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Show fDdily Thought Tne Deseret News is not what people call; luck." but your industry and ability? counts ttlit Delivered' Daily Is '"" FoT" Only -- Agreement Held Near HOUSING DRIVE New Temple Heatl Leaves PROMISES JOB In 'Deer Creek Eight, Tomorrow ForMesaPost TOTHQUSANDS Conference ;Eollowirigr WATER SUPPLY FOR SALT LAKE - - i Success Would End Depression in Build- Parties; Sought by Interested Commission Head, Engineers Explain Facts of poth Proposals ts parate-Projec- Prospects for an early settlement of differences of farmers 1 un(ier the proposed Deerreek redamalon project," appeared Ukelrloday as a result of a meetinJield lasLniB&t m. the West-Jordahigh school. The meeting, which was largely attended, ? was called by representatives of the various canal companies, n 'order to secure if .possible an agreement on division of waters. 1 General sentiment at the meetCreek that the Deer e 0n provo rlverrand-th- fS.'ftr-Z-L ol Utah lake Should be two with separate wwat6 projects, It that if developed fhs arrangement can be carried theie will be little difficulty ,a securing agreement among the farmers living under the projects Xt present he principal bone of contention is the proposal of the "federal government to retain 20.000 of water In the Utah lake acre ft Deer the ", , On Constitution In Los Angeles ka9Wtasfeaaet5Biess)33ieRFattsiy6-4X3s53yg- Creek project for, Lots Denied Willja speaking on thihpoint. iam R Wallace, chairman of the Storage commission, Utah Water and as such one of the principal advocates of the Deer Creek prol-te- t declared that the proposal of the fener.il government would not overWden the lake users, since if the amount was left In the lake, the end of the Irrigation aeason w ould find there was only 7,000 acre feet remaining duo to thq evaporation. This 7.000 ficre feet, he said, repre-isnte- d the actual amount that would be lost by the lake users either project that the project would cost the neighborood of $2 OOO.OOo whicn would result i.i a saving of (0,000 acre feet of water annually for the farmers under the pioj-ec- t Ho estimated the cost of the project would be $33 SO per acre foot' . Alternative Possible m '"present speulif ationa of 'reclamation seivice. said Mr. Larson, calk for construction of the Tdyke with mateilal taken fiom the shore. Ho explained, hpwevei, that after the canal eompaftlcs have reached an agreement, service might cor'uler an alternate proposal to construct part of the dyke from shore materials- and the balance from the Mr. Larson explained Utah lake dvjOg The cost of construct-lathe djko fiom lake short na- - totals, he estimated would be '.n the neighborhood of 40 to SO rents The lake material per cubic yard could be secured at a much loner lake bed g t figure. Mr. Larson said the government Would insist on construction of a safe dyke. If a cheaper way can be found to construct the dyke, the government stands ready to accept the proposition, he declared. A recent development in thp Deer Creek proicct. la Grant Macfarlane, assistant uty attorney, as a member of the house of representatives. As the city is of vitally interested in the 'onstritt-tto- n bf the two projects, it is more than probable that Mr. Macfarlane will Introduce the nesesasry measures creating a metropolitan water district, with which the federal government will deal In the construction of the two projects. STATE DAY long-tim- n . Richards died figures show- 4.DOO.0Q6 or more than d of .the nation's unem ployed aie men and women formerly occupied in the construction industry or allied trades, and that about the same proportion of Utah s Jobless were once similarly r. ing one-thir- employed. ould Absorb Majority Tomorrow All Utah citizens w ill be asked to American, Hag, andif pos lil&Ia.tho state flag, Friday in. observance of the thirty-nint- h anniversary of Utahs statehood. - Special programs In alt the schools will be sjlven Friday, depleting Utahs struggle for state-- HZ-ths hood. In the evening a public re- eeptton will be held al the Lion house social center at which the U remaining member pt the constitutional convention will be honored guests. A public meeting will be held At 1,$J) p.m, at the Tabernacle, Music will be furnished by the 145th field Artillery band and the Tabernacle Choir. t Professor A. C. Lund, and S. R. Thurman, two members of the constitutional convention, as werf as T. Hammonds first secretary cf state, will take . part in the The roll of the original con' membership will be --called P Richard H. Wootton, general .. secretary of the Sons of Utah , n0n1er8 Ine 3ov, and Mrs. Henry ir Blood, former Gov, and Mrs ji, r'es R. Mabey and many others be at the " WT Sons andreception. Utah fmneei s w ho areDaughters'of the cele- k planning ratln t the request of Gover-- , Blood announced that everyone vltod to the reception during . 