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Show -r r- .'volume nine LAYTON, UTAH, SEPTEMBER UTAH STATE FAIR Meeting ACCUMULATIVE IN IMPORTANCE Minulesof Held Monday By Education Board Minutes of a regular meeting of the board of education held at the office in Farmington, September 7, 1936, with all members, the clerk and the superintendent present and . . Loyalists in Firing Line at Giuularrania Hampton Seeks .. Nomination As Co. Commissioner Frrd of the Utah State Fair as one of the fore fair moet of all events has reached the point where more than half of the nations commonwealth will this year be reprse sented with exhibit in the arious exposition departments, William C. Winder, president of' the State Fair association since 1918,' stressed this phase of fair activities yesterday in discussing the 1936 event scheduled to open September 26 and close at midnight, October 8. He declared that year by year the Utah State Fair was being more generally recognized throughout the country as among the leading events of its National- recognition -- An excellent closmp view of the firing line during the attack on Guadtrrama, Spain, tnen aided in checking the rebel advance on Madrid at the mountain towix Federal-government- , - - - - -- . . . . dis--ense- 'erf . ' change and appointment of teach-;r- s reported bv the superintendent he approved and that he be authorized to make any future changes and appointments he finds necesall th school with sary to supply the best line-u- p of teachers he can make. The motion was seconded by Mr. Rampton discussed and carunanimously. ried ' Meeting adjourned. vision of the interior depaprtment and the soil conservation division. These will aim to show just what Uncle Sam is doing in Utah in the way of rehabilitating grazing and agricultural lands and other activities now under way. S. J. Stephenson, secretary of the Utah Manufacturing association, in charge of industrial exhibits, reports practically all space in the Thoe U'fUei . Ji nays Forestry Men And Burning Clothing Officials Visit Expected to Enroll Nearly Causes Death Watersheds, Wed. At B.Y.U, at Provo OfWinegar Girl 2000 Students . - . Utah will be Every county representated among the 2000 students expected to' etiroll at Brigham Young university at Provo when the big church college opens on September 25,-.iexpressions of in' interest from young some. 200 communities of the state . may be trusted., Last years enrollment reached e an record of 2438. Besides Utah, 24 states, Canada and. Mexico were represented. 'With an enlarged faculty and improved facilities, the university, is expected to attract even more this year. Compleion 'of the. stadium house, block long structure a which will' help hundreds- of gain better physical development and recreation, is being rushed.' Insulation and .decoration of the new Brimhall building head the list of campus. improvements. Every building on' both compuses has. been thoroughly cleaned and renovated. Reuben D. Law, assistant professor of elementary educa'ionwho formerly was superintendent of schools in Rich and Duchesne counties, leads the new faculty members; Others are J. Vernal Stimp spn, English and Miss Irene Oswho mond,' modern languages, have done much graduate work at Stanford; Miss Angelyn' Wamick, home economics, who has done advanced work at the University of Washington and other institutions; and Evan Croft, office practice, who has written a textbook on typewriting and has done graduate work at the Universiy of Chicago. All have had caching experience in In and-wome- all-tim- one-ha- lf - students . Accompanied by Supt. Charles Wehfneyer and (apt. Miller a cie- inspection of the erosion and flood control works, on Davis conn- -, tv watersheds was made Wednesday by about fifty forest service men and army officials. The foresters and .technical ad visors represented eleven forests in Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and Nevada. Captain K. K. Tatom, Fort Douglas district CCC executive, accompanied th.e inspectors' and visitors over the CCC projects; ; The tour Was under the direction of Reed W. Bailey, director of the forest service, intermountain forest and range experiment station. Th tour was planned primarily to dem onstrate the various types of control structures. The entire project was visited and forest . officials were enabled .to see all phases of erosion and flood damages' and the different methods adopted to control such ravages. - The' party had dinner at the Parrish canyon CCC camp, - . . . 