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Show SEPTEMBER 5, i i" 1 ' - i . i i ii , i , ;tatc Agriculture Department PAcrnljitions To Insure Uy of Meat Products u ,i governing the prepa-r prepa-r at and meat P been ordered by the Uh?V culture, with a ''ve September 1, meat, meat prepared meat food tsll not contain artificial cSgs into which meat la ! L S wieners, bologna sau-shall sau-shall not be colored, ex-printing ex-printing of firm names, for descriptive printing The Sored casings or color to l J products may conceal toferiority.lt is pointed mm regulation provides that iflour or other soybean 'jSmay be used in meat pro-;f pro-;f SS terms as Wry". Vand the like shall not be "fa labels to connection with Si meat products unless such ids are actually prepared In Si or on the farm. How-if How-if the articles are prepared In me way as in the country or ?K these terms if Qualified m WANTED!!! HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Bones, Wool, Hides, Pelts, Furs and Dead or Useless Animals. Pelt Prices Paid for Dead or Useless Sheep Prompt Service. Utah Hide & Tallow Co. PHONE 88 Three Miles West of Spanish Fork DEER HUNTERS w Pay Iliffhest Prices for DEER SKINS Try Drinking More Pasteurized MILK Milk is recognized as a beauty aid because it's a vitalizing health food. It supplies essential es-sential elements without with-out which health and beauty are not possible ft J 0 Three Bar Dairy Milk 0 Three Bar Dairy Milk is taken from inspected herds. 0 Three Bar Dairy is modern and scientific. Call 83-J Have it delivered to your home. THREE BAR DAIRY LOOK! Your present Mattress remade tfthnew covering FOR AS LITTLE AS "ALL WORK GUARANTEED" w call for and deliver FREE! 0verman's Mattress Co. W Uxa& WestEOVO or Phone 90-W, Lehi IMP by the word "style", may be used. another regulation provides for the heating or refrigerating of meat to destroy trichinae. Inasmuch as it cannot certainly be determined, by any present known method of inspection, in-spection, whether the animal tissue of pork contains trichinae and Inasmuch In-asmuch as live trichinae are dangerous danger-ous to health, no article of a kind prepared to customarily to be eaten without cooking shall contain any muscle tissue of pork unless the pork has been subjected to a temperature tem-perature sufficient to destroy all live trichinae, or other treatment prescribed by the board of agriculture. agricul-ture. Mrs. Alfred F. Adams and daughter, daugh-ter, Erma, spent Thursday visiting In Salt Lake City. Mrs. George G. Robinson and daughter, Marie, motored to Provo Friday on a combined business and pleasure trip. While In Provo they attended the play, "Brigham Young" at the Paramount theatre. 1 is Pasteurized. and inner springs ' JVS- 1 town " i A at Falls Arc in Lead In Home Accidents Find Bathroom Is Not Most Dangerous Place. CLEVELAND. The latest place isn't in the home, according to the Cleveland Safety council. Home fatalities for the first time in the past decade figures before that time are unavailable exceeded traffic fatalities in Cleveland. According to the council's report, the comparative figures were 127 deaths in the home and 115 by traffic. traf-fic. The council warns to be careful care-ful going up and down stairs because be-cause that is the time that acci dents are most likely to happen, j wmrc cause deaths. By far, of all home accident deaths, falls were responsible for most The council figures reported 83 in that manner. It reported that 29 deaths were attributable from falls while on stairs. Contrary to popular belief, the bathroom is not the most dangerous place in the home or where an acci dent is most likely to happen. Only one person in Cleveland suffered suf-fered a fatal fall in a bathtub. However, How-ever, two others slipped on bathroom floors and received fatal injuries. Twenty-one persons died of burns in the second ranking cause of death, and carbon monoxide gas poison poi-son claimed nine lives. In one of the oddest accidents reported, re-ported, a wringer fell from the hand of a woman, struck her knee and foot, and caused an infection that proved fataL Chemical Test Is Used To Show Damaged Corn WASHINGTON. Grain specialists of the agriculture department have developed a simple and rapid chemical chem-ical test to determine damage to corn by heating or fermentation. That method consists of the chemical chem-ical determination of the degree of deterioration undergone by the fatty oil in the corn. It is believed that the new test, which measures "the degree of soundness" in corn, is simple and rapid enough to meet commercial requirements. In current grain-grading practices condition and damage are appraised by a guesswork appraisal by odor and by the percentage of weight of damaged kernels present in the grain. "In the absence of more precise methods," a grain specialist said, "these methods of determining soundness may have been used successfully suc-cessfully in grain-inspection procedure." proce-dure." It was pointed out, however, that the new chemical test will indicate the degree of damage in the grain more accurately and will serve more fully as an index of market and processing values. Golden Eagle Is Given Clean Slate in Survey COLORADO SPRINGS. The golden gold-en eagle, only recently accorded protection by an act of congress in its capacity as the American national