2 aftetnoom in the Lion house, lh nubile at, I;80 j ig the Tabernacle, pro-ram- -- ng N Legislators-Arrang- e Caucus On , Chrysler Dealers Meet in Salt e er Best Roller Canary In U. S. To Be Chosen Here - Januaryl 0 Water aijd weather reports from key stations in the Great Salt Lake Salt Lake countys Democratic, legislators will be called into basin today cheered agriculturalists and water company officials, party caucus on Januory.10, Leonard Brennan, Democratic county and, in a great measure, removed announced today. The purpose wilLbe to arrange a Jears .aLlk drouth. duringjh com- chairman, ing season of any such seriousness program to prcsEP.tto thrcaucua of Dcmocraticlegislators called as that of 1934. by O. R. Mickelsen, slate chairman, for Jan. 12. Precipitation on the Salt Lake At the state caucus the Demo-- 1 is considerably cratic party will select its candiCity watershed above normal, It is shown in the dates of the senate of office at the George D. and for president report of the house -- These speaker water commissioner of Keyser, selections will in all probabllity be supply and waterworks. named to the respective positions Salt Lake City 6 24 inches, when the senate and house organize compared with normal 1 precipita- at the opening session, Jan. 14. tion of 4 22 inches and 36 inches Candidates for president of the in the same period of 1933. senate include J.. Francis Fowles. City Creek highline 10.7$ inchpresident ofjtbe last es, compared with normal precipi- Weber county, Maw, and Herbert B. tation of 6.94 inches and 2 inches senate, member of the senate from Sait Governor Henry H. Blood has in the same period of 1933. Lake several for years. devoted so much Of his tlme4o the Mountain Dell reservoir 8.69 Friendscounty men claim each of these of affairs of the etateof Utah that inches, compared with normal pro-- to win tf dent strength 1 69 it has made him a eocial recTuser and inches of 5,69 elpltation prize. friends declared today, pointing inches in the samejjerlod of 1933. coveted -There are least three candior has refrain Brighton 18 02 inches, com dates for the atspeakerltiip of the out T ft atrth e go vem a much needed va pared with normal precipitation of house. There are Walter Granger ed from taking cation aince he took office, 5 22 inches and 2 27 inches in the of Iron county ; Wilmer J. Maw of A man killing routine, which hoi same period of 1933. Beck and Mrs. Reva Weber the governor at his desk fronts kept 2 inches, com- Bosone county Brighton Dr. of Salt Lake county. after which the Church head with normal precipitation of E E. Monson early morning until after midnight,, pared counLake of Salt will officially Install President has proved a strenuous strain upon 11,55 inches and 8 01 inches lir-tby the executives constitution, ty, is also being groomed and Jones as head of the temple, same period of 1933. race. some of the friends his for advisors have advocated that he succeeding President David recorded by the Precipitation the Besides organizamesselecting whose retirement King Udali, various stations in December were. tion wh heirs 111 dliect the affairs rest after he has prepared his will be effectbecause of age, twenty-firs- t for legislathe 1 87 Inches; City sages Lake Salt City, of the earning session the party ture convening Jan. 14.' The .first ed Sunday. ' President Udali Creek highline, 8.5 J Inches; Moun- cauciyr-will decide upon the perhas served for many years as a message, sent to the legislature, 3 18 Inches, Dell tain reservoir, sonnel of the 44 jobs which wilt be will Church and civic leader In Ari(be of a more general nature. 2 49 inches, and Cottonwood, Big these session. Of opeh during the zona, and in 1926, when the Another message sent later will 5.29 inches. 