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Show Volume 10 Number 31 a Randolph, MISSIONARY WRITES Social Security News American Legion Dept. Convention t t $1.50 Per Year In Advance Utah. Friday August 6. 1937 PRICE American Legion members of Utah will invade Price on August 5, 6 and 7 when the annual departmens ment convention of the organization is being held plans for which were made for the greatest veterans gathering in Utah during 1037! The local port had been preparing arrangements for several weeks. As an indication of interest in Legion affaiis stands the mark of membership increase of the Price Post this year, the local unit having more than doubled its 1936 membership and also more than doubling its 1937 quota. Utah Legion Auxiliary and members and the 40 and 8 will also hold their state convention here during the three days, the latter organization carrying on its activities chiefly on Thursday, August 5th. Business sessions of the Legion and Auxiliary will be carried on chiefly Friday and Saturday, mornings. Sight seeing trips to interesting points will occupv afternoons, the an hual drum and bugle corps contest taking place Saturday afternoon. The Legion, Auxiliary street parade, colorful feature of the yearly veterans gathering, will start at 5 oclock Saturday. the day closing with a rodeo performance and grand fireworks Dancing will be enloyed each evening. rodeo performances taking place rn Fridav and Satnrdav nights with final riding events scheduled for Sunday afternoon. . Denver, Colorado, , August 2. Offi-da- l opening of the new Ogden Field Office of the United States Social Security Board was announced here toof day at the regional headquarters the Board. This office will be in the Fred J. Kiesel Building at Ogden. J. Golden Hunsaker, a Utah man, was appoint ed from Civil Service lists as manager of the office, several weeks ago. When the Ogden Field Office opens today, it will be pietpared to distribute and receive applications for Social Security account numbers, as well as furnishing employers, employees, and all other interested persons with accurate information regarding the Fede Benefits plan and their eral rights and obligations under the Social Security Act. Counties which will be included in the jurisdiction of the Ogden office are Summit, Morgan, Weber, Rich, Cache, and Box Elder in Utah; and Uinta in Wyoming. Other counties in Utah are being serviced at the present by the other Utah field office, which is in the Union Pacific Building in Salt Lake City, and of which William B. Hayward, also a Utah man, is the manager. Old-Ag- Dr. H. V. Hoyt, former dean of commerce at University of Oregon and Oregon State College, has been added to the Brigham Young university college of commerce faculty as professor of accounting and business administration. He taught at B. Y. U. before going to Oregon in De- NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION the Interior, U. S. Land of partment 193L Office at Salt Lake City, Utah. Jul 13, 1937. NOTICE is hereby given that LaVere Hansen, of Garden City, LAKETOYVN NEWS Utah, who, on Feb. 27, 1934, made or- rasing homestead entry No. Postmaster Amos Robinson has re-- j iginal stock 1 t Sec Lot 3, & NWSW for 051129, turned from the Salt Lake Hospital 20, 14 North Range 5 East, S. L. Twp. is and an BILL HIGH utter having THIRST operation, M. and on July 2, 1934 made add'l. gradually improving. No. homestead entry stockraising FOR IRON HORSE 051610 for BViNE, NWNE, out and around Hyrurn Nebeker is Section 15, again after. having suffered a while Township 13NWNW, North, Range 6 East, Salt Water Used in Trains Costs from an infected leg caused by an in- Lake Meridian, has filed notice of insect bite. tention to make final Proof, to estab$50,000,000 Yearly. Miss Julia Wahlstrw of Salt Lake lish claim to the land above described, before N. J. Hodges, Notary Public, at fabThe Washington, D. C. City, spent a few days visiting her par Utah, on the 24th day of ulous Paul Bunyan, carrying water ents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wahlstrom, Garden Citv, 1937. Claimant names as witAugust, on both shoulders, would find it a and family. nesses: Cecil Satterthwaite, Heber days work to quench the thirst of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Preece of Morgan, Oorb ridge, Wilford Hansen, & H. C. the "iron horse. Hansen, all of Garden Citv, Utah. Railroads spend $50,000,000 annu- Utah, were town visitors one day last THOMAS F--. THOMAS. Register. week. 1937. Adv. July ally for approximately 600,000,000,-00- 0 Aug. . 1 gallons of water required by Elder Farrel Johnson returned last locomotives and the nations trans- week Prairie Plant is Compass after laboring in the New Zealand portation system. He gave inMission for 2 are ever lost out on the If years. you The Association of American Rail- teresting missionary experiences at the a compass plant will help praries roads reports that the water used "unday School Sacrament meeting and you. In exposed places its base would fill a channel 100 yards wide M. I. A. Conjoint Session, Sunday. leaves stand upright with their and nine feet deep, extending from pointed approximately north New York to San Francisco. Mr. L. Lawrence of Logan, Utah, edges south. and Also, if Paul Bunyan should drop was a visitor at the W. H. Campbell the buckets on a cold day, the wa- heme Sunday and rendered a very fine ter would freeze to a thickness of violin solo at the afternoon church session. one foot over an area fifty-fodis-pla- v. SNW, S, , I 0. 