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Show T" uk '..., ::v-- i ip'.i .; - i..., irso. uiL jluk.nal. HYDE PARK DEPARTMEHTI v Luc.an, Discoveries of cache cui ;y. l.au PAGE FIVE ONE1 HALF NEVER BOULDER DAMS FIRST $10,000,000' JUST GETS LABOR, TOOLS, TO SITE KNOWS Sound Transmission MRS. AMlKKA LWIB, Cor respondent Park Hyde Annual Grammer School Interestingly Given A large crowd gathered in the auditorium of the West high Clean-u- p Day Is Held Commencement Park Saturday was the clean-u- p day for the ' for the woanwate! Ihovel Hyde nd Eighth grade graduating class pitch forks. Each group of men re held here Sunday evening cleaned their own As following program was of the streets hive Hyde -- annual Park-Exer- cises j J giv-'ma- congregation; centiy been graveled and all prayer, George Lamb, original have been leveled song by graduates, talk, Prln-- 1 The roads of our town are cipal R- - Homer Hyde, valedic-- , now in very, good condition or-Beth adoress ! Another big improvement is the Dames; tory igmal story, Barbara Ashcroft; cementing across the old ditch, class prophecy, Norma Sea- by the post office corner. This mons, song, clus, udciross to has been 1 very dangerous graduates-an- d presenting of place, and the improvement will certificates by Dr. Frank LJ be very widely appreciated by West; singing and closing pray- - the town. The board is bein'' er byTTIenry Scamons Those complimented on this piece of receiving graduation ccitificates work were: Barbara Ashcroft, Beth! The ward cha$bl is having a Verba Larsen, Gayle thorough cleaning. The walls are Dames, Seamons, Alvera Nielson. Ruth being cleaned and calcimmed Matkln, Emma Balls, Naoma and Wednesday, under the diSeamons, Elaine Perkes, Edna rection of the Relief society, Rachel Jorgensen, Hancey, the chapel will be thoroughly Grant Lamb, Wayne Waite, La cleaned. Moyl Harris, Glenn Lee, Morris. Hancey. Catlett Seamons. Everett Jorgensen. And ! Tuesday evening the seventh grade entertained lh$ eighth News grade at a party held at the jehool house. The evening was spent in playing games. Relresh-ment- s were served. By The Associated Press - Mrs. A mother Salt Lake City R. S. McQuarrie entertained at a birthday party and her daughter will graduate Tuesday afternoon ih honor of m the same class at University her little daughter, Carries 10 of Utah commencement exerbirthday. About 30 little guests cises June 10, for the" first time were present. A dainty luncheon in the history of the school Bachelor of Arts degrees In the was served. ' will be Friday the scouts, under the school of education direction of Scoutmaster Har- awarded to Mrs Annie A. Van old Daines and Delmar Waite Cott and her daughter, Miss Lake spent the day in cleaning up May Van Cott of Salt Mrs. Van Cott is the City. the cemetery. mother of six children. WILLIAM IIYDE Crushed beneath Ogden CAMP MEETS his own truck after it had been The William Hyde Camp overturned in a collision with mel an automobile driven by Joseph Daughters of Pioneers, Friday at the home of Nettir F. Steenblick, Salt Lake City, Reeder, Mrs. Mary Hancey ana W. D. Wood, 44, drivir for a Mrs. George Hancey were as- dairy company, was killed here sisting the hostess The lesson yesterday at a street intersecHe leaves a. widow and was treated by Oneta Waite tion. Sarah Petersen and Mae Han-ee- y three children. rendered a vocal duet. ElIdaho Falls William Watlen Hancey gave a reading were son Croder, 87, one of the two Delicious refreshments remaining Civil . war veterans served. Mr. and Mrs Ross Thurston residing here, died yesterday. of Bear River city, and Mr and Mr. Croder was born m PenThe surviving vetnsylvania. Le Vere Thurston of eran is Judge Isac Daniels. were of their guests RMrs. Mrs Rosabelle Thurs-Seven of Rupert Idaho last week. eight members of the Rupert J-a- . Perkes of Moreland, end with high school graduating class spent if his parents, Kir. and Mrs. T. were Injured yesterday .when the car in which they were ridH W. Perkes. He - returned home ing turned over on the newly Sunday. His brother Gaylen ac- oiled west of here. companied him and will spend Three highway of the injured, Ralph the summer in Moreland. Neta Dollolio and Miss