10-stc- ry Pacific experts and the locomotive company designers for high speed freight service, especially locofor mountain territory. In the are oj motive parlance they -4 simple articulated type To the layman this means that the front truck has four wheels, behind which are two sets of six followed coupled driving wheels of four whee.3. yjjramnguj; , -- ... Two Fined . burning She is Being treated with smne licw process recently dfreovered, which ia believed to- be proving ef. fect ive, The family experienced aome' other had luck this week. While in the Tenney store in Bountiful Tuesday shopping, the mother laid her purse on the bench upon which she was sitting in the shoe department and leaving for other parts' of the store to continue her buying, she had failed to take her nurse with her and when she went back, to get it, she could not find her-bbiy- . - it. It contained the pay her, husband bad received' for two. weeks work. Tjie store was crowded .with people at tho time." . . If any one could aidht them In recovering the money they would render. a great- kindness as- tha family has .experienced, a great deal of hard luck for a number of years 'past. A year or two ago, their house burned down without insurance, when they believed it insured, and before that Mr. Wine-gwas laid up for two or three years with a broken back. - ar his-tor- ic e TUESDAY, Feb. 27th It was alnlng when the "Maunganul left capabla of paBisg ft) or the states this morning, so wo dnt go to see her off. Instead we epgtoea eost 52,000,000. ns she oked through the in .ed i? front of the hotel, trucks heap There are two jl aved goodbye to Mr. Starr, Mrs. I under th. tender, which he. and her son J. They Iso hsd glasses, nnd wee looking t capacity for 22 tons of coal and mechanical stoker. s hrough them. It wus iilinot as If 19,030 gallons of water. The two sets of six coupl e were on the boat with them, l enThe overall length of the jo.--s wheels on the engine sr my predictions to Mrs. Ills-I- drive gine and tender Is over 110 ft., 63 inches In diameter, tho heigr ;nod came to pass I the weight Is 432A tons (without of the average man. The two V. UNUSIiAV, Feb. 2Sth Two '1 tavs of Incessant, torrental load of coal and water). The pair of wheels on the front true for hours from "Mutiny firebox of the locomotive, not are 33 Inches in diameter. Thfc a gripping honk Boi'idy", two white men, Charles including its 7 Mi ft combustion first pair of wheels on tne irajcrf seconai on" off and J.ipi"S Norm. in II. ill, chamber, ha3 a grate area 9 ft. truck Is 38 inches and the wheels od io are living on this .land, inan-d'The 45 Inches. wide and 12 ft. long and Is 6 A pair is a r 'nlve wives and raising 3C Inches. all ft. high which would require a wthe tenderore " Our radio was working well to el j St 1 JEJ & I all ri-a- J s Ralph RunneUs of Eureka and Ralph Hartley of Salt Lakt wto have been stopping at Roscdale ia North Centerville for some tima -- past, were convicted Thursday nellewella morning In Justice court in Farmington, of criminal-negligen- ce with fire on the Waa atch National Porest, and flnqd 1 each and ten days. Jail sentenea-suspend- ed on payment of fine. Forost fire guard, CL S. Bagky . and L. E. Sessions, superintendent of the Lake View W. P. A., investigated the case and brought the conviction. Last season, 'these Individual -were up on this part of the mountain hunting deer and they wtC8 up again Sunday oa horseback a cabin in preparation for another hunt this year when the season starting. It was a little southeast of the Jonathan Wilcox place which is quite high up on the side of tha mountain. Two local boya aceompanisi Runnells and Hartley but were not implicated in the setting of .the . ui For Carelessness With Fine on Hilb opens. On the way down, one of tha boys ask for a cigarette, which denied but when they reached the. foot of the mountain and looked back, they aaw the fir . 4-- II . Each b - eix-whe- d. - Monster LoeomoUwG The new locomotives, known ft a as the Union Pacific Challenger were developed by Union - vO. . field-gla- type, -- great-grandchil- Lt. I. II. Parker, junior officer at this headquarters is at present enjoying a three weeks vacation in southern California. Lt. Tartar stated that he expected to do considerable deep sea fishing while on the coast.