocky Mountain Conference sport, a petition bearing the signatures of leading proponents of the sport of kings at the University of Utah was recently submitted to the apportionment board. Utah University, through its R. O. T. C. organization, has had a team for four years, winning during that time two conference titles in quasiofficial meets. How to Keep Book Put them in a safe deposit box inside the vanlt of a large bank and throw away the keys. Buy only cheap books. No one borrows books with inexpensive bindings. Arrange your bookcase so that you can press a spring when neighbors call, causing th$ai (the books) to slide inside an invisible wall panel. Buy books with cactus covers. Have your books printed in Chinese. Bury your books on a desert Island. Make a careful chart of the island, then destroy the chart Brooklyn , O - Back on the Job First Executive Did you enjoy youi vi'catinn? Yell, hut Second theres nothing like the fep of a mod desk under you Life, fv.ct again. ti t Y- ,: h it . Features ATTEND : - Special 'Amusement PLAN TO on t -- (Continued from Totals Eagle. Forgotten Coat Saves Kansas Farmers Life PAGE THREB MADE PUBLIC OF MOTOR CARS Views of Big Steel Men Wired to Chevrolet Co. Officials. Semi-Week- ly RESULTS OF M MENS GAMES REFLECTS SALE New York. ing. pentist 'hi It 1(5 ! DOWN FOR WINTER 30-ac- business." Garble, d. d. s. nr,. STEEL INDUSTRY winter-- iST fkS NUDIST CULT SHUTS Members Already Lay Plans for Next Summer. PENTIST CC(, i r nrbir. tt rJlyh isCounts !e i ' ! c given, even Is in rci'iy cn with affection, II. Special Rates On All Railroads IBHI that it was in this house, in its better days, that she was born and spent her childhood. As their acquaintance grows, a romance develops between them. It is brought to ft climax by a series of startling events. Referee, Elmer Facer; Grant Valentine. Standing of the teams: Egg Production Low In the Average Flock Asserts Poultryman umpire, SOUTHERN DIVISION state-wid- The next games scheduled are to be played by the northern division, Wednesday, Jan. 4th. Bear River plays Honey ville at 7 p. m.; Corinne plays Third ward at 8 p. m.; First ward plays Fourth ward at 9 p. m. George Raft Finds Hollywood Hot Spot In Movie Foundry Actor Sees Grille for Night After Night Set Cast. Hollywoods hottest spot has been located. Its not the set where the hero and heroine embrace passionately. Rather, its the foundry operated in the Paramount studio. George Raft, virile young star of Dancers in the Dark Scarface, and Madame Racketeer" fame, who is featured with Constance Cummings, Wynne Gibson, Mae West and Alison Skipworth in Night After Night, directed by Archie Mayo, screen adaptation of Louis Bromfields novel, Single Night, which comes to the Grand Theatre, Wednesday and Thursday, spent as much of his time between scenes as he could spare, watching the workmen in the model foundry. The process kept him continually fascinated. Inasmuch as the workmen turned out 300 feet of metal fence and grille work for Night After Night settings, his presence was more or less justified. The foundry fulfills a variety of purposes in connection with the studio construction department Expert foundrymen turn raw metals Into a molten flux, cast them into a them variety of shapes and over and over again to flow out in new forms. Patterns are made in wood, laid into the impressionable earthen molds and liquid aluminum is poured in. In a few minutes the bright rough castings can be removed. It is found that the clear light metal can be used more economically than iron. When the Paramount foundry is not casting construction material, fine parts in bronze, brass or aluminum, or others of the metals, it reduces to ingots all the flotsam acre lot and Jetsam of the twenty-si- x which has meltable metal value. Scrap and junk metal is thus saved from the trash heap, to blend together into useful forms. The distillate furnace operates between 1250 and 2800 degrees Fahrenheit Castings up to the weight of 700 pounds have been made in the studio foundry. Another important use of this department is the ingot casting silver, which runs to within 6 per cent of being pure, from the precipitations secured out of film emulsions after the celluloid has been processed. A special process precipitates the silver out of the film emulsion on lead plates. It then is chipped off and reduced to ingots in the foundry. One ounce of silver is recovered from every 1,000 feet of film. The metal furnishings of the speakeasy which is the background for Night After Night all came from tids foundry. Raft plays the role of the owner of the place. He is fascinated by aloof Miss Cummings, who appears night after night, alone, as a patron. Ultimately she discovers . re-me- non-ferro- us lt One of the most urgent needs in the poultry industry in Utah today e is a campaign for a greater average egg production per hen, reports Carl Frischknecht, assistant extension poultryman of the Utah State Agricultural College. Mr. Frischknecht was led to make this statement because of the records made available to him from poultrymen in various parts of the state who have with the extension service in the keeping of poultry accounts during the past year. When some poultrymen are able to get an average production of 221-.