18 Brighton, house and in will 29 the be Arizona temple was dedicated deal .with the 1935-3- 7 budget.' Include The senate. in the jobs he became the president more vital and more Probably clerk chief Provo Stations Report the of senate, This above picture of Pressecretary complicated social and governof the house, minute" ajd reading mental ident and Mrs. Jones was takproblems nave never arisen sergea12.J Per Cent Normal clerks, chaplains, messengers, en in Salt Lake following the Of com- to perplex a Utah governor. nts-at-arms, of President appointment 3.. Five stations PROVO, Jan. major Importance, there will be and about six weeks ago. mittee clerks stenographers. on for the precipitation the problem of liqupr control comreporting Salt Lake county will make Its plicated the months of October, Novembei as it wilt e by the two this paand December of lant year, eijow bid for its proportion of next those who want to take tfie1 groups, few During the a total average of 6.76 inches, or tronage. liquor business completely out ol 121 per tent of normal, according daye t,he party organization will thrreaitir Of (profit and make H a to a report filed by J. Frank Wentz, gd over the applications of Salt state monopoly, and those who water commissioner of the Provo Lake .county residents and give want tho license system. ratThis a each rating applicant river irrigation system, Wednesday Also will' will be given to the legislators be that of major importance The reporting stations and the ing of relief, if, . as President choice In the final make who will Roosevelt has announced, all unprecipitation for each are as folThe positions are of lows Salt Lake Citv, 6.24; Provo. matter. employables are to bo carried by duration- state and local governments, whll 4. 93; Heber, 6.V8; Park City, 5.22 a system of publio works U to bs and Snake creek (Midway) 7.26. LAKE SALT GREAT set up forglvjng work relief to th Three mountain stations, Heber, Park City and Snake Creek show an GRADUALLY LOSING employables, a considerable financial problem must be solved, average of 5.85 Inches or 11$ per cent of normal. -- .County and olty -- governments The precipitation for the three ITS CRYSTAL FOREST cannot carry the (whole load, Th state must assist. This means th month given is the best in eight An underground crystal salt years, according to the report, the balancing of a finely adjusted fion of structure the bottom nancial responsibilities between percentages of normal being as folGreat Salt Lake thatln places lows for the. same period, state, county and city governments.--1938, near The grew There will also be legislation 58; 1932, 77; 1931, 101; 1930, 72, to resemble a forest labyrinth, 1929, 31 and 1928, 86. emanating from the committee of is nine report and relating to taxaelowly vanishing. The report on the Utah lake Reports received today by tion, publio utilities' control, edugauge shows that the lake has weather the Cecil J. of Alter, raised 16 H inches during the three cation, and multitudinous and combureau, show that the lake months period. plex problems. level isnow 1.8 feet t below Sadt Lake (City shows the best a on zero Saltair the gake, precipitation record with a mark of' rise of 3 - inches from the all- 148 per cent of normal followed by time low reached In Novem- Provo, 125; Snake creek, 120; Heb8? her. At the same time the City. 118 and Park City, 100 per decent. density of the water ha clined jfrom 28 per cent, the This big increase results partly point where salt is rapidly from using Salt Lake aa one of the five key stations. Precipitation precipitated from still water, at Salt Lake was 6. flinches for to 26 per cent, a point where Macfarlane Appointed to the water may absorb a little the three months and in 1933 was more solid mattgr. ' only 1.36 inches. The mountain Place Vacated by stations at Heber. Park City and end -- of the year has been 2$ Snake ereek, however, bad pre- Inches and the average water-conte- nt Arnovitz cipitation of 113 of normal in 1934 THOMAS HULL 5.75 inches, Mr. Adair and73 per cent In 1983. porta that the ground is not frozen Since Oct. 17. Utah lake has under the snow and has takpn In Grant Macfarlane, assistant city raised 18 2 inches. The lake, how a great deal of water. Prize attorney, will ftlb the vacancy in