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Show TBI HELPER PAGE TWO HELPER JOURNAL One Year Dollars Two - In Advance Entered As Second Class Matter At The Postofpice At Helper. Utah Published Every Thursday CLIFTON N. MEMMOTT, Manager VEMci.f.f .r? '&tf7sor UTAH STATE Carbon The following county youtns were accepted Tues day by the CCC camp and went to Bridgeland to begin service. The youths accepted are: Albun Topolivec, Spring Glen; Howard Jes-sePrice; Joe A. Mower, Spring Canyon; Mas Peikir.3. Stan lardvilk ; Tony Curia, Kenil worth; Joe Evans, Jr.. Spring Canyon; Tommy Hatsis. Kenilworth; Charles Kenneth Mack ey, Kenilworth; LaMar Polve, Kenil worth: Wayne E. Powell, Price; Del bert Peterson, Price. Harold Morley, Price; Harold Or Joe Sacco, Kenilrell. Kenilworth: John Zwalen, Kenilworth; worth; Harry Haycock. Spring Glen; GeialQ Oviatt, Price; Richard Larsen, Columbia: Earl Pollock. Price; Leo Larsen. Wellington; Lewis Pierce, Wellt ington; Paul Cavianl, Helper; Ostler Burton, Price; Robert Spring Canyon; and Delbert Alexander. Price. twenty-fir- e Issued Every Thursday By THE JOURNAL PUBLISHING COMPANY Helper. Utah THE- - Hl)h ASSOCIATION KEEP MONEY IN CIRCULATION HERE EVERY DOLLAR SENT OUT OF THE COMMUNITY REDUCES THE CHANCES OF PROSPERITY AND GROWTH This ia an age of competition, an age where the things that survive in the business world are the things that must prove their merit. Anything that is useless or inefficient soon loses out in the etrenuous race for supremacy. So when you view our successful business establishments In your home community you are viewing those who have proven their merit and a right to your patronage and consideration. The business field in the small towns especially, Is not exclusive to anybody. The game Is open to anybody who desires to enter and cares to risk the necessary capital. Nobody faces fiercer competition on every hand than the country merchant. A dissatisfied customer does not have to trade with him and he knows It. There are the competing stores across the street or next door. Or, if those do not suit there are usually towns within a very short distance that invite his patronage. So the country merchant must find a way to meet these conditions, and he can only meet them by giving the service, the goods and prices that do satisfy the customers. Most people expect and receive accommodations from the home merchant which they would never receive in a thousand years from the mail order concern. Just this feature of accommodation should be a strong point in favor of the home merchant, but that is not all. There are the churches, the schools, the various public activities that are only possible because the home merchant and business man is doing a successful business. All of these things are inseparable and if anybody would trade out of town, the town would decay and public activities would soon cease. There is no way that a prosperous town tan be maintained and ut the same time have a large part of the business of the town sent elsewhere. Many people do not realize what it means to send money out of the town. Of course a few would not matter, but when it begins to mount up to thousands of dollars per month then one can see the vast damage to the town caused by the loss of this liquid capital. The bank3 find their business curtailed, the merchants cannot carry the stock they should, money becomes "tight" and everybody finds it scarce because it has been sent away to the everalsting benefit of some big, overgrown metropolis. On other pages of the Journal will be found the advertisements of business institutions that are particularly interested in getting their side of this question before the publir. They have selected the Journal as their medium of expression. Take note of their advertising. They have their capital invested in their various enterprises and wish to show you by. service rendered that they deserve your patronage. Em-met- Kathryn Dart and Jane Locke left Friday for California, where Miss vacation Dart will spend a visiting her sister. Mrs. SetU Lloyd, in Berkeley, whi'e Miss Locko w visit relatives in San Francisco. two-wee- k EGAL OTICES NOTICE OF SPECIAL BOND of the electric power industry met last week in Amerconvention town, Atlantic City. Cool ocean breezes ica's promoted the conciliatory spirit, and a sincere desire to cooperate to be on the with the government was expressed. Another boom way, for according to