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Show TUB SUGAR HOUSE BULLETIN FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1949 Nazi Victims Begin Life Anew in Iowa BUY ONLY GOOD COAL CALL HYLAND 2520 "LOBB'S on the HOUSE COAL CO. il Mi Highland Drive riiMiiBarfnMM F. W. KIEPE THE TAILOR REMODELED for Ltd let and Gentlemen and - PRESSING CLEANING 21t East 1060 South FALL Call ut for estimate on your renovizing problem. Ottlcy at your Service THE PAINT POT We liUka the World Brighter East 21tt South 1074 Hyland 8739 ORNAMENTAL IRON PORCH RAILING Granite Welding! & Wire Works 2021 to do It," Kaltenbach said. There ere no conduct rules at the hostel and each refugee receive! $2 a week so that ha or she may feel independent. The occupants work in gardens, take care of tasks of the hostel, study English, economics and other such subjects end engage in any other work useful in their little community. Many of them still have relatives In Europe. Representative of the group la a Russian emigre from Germany. A soldier of the czar during the World war, he was captured by the Germans. After the revolution in Russia he remained In Berlin rather than live under a Communist gov- ernment. We Make South 11th East Hyland 458 He became the Berlin representative of an American mo lion picture company and became moderately successful. Then the purge separated him from his family and eventually brought him to the United States and to Iowa. A Jewish actress who attained prominence on the Viennese stage before fleeing to America soon will become director of dramatics In mlduiMtat-n- . aitau " i 500 Years Ago Found uiidavgr7aPc?tfdiuc?fa lathef SUITS MADE TO ORDER And Now BEFORE COLORADO SPRINGS. The golden eagle, only recently accorded protection by an act of congress in its capacity as the American national bird, does something beside, Are Being Taught to Serve occupy his perch on the "tall" side of a half dollar, findings of fish com. missions and universities in ColoUsefully in America. rado, Wyoming and Idaho reveaL WEST BRANCH. IOWA. Far Ascents high into the Rocky mounfrom the battlefield! that once were tains to photograph eagles' nests retheir hotnei, a number of European vealed that the big birds feed prirefugees are rebuilding their 'Uvea marily on prairie dogs during early here In the quiet of the Scsttergood summer. , War Refugee hosteL C. C Spencer, staff technician of Fifty men and women have en- the Pike National forest in Colotered the hostel to prepare for life rado, said that the rodents consume in this country since a total of 26.2 per cent of available John Kaltenbach took over the old grazing land each year. Other roQuaker boarding school year ago dents bring the annual total to 33.9 to give refugees a new chance in a per cent he said. new world. The original purpose of the exAs soon as they have been taught was to determine what efpeditions to serve usefully in this country, fect eagles have la the increasing they leave the hostel to take up their of western Big Horn sheep lives where they left off when forced depletion herds. said no evidence Spencer to flee from persecution. had been found that eagles prey on "We have former factory man the sheep, although further investiagers, judges, attorneys and other gation will be conducted. beprofessional men, all banned cause somewhere they were of Jew- Record of Indian Trek ish extraction. It took nothing more - AR JOB-SUG- 2191 Golden Eagle Is Given Clean Slate in Surrey A" BERKELEY, CALIF. An anthropologist's successful four year search for the rare old document known aa the Codex Fernandez LeaL picturing a Mexican Indian migration some time between the Eighth and Fifteenth centuries, was hailed today as a signal contribution to early Mexican history. The document, about nine feet long and so fragile It suggests aa Egyptian parchment, was made from wild silk, experts say, and painted with mineral and vegetable colorings of astonishing brilliance. It la said to be at least 500 years old. The search was conducted by Dr. John Ban Tompkins, research fellow in anthropology at the University of California. The codex waa found, wrapped in brown paper, in a seldom visited corner of the Crocker First National bank's storage vault in San Francisco. It Is to be turned over to the Bancroft library here. The codex pictures a long migration of an unidentified Indian tribe from a point In what now is Guatemala, northward through the Isthmus Tehaun tepee. Experts say the tribe may have been the Culcatecan of the Aztec period, whose descendants still live In Oaxaca. Speech Flaws Retard Pupils, College Finds STATE COLLEGE, (Dry) ChabUa (Dry) lUut Seuterne Burgundy Sauterne (Dry) Muscatel tgpj s-- .j 0; (Sacramental) truing nvacuo Sparkling (wwN SJtSf'-'fl M "X!25Xd!