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Show WEATHER FORECAST "TOE BULLETIN1 For Salt Lake and Vicinity; and fair Generally . f Published At Commettial Printing Co. 2041 South 11th East Hyland 361 Vol. 5 to-nig- ht Saturday. Warmer SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, HOME EDITION FRIDAY, AUGUST i MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 19S7 Wyoming forest fire clalmea 13 victims, two thousand acres burned. Three americans mained by shell explosion at Shanghai. LOCAL' Large hailstones fall in dty, temperture takeal drop. Police double shift in war on crime in Salt Lake. City. N n was charged with J. struck he driving1 after allegedly P. Strickley, 32, of San Diego, CaliTUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1937. fornia, at the West Temple and Japanese' fleet shells Shanghai. Chinese troops hold out in spite of South Temple intersection. heavy fire from Japanese. o Giant plane of U. S. crashes at San Diego:, Six killed. PRISONER RETURNED LOCAL Woman routes thug in suto holdup. Clifford Cola, 31, serving a term contractors. Joint conclave opened by Electrical of five years to life at the state Woods Cross boy killed in accidental discharge of small rifle. prison, and who escaped from the WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1937. prison farm in 1932, was returned to the local institution this week Chinese kill 5000 Japenese in trap set foif landing party. after, having been captured In Los President Roosevelt continues court fight revision fight. Angeles, Spanish rebels take Santander and control all of North Spain. o LOCAL Oregon Trail Envoys arrive for conclave; GOOD NEWS FOR STUDENTS J. E. Harris named depudy warden at prison. OF CITY HIGH SCHOOLS Brisk bidding ends final day at Rai sale, more than 200 change That students of the city high hands. schools will no longer be required to FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1937. purchase their own books or pay laborltory fees was announced Japanse fliers wound Britisher Ambassador. by Dr. L John Nuttall, superintend6. set for September U. S. intervenes in railroad strike, walkout ent of the city schools: to of Smith Texas. Reynold Kingsley lows match hit-ru- o SUGARHOUSE PEIPING AGAiN IS SdENE OF WARFARE j Ancient Capital of China Is Once More in Spotlight. Washington, Fighting in the Peiping area has again thrown a world spotlight on the frequently fought-ove- r city, former capital of China and always a center of interests. Peiping is still a' key to Chinas foreign affairs," says the National Its geoGeographic society. graphic location brings it into cond tact with on the northeast, Tibetan provinces on the Mond west, and golian republics on the northwest. Foreign embassies and branch offices of foreign business firms give it the greatest international importance north of the Yangtze river. counAa center of the cil, it Is a focus for the independence movement which has weakened ties between North China and the central government at Nanking. Stronghold of Tradition. In national affairs Peiping is a stronghold of tradition. Contrasting with the present Chinese capital at Nanking, the northern metropolis has had many reincarnations as seat of Chinas government under such romance-freighte- d names as Peking, Cambulac, and Purple Imperial City. Its Mandarin dialect, the Parisian French of Chinese speech, comes closer than any other to being generally understood throughout the nation. : Peiping was the focus of perhaps the most widespread international tension on Chinese record during Boxer uprising in the 1900, when troops of several nations, including the United States, were landed and marched inland to rescue all Peipings foreign residents, who had been besieged for two months in the British embassy. Since that time an important sector of the Chinese city has been the of occidental oasis on the oriental scene the legation quarter, where foreign troops guard y Three and gateways. buildings form the legation quarter skyline, pierced by the radio tower of the United States marines. China's lies at the very heart of Peipings walled rectangle, the Forbidden city. This .realm of fabulous imperial splendor began to totter when invaded by (foreign troops quelling the Boxer uprising, was supplanted by Chinese and when the republicanism, j 'White House was moved to Nan-jkiin 1928, the Imperial palace became a haunt for sightseers. Really Five Cities. .Vhen th Frh:.:.: . D. C. Man-chuk- Japanese-controlle- uo semi-independ- Russian-controlle- Hopei-Chah- ar anti-forei- four-stor- : ng 1 $2.95 WILL PAINT YOUR CAR WITH NU-ENAM- EL Sold ' Exclusively By APEX ELECTRIC COMPANY 