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Show Tire BniETIN TINIEST OF STARS 13 NEAREST EARTH THE BULLETIN Publlalied Ry Cnmmemal Printing ('unipany South 11th r.a.t Salt Luke City, Utah D.cvcrc d Only a Doc!y item and event of Interest to T ? El'.'IctL'i' fa uibrld :?,, ATTENTION The smallest liiMtonly h'Jly known to astronomer, of a mile ncro-- s, has only hei-fill tocraphi-l.y the Harvard I'oHcge filiserviitory, according to Hn oniioi' Avnu-u- t by Hr. Ilarlotv Shnpley, dinwj.r id the olisorvalury. 'I ja tni.lv, only l J.'.lKi'Jtli as large as 1li earth, was dUcotcre-February . 12 by u F.iiropenu nat 1 he tiny body when llrxt observed was wlihlti two or throe iiillllna miles of the eiirlli, which, with the exeep-- I bin of one or two Is tliiin any other wit o1iJim-- i has ever I'oiiiH. Ilans.'.l astronomer estimate its weight to he ."un.iMMi.miii tons, or uhour Hint of smell inoniitulii. 'The llnrvnr.t iihorographs were tiil.e'i hv Ur. V. I. Whipple and Ur. I. 11. Cun jlngliniu at the tiakrldge Nlnllon In the town of Harvard. The ohjii't uns located mid Identilled through calruhiiiuiis by Onrior Cunningham, based on observations by the tllseovery, Ur. M. Dtdpurre of the llii'Hl observatory, Itru.-.sel- , Itvlgiiim. Astronomers are not sure yet whether the nhjeet Is a comet or nil asteroid, but whatever It Is, It Is eedily moving away from the earth. It Is now visible only through the most powerful telescope nml Is expected to be well beyond the range of science Instruments soon. Through u study of the object, believe they may he uldn to discover many hitherto unknown of tsueh small particles. ANnv lscaue It Is so small, the object. Is expicted to tie u fleeted greatly Iqr the gravitational forces of the planets Venus and Mercury, which It Is expected to pass very closely, thus permitting the most accurate estimates e.ver made of the masses of these Ida nets. Scientists also hope to determine the bodys orbit so that they enn predict If and when It will return. From preliminary calculations. Doctor Cunningham 'believes the nhjeet has 'J orbit on the same plune ns that of the enr,t Its closest approach t the. g'n t about half the dlstnnce fr.trt the earth to the sun, while Us gfeiitest distance, his llgurps show, equal to nlmut one nnd tlmoa the eurlh-to-su- n distance. Mu. one-Jiir- Post Office distribution in the Rural Routes make it aVl dutrly be cloned not later tYoi Tb trsduy that the forma of "The Hulk-tincr-essa- ry n a. ni. Copy for news item ."octal ard zpnrt aclivit 'cn, mart be in the office not later than noon Wedncaduy, for publication in the foDov.lng femuo of The Bulletin. rnn-uner- TERMS Oh SIT.SCKIPTIO:: Salt Lake City, I't.ih One Year in Advatire Six Months in Advance Elsewhere in the United States One Year in Advance - $!.75 l.Od - , COMMENTS NEW FUNDS roll RELIEF In a menage which he declared should be regarded an supplements to the budget message of last January President Roosevelt Asked Congress for $1,500,000,000 with which to continue federal work during the fiscal year beginning next July. In hie appeal to private business to aid in the solution of the unemployment prohlem Mr. Roosevelt said the extent of future federal relief expenditure depended largely on the normal reduet ten of un"Only if industry falls to reduce substantially the num-- ; employment ben of tboae now out of work will another appropriation and further Although 5,000,000 more peoplan and policies be necessary, he said. in 1933, the unemployed and on than Jobs now work are at private ple ore still over 20,000,000 us. There with still are families their needy of. care to be taken dependent SOCIAL SYMPATHY All that we call our own, whether it ha come to ua by Inheritance, or ha been achieved by the sweat of our brow, make us debtors to nil who are leas fortunate. are always Strength la always in debt to weakness; the fortunate debtor to tbe unfortunate; those who live in freedom have always their The application of this responsibility to the men who live in prison. successive departments of human life is principle of social sympathy to the secret of all human progress. Whose who help humanity along the upward path, who live and er of others, acknowledging tjie ploy the gifts for the greater happiness debt that strength always owes to weakness, serve their generation no whit less than the patrolt or hero who, in hours of crisis, dies for the public good. HEY! RANO! The window trimmer is lived. Why bother? Same old people pass old grind. If the newspapers did away with