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Show THE BULLETIN THE BULLETIN A WEEKLY PUBLICATION at South 1 1th East Sugarhouse, Utah Printed 204 4 Issued Every Thursday Business Office and Plant at 2044 South 1Kb East Advertising Ratea on Application O. C. CON MIFF, Publlahet -- -- TERMS OF SLT.SCRIITION Salt Lake City, Utah (Founding of Sugarhouse, Continued From Page 1) was ready for traffic July 4, 1850. Big canyon road now Parleys Canyon, was named after lta builder.' In 1S52 the territorial legislature made it a toll road to keepj up consruction between settlements at Mountain Dell, Snydervllle, and Park City. The fee was as follows: two animal drawn vehicles hauling coal, lime wood, lock, timber - 25c; for every such load drawn by four animals or more thirty-seve- n and one half cents; vehicles such as buggyu or one dollar; and for additional wagons drawn by two animals Loose animals pairs of animals to such vehicles fifty, cents. except sheep or hogs each ten cents. ' To show the foresight of the early pioneers here Is a notice that appeared In the Deseret News, February 1, 1855. CANAL AND LAND NOTICE One Year in Six Months in Advance ' One Vear in Advance Elsewhere iii tlie I'niteJ States 1.0C .- 2.00 . FREE BALLOONS With Every Purchase SATURDAY and SUNDAY Don Hardman . . Service "On Site 1st Sugar Mill West of BHsaaslppI Try The Governor and Legislative assembly of the territory of Utah, during the last serslon, granted to Brlgham Young, Isaac Chase, and Feramorz Utile, and their associates and successors, the right to make a canal from Big Cottonwood creek to Salt Lake City and atrip of land one mile wide on the east and one-ha- lf mile wide on the west side of the canal throughout Its entire length. This work Is designed to be permanent, and will be con- GASOLINE Our Speedy Service' River" 20c . DRUGS SEAGULL On the Market Corner in Sugarhouse CRYSTAL New! Exclusive! FREE! WHITE Johnson's Laundry Soap GLO-COA- T Giant Bars Limit . ' 3 structed for the purpose of boasting granite rock from Big Cottonwood for the temple and for building up this city, and from the abundant supply of water, will afford great facilities toj bringing the adjacent valuable land into a high state of cultivation and for propelling machinery of all descriptions. . It is desirable to have the canal in readiness for boating rock by a year from next June, and with a few of the expediting the work among other modes, we propose to let out contrails for labor payable in land along the route and in credit on tithing. It is presumed that those who are anxious to pay their tithing, or to secure a pleasant home, or valuable farm near this city, will promptly report themselves, which they are requested to do to F. Littlo at President Young's mill, as he Is fully acquainted with the subject and near the line of the canal. Purest iwaNuia i 21st South and 11th East Steakes or T-Bo- ne THE 4 A "Cleanliness FREE! Super-Valu- e! BRUSHES Special Offer for 25c MTKODUCTOKY MCKAtC CONTAINING V1ut lot on NOW IRON PAYS UTAH BILLS lb. 9c Offttt Pit Workings NEW STYLE FIXTURES Llnm Water, PL ..9c (If you bring bottle) i ', ' APEX ELECTRIC CO. 1079 East 21st South TO SUGARHOUSE ON THEIR 83rd BIRTHDAY 1 39rJ Ashton Heating & Ventilating Co. Good ice cream is always a For You? VENTILATING HEATING and PROBLEMS Free Given Estimates ) treat, ther, we are six. or sixty. TRY A DISH Laura Larson Ice Cream Shop Hyland 2220 MOTHER REMEMBER Mothers Day Sunday, May 9tli - GIFTS CANDY AT THE 5-10- East 21tt South -25c Popular Acclaim has raised this book to the front ranks of HOW TO WIN I'llI ENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE By Dale Carnegie best-selle- rs $1.95 Other Best Sellers GONE WITH THE WIND 93.00 By Margaret Mitchell DKl'.MS ALONO The MOHAWK 13.50 By Walter D. Edmonds An American Doctor's Odystiey $340 By Victor Helser. M. D. THE HUNDRED YEARS 93.00 By Philip Ouedalla . OPTOMETRIST DESERET and have your vision examined with modem methods. BOOK COMPANY Charter Member of the Foundation 1090 East 21st South Ily. 1749 ms metal whose mining In was not only tolerated heartily encouraged by the authorities of the Mormon church la the early days was iron. The alternative was a long sad easily wagon haul from the east. Welcome, therefore, was the discovery that iron ore existed In abundance near the colony of Cedar in Iron county. In 1851 half the man at Cedar were set apart to develop an Iron Industry. During 1852 a blast furnace was erected, coal was coked and, bn September 30, a stream of liquid iron was drawn from the furnace. la November a company the Deieret Iron Company, took over the plant from the colony. Money was raised la Europe and. for seven years, ihe Company continued to operate. Upon the build-la- g of a railroad to Utah In the 'tills the cost of iron products was cut and the home Industry became inactive. An effort to revive It on a cooperative basis was made by Ebenezer Hanks and the Great Western Iron Co. In 1SC8 at Old Iron Town. The company was absorbed la 1883 by the Iron Manufacturing Co. of Utah. A local market for Iron castings Is said to have been developed, but the projected rallrond on