$y'l A$$' Q ' ''''' driiK J) jKdbll VttmW mHmS Bnrnmdr Port XXX Red Famous Beatdlen Vlneyarda Wines Rutherford, Napa County, CaWornla 1 Df AmTHa sTv f ai.m. laaBS children in American public schools outnumber the combined total of the blind, deaf and crippled students, according to Dr. associate proHerbert Koepp-Bake- r, fessor of speech at Pennsylvania State college. Dr. Baker declared that children of speech are with impedimenta handicapped in recitation and their scholarship average suffers as a re- v sult "vS '1 "Their personalities become more and more warped, and many ordinary jobs are closed to them," he said. "Early discovery and correction can reduce auch losses and prevent maladjustments in personality as well." Penn State speech specialists have maintained a traveling speech clinic for the past nine years. At the request of school districts, more than 1,000 children in 22 districts have been examined and corrective procedures prescribed by members of the college faculty. The mobile clinic also serves. as an internship for graduate students. - Commercial Printing Dodgers, Programs, Tickets, Visiting Cards, Stationery and Announcements No Job too Small nor too Large SUGAR HOUSE BULLETIN 1119 East 21st South Hyland 364 Russ Station 2 Miles From U.S. Research, Including Weather Study. the cotton-mouthcopperhead, moccasin, the coral, and WASHINGTON. D. C.- -A new Rus sian "Arctic station" is being es tablished on Big Diomede island, in Bering strait between the mainland of Alaska and the mainland of Si beria, according to news reports from Moscow. "Arctic stations" have been set up at various points g in the Soviet Union's icy domain in recent years. In May, 1937, such a station was established on the ice within 10 or 12 miles of the North pole, and later drifted The various stations are announced to be set up primarily to facilitate scientific research including studies of weather. "The new Russian station on Big Diomede island is within sight of U. S, territory," saya the National Geographic society. "Big Dlomede'a companion island, Little Diomede, on the U. S. side of the Siberian- Alaskan boundary line through Ber ing strait is only two miles southeast But despite this short distance, it is noon Tuesday on Big Diomede when it is noon Monday on Little Diomede. This is because of e a time fence,' the International Date Line, which, has been traced between the islands and on southward, dividing the Western and Eastern hemispheres. lalaads Sparsely Settle. "The two rocky islands rise almost exactly In the middle of Bering strait where the easternmost main land tip of Asia is 55 miles from the westernmost tip of Alaska. In clear weather one mainland head land la visible from the other. The weather is usually misty, however. in this region just south of the Are-ti- e circle. Heavy fogs hid the is land from their Russian discoverer. Vitus Bering, when he first passed them on his way through the strait which bears his name. When he later sighted one of the islands, he gave it the name Diomede because the date, August 16 (1728) was St Diomede's day in the church cal endar. "Little Diomede is a oval rock rising steeply 1.000 feet from the waters of Bering strait Big Diomede, to the northwest S. S. R. frontier, across the U. is larger, higher, and steeper. Fewer than 30 Eskimos live on Big Diomede, but the village climbing the rocky slope above the narrow boulder beach of Little Diomede has more than 100 inhabitants. In summer most of the Little Diomede Eskimos sail over to Nome, Alaska, for seasonal work. Eskimos Live Frugally. "The rocky surfaces of both islands are covered with dark, scaly lichens, except when summer brings blooms of blue monkshood and the walnut-size- d 'Eskimo potato.' The s, only animal life is the host of puffins, kittiwakea, and other Arctic birds that breed on the steep slopes. Occasionally a fox or white bear roams out over the ice from the mainland. The Eskimos on both islands live frugally on fish, sea mammals, and birds, the latter nets from caught in rock blinds. "On the trail of prehistoric Eskimo migrations, the National Geographic society and the Smithsonian institution jointly sponsored an expedition in 1938 which visited both Little and Big Diomede islands. Evidence from kitchen middens on both islands showed that this was the route by which Eskimos entered America from Asia, presumably some 2,000 years ago, bringing with them the 'Golden age culture of what is known as the "Old Bering sea' period of Eskimo history. It is highly probable, although not yet proved, that by this same route man first entered the American contimigranent, by some tions of the ancestors of the lean Indians." far-flun- d. man-mad- S.-- Nowhere for Nothing Except for New England poi sonous snakes are common to most of the United States. The Is Planned for Scientific south-war- Sees Too Many Going FIRST AID HINTS FOR SNAKEBITE U. ed the rat- tlesnake are all poisonous. The rattler is the one common ly seen in the mountains and plains of the West. He is usually found where there are rabbits and rodents since tneae xuruun Fre-hia orinciDle food supply. auentiv found under large rociu, he also Uvea in caves and under piles of rottlne trash and trees. During very dry seasons, rattlesnakes frequent the areas near streams and lakes. Usually, if he is disturbed, be warns the intruder by the cnar- actertstic rattle before he strikes. However, this la not always true whether he warns or not de pends upon his disposition. He is usually Irritable and often half blind while his akin is anedcung, which occurs a number of times' during the year, at such times he may 'strike without giving A rattler strikes for protection and out of fear. He will not glide after a person, and cannot strike at a distance greater than He his body length. rarely reaches above the knee. The poisonous venom of the rattler is stored in tiny eaca in the upper jaw. When the snake bites, muscles