sock'em headlines, by, Its the size of the type that makes the people wouldnt buy papers. And It seems we all have to do the same news. the of size not the sale, and hey hey, or nobody will know our holler, thing, just whang, bang, or ua from him. products from the other fellows, 8 8 0 1 i wtw61 PERFECT EYESIGHT .... YET ONE THAT COSTS A PRICELESS ASSET BY REGISTERED EXAMINED WHEN LITTLE BUT GLASSES MAY NOT BE NECOPTOMETRISTS ESSARY. .... char-acteiisgl- nne-liaJ- Austria Shows Lowest Birth Rate in World Vienna, Austria. Austria has the lowest birth rate In the world, anl Vienna ha the lowest birth rate In Austria. In 1934 (lie average number of birth In Austria was only 13.5 to 1,0110 ln-- ; habitants, according to the figure of the department of statistic Just published. Sliuc lSlO the birth rate in Vienna ht decreased by While In 1910 Vienna's birth rate was 70 births to 1,000 woman Inhab-- ' Hauls, In 1934 this figure hud sunk to 23. In the provinces the situation Is not as catastrophic, hut everywhere a substantial decrease occurred. From 1910 to 1934 the number of births digressed from 127 to 58 per 1,0110 female Inhabitants In Lower Austria. In Styrla the corresponding figures were 125 nnd OS, In Salzburg 130 and CO, In Vorarlberg 120 and 70, In Upper Austrln 120 and 73, In the Tyrol 120 nnd 75, In Carlnthla 140 and 83, and In the Btirgenhind ICO and 07. Due to Improved hygienic conditions and to better medical treatment the death rate also has decreased during the same period. It was 13 to 1,00(1 Inhabitants In 1334. The reduction In the mini her of deaths, however, was hot as marked as the decrease l.i fhe birth rate. The time Is approaching when the deaths will outnumber the births. two-thlrd- CALL AND CONSULT DR. W. H. LANDMESSER Optometrist 1090 East 21st South Hyland 7749 Welcome! j - EASTER - YOUR CHARM RE-NE- W AND BEAUTY Conference Visitors ' LET. As Usual the Granite Introduces New SENSATIONAL Mr. Mitchell Salt Lakcu most outstanding wCUfcaty OjHJAiltva, glVto JrOsi ifc Permanent Wave uno PRICES uwi. li Uwe W mui, ucuiiaUi aw 1mH ii.ai wmj ) w i .ia Lwib IN OUR BIG in JwS SUGAR HOUSE Spring UXiAUlX SAUlri iihi titti. Ila, twutn CALL IlY. UJ03 POTPOURRI ATTRACTIVE FURNISHINGS Add Charm To The Home Everything To Furnish TIm Home Out of the High Kent District We Save Your Money WE DELIVER EVERYWHERE CONVENIENT CREDIT W Give "S. A II. Green Stamp KNITRE 1050 Eat 21t Sugarhouse South o Giant American Trees In the sequoia forests f Oilifur-nl- a stand t rot whose size cannot be appreciated without pcmoniil observation. They range from 2.000 to 7,000 yeurs old. Twenty men are required to encircle one eclnien; another Is 325 feet tall, and still another 01 feet In circumference. They grow at ultltudes or Trum 5,000 to 7,000 feet. 0 Wwt.rn .cirNip.r Cadet Sailer Is Rated Expert British Pilot Union. II. 0 Vancouver youth has gained the distinction of becoming the first merchant service midshipman In the British empire to enroll for aviation nnd receive a pilot's Vancouver, faMlkv Mitchell's HOUSE CLEANING V Quern Mary to Co After Hccortl of Normandie. Third cf Mils Across. or Commercial Printing Company Hyland Sol. yIMHHHHKHHUUh) GROOVED FOR SPEED I 2U44 Phone copy for new HEW BRITISH LINER A license. lie Is Cadet Capt. Walker R. X. Sturdy, who Is making Ids first voyage on the A Empress of Japan out of Vancouver fur the Orient, lie has signed ss a cadet for three years. Flying Is a new field of endeavor for the merchant service. Cadets receive theoretical studies on hoard the II. M. S Conway, the training ship at Liverpool, and practical experience at Hooton aerodrome, Liverpool. Sturdy came within 2d minutes of creating a record In training for solo flight. The requirement calls for 12 hours before taking solo, and the record for the British air ministry I five hours. The Vancouver hoy made It In fire hours twenty minutes. 