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Show Page Four THE FOUR HELPER JOURNAL RADIO. STARS SUPPLY COMEDY The Frieodly Hand IN Friday, January 29, 1937. Helper, Utah. THE HELPER JOUPwNAL ; Shae HELPER, UTAH Wm. F. MacKnight, Publisher. ONE YEVa - 2 months . SUBSCRIPTION THE JOURNAL'S NEWS EDITION THE JOURNAL SHOPPER'S EDITION MMPE-4- - CST- 7 PktSV UTAH OP THE- at "the Postofflce Published - ASSOCIATION LABOR $i DELIVERED ONLY ON SUBSCRIPTION DELIVERED FREE TD EVERY HONS Entered as Second Class matter .Carbon County, Utah. UTAH STATE "GOLLEGEHOLIDAY" LEGISLATIVE at Helper, Every Friday AIMS BY PRESIDENT PAUL M. PETERSON'. While some persons may feel that our legislative-- program is too broad, members of organized labor feel that they are entitled to the fame benefits in the State of Utah, that workers ia other states have n joyed for many years. It Is not the fault of workers that Utah has in the past not ad opted progressive legislation, but it will be our fault if we do not now attempt to gain those things which for muny years have been denied us. Property TRANSACTIONS The Pick of the Pictures Phone 70 HELPER, UTAH , Friday - Saturday Sat. from 3:30 Continuous Bargain matinee to 7 p.m. SHIRLEY TEMPLE her latest entirely new hit To Thrill You In k STOWAWAY Sunday - Monday Cantlnuous from 1 p.m. 8un. for COMEDY and a cast that is can spill it. is for "OBOY" . . it. IL is for LAUGHS . loud, lusty and long . . and also for LOVE to the lilt of a song! s for EXCITE- the mad, E MENT merry whirls; . is for GRAND GAGS, for is . . giggles and girls. $315. Hall to Equitable Finance personal prop, $550.40. Stanley Myers to First Fed Savs Garth Co., and a story to trill IL Following are the real and per sonal transactions of property Carbon county since the 14th of January as taken trom the records of the county recorder. Mortgage Belmont Richards et ux to First Federal Savings and Loan Association. Price Townsite Survey, let 1, block 40. Nettie E. Sax to Carbon Emery Bank; prop, in Price twp. Surv. lot 3, block 13. Flora Edwards to First Fed. Sav. and Ln. Assn.; Local Surv. (high school Sub.) lot 22, Wk 6. W. D. Simpson to D. Menott, Price River Addn, $200. Lavon Vernon et ux to Carbon Emery Bank, prop. Park Dale, EVERY- that goes E THING to make a great show. . . Ln Assn., $1172.92. Benjamin E. Johnson to First Fed Savs & Ln., $2027.48. Warranty Deed Lawrence H. and Aria Beebe to Flora M. Edwards; prop, ln high school sub. sec. 16, twp. 14. blk. 6, rng. 10. Spring Canyon 1 Coal to George Harmer, prop. Sec 24, twp 13, R & 9, $1.00. Alma Haycock to Batiste Mese et ux. prop. Sec 31, Twp 13, R 10, $100.00. Quit Claim Deed If. Young to J. E. Whalen, Scofleld Townsite. $55.00. B. II. Young to Frank Helsten Scofleld townsite, $80.00. B. H. Young, county clerk to Carbon Emery Bank; prop, in S J. P. Powell Add. lot 1, blk. 2. Lola Thompson Oman to Lavon Vernon: Parkdale- townsite, blk. 9 B. H. Young, cnty clerk to A. J. Easton; prop, in sec. 27, Twp B. B. JACK BENNY BURNS & ALLEN MARTHA RAYE MARY BOLAND - Wednesday Tuesday Continuous from 3:30 pm. 3 Of Chapter the Thrilling Serial "AGE DRUMMOND" Feature Hit tnmp tns nrrit;nri vt; muttm uiwdui Thursday BANK NIGHT On the 8reen "WE WHO ARE ABOUT TO DIE" j ft and Picr.cc C.Whi abashed the As policeny, stepped aside the little faker strode through the door as if tlx Capitol was his rightful property Only God and the State Depart ment can tell what makes u American Ambassador! (Vinces hehaju0Personal History j," YVHAT IS OVIS When Joe Davis, our new A& bassador to Russia, announced U the President and the world general that he was shipping tw thousand pints of preserved crean Cwsrsjm to darkest Russia, it didn't seen to this column a matter of diplomatic life or death. The intrieuinsr thine about tht whole affair is that statistics at nana snow that the una of the Ms. Hews. Bolsheviks owns 42300,000 - FAMOUS SILVER CITY OF UTAH - v ", - . horn-blo- Rector Steea, a prospector, found a rich specimen of silver ore on s county in Utah contains mountain trail.' With his partners, EVERY minerals. It Is calculated that almost halt the John Kain and one