Mildred Daines under- Donaldson, arecnfined in the went an operation for appendi- Jane Larue, citis Friday morning. She is hospital here. getting alng nicely. Utah Idaho Briefs m Ida-Wh- the-wee- o, k What Congress Is Doing SON IS BORN i .Mr.and Mrs. Willard Hancey announce the birth of a son, mother and babe are getting THURSDAY along nicely. SENATE Mr. and Mrs R. S. McQuarForeign relations and naval rie, Mrs. Henry E. Hancey. Jr. affairs committees continue on motored to Salt Lake on Mon- London treaty. day and. spent the day. They continues Lobby committee returned home Monday even- - prohibition investigation. HOUSE Chrlstofferson of Votes on fish resolution to Andy , C. visitis here EmmetviJle, Idaho, the declare It the policy of ing relatives and friends. United States that there should A. P. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. be absolute equality for both of Franklin were guests of Mr. sexes in nationality In all Sunand Mrs.- C. L. Ashcroft treaties and other international day and attended graduatfon agreements. bill to Takes up Hawley exercisejuSunday ..evening. Owen Waite has just finished authorize settlemet of German a large Chicken eoop. Orson Perreparations. kes is .building another large Appropriations one. Jed Seamons Is building a continues work on second barn. large, fine dairy deficiency bill. considers Mrs. Junius Christensen and Rules committee children, of Preston spent Fri- rule under which Reece Muscle day heri,ylsiting with., relatives. Shoals .bill is tto be taken up Mr and Mrs. Horace Hancey by the- - house. entertained at a family dinner immigration committee holds SundayHipr Mr. and MrS. Hans executive meeting on Mexican Hansen of Whittier, California mmigratlon. Mr andtMrs John Miligan of Banking committee continues of ' branch Lewistoir and Mr. and Mrs. Wil- its investigation lard Gordon of Smithfield. banking. WEDNESDAY Those Jrom Hyde Park, who Senate graduated from North Cache railroad Couzens were: Lorna Seamons, Merle Adopted Jensen.f 'Mary Lee, Gwenivere consolidation bill. Received lobby reports from HanceyjAnneta Woolf, Nothan and Senator Caraway and Senator Seamons,. Ariel Waite Robinson. Bpencec. Raines. Lobby committee questioned antiof Of thdf nearly 85,600 miles of F. Scott McBride of saloon Union league. the in highways; South Africa only about Foreign relations and naval milei are Improved roads affairs committees receive testiand only some 700 miles of mony ton London treaty. HOUSE the betlfr types. Passed bills to classify clerks in the foreign service and of-to-i AT provide living quarters for ficials and employes of the TOMORROW in foreign coun- -' government r tries. i IS Judiciary committee approved bills to provide for 11 - adSOMEONES ditional federal judges. Way and means committee BIRTHDAY reported Hawley resiudm to extend for one year the time A nI IK) Is tnduy and the duv and refund "her fnmoYrow. It may he for assessment, credit of income taxes for 1927 ine member of your family and 1928 on community income. "r n dear frieud hn is hi" or her birthday are Outboard motors that "I nlmij-- the gift of Jewelry twin cylinnders by w operated an h appropriate for puu alternately, producing firing imiKidit oeeaKiiiu. two impulses for each revolution, have been Invented. -- -- -- 25.-00- 0. -- WENDELBOE JEWELRY O OPTICAL CO. of With the development certain mercury deposits Nevthe ada expects to become leading state for the production of that metaL school in Salt Lake city recently and saw and heard Sergius Pr Grace, assistant vice presideni of the Bell Telephone laboratories, Inc , of New York, give .a demonstration in sound transmission at a public meeting sponsored by the Utah section of the American institute of electrical engineers. If Mr Grace had given such an exhibition a few hundred years ago, he probably would' have been burned at the stake for witchcraft He came to Su.lt Lake city through the courtesy of President F. H Real of (he Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph company. The crowd of interested spec- tators saw the artificial larynx with which theard voiceless now can speak, it used I hey heard the music of an cichestra filter d with only certain tones being