2 Steps Taken to Save Utah Tomato Crop July 31, 1937 625 Itankin Ave. Windsor, Ontario. Dear Brother Marshall: Just a few words of appreciation for your fine paper, which I have received since I arrived in the mission field. I think it is the only paper that I read everything in, and we received the Desert News and The Windsor Star two of the best papers on the North The day The American Continent. Reaper comes Is one of my red letter days. It enables me to keep up with the happenings, and I get news in it that would not come from any other Efforts to save Utahs tomato industry from demoralization today moved forward on several fronts as the Utah Canning Tomato Growers Stabilization Committee, organized last week to avert a glutted market, swung into action. George E. Holt, Chairman, said the committee will meet this week in Ogden to consider many suggestions on how to speed up sales of several thousand cases of the 1936 tomato pack in source. I am getting along well and enjoy order to dispose of the surplus before the 1937 crop is ready. He asserted my work very much. witn Windsor Is located straight south of that already offers to from Detroit, and I think the most southern the tomato growers have come thru-out part in Canada. It numbers about many large distributing centers the country. 100,000 souls, of which I am doing my Mr. Holt reported he had received best to convert. I reside in the same house and pbund the same pavements assurance that within a week a proand probably have a lot of the same gram would be developed by which experiences that Elder Johnson had Utah canned tomatoes would be placed In the hands of consumers throughout when he labored here. They raise some wonderful crops the nation. He said that again this week he had here, and most of them are harvested the critical situation existnow. surveyed by Thanking you again, and wishing ing among Utah growers and urged you success in every endeavor, I re- quick action to avert a crisis. The last tomato season ended up with 322,583 main surplus cases in Utah warehouses as A Windsorite Missionary WILLIAM J. SMITH. - 1 WORKERS CERTIFIED FOR W. P. A. EMPLOYMENT: TO J ALL Employment on WPA Projects is in tended only as stop-gaemployment to tide workers over until they can be placed in private industry. In order to be considered for private or other employment through the National Reemployemnt Service, workers must keep their applications in Natl. Service Offices active hv presenting their N. R. S. indentifl-catiocards at the National Reemployment Service Offices in which their applications for employment are on file, either in person or bv mailing them nt which time a renewal date will be stamped on the card indicating that the worker has renewed his appliea Hon for emnlovment. The card wil1 then be returned to the awliennt. Effective ns of this dae. no WPA worker will be. considered for assim menx'to nnv'emplovment by the National Reemployment Service unless his application with the National Reemployment Service has been renewed within the last thirty da vs. DARREL J. GREENWELL, Administrator. Utah Works Progress Administration p J n ur miles square. The inhabitants of New York city could survive for two years and those of a city the size of Washington could survive for seventeen years on the water consumed in one year by railroad locomotives. Railroads have saved millions of dollars annually and increased safety and efficiency in operation by chemically treating water consumed by the "iron horse to prevent rust and scale from forming on the inside of boilers, the association re' ported. Additional scientific studies now, are under way to determine what further improvements can be made in the water supply, it was said. The bureau of mines at New Brunswick, N. J., Ohio State university end the University of Michigan are among the more important centers of such research. One large railroad, operating under typical conditions, reported only one engine failure caused by water quality in 20,000,000 miles in the last four years. -It is estimated that a passenger locomotive uses from seventy to 120 gallons dl water per mile, while a freight locomotive uses from 150 to 350 gallons per mile. The tenders of present-da- y trains hold as much as 25,000 gallons.