one spokesman, a $13,000,000,000 investment in new plant facilities will be required in the next decade to meet grow-in- g demand for electricity. It was revealed that at the end of 1937 Americans were using 2.100,000 more electric refrigerators, 325,000 more electric ranges, 2.000.0MO additional radios, 750,000 washing 600 thousand ectric clocks, 1,350,000 machines, 1,200,000 vacuum cleaners and 250,000 more toasters than at the close of 1938. Leaders time-honore- d flat-iron- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE RADIO PROGRAMS Sunday, July 31 KEUB 2:30 P.M. (1420 Kc.) Columbia Church of the Air Sunday, July 24 at 7 A.M. Local Devotional Sundays at 10:30 A.M. KS, ELECTION Public notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, the 9th "day of August, A. D.. 1938, a special election will be held within the limits of Helper City, Carbon County, Utah, for the purpose of submitting to such qualified electors of said c ty as shall have paid a property tax therein in the year preceding such election the following question, "Shall revenue bonds of Helper City, Carbon County, Utah, in the amount of Sixty-thre- e Thousand ($63,000.00) dollars, payable serially within twenty-thre- e (23) years from the date of issue, solely from the net revenues of the entire waterworks system of said city, and bearing interest at a rate not to exceed four (4) per centum per annum, payable be isused pursnant to Chapter 22, Laws of Utah, 1933. Second Special Session, as amended by Chapter 74. Laws of Utah. 1935. commonly known as the "Revenue Bond Act of 1933." for the purpose of defraying in part the cost of improving and repairing the existing waterworks system of Helper City, the said net revenues of the entire waterworks system of said city to. be pledged to the payment of said bonds?" At said election the form of ballot shall be as follows: Bond Election Ballot Yes ( ) For the issue of bonds No ( ) If it is desired to vote in favor oi the issue of said bonds, the voter shall place an "X" in the space after the word YES. If it is desired to vote against the issue of said bonds, the voter shall place an "X" in the space after the word NO. That on the reverse side of the said ballot shall be the following: OFFICIAL BALLOT FOR HELPER CITY, UTAH, SPECIAL BOND ELECTION August 9. A. D.. 1938. to-wi- rec-enu- e ERNEST Joyous Guests Wherever Meet Wine-Love- rs Good tasU and gaiety ar , ; Thr ; ,! S J in the pleasing quality and brilliant flavor of Roma Win . . . from California' fin grapi and on of th oldast, iargi winerioi in America. last U a Roma Win for ry and Try occasion. In rou bar your oholc oi Utah, th following Roma products) WHITE PORT SHERRY MUSCATEL RED PORT BAUTERNEf TOKAY CLARETt ANGELICA CHAMP AQNEf 8.40 BRANDY Alookal 111 to 14 by rofrm Alaokel 30 trf volum i 80 jwool Rami Wine Company, Inc. LodL Califoroia FLAIM, Facsimile signature of City Recorder of Helper City, Utah. At said election the polls shall be open at the hour of 7 o'clock a.m.. and shall remain open until the hour of 7 o'clock p.m. The polling places for all qualified electors of said Helper City at this election shall be EAST HELPER City Hall. WEST HELPER Liberty Hall. No. 10 Ivy Street. NORTHWEST HELPER Helper Junior High School in Helper City, Carbon County, Utah; and the Judges of Election of said polling place shall be; EAST HELPER Mrs. A. R. Demman T. H. Jouflaa Mrs. R. P. Barrel WEST HELPER E. T. Borkenhaeen Mrs. A. S. Wahl John Buchanan NORTHWEST HELPER Mrs. W. 11. Wardell Mrs. C. R. COUNTY CLERK LISTS j 21 193a Definition Of Church Offered In Sermon fha Dhi .. 01. the h. uurcnes of in. joiiuu. in au Scientist, on Sunday, Juiy 24 By Howard C. Means OF BUDGET AT 82 Scriptural selections sev- "And manv n following: Editor's Note During the past Fcuute k.. and eral months the Helper i. expenditures u, speeches' Departmental of to ft the7moune;fa;J been reprinting a number find amounted tpQ hQUSe of t on general in under rralB Helper, . delivered ai D: 193S be wiH H teach ns of hg way (ne lir3t ix months of Carbon county's industries. We do. ' m 3.28 per cent ..of will walk in his paths. ' M because we feel the absolute Cjrbon COuntv to .; . ... . 