OCR Text |
Show FOR SPECIAL NEWS ITEMS special announcements o f church, school and other activities. Call 6-23- gugar 33 Office and Plant at 1119 VOLUME Bulletin of sews Actlv-rtiand all events of Interest securing In the Southeast part of Salt Lake City. A section that !a the finest Residential and fastest growing part of Salt Lake Valley. A East 21st So. PUBLISHED IN SUGAR HOUSE Sugar House 8ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER HOME EDITION VIII. Express Views On CLASSES AT UNIVERSITY Third Term BEGIN OCTOBER 1 Q Tea vice-preside- w, life-tim- e, life-tim- Natural Production MISS.-Coldw- d Cold-wat- power-controlle- d SI. PUBLIC HEARING ON Solves Problem COAL ACT SCHEDULED Idea of Refresher Hops for Air Trainees Seems to Materialize. A. Public Health NUMBER Single Copy 5 cents 20, 1940. Tly-Yourse- lf recent Mayor La Guardia's statement that Senator George W. Norris would head an inde- pendent committe for the third term for President Roosevelt has moved Representative J. William When school beglna at the Un-to a Ditter. of Pennsylvania, lversity of Utah on October first, damaging reply. Mr. Ditter points one traditional figure will be missout that Senator Norris, sneak P.-T.ing from the scene. He has not, to a Senate resolution against ing in fact, made his appearance at a third term in 1928, held the view the U., for several years, though Sponsors a third term would lead to a monhe has always been, In the past, United States. a little spectator at college and The annual Oakwood School archy for the hlmselr to that resAddressing over the Membership Tea, sponsored by university functions all Senator Norris olution, spoke at world. The Lost and Lonesome the P.- - T. A. win be held Friday, Freshman is seen no more at the September 27, from 4 to 7 p. m. length. He said in part: "It (the U. and at many colleges through- flower show and a social will be third term) would mean ultima in this tely the establishment out America has become merely features of the event. a monarchy upon the F. E. Walker, principal of the country ofour legendary. present republican Next week, from September 25 school and Clair Alston, Miss ruins of form of government." "My reasto 27, is Freshman week at the Bergen, Marie Davis, faculty on for supporting the resolution," The whole campus miembers assisted the following University. continued Senator Norris", is one will be turned over to this year's officerf of the P.- - T. A.: Mrs. that has no partisenship in it. and and "Greenlings", faculty Joseph Decker, president; Mrs. and is without whatever upper division class members will M. K. Weiler. Mrs. to any man or toregard any president. devote themselves to introducing K. Fritz Eilers, secretary-treasure- r; it Mrs. Kenneth Treseder, pub- As I look at this resolution, approximately 1200 new students In my is because, important, to university life. Room Mothers are Mrs. licity. Each freshman will have a Gail Smith. Mrs. R. M. Hunt, Mrs. Judgement, if a President of the to United States were allowed "sponsor," a sophomore, junior, Meadows. Mrs. Mable renominate himself as he could, or senior student, who will call May Mrs. R. W. Nichols, Mrs. Teg-laTom on the "greenling" at his or her Morrison, Mrs. Leo Bennion,Mrs. it would mean not perhaps in or it may not be in and to freshhome, go with him Kenneth Luman, Mrs. I. R. Mor- my e of anyone here the man meetings, introducing him rison, Mrs. Hugh to faculty, campus, and traditions Clarence Bamberger.Barker, Mrs. but it would mean ultimately the establishment in this country of of the University, In a spirit of la monarchy upon the ruins of welcome. friendly our present lorm or government. Freshman week will begin with Gasoline "A President wishing to be rethe English Placement and Psy-if he wants to use the nominated, an freshwmch cnoiogicai teste, Increases power that la his, after he has man are required to take, and been In office for some time, can which will be given on Wednesday The production of natural easo-- compel his party to renominate In Kingsbury Hall. On Thursday line increased In July him materially at the head of the he is a class will be ivu morning assembly accoraing to aata reported machine the officials who held at 9 in Kingsburry Hall, to to Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of are under using him to round up del be followed by sectional meetings the Interior by the bureau of egates." of students with their faculty ad- Mines. The