1079 East 21st South .''i - Ily. 1738 la Sugarhouse i v vvt v " Feiping was crippled but not killed. For the nothern metropolis is really five cities, built like the nests of lacquer boxes on shelves of its own curio shops. The ancient but unbroken Peiping walls encircle a Chinese city in its southern part, from which the Tartar city in the northern section is set apart. Within that, red walls protect the Imperial city, within which nestles the once most exclusive area of all, the d Forbidden city. Just south of the latter is the international enclosure. Commerce with the north preserved Peipings importance when imperial prestige faded. Seven main highways for camel caravans, passable for some distance by auto, radiate from the city. Nomadic Mongol relatives of Genghis Khan from the north of the Great Wall converge by those routes to exchange meat, livestock, hides and furs for winter supplies of brick tea and salt. A thriving fur trade is stimulated by icy winds from frozen northern deserts, giving Peiping some zero winter weather although it is south of Philadelphias latitude. Summer winds bring blighting dust storms, for which Peiping is as notorious as London is for fogs. As commercial and cultural mistress of Chinas northern plain, Peiping is the countrys second largest city, being surpassed only by Shanghai. In location it has no natural advantages over the thousands of nearby villages, few of them containing more than a dozen earthen houses with thatched roofs. Yet Peiping is renowned for its spacious paved streets, imposing gates, and its crumbling palaces and temples." purple-walle- j Local Committees HES MODEL BOY" Continue Work For Street Bus Changes Tuesday CHARGED WITH HIT-RUW. W. Harwood, 20, 1959 View street, NUMBER SI. 1937 27, Lincoln Ward M. 1. A. To Sponsor Program NOTES OF INTEREST TAILOR RETURNS FROM VACATION Mr. and F. W. Kiepe returned to Sugarhouse, Monday after spending two weeks vacation at at Pinecrest in Emigration canyon. Mr. Kiepe says both he and Mrs. KIdpe are much improved in health and are ready for their fall rush in the tailoring business , Mi-s- . The Lincoln Ward M. I. A. will present a program Tuesday evening, August 31 in the ward chapel, 9th East and Hollywood Avenue, to which all members of the ward are Invited. The program will consist of musical numbers, both instrumental and vocal; playlets, and novelty numbers. The bishop urges ward members to attend this entertainment, that they may become better acquainted with each other, the ward officers and auxiliary organization heads. There will ha no charge for this fine program and rally. o New Post Office Gets O K From Congress Selection of a building site for the new 3150, 000 post office for Sugar-houswill begin in the near future, according to information received by local business men from Washington D. C. Formal approval of the deficiency appropriation bill, which carried the With untiring efforts, members of the Sugar House Rotary and Business Men's League met Wednesday with officials of the Utah Power nl Traction Company to further jtek a cliange in bus routes to give continued service from Fifteenth East to enter Sugar House and on Thirteenth East street, but nothing was accomplished, according, to Orson Kasteler and George Burbldge committee heads. However, Mr. Kasteler stated would not that the committees cease their efforts to have the Sugar House district better served by the traction busses as residents mi South street have beTwenty-fira gun petition in this respect and several other means of gaining this consideration will be looked Into in the very near future. o , Christopher (Buddy) Finnegan, seventeen - year old Gloucester (Mass.) boy, who was proclaimed Americaa most perfect young high school student by the Elks lodge at Denver. With the title he receives a check for $1,000 which he plans to use toward a college course. st e Business Meeting At e, proposal of Utah's congressional delegation, was made late Saturday night, according to congressional records. Proposals for sites will be viewed by a committee from the post office department and appraisals are com pletc, a selection will be made. o Social Notes A business meeting, in which committee gave reports on progress waa hed at the regular weekly luncheon' of the Sugar House Rotary club Thursday. Among topics discussed was the Fathers, Sons, Daughters, Wives and sweethearts outing to pe held September 2 at Fairmont Park with the Boys work committee in charge. Since this date is on Thursday it was determined that no luncheon will be held noon. MRS. J. ARVID BIRD RETURNS HOME; GUEST OF PARENTS Mrs. J. Arvld Bird, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alma