reproduced; heard a picture pass over a wire to be assembed at the receiving end; heard a palpita-t'on- s of the heart of one of the auri.ence magnified; heard how the noise of the movement ol a muscle, would sound were the human ear sensitive enough to detect it, and heard jazzy and-he- :nu..r. inverted. They listened to speech inverted and then transposed to its understandable form; heard speech scrambled into an mass and t..en led; heard n voice at one end of a short telephone line and waited several seconds to catch a reproduction; finally they saw a demonstration in whkh music frm a cabinet, w hich could not be heard by the audience or the subject of the test( passed through a wire, through one mans body and into the subjects brain direct. To prove that he heard the music. the subject of the experiment beat time with his hands. As Mr. Grace was demonstrating i he device then was a roar through the room like a speeding train, She sounds tremendously amplified coming from Tlirhe precipitous grades at Boulder dum site must be conquered by engineers establishing railroads, highways and workmens town shown in map. feat will be enBy Frank I. Weller engineering Associated Press Staff Writer countered - in getting railroad The spurs to the dam site. The Washington AP) initial Boulder Dam, ap- summit of the plateau is several miles back from the and propriation President Hoover re- can unquested of congress on arrivial usual be reached without difficulty by a branch of signed contracts for power, the railway will be used primarily to get (Tom running workmen and their equipment through Las Vegas, Nevada. But, from the summit down to into Black canyon. the decline is so Dr. Elwood Mead, commission- the canyon, sharp it will Involve specially er of reclamation, says the first constructed and locomoof the eight years work sche- tives. Once attracks the base-o- f the deconcrete cline one duled for the huge will run to the wedge will be to build a highway left aroundspur the cliffs and down ' to run to the top of the cliffs to the jiver. another to the overlooking the damsite. right and a third sharply down The five other main opera- the'Tace of the canyon for 300 tions expected to start immed- teet. iately after the appropriation JJ3ra, first two will be used to Include construction of railway get materials to both sides of work delivering materials, a the dam and the third to carry townsite for the working force, them when the dam starts rissanitation, a water system, four ing to its 725 feet of 'height. diversion tunnels through which Getting the railroad to the bot- the Colorado river will flow dur- tom of the canyon Js expected ing construction of the dam and to eost $2,500,000. Installation of power. Before anything can be done Because of the rough and pre- four tunnels, 50 by 50 feet and cipitous ground, it is estimated 4,000 feet long, two on each that the three miles of highway, side of the river, must be drilled beginning at the townsite two through the canyon walls to miles back from the river, will divert the water from the dam cost $300,000. fsite. They will cost $17,000- ,Probably the most spectacular 000. ' , u r teat 00 ITS A PLEASURE! the contraction in Mr. Graces law as he bit hi. teeth together. They came through a microthe phone which picked up connoise produced by the tracting of the muscles. Mr. Grace explained that this phenomenon had recently been discovered in the laboratories and explained that it was attributable to the fact that and surrounding tissues are made to act as one plate of the ear-dru- m condenser receiver, the resulting bivrations of the being interpreted by the brain as speech, music, or whatever sounds were impressed upon the ear-dru- m original transmitter. Mr. irace said that the sounds could be transmitted simultaneously to at least three persons holding hands. It will not be long before you will go to a doctor when you have heart trouble and he will place a special stethascope against your chest and listen, Grace said in connection with the reproduction oi heart beats. The doctor will then get out a record of heart beats which he thinks is most like the sound of yours. As soon as' he finds the one which corresponds he wllf