ever, is still 10.2 feet below the the lower house of .the Twenty-secon- d compromise level. state legislature caused by Snow Reported Over long period of years, Heavy the resignation of Irvin Arnovitz. northern Utah stations have rewho Shed Water was On appointed by Governor Ogden Dr. Vern O. Knudsen. chairman ceived almost half of the aqnual Henry H. Blood as chairman and precipitation during the three OGDEN. Jan. 3 A substantial fulltime member of the 'department of physics at spring of the state tag months. This has come in Increase (n the amount of enow v the University of California at rain in the valleys and snow on that has accumulated to date as commission. After a conference Tale yesterLos Angeles, a recognized authority the high watersheds. If normal pre- compared to the same time last day with A. Leonard Brennan, on sound, has again brought hon- cipitation comes next spring on ts reported at the regional forest chairman of the Salt Lake Demotop-the heavy winter snow, the office by H E, Peterson of the cratic ors to Provb. Bqigham Young uni- Provo river county committee. Governor Forest and Range Blood will again be in a flood Intermountain announced the appointment stage for a month and some of the Experiment station and Carlyle Savversity and the coast school. Mr. Macfarlane. Under th Dr. Knudsen, a native of Provo storage of Utah lake will be regain- age of Boy Scout troop No. 518 of the law, the governor Is empowered who took measurements on and graduate of the Church school ed. fill Ogden river drainage shed on Dec. the vacancies in the legislature hut Equal To Average has been awarded the $1000 prize appointee must be indorsed by 31. From measurements of the American. Association 40 taken at for county committee of the poThe average depth of enow this the n litical the Advancement of Science. The snow stations on the Daniels party that elected th memon the Wheeler Basin, Huntsg and Strawberry watersheds, year ber paper was entitled. 4.7 resigning. . with 20.2 is inches ville divide The Absorption of Sound Mr. Macfarlane, who is a grad- in under the direction of E. J. Adair, Inches of water w htle -- last year forest ranger, the supply at tne Gases. uate of the University of Utah, 5 1 Inches was there only gfnow end of the year was about equal The subject is of considerable imhas Jong been an active Demowith 1 6 Inches of water-I- n portance because exact' knowledge to the five year average. Average depth Wheeler basin at present a cratic party member. He has snow from how measurements served-a- s of sound waves behave In wet depth assistant attorney aince and dry air ts vital In connection taken between Dee. 28 and Jan. 1, ed. with water content of 6 8 inches 1 9 8 1 a. d epu 1929-193- 6 with anything that has to do with was 28 inches and water content from Comparative figures from this snow the Democratic- - and secretary of hearing speakers land orchestras tn was 6.5 inches. state committee course for last year are not availauditoriums or sound signals out- - At the same stations in 1938 At present he forest service officials said, from doors. there was a depth of 18 5 inches able, vice chairman of the Democratic on the basis of the measureDr. Knudsen is a son of Mr. and with a water content of 8.8 inches. but He also was county committee. Mrs. Andrew Knudsen. pioneer There is n increase of water stored ment made on the Wheeler Basin ob- a member of the 1929 legislature. divide. It Huntsville appear residents of his commuoity.- - He jin to 2. 2 inches vious rthe accumulation Of wa- Mr, Macfarlanefllled a stopped 'to visit his parents Thurs- ever the entire area tributary to the ter onthat la mission to the Eastern States, and whole a as the watershed day afternoon on his way home Strawberry reservoir. three or four times greater than at two different times engaged sucfrom a trip east. The kveragq now depth at the last year. cessfully in business in Hawaii. " Mr, Arnovits took office a chairman of the 'state tax te yesterday after filing hie bond -with Milton H. Welling, secretary of state, apd taking the oath of door-keeper- s, Death Ends Long Career Of U. Regents Secretary the-pub- . he Regulations Fixed " by Final regulations adopted administration and thp housing ex were provisions of the act in plained by the .Utah director some detail. He