100 Year-Ol- d Acts as Barometer long-limbe- d u Winner. Despite her vast dead weight bulk, she sits the water as gracefully na a smart light cruiser. Her razor-llk- e bows, obviously built for high aimed, are like those of a crnck destroyer. Her lines forward are reminiscent of those or a yacht, and nowhere la thpre evident the clumsiness and hulkluess usually associated with vessels of Mg tonnage. Everywhere the Impression Is gained of speed nod jntwer. Only nn mounting to the bridge, high above the waters of the Clyde river, and looking forward to the how Is the observer Rlile to realize the monstrous proportions of the new liner. Her sjmee forward from the bridge appears to he easily as Mg ns the tntnl length of many liners of average size. France Erects Monument to Its Heroic Fliers Cannes, France. On the Crolsette, famous promenade of Cannes, an Impressive memorial, 83 feet high. Is being erected to famous heroes of French nvintlnn. The monument consists of a symbolic design of two huge wings covering nn aerial lighthouse, while below Is the gigantic figure of a French pilot. The statue will glorify the distinguished flyers of France, and the names of pioneers, such as Louis Blerlot. who first crossed the English channel by air 20 years ago. and Boland Garros, distinguished- pilot, who lost his life during the World war 'hlle battling alone un entire enemy squadron. Georges Gtiyuemer. war nee. who brought down 54 enemy planes and was cited 21 times for bravery, will be honored, as well as Bene Fonck, war flyer, who felled more German planes than any other pilot In the French forces, will likewise lie honored. Transatlantic flyers, such as Coste and Bellonte. will also have their names engraved on the two rails of honor to he insert!! on the crypt underneath the moult men t. Calcutta. reward of f2.IH ($10,-OOiwill he puld to anyone who can put to sleep a wealthy, Indian merchant, Bal Bahadur ltainjldas BaJorla. For two years doctors have vainly tried every known treatment to make BaJorla sleep. Even narcotics have failed. Backed hy sleeplessness and wasted to a shallow, Bnrjurla finally advertised In the newspapers offering 2,000 pm: ids sterling to anyone who enn make hint sleep. Ills diet consists entirely of water and fruit Juices. A i) s t AROMA Regular $8.00 P.riAMPOO .. . r vi: n. $5.03 Permanent Wave Only $5.00 Calo-Re- x anil MNGFB 1 WAVE Beauty Shoppe Ma-Z- el HYLAND 2129 SOUTH 11th EAST 1210 Mad Barnes. Operators ITascI Rlrharchteii A 4 ..Office and Fancy Stationery Wedding Booklet! Posters Advertising tircdl&rs ' Dodgers and Window Cards 2044 South 11th Hyland 364 Eait MIRACLE OPERATION CURES STRANGE ILL I San Francisco Youth Starts to Learn to Live. old San Francisco. A nineteen-yea- r a motion that never made has who boy hln own brain dictated has stnrted to learn to live. For all of Ids nineteen years, the hoy has been unable to walk, lie could barely talk. Through all hi w;iklng momenta, his body wus wracked by Involuntary, twisting movements. At Stanford hospital here, eight days ugo, the boy came out of an anesthetic after a brain operation such as had never before been performed on a human being. He glanced down nt Ms left arm. It was Htlll. ' Still, for the first time In 19 years. Een.mnre of a miracle, to him, the hoy found he could move that arm, flex It. lift It. compel It hy the isiwer of hla own brain to do wlint lie wished to do. It was the first voluntary motion he had ever made. Today his surgeons, who performed the modern miracle, gave him more than un even chance lo lead a norinnl lire. They explained that the twisting, squirming luutlons that drew the hoy's face Into grimaces and made any attempt at ordeily activity grotesque, are of unknown cause. Thu condition might come from liilurics to the brain at lilrth or Infections from childhood diseases affecting the coordinating centers of the brain. Recently J. (J. Dusser de Barenne at Yule university showed Mint the outer layers of tbe brain cells can he thrown out of actioti through the application of heat. It was this method the Stanford surgeons used, FOR EASTER I Sweets JELLY EGGS 100 H. MARSHMALLOW EGGS 150 lb. AT TOE UNITED 5-10-- 25c STORE 10G9 Womftn Hitches Horses With Aid of Photograph Allison Dodge City. Knn. Mrs. Keller Is the wife of a power farmer and knows how to use a tractor. But recently, '.osmose of wet ground, a team was necessary. She never hod harnessed a horse, a ml the meu were not nvnilahle. Mrs. Keller wn resourceful. She found n photograph of a tenm that ber parent had driven. Perching this on the front of the wagon, she brought out the horses mid adjusted the harness until II resembled the fit In tbe picture. The learn Hilled a if it had been harnessed by au enerL And Enjoy A Delicious Treat FRESH BUTTERED POPCORN CANDY CORN TEANUT BRITTLE AT NU-CR1S- - Critics Bath Comment Brings Him Libel Suit Budapest. After seeing s score of lightly chid chorus girls In the musical -comedy. Vienna Spring, Anilcr Yarn, dramatic critic of a dally paper, remarked snuieu Mat sardonically lu Ids review t t obviously the chorus girls were i.ot aware of the fact Budnpest Is famous Tor Its numerous baths. The 20 girl