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Show THE SUGARHOrSE BULLETIN', FRIDAY, JTLT 9, ENIGMA OF RACE JS THE SUGARIIOUSE BULLETIN PARTIALLY-SOLV- A WEEKLY PUBLICATION Printed at 2041 South 11th East Salt Lake City, Utah Phone copy for news Items and eventi of interest to "The Bulletin'-oCommercial Printing Company Hyland 384. Copy for news items, social and sport activities, must be In the office not ufteY than noon Wednesday, for publication in the following Issue of "The Bulletin." r COMMENTS STUDENTS, JOE3 Although' this year's crap of 135 000 graduates of American col and universities will have a faiily good chance of landing Jobs, half leges a million undergraduates in need of temporary employment will find only slim pickings in the field of summer work. Toward the end of June, with the country's schools closing until September, 500,000 students were slated to be dropped from the 93,000,' Since 95 payroll of the National Youth Administration. families, their need for vacation per cent of them come from 'jobs could be viewed last week as pressing. Because the Works Progress basis and because it already has Administration operates on a d students had virtulong waiting lists of youth, no of relief communities so as home in their work prospects ally getting to help them carry on their education in the fall. For these reasons Aubrey Williams, NYA executive director, last week appealed for a "cooperative and sympathetic attitude on the part of employers, large and small, in order that as many of these young people as possible will be placid." 000-a-mo- low-inco- th NYA-alde- WHO SPENDS THE MONEY Women spend $52,000,000,000 of the $92,000,000,000 earned in the United States every; year, according to Vice President Grace S. Stoermer of the bank of America. - "They buy 96 per cent of all drygoods, 87 per cent of the foodstuffs, 67 per cent of the automobiles, nearly half of the hardware yes, and 36 per cent of the men's clothes." CAR Two policemen in a squad car answered a report that a suspicious character was browline in a .residential district of Austin. Texas. As the police drove up, the suspect seised a boy's scooter and sped away. In the chase, the policemen abandoned their car as the man on the scoot The scooter- er rained around on the corners, but pursuit was useless. rider got away. NOTICE OF BUILDERS FINANCE CORPORATION: A special meeting of the stockholders Of BUILDERS FINANCE a Utah Corpora CORPORATION, tlon, will be held at 803 Continental Bank Building, Salt Lake City, Utah on Monday, the 19th day of July 1937, at the hour of two o'clock P IL The purpose of this meeting is to elect a Board of Directors for the ensuing year; to receive and consid er the President's Annual Report to consider and pass upon a propoa al to change the authorized Common Stock of the Corporation from ten thousand seven hundred seventy-on- e (10,771) shares of Common Stock, of the par value of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per share to seventy-fiv- e hundred ' (7500) shares of common stock, of the par value of Twenty Dollars ($20.00) per share; to con sider and pass upon such other changes in the authorized capital structure of the corporation as may be proposed at said meeting; to make such amendments to the Articles of Incorporation of toe corporation as may be deemed necessary er proper to effectuato such changes as may be determined upon; to recommend to the Board of Directors, and to authorize, the distri bution or other use to be made of any surplus that may result from the proposed decreaso in capital stock or any other change in tho capital structure of tho corporation that may be determined upon at said meeting; and to consider and pass upon such other matters concerning the business and affairs of tho corporation as may bo presented at the meeting. CHAS. R. MABEY. President. Buildem Finance Corporation. Dated Juno 10, 1937. TO THE STOCKHOLDERS rf r Auto Glass Replacement Whllo You Wait, and We Hurry. REASONABLE PRICES Just Call Hyland 928 SUGAR HOUSE GLASS CO. 2023 South Uth East "And We Hurry" Line your clothes basket with oilcloth cut to fit basket. Fine fabrics will not then catch on loose pieces of cane. Texas Woman Takes Her Place Among Trappers ; Eagle Pass, Texas. A slight young woman, mother of a daughter, has become the leading woman southwest trapper. She is Mrs. Bessie Davies Kennedy. Her husband, Robert, is a state-pai- d trapper of mountain lions, wolves, coyotes and bobcats. He is recognized as the best in his profession, and his catch of 168 coyotes in a single month still is the record. Mrs. Kennedy surprised this town early last March by hauling in a huge mountain lion on the running board of her car. Less than two weeks later she came in with another a feat that few men have equaled. The Kennedys live in Maverick county and trap in the "Indio" cou. seven-year-o- dust-cover- ntrya 100-mi- le ld ed square area notori- ous for its wild animals and its lack of trails. Most of the area is owned by the Indio ranch, and few improvements have been made since the Spanish conquistadors established the ranch's boundary three centuries ago. The Kennedys were married in 1928 at Crystal city. They moved to Maverick county in 1934,- and began trapping. Their daughter, Bessie, is in school at La Pryor, 45 miles northeast of Eagle Pass. Police Sergeant Refuses to Blow Horn for Mayor Nice, France. one-ma- n Ion Hardman Service "On Site 1st Sugar Mill West of Mississippi River" Washington, D. C Knots tied in the threads of life as they stretch O. C. .CONNIFF, Publishei, Y ED Scientist Measures