1 , finrl t. i Innatrioq , neea OI prouiouue uui .uu aiuuus tue correlative na. tota) t,llcigptecl lor me uc luuuwing irom "Science i.n hnw utterly dependent we are -- otdirg to a raaori cumpieiBu on the different industries in our week by B. H. Youag county clerk. (Health with Key to the Scrint,, ' . tfAUCUHUU. iJUU county. "J TUe various iuuua iue churnti is that institution, which To date we have published a speech a the' percentage, larger average, on atw s Denof the n.acif on the development utility and is tom ? of the amounts allot ed to them tor .proor the ver & Rio Grande Railroad, by J. R. race, rousing the dorm,! the vear as in the road and bridges evating Lottis. Last week we concluded pub- fund" which was 70.48 per cent ex- - understanding from material bej to the apprehension of lishing a speech made by Walter pended by June 30. spiritual iJ! in coal ('i,.ir nn the future of the the demonstration of divi Exnenditures in the various funds an? were dustry. Both of these speeches science, cast.ng out devj! . inereny 1938 of months si kiwaaisi first the during made before the Helper or error, and - healine- - tv,.. ;.,... . tw and the percentages expenaeu ui cluu. aie install-- ' total budget allotments Today we are publishing in ,'rtHAii-a- . pnmnuft- as Louzuy C Howard lively made by xuent. speech .. mi ... FU K Tiur rent!' Aspnaltisioners, is.ou. Means, president of the Rock or v. auditor. IJ,4rJ.49 , w... ., ..;.l,.nniv pirk :.nii .......... nsnuu-iw.,.,- tf Lompany oi nan. ueioie . l -w, a' ted Civic Clubs of Southern Utah 4S.S2 per ceiyj cuuui, at their June meeting held at Helper or 52.81 per cent; Mr. Means has aeivea into me treasurer. S2 561.50 or 55.7U7.94 per assessor. hiatm-inf nsinhflH. from the time it county HELPER cent its traced and discovered was first UTAH rmintv recorder $1,971.70 or 53 development down to the present or $1,400.02 "Where Best The Comes First'' time. per cent; county sheriff, SG.Gper cent; county surveyor, $192.-- ' Installment I . 91 or 50.77 per cent; agriculture The story of asphalt and its insnector. $1,051 .01 Saturday interis uses . velopment to present Continuous Sat from 8:30 p.m. otit.n- in thii CVlt'OmH It fttartd 111' building and or 40.41 per cent; s about the year 3'000 B.C.. by the or 39.24 per cent; $1,824.51 grounds, DOUBLE FEATURE in the Euphrates Valley. The district court, $2,(j07.6'J or is.oi per early Egyptians used asphalt ,n pre41 or No. 1 servmg their dead nle.s by wrapp ng agent, agriCulture their bod.es in cloth and coating ; then, with houui asphalt in about. ju. I 1938 EXPENSES ROCK ASPHALT , "Truth" (a . i U111 U'"p u-.- jb, V of-it- I ...... itwy . i -- Q 1 70-0- STRAND a: Friday Sum-ariau- - semi-annuall- NO BOUNDS FOR POWER THURSDAY, JULY JJJAg- HISTORY OF UftMAL-HBLP- EH. 25 CARBON YOUTHS ENROLL IN C.C.C. THE Subscription j o ' ' venile court, $274.44 or 59.66 Per It is reported that Noah used i . S,9R7S77 nr luu" 6 t.halt in waternroofinir the Ark in 48.28 per cent bout the vear 2300 B.C Road and bridges, $41,317.26 or use extensive records the History 70.48 per cent; indigent poor fund, of asphalt by the Babylonians in the or 73.94 per cent; depend-$7,590.87 B.C. 700 to 500 year The early uses of asphalt were for ent mothers fund, $6,818.59 or C8.19 and pre- per cent; old age pension fund, cementing, waterproofing or 55.98 per cent; tuberculoma serving properties. The origin of the word asphalt is relief, infirmary, physician, et cetera. from the Greek and signifies "firm, $1,586.02 or 19.58 per cent; exhibition and advertising fund, $1,409.75 or stable, secure." The first record of asphalt having 70.49 per cent; highway improvement been used for paving purposes is fund, none; emergency mine fire somewhere in the year 625 to 604 B.C. fund, none budgeted and $755.14 by the father Nebuchadnezzar, who spent. For the bond sinking fund, $31,031 is credited with having built the first rock asphalt block pavement. wag appropriated and spent for re-- ' History records asphalt was used tirement of county road bonds, while by many different people in many another $7,743.90, not appropriated.' different countries for many differ was spent as an investment in Car-- ! ent purposes from 3000 B.C. down to bon county bonds. In the bond inter est fund, $18,549.88 was appropriated' the present time. The first compressed rock asphalt for interest and handling charges, ot roadway was laid in Paris in the year which 50 per cent has been spent.' 