pointed ut that the purpose of titles 2 and 3 were to bring abput a revival of new construction la order that the building industry might keep pace with other forms of economic activity. PRESTON D. RICHARDS Mortgagors to be eligible to borrow the fund ffiJnj private loanunder ing Institutions "Operating of Thoriias Hull Dip's in S. L. Basic Law of Nation and the mutual Insurance features title 2. must boriowon a resident After IiGitg Illness accommodations Amendments Analyzed structure having for from one to four families At 79 Years rates vary as to the maxiBy Expert mum allowed between a and 5 2 per cent yearly on decreasing balances, depending upon c monthly Thomas Hull, 79, secretaiy of the 8. (Spe-LOS ANGELES, Jan. the nature of the transaction out D -- faculty and of the board of regents La Richards, preston arises. indebtedness the which of ,) Loans must not exceed $16,000 of the University of Utah and senAngeles and Salt Lake attorney, delivered the piincipal address at nor-8- 0 per cent of the appraised ior member of the general board the Breakfast club here this morn- value of the property as determ- of the Young Mens Mutual Imwhile announced ined by an appraisal of the feding His subject, on a rccont visit to the home of eral housing administration, and provement association, died at his his parents in Salt Lake City, was must be repayable over a period home today at 5 a m. after an The Constitution. not to exceed 20 years, Mr. Richof more than four months. He One of the ,best evidences of the ards said survived is by his wife, Mary Jinn soundness of the federal constitution is that it has withstood the conetitution, eaid Mr, Richards, but Price Hull, 'and three daughters, test of time, notwithstanding it is after it was fully considered it Margaret Hull Eastmond, wife of easy of amendment, said Mr. Rich- was decided to leave It for later Professor E. H. Eastmond, of the determination. ards. faculty of BrighamJIoung UniverThe speaker, who Is considered Disapproved by Knox sity, Provo, Florence Hull, San on the an outstanding authority The sixteenth amendment gave Francisco; and Edna Hull Benmoa. Constitution having made a spe- a Congress tjie power to ievy in- Spokane. Washington. cial study of the document ovci come taxei. At the time of Its Bom In Loudon tli Mr. Richards was period of many year?, told then adoption son of EH and Susanah Lake A while club of that members the assistant legal adylser to the state wag born hi London, Engamendments have been adopted depaitment. When he took the Hull, he land, Dec. 27. 1885, the seventh in the first 10 couljl not be regarded proclamation on this amendment a family oS nine. He received his as changes in the Constitution, in- to Secretary of State P. C. Knox, education in schools of Lonasmuch as they were adopted si- for his signature, the secretary in- don, leaving the school at fourteen document. the with Mr was multaneously formed Richards that he of age to earn his llv ing. He The eleventh amendment pro- not in favor of the income tax, but years was baptized Into the Church when vided that a state could not be Inasmuch as it was a party meas- a child and emigrated to America sued by a foreigner or a citizen of ure, he would sign it. in July. 1875, upon Jiis arrival In 1 Mr. Richards declared that not- Utah he worked for Z. C. M, I. another state. The twelfth amendment is a withstanding that he wrote the where he remained until 1893. change in Jefferson, and Burr the proclamation for the seventeenth Among the positions he has held election of the vice .president of amendment providing for the di- during his long and active career tho United States, brought about rect election-eenators, he felt are, deputy city recorder for ten by the election of 1300, in which that also was & mistake. years, general secretary of the Thomas Jefferson and Aaron But The eighteenth amend ment, was Young Mens Mutual improvement nt voles of receive the same number the prohiibtimr-amendmeand association, and business manager This threw the election of the has since been repealed. Later Of The Improvement Era. The nineteenth amendment pro- he served as United States surveypresident into the Housejof RepJefferson wis resentatives and viding for the suffrage of women, or general for eight and onq-hachosen- - preAdent. The Constitu'ion