- Eye Infections The form of eye infection most frequently encountered is known as conjunctivitis. This is an inflammation of the conjunctiva, the covering which lines the eyelids and runs onto the eyeball. This type of infection is caused by Another infection set up by germs is known as fcink eye. Germ born infections are transmitted by the hands, soiled towels, or otherwise micro-organism- s. , Row Ermine Skins Are Handled When the trappers have caught the ermine the animals are skinned, and the skins are hung out to dry. Then they are collected into bundles and sent all over the world to be cleaned and dressed and made . up for wear. Miss Olive Irwin of Glendale, Clalif. is spending part of her vacation visit-- 1 ing her folks. Miss Barbara. Weston and Miss Mol-- 1 Sims of Salt Lake City, were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. l.v I Mrs. Della Alley of Cokeville, Wyo. was a town visitor Sunday. Miss Della M. Cheney Mrs. Louise ( of Ogden, and I man. Wyo. are visiting among kin and friends. 1 1 1 RAY STEVFNS LOSES EYE IN BULLET WOUND I of Lyman, Wyo. 'Ray Stevens,-23- . .Granger, a former resident of Moon tain View, is in the Wyoming General Hospital at Rock Spjrings suffering ' from a gun shot wound in the head, said to be It is said the bullet entered the right side of Stevens head, passed through his brain and lodged, in his skull on the left side. The right optic nerve was severed and necessitated the removal of his right eye Monday. His condition was such that it would not per mit the removal of the 'bullet from his skull. , Stevens was taken to the hospital shortly after midnight Saturday and until late yesterday was unable to tell how he reveiced the wound. He had attended a dance at Mt. View that eve ning, and received the injurv shortly after arriving at Granger. Two men, their names unknown who ttok Stevens to the hospital, told attendants that the wond was Stevens condition was reported as fair at the hospital. His sister, Mrs. Tom Phillips.- - of Otw1, Wyo.. who went to Rock Springs to be with her brother, told hospital officials that she knew of no explanation for the shooting nor how It hapnened, Sweetwater county sheriffs officials are conducting an Investigation Into the shooting. Thev said the wound I self-inflicte-d. TO FRENCH STAMP Issue to Be Destroyed, Some Will Escape. but Philatelists will Paris, France. have another minor variation, which makes all the difference between an ordinary stamp and a rarity, to hunt if any of the several thousand original version Descartes stamps escape from the incinerator of the French postoffice. Although the issue is to be destroyed because of an imperfection, it is virtually a certainty that some will slip into collections, for France as a nation is avid about postage stamps, and someone in the printing office has acquired samples of the new stamps that will never go into circulation. The stamp, issued in celebration of the 300th anniversary of the appearance of Rene Descartes "Discourse on Method, bears his picture surrounded by books, on one of which can be read the title Unfortusur la Methode. nately, by general agreement, Descartes book is known in academic circles as Discours de la Methode. Hence a red stamp bearing Descartes picture, with the sur, will identify the issue. The curious thing about the suppression of the stamp, of which several thousand examples already exist, is that there is no evidence that Descartes wrote "de or for that matter, that he wrote sur or that he gave his book a title at all. In those days such things as titles were likely to be left to the printer. Both mean the same, but de has a rather more archaic flavor. Yet on the famous portrait of Descartes by Franz Hals, the title appears as Discours sur la Methode. In the first edition of Lan-soHistory of French Literature it is sur. In Graziers dictionary it is sur. In Larousse it is de. To the French postoffice, even a single letter is a matter of concern, to say nothing of two or three of them. So despite plenty of authority for sur, the purists will get their de, and the philatelists, with luck, another rare stamp. ns self-inflicte- d. E rgro"e1yrelinought ERROR ADDS VALUE Dis-cou- rs Benjamin Weston. Mrs. Violet Rollins, of Evanston, Wyo.. paid a short visit to Mrs. Chas. FT. Alley. compared to the normal carry-ove- r of only 50,000 cases. The 1936 pack amounted to 1,050,000 cases and wPh almost the same acreage contracted this vear another similar crop is likely bringing the total to be marketed close to 1,500 000 cases. t Mr. Holt said that in other years there have been large surpluses but none which reached the proportions of six times the normal carryover. Srn-- MARVIN RAMSAY, TULSA, OKLAHOMA TRICK RIDER AND to I gallon to determine the reason fo MAN JUMPER, WHO WILL BE A FEATURE ATTRACTION DURING the act. nor how it occurred. Enter-- I COWBOY DAYS IN EVANSTON, SEPTEMBER ' prise. - - RO-ver- ti ! Biblical Land of Goshen The location of the bilical land of Goshen cannot be positively identified, but it lay somewhere on the eastern border of Egypt The Egypt on our maps, however,, is not the Egypt of the Pharaohs. Ancient Egypt consisted only of the Nile valley, the I ayum and the Delta a long narrow strip of land watered each year by the inundations of the Nile river. The land of Goshen was located somewhere between the Delta and the Isthmus of Suez, not in ancient Egypt proper, though it was under the jurisdiction of the Pharaohs. Rich County FAIR and RODEO Sept. 14th - 15th i |