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Show Tins BULLETIN THE BULLETIN PUBLICATION LINCOLN WARD &NOTES A WEEKLY Printed at 2044 South 11th Eaat Sugarhouse, Utah Issued Every Thursday Business Office and Plant at 2044 South 11th East Advertising Rates on Application O. C. CONNIFP, Publlshei We appreciate the way the people of our ward have supported the Bishopric in attending various meet ings. You come to get spiritual food, we are trying hard not to dlsapoint Phone copy for news items and events of Interest to "The Bulletin Hyland 364. social and sport activities, must be in the office Copy for news items, for noon Wednesday, publication in the following issue of not later than Bulletin." The or Commercial Printing Company TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Suit Lake City, Utah car i n Advance Months in Advance n Qjj j Year in Jvancc Elsewhere in the United States Quc COMMENTS you. Let us add that Lincoln Ward meetings have been spiritual festivals both in music and speech. Truly worth the time spent in attendance. Everyone has been repaid for their attention. A very delightful friendly gather l'nT' Ing was held at the home of Bishop and Un. Willard Richards Jr. last Sunday evening after the farewell tesimonlal of Elder Alfred Trtuffer. rhlrty-flv- e guests were present. Six members of the Swiss Yodelers were present and rendered several numbers. A friend of the Trauffer family from Logan played accordion solos. GETS GOING A farewell tesimonlal for Elder Clarence Silver, son of Mr. and. Mrs. Amidst the persistent talking the mamoth wheels of the Social C. W. Silver, will be held Sunday, system began to turn last week. Althonugh continued on every November 29th at Sacrament Seraspect of the system, from the form of registration to the ultimate meth- vices. The.program will be announce ods of disposition of the collected money. In another vein, several labor ed later. leaders said they would press for amendments to the actso as to finance the benefits through higher income taxes instead of pay roll taxes. New Liskeard, Ont. Wallace police chief, Despite the clamor, and with what it considered a popular approval McGirr, Haileybury his in the election returns, the administration cleared the track for the first has been given another Job He was holding down 29 thirtieth. step registration of eliglbles. different positions when the Town Hundreds of clerks taken from civil service lists began to set up offic- Council decided he didnt have to do and appointed him es in Baltimore, which is to be the res pool to ry for mors than 20 million enough weed inspector. cards containing data on individual workers. Throughout the country 56 field offices were being sat up In In 12 regions. SOLVES PROBLEM OF Sec-curl- ty The U. S. Post Office stepped in to aid the work of registration starting on November 16 and found a vast increase in mail ahead of it. It was estimated that in New York State alone 12 million pieces of mail connected wlthappllcatlons and return of fllled-l- n forms would be circulated. The registration procedure will end with the Issuance of a number to each employer and an indentlflcatlon card with number, to every worker. A GIFT IDEA T l 1 An approved Better Sight lamp would make an ideal Christmas gift for your family or friends. Priced as low as - , $45 Drop in and look over our display of attractive lamps. SIGHT4 IS PRICELESS-LIG- HT IS CHEAP! Utah Power & Light Go. t! Save at the only complete Appliance Store IN SUGARHOUSE Trado in Your old Washer as a Down Payment on a New A. B. C. Washer, Wash the modern way. Let us show you how! A Complete Home Laundry For ONLY (Elfi C A V Enjoy world wide reception with the new R. C. A. VICTOR RADIO A Complete Line from $18.00 and Up I Where Quality Is Priced Right f Appliance Store 1 Hyland 656 080 East 2 st South 1 MW DEPTH FOR FILMS Inventor, Makes 3 Dimensional Movies Possible Washington. P. Serge LiU, young inventor from Tonawanda, N. Y., announces that by placing a couple of layers of ordinary window wire screen in front of a metal reflector he has solved the problem of giving moving pictures depth as well as height and breadth. Three dimensional movies have intrigued the industry for some time. One large producing company owns patents on s process which has been successful but which is so costly that so far it has been used only as a novelty. Litts invention embodies en entirely difrerent principle. The young inventor demonstrated his new screen, using a home movie projector and flashing the pictures first on his three dimension screen and then on the ordinary flat motion picture screen. Highlights Made Prominent. On Litts screen the highlights sprang into prominence and the shadows faded away into the background. The effect was like the old fashioned stereoscope view popular in American parlors a generation ago, which were viewed through a special frame containing lenses for each eye. A man playing a slide trombone seemed to be pushing it into the room itself; a dog scampering down a country road seemed to be disappearing into the distance. The illusion of depth tended to make the Spectator forget the presence of the screen. Litts invention is really two screens, one in front of the other. The Image first strikes a wire screen which breaks it up into sixteen small squares to the square inch. Just behind this screen is another, chemically coated to correct distortion caused by the first screen. A quarter inch behind the second screen is the metal reflector. Thus part of the image is reflected from the chemically treated screen and part from the metal reflector, and the quarter inch space is sufficient to give the illusion of great