dally average in July visers. The afternoon will be de was o,so,uuu voted to sightseeing on the cam with 6, 161,000gallons compared In June. pug until 8:30, when an informal The outstanding gallons Mississippi Town Sells dance and reception will be held red in Texas, Increases occurthe Out to U.S.; Will Move in the Ballroom of the Union Panhandle, East particularly Texas and Gulf ater Building. Freshmen will there districts. COLDWATER, meet classmates and faculty in Stocks continuel to increase citizens every one of them ere geta social way. Friday will be a totaling 318 528.000 This ting ready to move, for the town site special registration day for fresh- was 24,528,000 gallonsgallons. more than Is going to be flooded. men. They will have received on hand the For six years, ever since governof first month the careful instruction from their ad- and the ment since engineers first talked of dam highest September visers on how to register for 1938. ming the waters of the CoMwatea class work, but their own sponShipment to Jobbers lncreaal river at Arkabutla, residents of thlr sors will be on hand to help them from 14,490,000 gallons in June little community have argued the through the confusing business to 16,968,000 town gallons in point: Shall the century-olof first registration. while exports reported to July the new or to moved a be location, (hall October will be Bureau 1, Thursday, the first day of classes for all 8,778,000 of Mines todecreased from United States engineers build sn en5,250,000 gallons students, and the new crop of circling levee? zresnmen ww De neither lost The aveaee The Coldwater win be dammed to for vapor pressure nor lonesome, since they will know ssve the rich farmlands of the delta, to refineries decreased, other members of their class, and shipments while those for all movements and the town site will be flooded. will be familiar with the build- Increased. The It was a hsppy day for the citizens average ings and campus. In addition. for the month weighted when Mayor Smith Cooper anwas 17.7 pounds will they already have met many with 18.1 pounds in nounced that the federal govern or tneir instructors, and they will compared ana 19.4 pounds in Julv ment would buy the town "lock, have established firm friends In June stock and barreL" their sponsors. "We have decided to sen," Cooper STORES PACKED IN "and we have selected the hillsaid, CITY ON DOLLAR DAY EARNING THEIR WINGS on Highway 51, south of the pres top salt Lake City stores hummed for our new town." For the first time, the Civil with activity Wednesday as cus- - ent location, said that while some perCooper SVfronautics Authority is offer luiueri ujok advantage or com' to sons move their present planned ing a flying course at the Univer- munlty Silver Dollar Day bar-were homes, going to build many of Utah UUS. for which men sity young town. ones new new the in not actually enrolled in the Unjuini salesmen ana women The committee that negotiated the iversity are eligable. The new C. were hired In all laree denart. A. A. ruling makes men eligable ment stores to take care of the sale of the present site of If they have previously completed crowds. asked the government for No counteroffer was $1,850,000. successfully two years of college work. Men registered for Univer AIRPORTS', HAVE DOUBLED made In the government's accept" ance. sity work this year eligible if IN UTAH they have completed one year of The number of airports which couege training:. has may be used by airplanes Other important innovations In more than doubled In Utah, since British 'Cruiser Tank tne mght training are reduction January 1. 1940 according to a Has Unusual Mobility of the fees from 140.00 to25.00, from the aeronautical dir-- l A ENGLAND. BIRMINGHAM, and the Increase of age limits report ector Issued this week. new type tank is being produced In rrom 18 to 25 to 18 to 26. this country, which can turn in the Fifty students will be enrolled length of an ordinary car and ac by September 30 for the prelimincelerate at a rate equal to that of ary flight training, which win enable them to obtain theirto ob most small cars. tain private pilot's licenses, and A total of 106 cases of com These advantages give the new twenty of the best students who municable diseases was "cruiser" tank tremendous advannave bad the preliminary train' reported tages in maneuvers. The massive lng in the past will be selected to the Division of Epidemiology, turret, with its