18o4. The discovery was made by ac- A3 an investment in Carbon county cident. Fragments of rock asphalt, bonds, another $22,777, which was which fell from carts transporting not budgeted, has been spent. o o mm r . r it from the Val de Travers Mine to j jjj Bermudez subse and Company the village, compressed, in summer, under wheels, into a crude pavement. quently taken over by the Barber, This information was used in con- Asphalt Paving company who devel-- ; structing a stretch of roadway, com- oped its use in sheet asphalt con-- ' pacted with a roller, in Paris in 1854 struction. The first project, where itj and this roadway was maintained in was used extensively, was at Detroit1 in 1892. j good condition for sixty years. It was a natural process of evolThe first pavement laid in the United States was with rock asphalt ution in the construction of asphalt' brought from Switzerland in 1S72 roads to move from rock asphalt,1 and used to pave Union Square, New the natural paving material, to sheet! York City. asphalt . an artificial mixture of! Rock asphalt or bituminous sand liquid asphalt and local sand heated' stone is a mixture of asphalt and ;ind rolled tn sand compressed by nature into hardltnen t0 bituminous concrete, a mix-- ' ... J .., tl.W. inch, auu was iormea by liquid oilru'c ul aspnait with both sand with an asphaltie base accumulating! ilnd gravel which provided a way ot! underground in some kind of a geo-- j reducinS the asphaltie content ot logical trap. The sand, originally laid ' the mass: then to oil roads-furthe- r down as a Marine sand of fine and! reducing the asphaltie content and1 uimuiui texture, was then covered yluv """8 a roaa satisfactory for pres by a pool of asphaltie base oil which, ent day travel at a minimum nt due to extreme underground heat cost but of short life with high e and pressure, allowed the volatile costs. To be continued next matter to escape, leaving a residue week) of pure asphaltum permeating through Miss Carrie Ashton of Decatur 111 the strata of sand and impregnating the entire mass. This formation per- arrived here Monday to visit her iod occurred somewhere between ten sister, Mrs. Henry Hall. and fifteen million years ago according to geologists. Trinidad asphalt was first discovered by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1595 and described by him as a "Pitch Lake." It is a lake of liouifi asphalt, but very little use was made of the discovery until about 1876. In that year, through an Act ot Cone- Onhr Saturday ress, Pennsylvania Avenue, WashingContinuous Sat from 3:30 ton, was paved. One-hal- f of this project was rock asphalt brought from A Saga of the West Jswitzeuand and the remainder wa Trinidad asphalt mixed with local "PIONEER TRAIL" sand heated and laid in a pavement This was the first sheet asphalt ever laid. Tnundenno Fury Blasts The Bermudez Asphalt deposit was first Pioneer West developed In 1891 by the New York ADDED ATTRACTIONS 1 j mi wte" 4 ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S Kidnapped vitb o cait ol v SOOd, WARNER haturmg , . BAXTER Freddie BARTHOLOMEW ARLEEN WHELAN AUBREY SMITH tm C. REGINALD JOHN CARRADINE NIGEL RALPH FORBES R B BRUCE MONTAGU - MILES MANDOt - ARTHUR WARNER HOE J LOVE No. 2 SMITH BALLEW Harold Bell Wright's in "Western Gold" with Hoatnr Angel SUNDAY Only Continuous Sunday July from 24 1.00 1 main-tenanc- NOTICE TO CREDITOltS Estate of Nick roulos, also known as Nicholas Auagnostopoulos, Fahrlng de-- ; Mrs. John Laborol ceased. Dated at Helper Creditors will present claims with Carbon City, County, Utah, this 5th day of July vouchors to the undersigned at tha' A. D.. 1938. office of Marl D. Gibson. Attorney By order of the City Council of at rrice, Utah, on or before Helper City. Carbon County, State of the 22nd day ot September ' AD " 1938. Utah. G. F. SPRATLIN'G, D. J. PArPACOSTAS. (SEAL) Administrator of the Estate of Mayor. Attest: Nick roulos, also known as ERNEST FLAIM. Nicholas Auagnostopoulos. Deceased. City Recorder. First date of publication, July 7, Date of First Publication. July 1938. Date of last publication, Aug- 2 1st. 1933. Date of Last Publication ust 4. 1938. August 18th. 1938. July zw .Shows continuous Monday, July 25 from 1:00 P.M. Mon. - Tues. SPECIAL HOLIDAY PROGRAM WWI 1 tmax V.; , L i 4 SOUS OF THE PLAINS Mechanics Illustrated and Musical DOUGLAS - (fit; wnn ROBERT YOUNG jm MELVYN Barbara O'lfEIL H. R WARNER V sffyJSk will not be played this Saturday Sun. - Mon. - Tuos Contmuous Sun. A Mon. from fp'.m. ving tale of two Lovable Souls Only Wednesday from 3:30 Wert. Continuous Edith Fellows and Leo Carrillo "CITY STREETS" n 111 ii j. X, J U S I V1UIAM BOY "' Cfi i " i |