-ThLieutenant proceeded from here to Battlo Mountain, Nevada, where be joined Mrs. Parker and proceeded from there to his home in Santa Monica. The program of camp beautification is still going on with renewed vigor as more suitable weather for lawn planting comes along. The last two plots of the quadrangle high schools. have been plowed and art) being seeded. .Other lawn and shrubery allotted Manufacturers building and indications of the best xhibit planted earlier in the season has of Utah factory products made at grown well and is greatly improving the appearance of the camp. a state fair. County and individual agricultur CENTERVILLE al and fruit exhibits will also set E. L W. Literary club met at the new records for number, variety and quality. Members of and home of Mrs. Emma P. Walton at Future Farmers- of America clubs their regular monthly meeting. and organizations have filed en- Mrs. La Vaun Walton gave a most MONDAY, Feb. 2fith The Maun-guncame In from Australia, so tries in large numbers. They are interesting account of her trip to we went aboard and renewed being offered special inducements Old Mexico, especially of tha with the stewnrt and Mexico City and its Iu0,0u0 to bring their exhibits to the 1986 and Jut son Disillusioned Mrs. crew. exinhabitants, fair and competition in every customs, habits, etc. tomorstates for the lesson are J Atter the division leaving luncha will be position Spanish apparently unsuccessful been slie eon row, was having servH more keen than ever before. in finding a suitable place to "go nail ve. Too many people gave her people ; too many "helpful were too willing to do this and that a consideration, of for hei-f- or course. They auctioned off her piano the other n the public market-plac- e day for a fraction of Its worth.. .Sl.o doesnt like bugs are niosqul-toes or lizards. In short, she didnt find things ns she expected them to he, and ahe discouraged. The situation has reversed Itself In her sons eyes, also. Where he had to he brought down here against his will, ho Is now going to leave against his will. lie hns had the time of his life, swimming and Aiding with the native kds. lie has been running most of the kids, too. Wlmt no month has done for that encode little filssy who cunie down on the 100 enough to puD 100 cars at freight train cf a minute. Its :peed of a mile to the height of the length equal building, with a average as large as the average firebox first of fifteen new the bedroom, locomotives has Just been received by the Union Pacific Railroad at Omaha. The balance de-of22.C00.003 order will be Loco- ilivered by the American 1 of Schenectady motle company N. Y. during the next 93 days. Powerful 'eeventy-fiva- -' At Syracuse The seven year old daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. John E. Winegar of South Bountiful waa. burned awfully had Friday of last week when her .clothing caught on fire,. It was the li.ttle girla birthday and her mother made' her a. cake placing candles on it. While the mother was busy working, the child took one of the cAndlcs-ofthe cake' into' the bathroom and tried-tUghit it,, setting her clothing on .fire, badly out with us! freight train of Utah, and was of Lightning Kills Tomato Picker 1 The new 5j . ad-vR-- Union Pacific y - fay-ton- -- ; Layton,-Wednesda- Primaries Are Called for Mon - . ycar,. Democratic -- -- James Ware, a successful sheriff ;. of Davis .county,, for six. some years ago, died at his home after an iJ in months. ness of several Mr. Ware Was born at Slater--vill- e, on the 11th of last May..He.wa the son of .James and Rebecca ' Simmons ware.' lie moved to Kays- ville with his.parents'whcn be waa a young man, later moying to Lay ton where he .has' since resided. I Mr, Ware" was sheriff of Da via . county for throe terms. 'While tier in that capacity, he was deeply . interested in young people, whom, he had to take, into custody and spent much tim'o trying to .show them the . errors- of their way. Ha : waa an excellent principal man, honoruMe. and reliable and would not harm any one. At one time he was a member of Democratic primaries wilt le the Layton tpwn board. He waa a held Monday at 8 p. m. in all the director.'- and' watennaster of th precincts of the county to elect Holmes Creek Irrigation, company delegates to the county convention for many years. Ila was an active to be held in Saturday, member of the Laybon ward. . He is survived by the following Sept. 19. children, his wife, Cher lette. Young, . whom ho married Feb. .3, ' 1886, Holt . died August .5.,. 