McDowell, he located the Ontario. An offer of people of the state normally depend the claim for $8,000 was disregardoa mining for their livelihood. It a scout for Sao Francisco but ed, Industrial payfurnishes the largest his last $20 bill for bankers up put rolls and mors than He interested a option. of the total freight tonnage la August, and some Callfornians in the state. It provides Tevis and 1872. Haggln. Hearst, other for the state's cash markets the prosfor Chambers $24,000 paid products and disburses wtthin the rich in Ontario The proved ' than pect. of more state By HOWARD V. ALSTON " Ftohj a nucleus of four claims the original company has grown through purchases and consolidations to a property with thousands of surface acres and mors than 200 miles of underground workings, which have yielded approximately $100,000,000 worth of ore. three-fourth- s 30-da- orgi-nate- d But tor Park City and other mining camps Salt Lake City might still be a struggling village in the desert Such buildings as the Kearns, Ness, Utah three-fourth- s Its total ifrosa income for labor, supplies, taxes and other services. Park City, in the Wasatch mountains 43 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, alone has contributed $$28,009,000. of which Investors have received about $35,000,000. The average net income, is considerably less than 5 percent, of gross production. In early days Park City was a mere sylvan glen. It received Its name from a grassy park surrounded by a grove of quaking aspen. Discharged soldiers from the command of Gen. Patrick Connor at Fort Douglas were the first to find minerals ia the vicinity. Rutus Walker, as early as 1869, located the Walker and Webstar claims. Others staked the Young American, Yellow Jacket. Green Monster, Flagstaff and McHecry lodes. But mining really began whea Rng 10. H. Young, cnty clerk to Bianco;' prop. In Sec silver. In nine years It produced more than four million dollars worth of ore. For six years more it was the only shipping mine in the district. Profits from its operations furnished much of the money needed for" development of other prospects. The Daly-Wes- t. N'aildriver, New York, ' Crescent, Anchor, Mayflower, Alliance, Silver King and other mines were opened in succession. In the late '80s David Keith, Thomas Kearns and CoL W. M. Ferry took a lease on 25 acres of the old Mayflower workings ln Woodslde gulch. Without capital and with much privation these men sank a shaft at a point they After thought to be mineralised. going about 700 feet they finally vein. This struck an discovery led to the organization in 1892 of the Sliver King Mining company. - g ings Sav- k Trust, Judge and others were built with money trom Park City. These buildings and other city property Improved by mine revenues form a substantial basis tor present and future taxation. Several western mining districts, after periods ;of flush production, faded into "ghost camps". Not' so with Park City. Activity and population necessarily hae varied widely as mine production has increased or diminished. However, after each boom period there has remained sufficient' ore deposits and prospect leads to keep a goodly number of men employed, even though profitable production was temporarily curtailed or entirely discontinued. Perhaps the most noteworthy example of curtailment occurred during the recent depression. Collapse ot the metal market made mining an industry of loss. For the time ia the history of Park City dire want . and poverty stalked through the streets. One large company chose to operate at a loss and provide a few development jobs, rather than add to the genThis company la eral misery. three years' time lost three million dollars. For many years the population of Park City has varied between 4000 and 5000. Dwellings, terstores, theaters, minals, schools, churches and depots had to be constructed to house and serve a rapidly growing number ot people and to care for their economic and social welfare. The people of the city are, and always have been a cultured and cosmopolitan group. They comprise every phase of civic, religious and political opinion. First settlers came from