Bones and Discovers Link. Stigarhouse, Utah Issued every Friday p. ra. Business Office and Plant at 2044 South 11th Eaal Advertising Kates on Application GET-AWA- 19SY Sergt Emile police squad of the Gui-go- u, tiny village of Flassans-sur-Issolwas sassy with his boss, the village e, mayor. He refused to go about town blowing his horn and publicly announce the mayor's orders to his fellow citizens. Monsieur Magne, the mayor, decided that his subordinate's actions were insulting and brought charges against him. Included in his complaint were the facts that Guigou showed "the most complete inertia to the mayor's orders" and instead of blowing his horn on the public square frequently would go into the fields and make the announcements to a flock of sheep or a herd of cows. Guigou brought a counter-sui- t asking 35,000 francs damages. The court decided that the police sergeant was in the right, but cut down the damages to only 4,000 francs. Meanwhile villagers are wondering who is the boss around City Fools Farm Hen Fremont, O. The brightness of the city's ornamental street lighting system fooled a white Leghorn hen that had ridden to town unnoticed on the running board of an automobile driven by Joseph Gross, a farm hand. Grosi parked t!ie car, returned an hour later and found the hen cackling over a freshly-lai- d from generation to generation constitute a partial answer to the biological enigma of race. Such is the conclusion of Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, curator of physical anthropology of the Smithsonian Institution, from the study of many thousands of human and animal skeleton remains in the collection of the national museum. Dr. measurements. Biological Hrdlicka explains, tend to arrange themselves in normal distribution curves. The greater the number of specimens measured, the smoother such a curve. Along such a curve, races and all other groups shade imperceptibly into each other. For example, if the length of the thigh bones of every human being on earth could be measured and the measurements plotted the result would undoubtedly be very close to an absolutely smooth curve. Conclusive Proof. , The same would result from plotting the heights, weights, breadths of shoulders, etc., of every human being, on earth. Strictly speaking, these curves offer a conclusive proof that all human races and types belong to one and the same species. Quite different is the result, Dr. Hrdlicka finds, when one plots the form or shape of different parts of the body, or even of the body as a whole, of thousands of specimens. One is no longer able to get a uniform distribution curve but a curve in which there are various nodes, or points of aggregation. These form the focal points of forms or types which differ substantially from each other. This newly discovered phenomenon of biological differentiation Dr. Hrdlicka calls "typogeny." Hitherto the "normal distribution curve" has been a serious barrier to differentiation of human groups. This barrier is now largely broken down. "This process of typogeny," Dr. Hrdlicka says, "is apparently of wide biological, extension, but is especially obvious in man. It is observable in probably all the more important and larger organs of the body, and also in the body as a whole. It is most obvious in the so - called 'body constitution,' in physiognomy, and in the nose, hands and feet. "It manifests itself in the shapes of the skull, of the palate, of the lower jaw, the sternum, the first rib. the scapula, the sacrum, and the long bones. There are indications that it extends also to the brain, the main parts of the body, the main internal organs, aand even to human functions." Points to Example. As an example, . Dr. Hrdlicka points out, the cross section of the main leg bones (tibia) of thousands of individuals of different races show, five different ' shapes which are quite clearly differentiated. There are the rjrismatic. the lateral prismatic, the quadrilateral, the the gorilloid. The frequency of these shapes is found to differ markedly for racial stocks. Each now constitutes a diagnostic node. The causes of this nhenomenon. Dr. Hrdlicka savs. seem to be mul tiple. The different shapes are part ly survivals ana partly individual functional modifications. A tendency toward a freauencv or ruritv of the different forms in families, local ized croups, and races has alreadv become hereditary. And many of uiem are expressions of some gen eralized tendencies in the body. Says Dr. Hrdlicka: "Pure types are rare, and all the tvoea connect by many intermediate forms or Some of the types are already fairly represented at birth, but in general their full development is not realized until near or within adult life, and they may un dergo some changes even later." . ever-prese- nt pear-shape- d, Tribe Permits Historic U. S. Flag to Be Flown Muskegon, Mich. A feature of the Muskegon centennial and lumberjack carnival, scheduled for July 17 to 31, inclusive, will be an American flag which has been hidden from the white man since 1828. The flag was presented to the Ottawa Indians by President Andrew Jackson as a token of appreciation and good faith on the part of the American government toward the Michigan tribe. Indian chfefi, in whose custody the insignia was placed more than a century ago, say that no white man has seen the flag since its presentation. It has been used only in tribal ceremonies, they emphasize. Custodians will bring the flag to Grand Rapids, where they will be met by a police cordon and escorted to Muskegon. Here it will wave over a "mock" Indian village, constructed within