and the twentieth amendment pro- years , He was elected to the ate candithe that originally provided viding that Congress should con- legislature and was speaker of the date receiving tho highest number vene on Jan. 3 instead of March of votes should be elected president 4 were characterized by the speak- (Continued on Paga 18 Column next er as commendable changes. The and the one receiving the amendment is a repeal highest vote should be vice presi- twenty-firdent. This meant, said Mr. Rich- of the eighteenth amendment Mr. Richards deplored the fact ards, that the vice president, would be of a different political faith that forceaare at work in the naLake than the president tion. today to undermine the con fourteenth and stitution, and In conclusion said-ThTh. --thirteenth, constitution is the ladder fifteenth - amendments- - were, the Sixty Chiysler dealers and salesfirst by which this nation has climbed men. from Utah, Idaho, Wyoming the slaveiy amendments; to its present pinnacle of supre- and Nevada assembled t the Hofreeing the salves, the second giving them citizenship and the third macy among the faintly of nations, tel Utah at 11 a.m. today for a therefore lef us. as Americans, nev- sound film presentation of the newi to voe giving them - The question of slavery was In er kick down the ladder by which 1936 Chrysler. J. W. Frezer, vice thoTTtindsofthe' framersof the we have climbed. president and general sales man--agfor the Chrysler Bales corpora t ion presented the new line in the film. Frank Bottcrill, manager of the BotterIH Automobile company, distributors for Chrysler and Plymouth, was In charge of the meeting, He was assisted by Ben Travis, jterritorial manager for the Chryei r Sales Corporation. Salberg, president of the club. Those pampered pets of. the Judge Leonard Taylor pf Following the sound film and feathered species, roller caluncheon, the dealers were given Ogden, a national authority on naries, will be brought from new cars at the the roller canary has been apCity pear end far to Salt Lake vocal next week to test their pointed offlcal judge of the display rooms of the Botterfil Combirds. pany at 24 south Third East. The powers at the national song - ebne?t for rolW canaries to Mr, Taylor now Is Judging a cars will be on display fer the contest, at Portland, Ore.;, In general public early next week. be. held at the NeWhous ho- December he officiated in the . lei from January 111 to 13- " This ie the grand champion-shi- p . same capacity .at Omaha and Milwaukee. Dance Will Honor show staged every year"-intheir The birde arecored an one of the larger cities to song entirely, there being IS Missionary Tonight determine the"finest roller cacountrv. different tours or tones. Each nary ainger in the of value has maximum tour a shows Honoring Clarence . 'hlngleton. .The winners of other 2 to 12 points, the total maksbn of the late Isaac end Mrs. Mary ' will compete after the Salt Shingleton, 27 north Sixth West Lake champion Jias been de- - ' ing a 109 point scale. show will be open to street, prjor to his departure for '' The ermined. lio he Saturday and Sun-da- y the Southern States mission." ThC conlest sponsored by-tm, darce will be held tonight t Salt Lake Holier Canary ' Jantiafy 12 and 13. Demonstrations of singing by the in the Sixteenth ward amusement .club. .and more than 800 birds conductedJbQL-MV. .. hall birds wilt be are expected to compete, com-- A farewell testimonial will be ire from- Texas, California. - -- Taylor Saturday afternoon and Wiscon-- iNebraiks. - Oklahoma, given the missionary Sunday Jan evening ndnl S"rdax afternoon J war-In 18. W the O. at 639 pm chapel. Elliot, secretary, sin. Washington and Montreal Georgs The program will be show. st - - 13-0- President Heber J. Grant, who will install him in bis now position as president of the Arizona temple., Charles R. Jones will tomorrow Jeave Salt Lake morning, for Mesa, Arizona. President Grant wiki be accompanied by his ssecretary. Joseph Anderson, and Mrs Jones will make the trip with her husband. They will make' their nome in Mesa. President Grant and his party expect to reach Mesa for special services on Sunday, Accompanying lf Statehood Anniversary . Will be Celebrated Salt Lake. Democrat On Governor Cf PLANS MADE rJEIIlHTY.FI FTH ....Y F.A R- - State Duties Severe