the Pacific Coast,- Salt Lake valley, eastern and United States. These were followed Europeans, by northern chiefly Irish and English, to be joined later by a sprinkling ot Danes, Norwegians and Swedes. Present large metal producers are Silver King Coalition Mines Co., Park Utah Mine3 Co., Park City Con. and Park ment Co. A newcomer, which is just beginning to ship, is the New Park Mining Co. Their principal products are lead, silver and line. w In despair I turned t My old reliable Webster which informed im that a helicon is a deep tened bra wind instrument with a Urge circular tube that may be carried around the body when marchinf Also that it is a mountain ranrt in Greece. Bat yoy don't play thill, A good job watts the man wb can play the helicon and wants U see Panama, but he roust furnitl his own helicon. According to reports going the rounds of New Deal inner cirtki Henry Morgenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Tieaxury, has become Ur President's closest adviser. Whick may tend to verify the belief thtf the second Roosevelt administr lion will lean more toward cm aervatisn than during. iU.fltH .term. n ' City Attorney Thorit Hatch a business caller in Salt La City the first of the week.. , City-Develo- . Mm THURS. Continuous PR1. SAT. 3:30 Saturday Shirley Temple dish-wate- Saturday Only Continuous from "STOWAWAY" 3:30 Featuring Bartino's On Trained Dogs the Screen MON. - ELEPHANT and "Pearls of the Pacific" Just like a trip to Hawaii Continuous Clad Glorious Musical SUN. MICKEY'S .STJf. MON. TUES. "HATS OFF" A Sunday 1:00 ntw aw- mw gI nt m I The life and loves of tlx greatest artist the world M ever known! RICHARD DIX DOLORES DEL RIO CHESTER MORRIS "Devil's Playground" Thrilling story of the Navy's Submarine Service ADDED ATTRACTIONS "Northern Lights" Weird In Its gorgeous 1:00 as TUES. from Sunday Charles Laughton P--f Continuous r pius 5 Acts Vaudeville 5 eolor e Ik ore-loadi- junior High News '36 cowi or one for every four persons at compared 'to one for every five Americans in our own landalte that Mrs. Davis, the former Post, owns a "few sharer of Post products stocks. Did our esteemed diplomat simply mean to get a bit of free advertising for his wife's cannei Perish the thought I products? Help Wanted With nilHar) terseness, the United States Ann; reports the nation's second line ot defense in danger; and alt becaua of a helicon shortage. The plight of our armed forcei leaked out when the Army Information Service let it be knows that a band in the Caaal Zone had to have the said helicon plus a man who could play it. But the frantic Army Bureau informant neglected to report what sort of an instrument a helicon is. Quesen tioning of expert around Washington brought nt further information. Mar-jori- The Denver & Rio Graade conMrs. Dodge and Mr. Reld, teachtinues to be the largest single ers here, were absent from, school 2G; consumer of Car ben coal in the last Monday and Tuesday. west. Last week the railroad purTwp 13, Rng 9. Chattel Mortgage chased 170 carloads of coal for The school had a very distinSutMerfbe for The Journal Dominique and Jean Eyheram-end- y use m their locomotives on the guished and unusual visitor last to First Nat'l Bank; sheep, run from here to Ogden. week. He had long whiskers, four r blond. horses, camp outfit. legs and was a Stavros Protoppas to Utah This individual was oae ot the PRODUCTION neighbor's goats. GOAL Farm Credit Adm., sheep, horses, bay. Lis Pendens The school basketball team will SOARS ABOVE George F. Spratlinf to Tony play Its first game today with Perry et al; prop, la Sec 18, Twp Castle Gate. It is scheduled to 13, Rng 10. Production of coal in the United start at 4 p.m. sharp. Army Discharge to run ahead ot TJ. S. Army to Benjamin Saturday Only B. States continues Another dance at the Liberty 1936 tor the month of January by Rule. from 6:00 Continuous Student cards over a quarter of a million tons. hall tonight. body Note to free. will dance admit the west you state ln the Nearly every Noe Aubert to Joseph Mott, note. TEX RITTER also shows a gain in coal prod Release of Mortgages Earl Hauti was unanimously Joe Barboglio to Pietro Arlottl uction for the periods Indicated and "SONG OF THE Utah Is among them. Five thous elected by the teachers to be the et ux. cf the school paper, "Pep GRINGO" Swift & Hernry Live Stock Co and tons gain is shown in Utah!J editor for the week of January 2nd: Master." to G. K. Nelson, chattels Home Bldg & Ln Co to Benj. Following are the figures: TONS Sun. and Mon. BITUMINOUS COAL PRODUCTION E. Johnson. 