gun, to take a secondary course of In Utah State Board of Health, for wireless set and mounting, weighing struction wmcn will qualify them the week ending September 13 2 tons, Is so balanced that it can for commercial, army, and mail as compared with 118 cases for be swung around Into any position pilot licenses. The coming session of flying In the corresponding week In 1939. In Ave seconds. Mounted on rollers. struction will begin in October, Five new cases of Infantile par-- It can be rotated by hand gear or and concluded by January 31. A hydraulic variable speed gear. second course will begin on Feb- alais were reported from the The machines weigh about 14 tons. ruary 1, and conclude the last following counties: two from carry a crew of four and have a of May. Cache, one from Piute, and two speed of more than 30 m. p. h. on According to Dean A. L. Tay from Utah. This makes a total of flat land and 15 to 20 m. p. h. on lor, of the University School of Mines and Engineering, under 32 cases reported so far this year rough going. Inhales Fumes, Dies whose direction the program is as compared with 11 for the corRAWLINS, WYO. Theodore Bar being carried out, six of the men responding period in 1939. now completing the advanced ney, 10, died while playfully Inhaling course will enter the Army Air One case of typhoid fever was gasoline fumes. Corps immediately, and go to reported from Ogden. One case Randolf Field, Texas, to complete of undulant fever was reported ' army air training. Tailor Presses Suit, from Logan. Juab and Utah counties each reported one case of But Forgets License STORAGE OF WATERS diphtheria. Other communicable MASS. WATERTOWN. LOW IN RESERVOIRS It diseased reported are as follows: wouldn't do to give Theodes S. 1 was announced it September chicken-po- x 11, measels 6, mumps Dhoku an urgent letter to maiL that the storage of water In the 3, scarlet fever Back in September, 1933, Dhoku, 8, tuberculosis 1, Utah reservois was about half of what it was at the same date whooping cough 22, gonorrhea 15, a tailor, and Cleinde Sthika were married in Worcester. The clerin 1939. chancroid 1, and syphilis 24. Because of the excessive heat gyman handed Dhoku the marPrice, Cedar City, riage license and told him to file Bingham. and drought, the 12 largest re servoirs less water in storage, and the following counties reit at once with the Watertown but that at the present time the ported no diseases: Beaver, Dagclerk. situation was not as bad as it gett. Emery, Grand, Kane, Mor Dhoku remembered the other appeared, because last year the gan, Rich, Sanpete, Sevier, Too and handed it in. day storage of water the highest on Wasatch. and ele, record. Oakwood ei er Bus Route Change Receives OK NEW YORK. One of the problems confronting the government's training of 40,000 civilian pilots has been what to do with them after they have received the rather meager basic training it is possible to give at government expense. They can't all own airplanes, not even the little ships which cost about as much ss an average automobile. Thousands of fliers have permitted the licenses to lapse in recent years because they could not afford to buy planes and fly them the requisite number of hours to maintain a license. Howard Ailor thinks he has found the answer to this and some other aviation problems by taking a tip from the automobile industry. He syshas established a lf tem" frankly patterned on the suto idea. In less than two months his hangar at Roosevelt field has become the center of a booming business from what started out as a sideline to his principal Job as New York distributor for an aircraft company. Sees New Avenue Opened. He believes that such a system, established on a large scale, Is essential to achievement of aviation's dream public acceptance of flying as a means of transportation instead of sporty entertainment Aviation enthusiasts long have held that until the public has begun to think of the airplane as a transportation vehicle the air business cannot come into its own, regardless of war or- The Bituminous Coad Division of the Department of the Interior has called two public hearings on matters involved in tne admin- stration of the Coal Act under the minimum prices and market ing rules and regulations wmcn com become effective on October 1, The state nublic service mission Wednesday granted per- 1940. A trial examiner will open a mission to the Airway Motor Coach Lines Inc., to divide its hearing