C. Lambert has returned to her homo in Sprlngville after spending ten days with her parents. FAMILY PARTY RETRIAL OF RIOT CASE FAIRMONT BY SUGAR HOUSE SET FOR SEPEMBER COURT ROTARIANS Retrial of Ralph Solomon, James A mothers, sons and daughters Woolman, W. D. Allen, George Shay, will take pace Thurs- Martin, Dave Sinclair and Orson Shelley on a charge of rioting at the county relief headquarters in Sugarhouse, August 1935, will 'not be reset until beginning of the September term of the Third district court. The announcement waa made by the District Attorney after the supreme court ordered a new trial for the defendants. o MAY RECEIVE BENEFITS SMALL STOCK-RAISER- S Senator William H. King conferred with interior department officials in Washington, in what ha said was an attempt to get proper recognition for the small operator in the awarding grazing permits. He asserted there had been some complaints from livestock men in Utah that, because they were not operating on as large a scale as their neighbors, they were not receiving their proper share of benefits' from the Taylor grazing act. o ' Rotary Luncheon o Frank to-nig-ht. TO SHOW TROUSSEAU o Miss Leone Oblad, daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. Alex Oblad of 921 MRS. T. M. WORLD DIES Blaine Avenue, whose marriage to AT FAMILY HOME Kenneth Fisher will be an event of day, September 2 at Fairmont park Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Tyler World, September, has issued invitaby the members of the Sugar House early to friends to her trousseau wife of Thomas M. World of the tions Rotary club and their families. Allan tea, which will take place Saturday city police department died at her Pyper, chairman of the Boy's Work after noon between three and fix p. home, 1934 View street, .Thursday committee is in charge of the party. of carcinoma. She was forty years m. of her home at the parents. A program will begin at 7: and of age. will be followed by supper, which Surviving are her husband pnd will be served by the club at the VISITS SCN VALLEY five sons; Kenneth William; Earl picnic grounds. Miss Maragret Vernon, 1237 East Monroe, George Lloyd, Thomas Jr., Others assisting in the event are ' South street, returned home and Glen Robert, all of Salt Lake 21st Jed Ashton, Raymond Coin. Dr.LL and a daughter, Harriet Martha, aland Wednesday after a vacation at Sun so Richards, Elmer Sandberg of Salt Lake; her mother, Mrs. Valley, Idaho. Sam Leaver. Lee Loa Angeles, two brothof Ray er . New Prison Fails To Get P W A Fund ers and two sisters. o MISS JULINA PEERY LEAVES - FOR WASHINGTON, D. C. Miss Jullna Peery, daughter of SOUTHEAST CHILD DIES Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Peery, left OF INJURIES IN MONT. left Wednesday for an Indefinite Richard .Timmerman, Finances for the new Utah State stay in Washington, D. C. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Timprison were overlooked this week 2661 Beverly street died of merman, when the public works allotments RETURNS FROM VISIT sustained when an automo-bl- e Injuries were announced by R. A. Hart, backed over him while he was Mrs. Charles Stain, entertained state PWA administrator who had near his parents trailer at an playing been informed of approval of three Mrs. Ida Fliener, who returned from auto camp at Bozeman, Montana, other projects from Washington, D. a two months visit in Wyoming, Mrs late Thursday. C. Fliener is well known In Provo and RECLAMATION BOARD said Buck Western Grave for In an Interview Governor Henry Eureka, her present home la 154 The relatives here Thursday RELIEF BILL SIGNS crane to Salt had Mr. Tilmmerman Sutter, Finder of Gold August 24, President Roosevelt H. Blood stated that he was grate- South Seventh East. for his wife and child last week Miss Margeret Scott also was vis- Lake Lititz, Pa. Removal of Gen. John today signed a bill to create a com- ful for the assistance given thestatr. to be with him while he worked as Augustus Sutters body from this mission and to extend further relief tuberculosis sanitarium, new Carbon itor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. place to San Francisco for sup- to water users on United States re- Junior College and Weber college ad- Stain, in Sugarhouse. Miss Scott was a salesman for a clothing company. o posed expositionary purposes so far clamation projects and on Indian ditions but be was disappointed at formerly of Salt Lake and is now has met with a cool reception. Several California emissaries recently visiting here pleaded for permission to return the body to the west coast where, they said, the general should remain. They would build