depth. To Cost $1.50 a Square Foot. The new screen, Litt estimates, will cost approximately $1.50 per square foot to manufacture, compared with an average cost of $1.37 per square foot for the screens now in use in motion picture theaters. The screen utilizes ordinary movie film and works even better with color films, Kitt said. This, he contended, gives it a great advantage over the three dimension process now in use, which requires a special three dimension film, costing about $1.20 a foot to produce compared with 2.5 cents a foot for ordinary film. The process also requires that spectators view the image through spectacles a red lens for one eye and a green lens for the other. Litts screen does not require glasses. The young inventor also is experimenting with a curved screen. The one he used for the demonstration was concave, curving one inch to a foot. The idea is to eliminate distortion for spectators who sit on the extreme left and ..right of the theater, where because of their angle of vision they get the impression that an actor the size of Edwin Arnold should be playing the title ride in "The Thin Man. Litt said curvature eliminates of this distortion, but still leaves some. two-thir- "J U. S. WILL LEARN FROM INCA FARMERS GAS MISHAPS SILO HELD PREVENTABLE " Expert to Study Erosion Control Work of Indiana. "The work done a thousand years ago by the Indian farmers of the Inca empire for the control of erosion is far in advance of anything accomplished, even in our own times, by the most declared countries, Charles Collier, special assistant to the chief of the soil conservation service of the United States Department of Agriculture, as he sailed on the Grace liner Santa Lucia for Valparaiso, Chile. Mr. Collier, son of John Collier, commissioner of Indian affairs, is being sent by the Department of Agriculture to conduct a study of the erosion control work of the Incas for the purpose of obtaining information that will be useful to agriculturists here in the United States. During his stay in South America he will motor 4,500 miles through the interior of Chile, Argentina, Bolivia and Peru. "The Incas accomplished more than any country or race ih the world along the lines of land conservation and their 'staircase farms built along the steep mountainsides are the marvel of Modem Mr. Collier states. engineers, "Lands that the Incas protected from erosion one thousand years ago have been cultivated With fine results ever tines, while Motions of land in the United States have become a total wreck in 50 years. Members of the Inca empire showed amazing knowledge not only of soil erosion and Its prevention but of irrigation and of the rotation of crops ideas n&w being employed in the United States for the control of erosion. The Incas were the first conservationists of the Western world. They were also interested in the preservation of wild life and of forests and allowed hunting in only one fourth of the empire each year. "The little we have learned of the agricultural pursuits of the Incas has come to us from archeologists whose main interests lie elsewhere no extensive investigation ever has been made of their attainments along the line of soil erosion prevention. We hope to be able to learn a great deal from the Incas which we may be able to use in this country, for their empire was probably the most efficient in the development of agriculture and their chief concern the conservation of natural resources. New York. pro-gressi- Aged Woman Makes Her Home in Railroad Coach Elk River, Minn. Tourists en route to Minnesota's north lake country have been intrigued by the residence of Mrs. Eva Waterman, who at the age of eighty-thre- e set out to make a childhood dream of a "railroad coach home" come true. The unique structure, built of an old railroad coach, which at Mrs. Watermans supervision was cut in two, with the halves placed side by side, stands on the busy highway running through this small town. The house, containing five rooms, has all the conveniences of a modern home, including a maids quarters, a large fireplace and two bathrooms. Mrs. Waterman personally laid all the plans for her dream home. During its construction, she was present each day, acting as the architect, contractor and sometimes the laborer. Furnishings for the home have been made or purchased by Mrs. Waterman most of them found in attics of relatives or friends. Washington. Because of the possible presence of suffocating gases soon after silage has been stored, entering a silo is considered particularly dangerous at that time, says Dr. David J. Price, chemical engineer of the bureau of chemstry and soils, who recently investigated a. case in Maryland, where three lives were lost in a pit silo. The greatest danger comes, the bureau engineer says, when large are quantities of carbon dioxide gas fermentation the during generated that always takes place when corn This ensilage it placed in the sUo. immediwhich begins fermentation, in, ately after the ensilage is put The several for days. continue may excess amount of carbon dioxide often lowers the oxygen content of the air to such a point that persons entering the silo will suffocate. Source of Danger. The pit silo, with its lack of ventilation, is the source of greatest danger. The air in the aboveround silos may be regulated by eeping one of the many doors open near the surface of the silage. Care should b taken to open the door as near the silage level as possible after it has had time to settle. The presence of dangerous gases may be detected easily by lowering a small animal or fowl into the silo before any one enters, Dr. Price points out. If the atmosphere is dangerous the animal or fowl