na-tional bird, does something besides occupy bis perch on the "tail" side of a half dollar, findings of fish commissions com-missions and universities in Colorado, Colo-rado, Wyoming and Idaho reveaL Ascents high into the Rocky mountains moun-tains to photograph eagles' nests re vealed that the big birds feed primarily pri-marily on prairie dogs during early summer. C. C. Spencer, staff technician of the Pike National forest in Colorado, Colo-rado, said that the rodents consume a total of 26.2 per cent of available grazing land each year. Other rodents ro-dents bring the annual total to 35.5 per cent, he said. The original purpose of the expeditions ex-peditions was to determine what effect ef-fect eagles have in the increasing depletion of western Big Horn sheep herds. Spencer said no evidence had been found that eagles prey on the sheep, although further investigation investi-gation will be conducted. Statute Through Error Stabilizes Unemployment SACRAMENTO, CALIF. There was quite a laugh when the assembly assem-bly committee on unemployment insurance in-surance looked up the law governing govern-ing jobless benefits. The original act of 1935 plainly said that the purpose of the new law was to assist "in the stabilization stabiliza-tion of employment conditions." But the 1939 act, as amended, was printed "unemployment" conditions. It was found that the inadvertent error slipped in when the act was amended in 1937 and was copied into the 1939 law. Girl Harpist Studying To Be Plane Mechanic SYRACUSE. Unable to find employment em-ployment in the music world, Miss Jessie Elinor Walizer, 25-year-old harpist, is takinf lessons to become an airport "grease monkey." Miss Walizer, who says she Is "crazy about tinkering with motors," mo-tors," first discovered her mechanical mechani-cal Inclinations when the 13-year-old family car broke down. Lacking funds for the necessary repairs, she overhauled the motor herself. She is now taking a course in aviation mechanics under a scholarship scholar-ship extended by the civil aeronautics aero-nautics authority. TIH LKHI SUN. LEm, UTAH Constitutional Amendment Liability of Stockholders of Banks A IOIN1 RFSOLU1ION PROPOS. AC 70 A At END SECTION 18, ARTl'CLE XII OF THE CONSTL TUTION OF THE STATE OF' UTAH. RELATINC TO LIABILITY LIABIL-ITY OF STOCKHOLDERS OF BANKS. Be it enacted ly ihe Lefhlalurt tf the Slate ef Utah, tvo-thirjt of all the membcrt elected to each home ten-curing ten-curing therein: SECTION 1. That It is proposed to amend section 18, article XII, of tbe constitution of the state of Utah to read: Sec. IS. The legislature may provide by law that the stock-1 holders In every corporation and' Joint stock association organized, for banking purposes, or the holders hold-ers of any one or more of the classes of stock issued by any such corporation in addition to the amount of capital stock subscribed and fully paid by them shall be individually responsible for an additional addi-tional amount equal to not exceeding exceed-ing tbe amount of their stock in such corporation, or the amount of their stock of any particular class in such corporation, for all its debts and liabilities of every kind. Section 2. The secretary of state Is directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors elec-tors of the state at the next general election in the manner provided by. law. ' Section 3. If adopted by the electors of the state, this amendment amend-ment shall take effect the first day of January, 1941. I, E. E. Monson, Secretary of State of the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing! is a full, true and correct copy of the Constitutional Amendment proposed pro-posed by tbe regular session of the legislature of 1939 as the same appears of record In my office. In witness whereof, I have hereunto here-unto set my hand and affixed the Great Seal cf the State of Utah, this 26th day of August, 1940. Secretary of State. Mrs. Lehi's spected olu her elghty-lii? ary next Sunday, oe; In honor of the occasion members mem-bers of her family are entertaining at "open-house" at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Charles Crabb, from 2 to 5 o'clock p. m. All of her friends are cordially invited to call during the afternoon after-noon and visit with her on her birthday. Mrs. Jay Haws entertained at a delightful children's party Saturday afternoon, honoring the third birthday birth-day anniversary of her little son, Hugh. The following little friends enjoyed lively games and were served dainty refreshments: Brent Dorton, Stanley Allison, Joan Lov-eridge, Lov-eridge, . Mack Wagstaff, Barbara Wagstaff, Marcille Morgan, Julia Adell Garrett, Glenice Wing, Shir-lene Shir-lene Long, Nile Peterson, Nan Broadbent, Knollin and Ralph Haws and the guest of honor. Legal Notices PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICE Consult county clerk or respective signers for further Information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Joseph Roberts, sometimes some-times known as Joseph M Roberts, and Esther M. Roberts, his wife, deceased: Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the under j signed at his residence in Lehi, Utah, on or before the 31st day of October, A. D. 1940. JOSEPH M. ROBERTS, Administrator, Elsmore and Wootton, Attorneys for Administrator American Fork, Utah. First publication August 29, 1940, Last publication Sept. 19, 1940. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Christina Harrison, deceased: de-ceased: Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the under- ! signed at his office in the State Bank of Lehi, Lehi, Utah, on or I before the 31st day of October, 1940. , EL L. CHTPMAN, I Administrator. Elsmore and .Wootton, Attorneys for Administrator American Fork, Utah. First publication August 29, 1940 Last publication Sept. 19, 1940. - 1IUK V UlFUl I I A 1 M Faces Shortage In Vital Metals Government Acts to Build Reserves; Manganese, Tin, Offer Problems. WASHINGTON. Virtually com-plete com-plete dependence on foreign sources for tin and manganese may complicate com-plicate efforts of the government's national defense administrators to build up a large emergency reservoir reser-voir of strategic war materials for the United States, according to mineral min-eral experts. Unlike chromium and tungsten, which the government plans to buy , In large quantities, tin and manga-. nese are produced In very limited quantities in this hemisphere. Large quantities of all will be needed for the defense program. Heretofore, government experts laid, more than three-fourths of the tin used in the United States has come from British Malaya, with the remainder divided between England, the Dutch East Indies, the Nether- lands and Bolivia. Except for that ! of Bolivia, the supply from these 1 sources is likely to be curtailed and even completely shut off because of the war, they believe. Smelters Not Available. Even if Bolivia could supply "all the tin required by the United States, neither country has commercial smelters capable of refining what the experts termed "refractory and rebellious" re-bellious" Bolivian ore. The situation in regard to manganese man-ganese is similar. In 1939, American Ameri-can industries required more than 782,250 tons of the metal essential for hardening armor-plate steel. Main sources of manganese ore have been the African Gold Coast and British India. Minor quantities ere produced in the Philippines and Brazil. Tin and manganese, the expert said, undoubtedly will provide Edward Ed-ward R. Stettinius Jr., materials coordinator co-ordinator of the national defense commission, with his most difficult problem. President Roosevelt has said fears of such shortages are hysterical hys-terical and that Stettinius has the situation under controL Under the strategic materials act passed at the last session of con gress $100,000,000 was to be spent over the next 10 years for essential war-time commodities not readily available in this country. Approxl- ! mately $13,000,000 has been spent in current fiscal year. More Funds Sought. if invasion of Belgium, Hol- 'rance, the administration as essential to the na-2 na-2 to speed up purchases materials. Since May dent has sent two re- nmgress for $47,500,000 qulsition of such supplies. f$100, 000, 000 would be avail- indirectly if needed under ns of the 1941 fiscal year military and naval appropriation bills. Experts regard the tin situation as the most acute. During 1939 in dustrial consumption In the United States totaled approximately 70,000 tons of pig tin. ' Since last September Septem-ber the government purchased 6,124 tons at a cost of more than $6,000,-000. $6,000,-000. But this would not be suffi cient to last more than a few days if the country found itself at war, experts ex-perts said. "" The rubber situation is more indefinite, in-definite, but probably not so serious, seri-ous, experts said. The procurement division has no quota on rubber, since all Imports are handled on a barter basis for American cotton by the state and agriculture departments. depart-ments. Chromium ore, necessary for the manufacture of armor plate and highly important in the manufacture of tool steel, is fortunately widely distributed over the earth's surface, the experts said, with the Philippines Philip-pines and Cuba among the major producers. Dinosaur Print in Texas Hints of 50-Ton Beast AUSTIN, TEXAS. A single footprint, foot-print, as long as a bathtub and 40 inches wide, has convinced Dr. E. H Sellards, director of a paleon-tological paleon-tological survey in Texas, that the world's largest dinosaur once roamed over what is now Texas. From the size of the track, University Uni-versity of Texas experts construe existence of an animal 80 feet long, weighing nearly 50 tons. The foot-deep track was uncovered uncov-ered at the water's edge of the Paluxy river, near Glen Rose, Texas. Roland T. Bird of the American Museum of Natural History has been sent to the spot to supervise preservation and removal of the dinosaur track. To do so, men under un-der Bird's direction will cut away a one-ton block of limestone on which the four-toed marks of the foot are imprinted. Sees Too Many Going Nowhere for Nothing WASHINGTON. Sarah Todd Cunningham, a visiting senator from tranquil Hawaii, has this impression of the mainland: "Too many people In too many cars in too much of a hurry going go-ing in too many different directions direc-tions to nowhere for nothing." r 1 M World's Largest Selling Liniment Every minute the clock ticks several bottles are used up. Watkins Liniment for Aches and pains, burns and bruises and one hundred other uses. , 1 pound of Watkins Pepper 10c or 16 ounce Antiseptic 10c or large Petro Carbo Salve 10c With