- 7 eggs per bird during the year, while others secure an average of less than 100 eggs per bird in the same length of time, there is something wrong," so declares Mr. Frischknecht. In some flocks the production is low because inferior chicks were pur chased. In others it may be due to faulty feeding, poor housing, insufficient culling throughout the year, poor sanitation and disease control, or to poor care and management in general. Mr, Frischknecht advises that the egg production per hen in the state must be increased if a large percentage of poultrymen are to remain in the business. The average production in Utah for December last year was only 8.8 eggs per bird; therefore, if a poultryman has a flock of 500 birds, they must lay 4,480 eggs or an average of 144.6 eggs each day this month to equal the state average production for December of last year. Creed Not Biblical The Apostles Creed is not in thw Bible. It is a compilation or declaration of faith. In its present form It dates back to the Fourth century. LEGAL NOTICES UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, United State Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah,. December 16, 1932. PRIVATE LAND SALE. Notice is hereby given that William A. Braegger of Willard, Utah., has filed application to purchase. Serial 048322 under the provisions ot the Act of April 15, 1920 (41 ), the following described land: Tracts Nos. 50A Section 15, 50B Section 16, 50C Section 21, SOD Sectiom 22, 71A Section 21 and 71B Sectiom 22, all in Township 8 North, Rang 2 West, S. L. M. containing 131.6& acres. All persons claiming adversely the above described land are advised: to file their protests or objections one or before January 26, 1933, the date set for sale, otherwise their claim may be disregarded and the application allowed. Any objections or protests must be under oath, corroborated, and a copy thereof served upon; the applicant. ELI F. TAYLOR (d20-jlRegister. Stat-553- . 7) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, United State Land Office, Salt Lake City. Utah. December 16, 1932. PRIVATE LAND SALE. Notice is hereby given that John G. Braegger, Jr. of Willard, Utah, has filed application to purchase, Serial 048320 under the provisions of the Act of April 15, 1920 (41 Stat. 553), the following described land: Tracts Nos. 49A Section 15, 49B Section 16, 49C Section 21 and 49D Section 22, Township 8 North, Range 2 West, S. L. M., containing 159.65 acres. All persons claiming adversely the above described land are advised to file their protests or objections on or before January 26,. 1933, the date set for sale, otherwise their claims may be disregarded and. THE BEST PEOPLE" ENJOYED the application allowed. Any objecor protests must be under oath, tions University of Utah varsity players corroborated, and a copy thereof participated in the cheer week prog- served upon the applicant ELI F. ram sponsored by the city board of (d20-jlTAYLOR, Register. recreation during the holidays. The Best People, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT comedy that was acclaimed by both OF THE INTERIOR, United State Salt Lake and audiences, Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah. was presented at Kingsbury Hall by December 8, 1932. PRIVATE LAND the players free of charge as a fea- SALE. Notice is hereby given that ture of the annual Christmas civic Joseph R. Lowe of Willard, Utah, ha recreational activity. filed application to purchase. Serial 048506 under the provisions of th& of April 15, 1920 (41 Stat 553)-Act Note Business the following described land: Tract Under not are coins legal Foreign Nos. 72, Section 22; 74A, Section 21 p Ip the United States. A check Is not 74B, Section 22; 74C, Section 27 and no 74D, Section 28, legal tender, and although there is Township 8 North,-Rang- e 2 West, S. L. M., containing uniform specific time within which it should be cashed, reasonable diligence 99.80 acres. All persons claiming adcashed versely the above described land are requires that it should be advised to file their protests or obwithin 24 hours. jections on or before January 20, 1933, the date set for sale, otherwise their claims may be disregarded and the application allowed. Any objections or protests must be under oath, corroborated, and a copy thereof served upon the applicant ELI F, (dl3-J1TAYLOR, Register. 7) fast-movi- out-of-to- , New Year Happiness ... by Telephone Members of your family, relatives or friends in other cities are only a minute away ... by telephone. Telephone reunions now and then during the year are next best to personal visits. It's a thrill to hear their voices. The Long Distance operator will be glad to tell you the rates to any points you may wish to call. The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. 0) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Boon Bunderson, deceased. Creditors will present claims with: vouchers to the undersigned at hi residence in Brigham City, Box Eider County, Utah, on or before the 15t!x day of May, A. D. 1933. HERVIN BUNDERSON, administra- tor of the estate of Boon Bunderson, deceased. Date of first publication: Jan 3rd, A. D. 1933. WILLIAM E. DAVIS, Attorney for Administrator. (adv-j3-3- 1) $100 Cash Reward For information leading to the arrest and conviction B of party or parties who b stole furs from L. Bloom & Son recently, providing bulks of stolen goods is returned. All information will be held confidential. L. BLOOM & SON Brigham City, - - Utah g IBHHBS00BBBE318BSElI |