1937 1936 (Bureau of Mines) Home Bldg & Ln Assn to First Continuous Sunday 3:30 - 10,263,000 9,095,000 The Nation, Week Ending Jan. 9. Fed Savs & Ln Assn. 271,642,000 331,798,000 JOE E. BROWN Frst Fed Savs & Ln to Elta The Nation, Coal Year to Date Western States. Week Ending Jantiray 2: Frandaen etal. 1 63,000 . ..- - 163,000 Colorado "POLO JOE" J. B. Lee to J. C. Schaurer et ux. 77,000 68,000 . Montana J. B. Lee to J. C. Schaurer et ux. -- - 39,000 and New Mexico 31,000 First Fed Savs &, Ln to Law68,000 and Dakota North South 63,000 rence Mlellaccio. "ORIENTAL PARADISE" -- .. 83,000 78.000 Utah Joe Motte to Noe Aubert, reIn gorgeous Technicolor .... 39,000 30,000 Wyoming lease of Agreement. Washington .... 110,000 l.00O M 14. Put them all together and they spell a show you must'r.t miss with Iv - xa WASHINGTON. D. Capitol policeman stopped hint the steps to the Capitol with ti "Sony, only members of Congrcst are permitted to enter," the nem little fellow threw out his chat and replied with dignity: "And who told you that I'm a member of Congress?" PARK CITY f1 6 Months - i JmmOH gay comedy with music which begins on Sunday and the Strand Theatre. The list is headed by Jack Benny, America's most popular radio funmaker, and includes the team of George Burn3 and Gracie Allen, and the sensational Martha whose meteoric Raye, career is the talk of Hollywood. Jack Benny plays the role cf part owner of a bankrupt hotel who yields to a group of cultists who want to try out scientific mating. Gracie Allen Is the girt who Is endowed with an instinct which makes it possible for her to pick couples at random. Martha Raye is one cf the college girls used in the experiment and George Burns burns up every time Gracie opens her mouth. Friday and Saturday, Jan. 29, 30th, the Strand Theatre brings you that darling actress of the screen Shirley Temple In a new-hi- t entirely dlffeernt to anything she has ever been in before called "Stowaway", This time Shirley is in China and ta.lk about Chinese! they have nothing over this little star. She will thrill you every minute with her talents and adventures. We believe in the principles of minimum hours and maximum wages for men and women, the abolishing of child labor, proper pro tection of those injured in industry, whether by an industrial accident or an occupational disease. We believe In properly protecting labor's right to strike and to picket, and feel that all laws which conflict with this and with the freedom of speech and freedom of assembly should be eliminated from the statute books of the State of Utah. We believe that the law enforcing agencies of the state might properly be used at any time to protect the property of an employer, providing they are equally didigent in protecting the jobs of the worker. If this is not done, law enforcing agencies become not an Instrument for the promotion of peace and protection cf all citizens, but rather, they become the private army of an employer and tend to break up strikes) and lockouts when in existence and by such Chris Jouflas, local manager of actions lower the standards of living of all the cltliena of Utah. Success Markets, was confined Unless the .workers of Utah are prosperous, business, agriculture to his home the forepart cf the or any industry cannot prosper. We trust that this legislature, which w believe to be the most week with a light case of flu. progressive the state of Utah has ever had, will consider seriously the problems of labor and do Its part to eliminate the unfair conditions that now exist. 3ne Tear - $2 c Four "top" radio names are in the cast of "College Holiday," the Plus "ANNIE LAURIE" A Tabloid Musical "LITTLE CHEESES" Outstanding cartoon of the and "March of Time'! |