1834: J. W. Ware,-- . Leo Ware, Mrs. J. William. Burton, Mrs.' Jes.se Thornley, Mrs. Quincy Adams, all of Layton; Mrs. Harry Strong, Kaysville; Mrs. Leo May-fiel- d, Farmington; 'Mrs. Andrew I. Tashlma, a Japanese, whilo'out Watt, Lansing, Michigan; 20 grand in the field at Syracuse picking to- children and one Funeral services will be held at matoes, Thursday, just heforc noon was struck by lightning and in- 2 p. m., Sunday, in the Kaysville. tabernacle, with Counselor J. S. stantly killed. Adams in charge. Interment 'mi ceme- - -Miss Beatrice Letup?! of Los An be in tho Kaysville-Layto- n gee makes it llxlng sorting nm tery. for trtountei pmtoblng. glass rjo ... specimens. $10 Only one out of every I'M persons dto old lives long enough to of ago. . . -, &' -- chil-drenw- ill i mi-sio- '. Years Sheriff of Davis Co Dies. 4. cc-- E James Yare, Six Ram pt oi candidate for nty com jear of Daii county on the Democratic tick now serving his first term in thisfts capacity. Mr. Hampton m--l orn in Bonn W't tiful; served '''A War: World the first commander of American Legion of Rountifu1 and manager o' Farmers Feed A Lumber company Mr. Trcd of Bountiful. Rampton Political advtg. state-sponsor- . FIFTY-ON- DUMBER : Mr. Adams presiding. The minutes of the meeting of .August 17 were read and approved. Superintendent Wiltsie of the Bamberger Electric Railroad com- pany met with the board on the matter of student tnileage rate. Superintendent Burton explained that in passing the previous resolu- . tion to allow an increase in the kind. rat the board was working under Each passing year sees the Bee den error rate. last hrve states annual exposition more regarding years , Instead of 9 mills per student mile widely acclaimed as a truly great .. it was 9U mills, go that to allow fair, This said Mr. Winder,' an increase cf t; mills would mean years event, with its outlook for that the new- rate would necessar- - the largest number of exhibits ever ily be SH mills per student mile. fchown and an unsurpassed amuse. "There being no objection the Presi ment program, will go far in endent ordered the former resolution hancing this reputation, to. be corrected to conform with Ernest S. Holmes, fair manager, the intended action.. to the steadily growing list pointed Vouchers numbered from" 66292 of livestock entries for the 1936 to 56360 were presented by the fair as evidence that livestock -- clerlu After an examination' and growers in particular view the approval by the members, Mr. Par- - Utah State Fair as one of the moved they be approved and greatest of all stock shows. En.ordered paid. The motion was sec- - tries. have been received from more onded by Mr. Hampton, passed and than a score of states and all acxirdened paid. commodations for cattle, sheep, The superintendent reported that swine, horse and poultry promise he had held a meeting with, his promise to be allotted far in adprincipals on Satunriay, that the vance of the opening fair. teachers will meet at the'respec- - Exhibits of machinery will eclipse ve buildings with the . principals those of any previous event of like . on Tuesday in preparation for be- -. nature according to fair officials. Finning school, that institute will All available space on machinery ie held, on Wednesday morning at row on the north. side of the fair '9:15 a. m. at Davis high for all grounds has been rserved And the . teachers to which he espepcially fair management has been compelInvited the members) and the led to allot space elsewhere in the bagin work in all schools grounds for the overflow exhibits. on Thursday morning, September The division will include an inter. 10th, esting automobile show. Mr. ' Burton, asked if the .'.board Prospects are also fine for the 'cared to reconsider the former or- greatest of all state fair horse der to allow no children to enter shows. Entries already filed inschool who has not reached the age clude- some of, the. etates cham, of six by October 81; 1936.' In the pion thoroughbreds, as well as discussion it was uanmious to have some from other states. The. anthe order stand as it is." nual Fair Dog show Will far sur. Superintendent Burton presented pass that of last year in point of a petition from patrons living on number and variety of canines exWest Shepherds lanp to have a bus hibited. The same may be said of sro their way this year. Referred to the' poultry show. .The new cement the euperintendent floor laid in the poultry building The superintendent reported hay' will prove a boon to show visitors. exhibits will 'ing filled the palccs of F. B. Muir neverin be before', .who variety present had Lynn Hales, resigned from the- high school by