will be affected but may be revived when brought back into fresh air. No attempt should be made to enter the silo until the gases have been removed by agitating the air or by proper ventilation. This can be accomplished by using a blanket, a piece of canvas, a limb of a tree or similar devices to circulate the air and remove the carbon dioxide. As the carbon dir oxide is heavier than air it is likely to settle just above the silage and remain until the silo has been aired properly. Methods of Reseue. No one should enter the silo while the fermentation is in progress, Dr. Price cautions, unless others are present to render necessary aid in case of an accident. If it is necessary to rescue a person overcome by gas in a silo, a rope should be tied securely to the person entering so that he can be removed promptly. If possible the air should be agitated quickly before he enters. In cases of suffocation from sib gases the person affected should be removed as quickly as possible and artificial respiration given immediately, the bureau engineer says. The person is suffering from lack of oxygen and the artificial respiration permits fresh air to enter the lungs. The prone pressure method for artificial respiration is recommended by the United States public health service. In this method the victim is placed face downward with his nose and mouth to the air by turning the head to one side. The bad air is forced out of the longs by the operator alternatingly applying and releasing pressure on the back about the level of the bwer rib. Arkansas Farmer Raises Watermelon With Handles Gould, Ark. Dave Crockett may BEAUTY . CULTURE From A to Z When you have your work done at Norma Anne's you are assured of excellence in all branches of beauty treament Our operators are thoroughly skilled and are able to give you the newest and best innovations in beauty culture. A visit) to Norma Anne's will afford you the Finest coiffure that can be had. CALL HYLAND 8434 FOR APPOINMENT NGRMA ANNE BEAUTY SHOPPE 1647 South 11th East FOR YOUR Thanksgiving Dinner and Fall Parties Wo Carry A Choice Line of Paper Napkins, Tallies Games, Etc. Let Us Plan Your Winter Reading Course With You GIFTS and CARDS FOR EVERY OCCASION DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 EAST on SOUTH TEMPLE "Books For Every Mood THANKSGIVING THURSDAY NOV. 26th Prepare For Your Thanksgiving NOW. WE CARRY Glassware, Chinaware Cooking Utensils Paper Napkins and Tallies AT THE UNITED 25c STORE not be the star farmer of America, but he's just about aces in these parts for raising freak fruits. He gave the entire county some5-1thing to look at in amazement when -0 he produced Siamese twin cantaloupes, just to prove that the critters sometimes grow that way. Institute for the Deaf But that was nothing! Has a First Class Band Imagine every ones surprise De Paul institute, when he displayed a full grown Pittsburgh. 1069 East 21st South private school for the deaf, talks watermelon with handles on it. its pupils into talking. The fruit, a small but well formed in Sugarhouse Forty recently were graduated. specimen of the Dixie Queen varia to prayer, sang and ety, is all ready be carried home They recited made rhythm.. from the market. ! The school teaches pupils to read Toledo to Oust Police 'Misfits It grew into an oblong opening in Toledo, Ohio. City Manager John lips, speak and inflect their voices. a section of wire fencing eight feet They learn by feeling the vibrations from the home watermelon hill, and N. Edy, reorganizing the Toledo in teachers faces. the only way to get the watermelon police department, said he believed But its harder to get these chil- out was to take a chunk of fence the department had taken in so dren to talk than to keep other along as handle. many misfits in the last twenty children quiet, so the school is Thats what Farmer Crockett did. years that at bast five years would be required to build it into an effU placarded with signs such as: "Be wise Vocalize! cient force. "Talk Dont be a goose. Sister Emmanuel directs the rhythm band. Instruments d The Bulletin are sticks, clogs, jingles, Your Message triangles, bells, cymbals, tambourines, castanets and tone blocks. The Bulletin's circulation and distribution covers that is a chart The orchestration part of the Southeast where 90 per cent of the inwith symbols representing the Sugarhouse patrons comes from. struments. The children follow it Why not send your message weekly to the people of the Southeast, and perfectly, although they cant hear they will buy in Sugarhouse and save transportation costs necessary to a sound they produce. stores. go to the 40-pie- four-tone- Let Carry up-to- Largest Marble Slab in World Quarried Massa Carrara, Italy. The Ravaccione quairy near here has just yielded the largest single slab of marble in the world, weighing around 1,000,000 tons. It is of fine quality and has a volume of 300,000 cubic yards. ' This huge block of marble was obtained by a new method. Instead of the usual blasting by dynamite, electrically operated saws cut into the side of the mountain. Great care and the use of levers enabled this marble cube to be separated from the side of a mountain. The Bulletin: A weekly bulletin of amuse- ments, sport events, social items, local news of interest to those in this part of the cjty, has a circulation of 3,000 copies distributed Friday p. m. Any item of interest concerning your society or club organization, what they are doing or intend to do, will be publish- in The Bulletin office be fore Wednesday p. m. The Bulletin reserves the right to eliminate admission prices, street numbers and names, where they conflict with the policy of the publication. |