Drain -- that A large proportion of these un- wouhPbe hired directly or lndirect-b- y property owners if Immedithe ate activity was created in fields of repair and modernization of existing property, the speaker declared. Most of the . remainder, he said, could be g.ven work under the long term features of the government housing program, providconing for the financing of neiy struction and the refinancing oi Week ; merce existing mortgages. acMr, Richards explained that tivities under Title 1 of the federal react. covering modernizing and In advanced well were pair loans, Utah, and that operations under Title 2 would be commenced with the arrival of mortgage forms from Washington, D. C. next week. speakers at the meeting Other fwere E. O Larson, district engineer for the reclamation service .and Elmer Jacobs, project engineer. Both engineers urged the farmers to reach an early agreement, although Mr. Larson took the posi-- , tien that he was not promoting - UtaKiTSpeaks Successful operation of the federal housing programs In Utah wtll e furnish employment for several thousand jobless and break ifp the depresalOny )n the building trades-- , where- - hard-'time- s have been most severe, Franklin D Richards, state FHA director, told members of the Salt Lake Lumber Men s cub at their luncheon meeting today at the Chamber of Com- a Reports From Shed Show Unusual Meeting Will Arrange Program For Presentation to General Parley of Party Scheduled For Jan uary 12 T ing Trades, Claim 3 wpayments. ABOVE NORMAL YourHome to loo If 80-d- rocky-island- s LEGISLATIVE 6- POST FILLED r' Science Goes To Former Utahn of to' . ean-yef- prize-winin- y-- 1928-193- enow-equivale- C. J. Olsen. the Wasatch dorest, back today from an official survey of Ca- lifornias winter playgrounds, said his inspection had served only as an teye opeiier to the possibilities that are being ovcr-lopkby Balt Lake and his own forest. Last Sunday, he eld, there were $.800 people registered on the Los Angeles winter play- ' ground, ranging dn ago from 6 te 70 year old. This play ground Is 100 miles from Los Angeles and there was elght' Inches of snow on the ground. - Brighten Is 20 miles from-Sa- lt Lake and Mill B flat only 16 miles away. There is on ore 10-d- ed -- ground in both basin. Contest's for every age were itr progress at the California Playground for fancy skating, ski jumping and tobogganing. Sleigh sped down the long grades at 100 mile per hoOr in safety, he ald. Big Pines is the ihqin Los An, geles playground. Mr. Olsen also visited th San Bernardino playground and the Arrowhead Jake and Big Bear lake development He came back with exact plana and description Of all contraction and. eqjilpment admitted that it may be hard now for the government to secure a publierigbt of way for a free playground at Brighton because the fc&sln la 1 two-yea- J. Olsen Compares JLJtair Winter j Playgrounds With Coast Resorts C. 2. largely privately own possibilities on Mill present sit ity camp . New Legislator Will Retain- CityOffice;: -- B flat, of the Commun- on Giles - office. flat below Brighton and several other are being investigated place for a report to tne district and national offices. It Is a part of the New Deal plan, already launched on a large ecale in some States, to and develop bdtb summer winter recreational facilities on marginal land and national forest land near the centers of population- - Mr, "Olsen said hevlntenda tp cooperate with the Junior Chamber of Commerce and with out. door or. ganlzatiots in Salt Lake In the expectation that a federal win- -, ter recreation project can be brdugbt ito Salt Lake. Constitutional provisions do not prohibit the holding of a position 1 as state legislator, while the per- son is bolding office in a municipality, It was decided today by Mayor Louis Marcus, in granting permission to Grant MacFarlanej assistant city attorney, to accept the appointment of Gov. Henry H. Blood a a member of the state house of representatives. It is likely that because of the absence of Mr. MacFarlane, some person-- may be appointed io take his place in of City Attorney Fisher Harris. Appointment wilt not be made, however, 'said Mayor Louis Marcus, until it is determined' that the work of the' Office cannot he carried on during th 60 day Mr- - MacFarlane la in the legislature |