moving approached. The works- progress Wm. II. Holbrook from the Junior administration will show WPA acthroughout Utah in 'high to Davis high and G. M. Ad- - complishments to- be housed to gTeat exhibit an from the Clparfield school to Davis high, Mark .Argyle being advantage in a building especially . for this purpose. The placed as principal at .Clearfield. constructed will include a showing . "He reported the employment of exposition in action displays of projects many new teachers as follows: Eloise and workers .' .Poulter, Matilda Huber, Margurite with, human models, WPA of work artist pro- the and Huber, David M. Merrill, Afton "Walker, Arvld D. Larson, Mary 'will be erectThe WPA Ttogers and Georeia Hougard; also ed on the fairbuilding immediately grounds the placement of recommended west of the State Fish and Game teachers as listed. .. . structure. It will be large enough . The question of changing teach- - to provide facilities and space for vrs in the various schools was the exhibition' of project models The (superintendent explain and pictures in addition to the disad that his method in placing teach play of the handicraft of WPA is to make the beet arrange- workers and proje ip actual dem ments possible for taking care of onstration. '.all the needs of all the children In Other government exhibits will each school. include those of tie federal housMr. Van Fleet moved that the ing administration, the grazing di. 10, 1035 -- fire. men all It took thirty-seve- n follow the ten men and oi all night liswe the and evening spent night and fire to tho extinguish tening, to lt. 'Dili; most distant sta- ing day tions were Lawrence, Kansas and to make sure that it would net Cincinnati, Ohlo.1 understand there spread any more. The 10 fine exacted of eneb of or so radios are. only- a tbe men or boya as Runnells ft In this towii. Just before going to ed we stroll- close to SO years old and Hartley ed through town nnd then to the about 20, ia very small In compardock, where we watched corpra be- ison with tho actual cost of putting ing loaded onto the French ship out the fire to say nothing of the "Ville De Btraasburgh. What a awful damage that might have r half-doze- n . . smell I THURSDAY. March suited. ist Another banana breakfast, and then my weeks washing. Bead from Ohrlens White Shadows In the South Seas" until I finished lt. The pictures he Hit and Run Driver Sentenced to Pay $25 Fine; Serve 10 Dayo draws of the depopulation and resultant desolution of the Marquesas Islands (for which the while man is An accident occurred north of to blame) strike me heavily sentilate Sunday night when a Layton I an regarding the par mentalist that to C. C. Baxter cf belonging South Sens and her Polynesian Indriven Ogden Roy Alle of the bby seen I have similar for habitants same collided with another place though not so foreeul examples of machine. Alton the After collision, enacted same the tragedy being inbeat it. in Baxter car was the here In Tahiti and In Hawaii. sobered toxicated he when but up, FRIDAY, March 2nd An elderly the officers obtained information from New Zealand, ninldenly-ludlead to Baxters arrest. that to us Invited Miss Hollis by name, Sheriff Holbrook arrested go out In the lagoon tomorrow In a who plead guilty in Justice boat which she has chartered. I helped her shop the Hcllewells court. Allen was fined other day In a Chinese store and 825 and to serve fifteen days in the n offense kept her from getting stung by the county jail for tbe old pirate who owried it. And she and Baxter was fined 810 and senworld tenced to serve five days in the turns out to he a traveler She Is Just returning from county jail on the drunken charge. u trip to England and it Isn't her Jail sentence in the latter case first, either, hhe travels alone, with suspended on payment of the Ana, out maid or servant of any kind. Baxter given until Oct. I in which And she takes In nil the sights to pay. whereover she goes. After several days In Tahiti, the When Patrolman Koster of D seaside follow from the Utile scIiooq troit stopped Mrs. Elsie UarIan-er Los Angeles" has forgotten how for spot thug, tUie gritb"d his book lio sulleied on the trip down hero, of violation tloko' f and Mapped him and has derided to at.iy with liis soundly u the fueo vvitli if. Bent ta" d'.d m t ship for the rc'--t of her o.vagi. Thai to jail for five means no trading of passage be- tost, but rem.ul ed: "It was wortH IL" tween us two, I guoss. i y the-pai- r glass-botto- hit-ru- well-to-d- o 1 |