diagnose just what is the trouble with your heart by comparing it with the records made by a famous heart specialist. The artificial larynx r was demonstrated with the aid of a bellows. The bellows, Mr. Grace said, would take the place of the wind which would come from the lungs of the dumb person. The words were formed by the lips and tongue and ' the air reproduced the sound with the use of the artificial voice which much resemVice President bles former Low Fares to Dawes famour pipe. You carry this voice around in your pocket, Mr. Grace said. He told' of one man of who, later losing his voica secured one of the artificial -- Virginia larynxes and returned to his work as a salesman. With the use of . iheartificlal larynx a person can speak across the continent by telephone. For those whose vocal cords are lung paralyzed a synthetic has been developed. Another interesting phenomenon was the latest thing in burglar alarms for safes. Merely by dropping a ienny on a steel surface, similar to that of a vault, a sound was set off like a burglar alarm. Mr. Graces demonstration of delayed sperch was particularly mto a Speaking Interesting. transmitter lie was able to dehvery of speech to the lf loud speaker for four and seconds, ahd also to cause at will electrical echoes so that the words were repeated one. two or three times. This delayed speech has a practical application .In transatlantic transmission. preventing howling. ' One of the most amusing parts of the evening for the crowd was when Mr. Grace scrambled speech electrically, Inverting it so that high hotes were low and low notes high. The speech was then unintelligible. But he showed that an electrical brain as he called It. could scramble the sounds and translate them into English. In this scrambled gibberish the de-la- y' one-ha- words playefeen krinkenope spoken into the telephone were unscrambled and came out of the loud speaker as telephone company. 1 Mr. Grace explained that this of words made it scrambling possible - to send - messages Ly i radio which are unintelligible to anyone except the listener at the station which has receiving apparatus to unscramble the message. While the laboratories cm-- ! ploy 550 persons and has an annual budget of $19,000,000, the discoveries that have been made have saved the telephone company and the public hundreds of millions of dollars, he said. rrzr z He explained how the loading coil and the, telephone r?peatr er made long' distance calls possible without the necessity of heavy copper wire which would make calls almost prohibitive in cost both to company and to the user. Now Jong distance calls are made over wires no larger (Jiam the ordlnary pin, he said. Mr. Grace pointed out ;hat the development of perminv ir together with a new insulating material known as para gutt i, both products of the laboratories, make possible the construction of a telephone cable across the Atlantic to supplement the radio systems now in use. Construction of the cable Is expected to start within the next -- t - DANCING- - continuously. cities and broadocean be ac lies of California call you to a cool summer vacation beside the blue Pacific. Southern Pacifics fast, luxurious trains bring this western playground as -close as tomorrow. 7 Travel West over the direct Overland Route, crossing Great Salt Lake by rail, and over the High Sierra with Donnet Lake and the Great American River Canyon far below. Mile-hig- h Lake Tahoe is reached by short sidetrip. Persiana Ball Room TRESTON Billie EXAMPLES OF REDUCED ROUNDTRIPS: Kuglers famous broadcasting orchestra from Portland. Special Features Male Quartette and Duet Ticket! on Salt until Sepftmbtr J Of good until October 31, i - t - Sousttlhiem FaelSae1 i Prices 3 Gents 50c, Ladies Free , D. R. OWEN. tJenl Agent SOI THhKN PACIFIC. LINES 41 So. Main St. Salt Lake City, Utah - 1 . , On your way to Southern California, Southern Pacific will take you to Lake Tahoe, San Francisco, Del Monte, Santa Barbara, Yosemite, the Big Trees and otherfamous vacation centers, 7 at but slight additional cost. Saturday, - May 24th year. According to British experts a man cannot safely carry loads weighing more than 40 per cent of his own weight x lashing |