a monument near the site of his mill where he discovered gold. Sutter was credited with starting of the 49ers the Westward who, crowding around the mill creek, eventually founded the colony which became the city of Sacramento. Lititz officials, however, insist that Sutter found it necessary to come here to prosecute his claims of California property. While his suit was in litigation in Washington Sutter died, reportedly a poor and disappointed man. Ho-in- g" Stingless Bee Is Sought by Chemist New York. A stingless bee may develop from experiments in controlled mating carried on by Dr. Lloyd R. Watson, professor of chemistry at Alfred university,' according to a report from the Rochester section of the American Chemical society. The future bee may be gentle, able to carry a larger load, willing to work at a lower temperature, have a longer tongue, and be more beautiful, . the report says. When the stingless bee arrives, everyone can have honey from a hive by the hammock on the porch, it is predicted. . j . the committee not considering the prison. He further said he believed the prison project had not received KINGSLEY QUALIFIES an allotment due to the fact no IN GOLFING CONTEST fund had been set up for the special Ore.. Portland, August 24, Ed Work at the last legislature but Kingsley, Utah golfer, posted a instead the surplus funds from sals Tuesday to give him a 148 tonot on the Junior college protax used tal and a qualfying berth In the natbeen had jects designated for the ional amateur golf tournament. prison. Kingsleys 148 total is will within o. the scoring limit for the low 64 berth in the tournament. His first round totel Monday waa 75. reclamation projects. residing in Los Angeles, . Local Store Features Novel Accessories o RfXEPlION TO FOLLOW WEDDING CEREMONY .reception will follow the marriage of Min Julia Ruth Mecham, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. N. R. Mecham. 1325 WestmlnstMer and Albert Parkinson aMvenue, Smoot, son of Mr. and Mrs. X. A. Smoot Tuesday at the Hyrum Jensen Home on Highland Drive, The marriage ceremony will take New place In the morning at the temple As an aid to prevent accidents and the reception will be from 8: which have been occuring almost to 11: p. m. Both young people are daily at the intersection of Thir- graduates of the University of Utahteenth East and Twenty-firSouth o street, the city traffic department Used Cave for Glass Work will install a new semaphore this The first glass maker in Scotland week, according to information givwas George Hay He en out by the city commission Tuestook advantage of a peculiarly day. formed cave at Wemyss, on the Fife As Thirteenth East is a through coast, and set up his furnace therestreet until it crosses Twenty-firin. South, which is the Lincoln Highway, motorists are not on the look- ELDEP, LAMBERT SPEAKER SUNDAY EVENING SERVICES out for a stopslgn, according to the Elder Quayle Cannon Lambert police, and do not cut their speed until it is too late to stop behind the ion of Mr. and Mrs. Alma C. Lambert, has returned from his mission sign. in New Zealand. He will be the at tho Sunday evening serspeaker First Flows of Tree Branches at vices the Sugar House Ward, The first farm plows were made of crooked tree branches and August 29, A Large attendance is worked by man expected to welcome him home. ..... power. t A wedding . ll St. Paul, August 24. Betty of the Salt Lake Country club defeated Vlrginit Llndblad of Chicago, 3 and 2 in a first round match of the women's western golf tournament here today. Bot-terl- o DEATH CLAIMS MATRON Thirteenth East To Semaphore - City Officials Are Heirs Malden, Mass. The will of Attorney George Howard Fall, filed in probate court, left $100 for sick and tired" city officials. , greater comfort and con- st (1566-1625- ). Death claimed Mrs. Martha Goddard, eighty, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Erma Everett, 266G Fifteenth East street Wednesday. Mrs. Goddard was a native of Wales and came to this country sixty eight years r.go. That venience and hence greater safety in driving are afforded motor car owners by auto accesaaorles, u quickly recognized by a visit to one of Sugar houses more modern auto supply stores, according to J. W. Holliday, resident manager of the Western Auto Supply Company located at 1049 East 21 South street. A surprisingly wide range of usefulness is served In the things to be found In a modem auto acces- - st - - - ( Continued on Page 4) NEW METHOD Cash A Cany Cleaning IENS SUITS OPOOATS A ELT HATS adles' PLAIN iRESSES, SUITS COATS tfT 59 Guaranteed Satisfaction 4ew Method Cleanerf 11th EAST Across from the Library 2120 SOUTH . . |