squeeze down on the sacs and squirt the poisonous fluid through long hollow needlelike fangs. It requires two weeks' to refill the sacs after the snake strikes. In a study of over two hundred cases, where the individuals were leggings, there was not one seri bitten through leather shoes or ous result. In case of rattlesnake bite the following procedure is recomone-thi- rd . mended: 1. Keep the victim quiet possible, do not let him walk If or run. Unless the bite is on the face or chest or the victim is very young, there la no serious Use danger for several hours. aspirin or codeln to ease the pain. 2. Tie a rubber tourniquet from your first aid kit around the arm or leg about two inches above the bite. A handkerchief will do if you have no tourniquet It should be neither tieht nor loose, out should give firm comfortable pressure. You should be able to run the bite and the skin about It your finger under it easily. 3 Apply iodine or aiconoi to the bitee- and the akin about it do not use cautlcs nor acids-Sterilize a razor blade or sharp knife with alcohol or a flame and to make two cross-cu- ts inch long through the wound. The cuts need not be deep but must go through the skin. 4. Then apply suction to the cut area. This may be done with the regular suction bulb in your first aid kit or with the mouth. There is no danger in the latter procedure even if you have bad' teeth or if you accidentally swal low some of the poison. Thie - - Sarah Todd Cunningham, a visiting senator from tranquil Hawaii, has this Impression of the mainland: "Too many people in too many cars in too much of a hurry going in too many different directions to nowhere for nothing." WASHINGTON. Falls Arc in Lead In Home Accidents Find Bathroom Is Not Most Dangerous Place. CLEVELAND. The safest place In the home, according to the Cleveland Safety council. Home fatalities for the first time in the past decade figures before that time are unavailable exceeded traffic fatalities in Cleveland. According to the council's report the comparative figures were 127 deaths in the home and 115 by traffic. The council warns to be careful going up and down stairs because that is the time that accidents arc most likely to happen, which cause deaths. By far, of all home accident deaths, falls were responsible for most The council figures reported isn't manner. It reported that were attributable from faus while on stairs. Contrary to popular belief, the bathroom is not the most dangerous place in the home or where an accident is most likely to happen. Only one person In Cleveland suffered a fatal fall In a bathtub. However, two others slipped on bathroom floors and received fatal injuries. Twenty-on-e persons died of burns in the second ranking cause of death, end carbon monoxide gas poison claimed nine lives. ' In one of the oddest accidents reported, a wringer fell from the hand of a woman, struck her knee and foot and caused an infection that 83 In that 29 deaths fatal proved ant and ahould be continued until the patient is turned over to a The tourniquet should physician. be loosened every half hour and then reapplied. A jm UMIWt People of Sugar House The Frigidaires have never in history been so beautiful in design or so low in price. New & Used Refrigerators Thor Washers at Reduced Prices MERRILL APPLIANCE CO. 1090 East 21st South auk-let- long-handle- Watch for the - - d pre-Eski- Racing Pigeons Serve Valiantly for R. A. F. LONDON. Nearly 4,000 racing pigeons were supplied during one month to operational aircraft of the royal air force coastal command through the agency of the National Pigeon service. The pigeons are carried on coast al reconnaissance aircraft as an additional means of communication In an emergency. Of 14 messsges recently sent every one reached its destination safely. One of the most gruelling flights by these "feathered airmen" was made by a bird which was released from the neighborhood of Stavan-ge- r. Despite unusually Norway. unfavorable weather conditions, it reached home safely, having flown nearly 230 milea across the North sea. Woodpecker Drillings Backed Up by Bees KINGSTON. N. C It might be something new in the building game, but: Some woodpeckers came along and drilled holes in the columns of Mrs. C. Felix Harvey's home. Very soon, some bees swarmed by, spotted the holes and began storing honey Inside the columns. ... Stirring romance in Old California and high adventure in frontier America are combined in CARMEN F RANCfiO A Magnificent Story of Western Pioneer Days, Unsettled Lands, and Danger Ever-Prese- nt Frank II. Spearman is the story of the middle 19th century in California. In those days unsubdued bands of Indians made periodic raids on the ranchos of the Spanish Dons. HERE In one of these raids on the Rancho Los Ala- mos of Don Alfredo family and retainers were massacred and two small girls were kidnaped by the savages. It was Henry Bowie, a Texas scout, who rescued them and found them sanctuary in the mission of Padre Vicente, then forgot them even as he rode away. But he was to remember them eight years later when, his suit spurned by the stormy Carmen, he tried to forget by roving California with Kit Carson and Captain Sutter. How Padre Vicente came to Bowie's rescue and how the gallant Texan again met the lovely Carmen are experiences you will want to follow. Doit SERIALLY IN THESE COLUMNS 0 o |