that this broad hint meant that the critic did nut Judge them to be too dean and sued the critic for slander and llbeL P PRODUCT CO. tl027 East 21st South Ily. 8333 CONFERENCE SPECIALS DURING CONFERENCE ONLY Yo are offering many remarkable) bargains In books and gift articles. Dont fall to come in. Theso are cash and carry. Items. Stationery One Lot of high-grad- e stationery at 25t per Box SOME EXTRAORDINARY GIFT ITEMS OFFERED AT ice. The meat was of better quality than most venison because the animals were fat and In good condition, and were scientifically butchered. It retailed In Seward at seven rents a pound. The reindeer were originally Imported to Alaska from Siberia for the Eskimos. THE ARROW FOLLOW Reindeer Meat Favored as Substitute for Beef Seward. Alaska. Displacement of beef ns a staple food In the norihland by Alaska reindeer wn seen as a possibility, after a meat sli'pinent from the Arctic was delivered to Seward markets by guvernmeut reindeer serv- East 21st South in Sugarhouse - Indian Offers $10,000 fer a Sleep Producer z OFFERING IHHl-tc.- T.etchlkan, Alaska. The average life span of A Klein Is only 24 year, due ehietly to tuberculosis, to Dr. Victor E. Levine, of the Creighton L'nlversitv School of Medicine. In hunh.i. Xch. He has com-;- ! 'led Ms third trip to the Arctic to !:e I'leilii-ii- l studies of the Eskimos. U:i!:-smore physicians ore provided g.vir.l the henltli of the Eskimos, race will become extinct In little than a generation, Doctor Lcvlue iedlcts. lad. Will It he cold or warm tomorrow? Miss Minnie Mulder, of this city, has a Seth Thomas clock more than one hundred years old, which in the 7(1 years she hn had It never ha failed to tell her wlmt torniirruws weather will be. The old clock, "drags' at striking time if ii,o weather Is to warm up, mid slrikes deep, clear and resonantly If it is to remain cold or turn colder. Shclbyvllle, Flattering Bolero From the women of America to the toreadors of Spain many thanks for the bolero, which no flniierlny slims the wulxt nt.il ndds to the desirable look. Hark frocks topped by pert anil young boleros are combined with printed blouses swathed about the waist and tying In a how st the side. Skirts are pencil-slliwith concealed fullness In center kick pleats. Clydebank, Frntlaii'l. Queen Mary, plant new flag3ldp of tbs British mercantile marine vyl hf the British nation, 1 bearing completion la her filling-nu- t dock here. On March 21 the innuiimitli new S'V ocean greyhound, which was launched and r.amed hy Queen Mother Mary of England here Ncptcuilicr 2fl. 1934, will le gently maneuvered Into the narrow Clyde river und will proceed to sea under her own power on route to Southampton to he drydocked preparatory to her final speed trials and official commissioning. Two months later, on May 27, he will (Mil nt her hows westward out of Southampton on her maiden voyage Pi New York. Her distinguished passengers on thin voyage are expected to Include oue or more inemliers of the British royal family, probably the Duke nnd Dnelies of York. Szerct, Speed Details of the vessel's potentlul speed are being kept a Jealously guarded secret, nnd the most that Is admitted Is that her engines will develop approximately 200, (too horsepower and will get her to New York In five days nr under. Unofficially, the British feel no doubt that their latest marine Wonder will develop around 31 knot nn her trial, and everywhere there 1 nfliclitl Confidence that she will easily Wrest the Atlantic blue ribbon from the French colossus, Normandie. The most rigid precautions are being taken by the builders aboard the vessel to Insnre that the engineering secrets of their child wJU tin! he disclosed, A request to he permitted tq Inspect the seated engine room was btuhtly refused. 1 Potential Winner. A close elimination of the new vessel. of Hie delicate streamlining forward, the beautiful proportions of the null and superstructure ahd the reall-af-- " n of the unprecedented space Riven over below to the powerful d propelling machinery led to the conclusion that lit the Queen Mary the British have a potential Atlantic Alaska Eskimos Facing Extinction, Doctor Says Clock SPECIAL SPRING' HALF PRICE Tablo Lamps, Gift Glassware, Gift Pottery, Geographic World Glohes and Ono lot of Telechron Electrio Clocks. We also offer, DURING CONFERENCE ONLY, numerous outstanding bargains In Church books Including the TORY DOCUMENTARY HIS- OF THE CHURCH, for Only 91C.00, Cash anil Carry. DESERET BOOK COMPANY unili-rstno- 44 EAST on SOUTH TEMPLE ( |