your pur- , chase of each bottle of Watkins Liniment. ' Arnold C. Brems LEHI, UTAH WATKINS DEALER "Rtrr Affropf lHTIC -L1fe XllUtlUUlIO To Be Offered At Utah Stale Fair The 1940, Utah State Pair Is ex-pected ex-pected to set new records In scope and variety of attractions for vlsl- tors. Contracts already signed for entertainment features assure this, while every advance indication points to the finest exhibit of Beehive Bee-hive state products ever assembled for public display. Acting on the assumption that people come to the fair to first of all be entertained, both by exhibits and "show" features, Utah State Fair association officials are "going the limit" in making certain that the 1940 exhibits in all departments will eclipse all previous fair showings, show-ings, and that the daily event programs pro-grams will be filled to overflowing with new features. As for exhibits, the fair management manage-ment has devoted untiring efforts toward interesting producers in every county and In every field to enter displays in the various exhibit departments livestock, manufacturers, manufactur-ers, agriculture, horticulture, women's wo-men's handicraft, fish and game, youth activities, machinery, and art. The response has been statewide, assuring many new Items for public Inspection and a sum total of exhibits ex-hibits that will establish an all-time record. The fair officials due to most for tunate circumstances have been enabled en-abled to book the greatest of the nation's fair entertainment features the gigantic show-spectacle "Flying "Fly-ing Colors". The circumstance was that this superb attraction had open dates enroute to the Los Angeles County Fair at Pomona and was induced in-duced to stop over in Salt Lake City to present its complete program at the Utah state fair. More than 70 people comprise the great cast of "Flying Colors", plus a troupe of trained animals taking part in several of the spectacular portions of the long program offered. offer-ed. The attraction is presented on a 200-foot long stage and Includes In addition to an enthralling musical comedy eight vaudeville acts and a variety of circus features. Along with the livestock exhibits I Ellery : 1 THE FAMOUS RADIO DETECTIVE and author of the sensational best seller "The Adventures of Ellcry Queen" PRESENTS The DUTCH SHOE MYSTERY You will be held breathless by this startling, fast-moving fast-moving story of murder in a modern hospital. Daring, Dar-ing, clever, extraordinarily exciting, this is one of the most amazing adventures of the famous detective. detec-tive. Because we want you to know Mercury Books (selected (se-lected and published by The American Mercury), well send you this one The Dutch Shoe Mystery, by Ellery Queen practically free. Well supply the book if you will pay 10c for postage and handling. hand-ling. Out of more than 60,000 copies printed we. have less than 3,000 left-and they're going fast. Hurry and send a dime for the complete copy of this intensely interesting book. (Sorry only one to a customer.) Mercury Books 570 Lexington Avenue New York. Here's my dime. Send me a copy of the Mercury Book -The Dutch Shoe Mystery" by Ellery Queen. ft NAME- ft : ADDRESS- : CITY AND STATE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1940 there will be a special exhibit of purebred bulls. Animals from every section of the state will go on exhibition ex-hibition in this concerted effort to center attention on the great advances ad-vances livestock growers are making in breeding methods. Garden clubs throughout the state are combining to make the 1940 fair flower shows an outstanding exhibit feature. Orchardlsts, too, are concentrating con-centrating on bringing to the 'fair this year a truly representative and all-embracing display of Utah-grown fruits. Already, the best of all state fair dog and horse shows are assured. The Intermountaln Kennel Club promises nearly 300 entries for the annual fair dog show, while Utah horsemen are determined to present an even better horse show than the one last year. As usual, youth of the state are looking forward to the state fair as the opportunity for public culmination culmina-tion of a year's 4-H club and Future Farmers of America activities. Utah manufacturers will not be . left behind In the march of state fair progress. Nor will the women of the state. Both departments are well advanced In the placing of exhibits ex-hibits and both assure fair association associa-tion leaders of outstanding displays. The great agriculture building Is being revamped to house the oncoming on-coming horde of exhibits. Always the farmer's mecca, the 1940 state fair will as ever present a complete picture of Utah's agricultural resources re-sources and the many advances that have been made during the past year In production, soil conservation, and crop betterments. WANT ADS WANTED: Representative to look after our magazine subscription interests in Lehi and vicinity. Every family orders subscriptions. Hundreds Hun-dreds of dollars are spent for them each fall and winter in this vicinity. Instructions and equipment free. Guaranteed lowest rates on all periodicals, domestic and foreign. Represent the oldest magazine agency agen-cy in the United States. Start a growing and permanent business in whole or spare time. Address MOORE -COTTTIELL, Inc., Naples Road, North Cohocton, New York. |