the stockade where Michigan's entry into the Union will be celebrated. Makes Gas Out of Hay Harold Ohlgren, Minneapolis. physics assistant at the University of Minnesota, has discovered a method of obtaining gas in commercial quantities from hay, cornstalks and eh: er. He declines to reveal the pro. ess used. GASOLINE GAL. By L. L. STEVENSON Meanderings and meditations: A d d wagon filled with plants drawn by a pony trotting down Eighth avenue. . . Possibly those plants will lighten the gloom of tenements. . . Over on Seventh avenue, a wagonload of t'.ose foolish little evergreens. . . That maybe will last out the summer in boxes in front of apartment houses. . . Youngsters clinging to the back of a broadway bus. . . Risking their lives for a brief thrill. . . Or to save a few blocks walk. . . Greenwich Village mothers hovering over their broods on front steps. . . An Eighth street ice peddler transporting his wares on the chassis of an old baby A peddler decked with carriage brushes large and small, ringing a bell and looking at windows hopefully as he plods along Tenth street . . . Pretty girls smiling at passen gers in Sixth avenue elevated trains which pass the lofts where they are busy making artificial flowers. bright-colore- FOt-te- Tr7 Our Speedy Service" iEtmstrntr Tubes Tires . ArresHorSei Motor Oils Lubricants Hyland 8715 21st South and 11th East Franklin D , Jr., Weds Ethel du Pont ... Youngsters sailing toy boats in Conservatory lake in Central park . A lot of them are experts. . and may grow up to be sea captains. . . or captains of industry. . . An umbrella mender asleep on a bench. . . The first I've seen in New York in many a day. . , Wonder what's become of Pittsburgh Phil . . . Who used to visit our town every spring. . . and whose most cherished possession was the handle of an umbrella once carried by William McKinley. . . doing a bit of roller skating on the Mall. . . Along with youngsters from East Side tenements. . . the place where the Casino used to stand. . . Where Jimmy Walker and other celebs gathered. . . and where a cuppa cawfee cost a half a buck. . . A couple of young lovers holding hands. . . and probably wishing there weren't so many motor cars and pedestrians. Sub-de- Alexander Woollcott strolling Fifth avenue. . . He's still my favorite ether story teller. . . Dudley Field Malone who is my idea of how the man should look. . . A "Public Notice" that sticks in my mind: "Bro. come home. Mom sick. Sis." . . . Tragedy in six words. . . Dorothy Fox window shopping along Fifth avenue. . . She's president of the Ziegfeld Girls club. . . which helps out those who were once "glo rified but who have been getting bad breaks. . . Paul Jonas, once of the Museum of Natural History . . . Now in business up in Mt, Vernon. . .' Makes animals correct in every detail. . . But only one- tenth natural size. . . One of his patrons is an Indian maharajah. The calm dignity of that statue of Father Duff ey. . . Set amid the false glitter of Broadway. . . and many a former doughboy salutes the bronze of the famous chaplain of the old Sixty-nint- well-dress- . GRANITE MILL AND FIXTURE CO. General Mill Work and Kiln Dried Lumber Office Fixtures and Stair Building A Specialty F. R. Sondberg, Mgr. h. 2 67 1 Constable home on Eighty-thir- d street, just off Fifth avenue. . . A white wooden house. . With stables behind it. . . Typical of New York. . . and now for sale. The ivory punishing Eddy Duchin standing in front of one of those a lesson music schools at Eighty-firand Broadway. . . Listening to some youngster playing a la Eddy Duchin. . . The fiery Jalna, who dances with Georges in the Waldorf. . . Who is called "Senorita". . . In her veins flow Indian, Scotch, English, Irish and a bit of German blood. . . But no Spanish. . . One thing to be thankful for: With the ceremonies over, there'll be no more "Coronation cocktails." The Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., and his bride, the former Ethel du Pont. The President's son and the daughter of Eugene du Pont were married in Christ church, Greenville, Del. A' reception was held on the grounds i of "Owl's Nest," the estate of Mr. and Mrs. du Pont. old Highland Drive IX SUGARIIOUSE Hyland 1617 ts st A gentleman, with morning coat and topper, stepping out of a sedan at Columbus circle. . . . With a carnation on one lapel . . . and the red button of Communism on the other. . . Frank Kolba. now a big railroad man, entering General Motors building where his offices are located. . . Newsboys pitching pennies at the base of the Maine memorial. . . and a soap-boorator holding forth in the shadow of the Columbus statue. well-dress- Peerless Laundry SNOW WHITE CLOTHES 1206 Eatt 21st So. Hyland 2182-218- 3 ed x Now for the mail. Thanks to Miss H. S., Plymouth. . . and to "Wise Old Owl. of Tulsa." Got a laugh out of that note." But the yarn won't do. . . A nod to Miss E. S. L., Chicago. . . and the end of another day among The Seven Millions. "She Bustop eavesdropping: thinks she's economizing when she feeds her family chuck steak and then spends two dollars and a half for a facial." e Bell Syndicate.-W- MU Service. This Car's Squeak Really a Peep, Peep Columbus, Ohio. Samuel Taylor decided to give up driving his old automobile for a while after his son, Bobby, five, discovered a nest of robins in the car's left rear spring. There were four baby robins in the nest. I t, Urn I I TIME W i b. cA telephone brings news and invitations from friends, makes appointments J "ffdlLMIDBl and saves count" less trips for a few cents a day. You can order from any employee |