on October 1, at WashEast Mill Creek route. Under ington, D. C, on proposed orders AtiDulatlons. the companty may which would require persons sub ject to the Act to maintain and extend its lines as follows: South and file with the Dlvison data conFrom Twenty-firEleventh East streets south on cerning the preparation, coat, sale and distribution of the bituminoHighland Drive to 2700 South us they sell. street, east to Twentietn East- Incoal the order setting the hear street: also east from Twentyfirst South and Eleventh East ing, Division Dercctor Howard A.' streets on Twentyfirst East Gray stated that in his opinion and filing of street, south on Wilmington av- the maintenance was reasonable and necdate the East to west enue, Eighteenth adminstra-tio- n for the proper essary to Twenty-firstreet, north of the Act. The data will be South street and west to Sugar carefully studied by the Division House business district. as part of its program' to ensure that producers, sales agents and COMMITTEES MEET TO ARRANGE FOR C'ELEBKATON other representatives, registered and farmers To arrranee for the opening, coal distributors of the new Sugar House post cooperatives are complying with office in November, a meeting of the minium prices and marketing in the committee heads waa held rules and generally as an aid or tne provisions the offices einuoiaung in Tuesday evening or tne sugar House lumoer ana the statute. Part of the information already is being filed under Hardware Company. previous orders, which would BACTERIA COUNT TO HIGH be superseded by the new ones. The Division has set for hear IN DRINKING GLASSES Of 135 eating establishments ing a petition filed by the Bituminspected, only 95 were passed. inous Coal Producer's Board for The results of an inspection to District 11, (Indiana) requesting determine results obtained from certain relief from the minimum rules as washing and sterillxing devices, prices and marketing Some bacteria counts are as high promulgated by the Division. The 60.000. according to division of Board claimed, in its petition, to permit ficials, who said that restaurants that this is necessary will be asked to provide proper Indiana producers to sell coal In Wisconsin, Minnesota and near santization. facilities, V by markets at prices competitive with those for coals shipped, via BOMBING RAXGE WORK Great Lakes dock, from the Apders. HELD L'P field. This hearing will "The future of aviation in this Th rhW nf the United States palachian on 27, 1940, at open September with "lies declared Ailor, country," air corps Monday blamed D. C, before a Trial those people who now earn moderate army la1a.. In nnnatmotlnn nf fapilltlM Washington, e incomes, but win some day at Wendover bombing range to Examiner. Minimum prices, "at the mine," mass fhe purchasing power for "a controversy between tne war and marketing: rules, ann production of private aircraft" interior aepan the sale of substantiallyregulating. department an the Most of Ailor's business so far ment." In the United Stat coal produced "This reduction of what was has come from pilots who have not es, now are before secretary ox been able to rent fast, modern and is considered our (the air the Interior Harold L. Ickes for ships for long distance flights, those corps) required acreage for an review. A Division order has been, who own planes but want time on adequate bombing and gunnery Issued making them effective on other types, and students seeking ranee la the reason for the de October 1, 1940. The minimum prices were es radio, instrument and navigation ex lay." tablished under the Coal Act to. perience. UTAH'S COMMUNIST LIST stabilize bituminous coal markets Chain System Envisioned. SENT TO DIES COMMITTEE by maintaining a "cost floor" unHe hopes to extend the system The Secretary of State sent a der prices at the mine and elimacross the country, and as s plane copy of a list of names attached inate the distinctive distributor believes it will give a to the Communist party petition which has kept the industry in great boost to the production of for certificate or nomination to a state of depression for many private-typ- e planes, since he has al- the secretary of the Dies con years. The marketing rules are ready been forced to order some gressional committee investigate to prevent evasion ox minimum activities. lng new ones, among mem the new prices and Implement the proThe petition had been denied visions of the Coal Act which, which