which the company relied did not materialize. The appropriation of Iron land began In 1877 with the survey of a lode claim called the "Blowout". Locating claims was the outstanding feature of the Iron business for several decades. Those most active In acquiring claims were Matthew Cullen, S. B. M liner and the Colorado Fuel Iron Co. The ground once patented, a search for capital to develop and exploit it was in order. The clock of time pointed to 19:3 before a successor to the Old Iron Town enterprise appeared. In that year tbe Columbia Steel Corporation went actively to work at Iron Springs, using a tunnel and glory hole system. The following year shipments of ore to a blast furnace at Irontou were commenced. Nlneteen-thlrtwas an eventful period for the Utah Iron industry. The United States Steel Corporation came west and purchased all the properties of the Columbia Steel. There was no lack of capital now. Operations were shifted to Iron Mountain, IS miles southwest try. of Desert Mound, and a railroad to It la a competitive Industhat point was planned. Surveying try. The highly Utah field must compe for a standard gauge line was not only with domestic producers, started In the rail of 1934. Con- but also with foreign Interests forstruction began May I, 1935. and tified by cheap labor. To do so it was completed on August 25th. needs the same throughrriillminnrv work on a mining out the state that support it receives from and pushing plant had been In ,the people of Iron county. REMEMBER YOUR MOTHER MOTHER'S DAY With . A GIFT and A CARD FROM AFTON'S GIFT SHOP 1056 East 21st South Hyland 5051 44 i Cor-noratl- Sugarhouse Better Sight Dr. W. H. Landmesser THE progress for some time. On August 1, 1935, the building of the plant was actually begun and the following April It Was completed; Adjacent t the plant site are several ore bodies. One of these, the Black Hawk, was selected for An open the first development. pit was started 700 feet from the receiving hopper of the primary crusher. The ore is broken by churn drilling and blasting drill holes. The open pit face Is 80 feet high by 160 feet long. The ore Is loaded by a electric shovel Into two trucks, each with a capacity of 28 long tons, and hauled to the hopper. A pan feeder con veyi the ore from the receiving Jaw crushhopper to a 60 x er, A belt conveyor carries It to a scalping screen which the finished product. The oversize goes through either a reduction or a cone crusher. The product of this operation, which Is all of size or leas. Is conveyed by a belt to a doubls-dec- k finishing screen which produces three sizes as follows: First grade, under inch: second grade, 6 to 1 inch; third grade. 1 Inch to 2 inches. The ore Is loaded Into railroad cars ;nd shipped 239 miles to the blast furnace at Travo. Sines the Calamhla Steal opened the mines at Iron Springs in 1923, operations In the Ustrict have been continuous. The development of the Iron industry in Utah was the greatest Incentive to the building of the Cedar City branch of the Union Pacific railroad. The iron mines have been the largest source of revenue for the road and also the largest consumer of power In the southern wart of the state. Their payrolls have always been substantial. From them have been derived most of the 390,000 of taxes paid annually by the railroad to Iron county. Taymenta by the railway, mines and power company to the county are well over $100,000. Although It has not been feasible to smelt the ore in Iron county, it Is done within the state, so that the coal mines, stone quarries and transportation companies contribute to the employment of labor and the tax revenue of the state, the counties and tbe munlcljal-itles- . Farmers and local merchants are secondary beneficiaries of the wealth produced by the Iron Indus6 UNITED STORE The strain on your nervous sys tem caused by poor vision may easily destroy your health! . If you have been suffering from dizzy spells, a throbbing head, or feeling "all in," CALL ON By E. ft. O'CONNOR h ON Better Health Phone Hyland 1434 whe- None of us ever quite grow up about it. Laura Larson's Ice Cream does something for It's rich and satyour family spirits. isfying . . . and it's good for "vou! 2103 South 11th East . "'Where' Quality Counts" 137 East 21st South j ICECREAM FOR Hyland 1738 CONGRATULATIONS ' WE'RE ALL KIDS When It Cornea to 1069 the TIME SEE OUR DISPLAY OF lSc Acetone, 1 ox. is LIGHTING FIXTURES in 1 CARDS Above All" To Change Your Old Iron rie'kJ, 't lint 3 SO CASHMEtf I0UQWT HANO lOTIOIf I Or CASHMWJ lOUQUn SOAP 60 Vi Witch Hazel, The cone la fresh lin-- J ed on the Inaide with delicious chocolate. TOOTH 2 Boric Acid, CHOOCONE 1 CONTIUED NEXT WEEK s Taste Thrill! 50c BEST PLACE TO DINE 1058 East 2l8f Ssuth , Get one Pt. Our Specialty Mammy Fried Chicken Dinners SUGAR HOUSE CAFE , for internal use lb. Hyland 8715 HOME COOKED FOOD THE WAY YOU LIKE IT Isaac Chase Feramors Little SALTS 57c Tubes Accessories Lubricants Motor Oils Brlgham Young EPSOM Buy one Pt. for Tire EAST on SOUTH TEMPLE y GENUINE DEXTER WASHER Demonstrator Now For Only $3495 FOR WASHER SERVICE Phone Hy. 7312 Hansen Dexter Company 967 East 2 1st South St. |