can be flown solo in as little as four hours. Ailor says by the Secretary of State on ad-s prohibit unfair trade practices. . . .a the Attorney generaf , the client he Is aiming for is "the tvlcs: of was oy oriice, signed approximate looked up average man who has DRAFTED POSTAL WORKERS 600 persons. and watched them go by because he ely FACE PAYLESS LEAVES could not afford one of his own." FOR RENT 4 Room Apartment, Postal workers called under the His rental system Is modeled allaw will receive clean. Inlaid hardwood floors, conscription most identically with the automobasement, earage, elect range, leaves of absence without pay, acHeat and hot water furnished. cording to word received Monday bile Idea, with rentals 1986 Douglas Street. at the Salt Lake City post office. hour and at an $8 applybeginning ing only to time in the air. A plane may be rented for as long as a month and flown anywhere in the United States, with a dally mini mum charge of one hour and IS st st "fly-yours- drive-yourse- pro-vid- price-cuttin- g. Er-cou- -- drive-yourse- lf minutes. Pilots seeking special experience may have it on ships equipped with y blind flying instruments, Lear Avia radio apparatus and direction finders. Including some find ers which are automatic. two-wa- Sioux Indians Enlist, Become Good Soldiers CHEYENNE, A bronzed, WYO. recruit named E. Flood or Leo High Wolf makes Just as good a soldier as a raw newcomer with a more common name of John Jones or Harry Smith, Fort Warren officials report In the last six months more than 20 Sioux Indians have been added to the rosters of Fort Warren's three regiments the First and Twentieth field infantries and the Seventy-sixtLouis h artiUery. "They make excellent soldiers, no matter whether we put them in the band, medical detachment, quartermaster department or the headquarters brigade," officials said. Among the Sioux recruited recently were those with such names as E. Louis Flood, Leo High Wolf, Ssm Harry Bird, Melvin Red Cloud and Seymour Twiss. FIFTH OF UTAH ALIENS SIGN UP of the Approximately aliens in Utah are known to have registered with the United States government and the actual number will exceed that, it was Indicated Monday. one-fif- th 53 Grazing' Districts Earn Government Large Sum Thousands of Families Given Security by Land Reclamation Program The public lands in 53 Federal grazing districtsestablished under the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, earned approximately $800,000 in grazing fees during the fiscal year ending June 30, Director of Grazing, R. H. Rutledge, reported to Secretary' of the Interion, Harold L. Ickes, today. Of the amount collected from lf will the 20,000 licenses, be paid by the United States Treasury to the States in which the grazing districts are located, of the fees coland lected will be allotted to the Grazing Service for purchase, construction, and maintenance of range improvements in the Grazing districts. The remaining is retained by the Treasury. Nearly 12,000.000 head of cat-tihorses, sheep and goats, used the Federal range during the year under Federal licenses in Arizona, California. Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming. Grazing fees are charged at the rate of 5 cents per head per month for cattle and horses and 1 cent per head per month for sheep and goats. v one-ha- one-four- th one-four-th e, The Federal reclamation program Is geared to give security to approximately 500,000 families in 17 Western States in the next ten years, John C. Page, Bureau of Reclamation, today advised a special Congressional Committee at a hearing In These famiLincoln, Nebraska. on lies would be irrigated land or in cities and towns that rise or expand In the wake of irrigation developments. In astatement prepared for presentation to the special Committee of the Hinise of Represen-tatintlvinvestigating the interstate m'gration of distitute vitizens. Commissioner Page outlined the Bureau of Reclamation's progress tor water conservation in connection with the critical droughts in the last decade, the that have followed, migrations and the resultane pressure of population on the irrigated States westward. The Committee, of which Aepresentative John H. Tolan. California, is chairman, yesterday opened at Lincoln, near the center of the drought belt, a series of hearings to be held west of the Mississippi River which will deal with migration problems largely arising from the droughts. Com-mission- er, ng cs |