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Show 5 t? I PSGF FOUR FTTO'V 0!iriTOSfH)?BV E NTN HE R A ID, WBDNESD AY, SEPTE MB E R 1 3, 19 35 is?-. . Salt Lake Stock Exchange At Furnished By WELLS X BIUMHAUL "i Broker WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 13, 19S3 Alta Tunnel .. $ .03 Amag. Sugar, pref. 60.00 Big Hill 10 Bingham Metals . . .02 Bristol Silver 09 Bullion .00 Cardiff .13 NCerr. Standard 01 Chief Con. 58 Colorado Con 02 Columbus Rexall . .02 Con. Wagon 80 Combined Metals . .08 Crown Point 01 $ .05 61.50 .13 .03 .10 Crescent Eagle ... .02 Dragon 03 East Crown Pt. . . .01 : Eureka Lily 24 Empire Mines 05 '4 East Tin. Con 20 East Utah 02 V4 Eureka Bullion ... .19' Eureka Standard . 1.35 Great Western 01 -Iron King v 08 Indian vuecn 01 - Lehi Tintic 00 Little May 00 Is , Mt. City Copper . . 1.10 " Mammoth 30 '-j . . Moscow 06 Vi Tview Quincy 01 ', I. North Lily 60 pSjJMo. Standard 01 "Opohongo .00 '-j tiPark Bingham 01 h ':Park City Con 20' vtPark Utah 2.87V2 5-Park Nelson 02 Park Premier 06 i. . Plutus 20 Provo 10 i -Sacramento 03?i Schramm - Johnson Pref 50.00 Silver King Coal. . 6.25 Silver King West. . .6 So. Standard 07 Tar Baby 00 Tintic Central 01 ' Tintic Lead 25 .Tintic Standard .. 4.35 "Utah Met. & Tim. . 1.20 U-I Sugar Com. .. 1.77 Ms - U-I Sugar Pref. .. 5.00 Utah Fire Clay . . . 20.00 Utah Home Fire Ins 50.00 Utah Power & Light Co., $6 Pref 20.00 Utah Power & Light Co., $7 Pref 25.00 Utah Power & Light Deb. 55.00 Victor Con 02 Walker Mining ... .92 Yankee Con 01',4 Z. C. M. 1 18.00 Zuma 05 yn.oo 6.35 .72 .10 .01 .02 .30 4.37 Vi 1.50 1.82 5.70 25.00 70.00 23.00 26.00 62.00 .05 , .93 .02 20.00 06 SALES Empire Mines 1000 H 6c. Park City Con. 2200 ji 21-22c. - Tintic Standard 600 (w $4,35. Mt City Copper 100 fi $1.12 Vi. k. Tintic Lead 100 Q 25c. - OTHER SECURITIES Am. Smelting 39 V. Anaconda 17 7-8. Am. Telephone 13214. Kennecott -22V4. E. Bond and Shares 24. Safeway 49 7-8 U. S. Steel 55 Vj. Silver 37. Beekeepers Plan Institute Here A special institute lor M. I. A. Beekeepers and counselors in charge of class work will be held Friday evening at 7:30 p. m. in the Utah stake administration building Every jAiase of Beehive Work for the current year will be discussed including' the new Beehive termin-ttogy termin-ttogy and other new features. EUtiENIC COURTS MUNICH, Germany. Sept 13 fITT "Pllfpn if Court" will nncn 'January 1 to pass on applications for sex sterilization operations on '--sufferers from hereditary maladies it was arfhounced today. The courts 4.wll carry out ttie stelization de- grees..Qf the Hitler government, .designed to insure a healthier race. - , THIS CURIOUS WORLD 4 A 36-FOOT, 1Z-TON CACTUS WAS HAULED AOO AAILES Ano Planted IN LOS ANGELES. ' 8ERT C.COHN, OP SARASOTA, PLAV LANDED A III LB. TARPON FROM A BOAT MADE. OP A GAJQ&AG CAA - Ma XLLJ BE -... i'i'i I ilJJ 1 Ir.lil 1 Mm. m Indians Have Their Own C. C. r,,r inrii;;ns nf Hip far west and tion proif-' o-i the Warm Springs reservation in eastern Oregon. The Indians are under Forest and m-o m-o ai. Hc'Vir u riKMclion rather than army officers, and also, they can bring their families to can.,j. Pilule liken at He-He Mills camps show a section of th? encampment, a group of Indian woorttmen, Iu-r.L. Iu-r.L. u. rliihlren at the camp's nlaygroua, and a young Indian wife and her papoose. VETS RECOUNT FIGHTING DAYS Fifteen years ago today the fighting fight-ing American doughboys swarmed into the St. Mihiel sector of the World war territory in what was one of the most successful of the Allied World war drives. Sidelights of this drive, some of the humor, pathos and thrills, were described by Ludwig N. Poul- son of Provo, Roland Smith and James L. Hendrichsen of Pleasant Grove, in the anniversary observance observ-ance of the drive by Ute Post 2162 Veterans of Foreign Wars. The vets met in the Provo Armory Tuesday- night to talk over the war times, to initiate Smith and Hend-licksen Hend-licksen into the outfit and to nominate nom-inate officers for the coming term. Nominations Made Crl Perry, Edward Bentley and O. L. Olsen were nominated for theoffice of commander of the. post, with Auslin Carter receiving the only nomination for senior vice-commander. vice-commander. Other nominations follow: Junior vice commander Ludwig N. Poul-son, Poul-son, Payl Healy; quartei master Ralph VVestover, M. J. Cottam and Hugh Ross..; officer of the day Louis W. .Paulsen, Alvin Harding and Darwin Perry; chaplain Joe Martin, Bruce Haws and Robert Hill. The V. F. W. plans to sponsor an Armistice day observance in Provo on November 11, and Edward Bent-ley, Bent-ley, chairman; Carl Perry, Joe Martin, Mar-tin, Ralph VVestover and Austin Caiter were appointed as a committee com-mittee to investigate what support can be obtained for the proposed celebration. Commander Stanley Bonnett was in charge of the meeting. Carnivorous animals lap up water wa-ter with their tongues; herbivor-ius herbivor-ius animals, as the horse and ox, suck it up. THE RED STAR WHICH MY SEEN IN THE CONSTELLATION OF SCORPIO. IS THE LARGEST OF ALL STARS WHOSE DIAMETERS HAVE BEEN MEASURED. IT HAS A DIAMETER OF 390,000,000 MILES. " Alaska have their own forest camps, too SOWIETTE PARK DEDICATION SET (Continued from Page One) Matilda Wilcox, one of Provo's pioneers, pio-neers, followed by band music by the Provo high band under the direction di-rection of John A. Omanson. Community Com-munity singing will be led by Mrs. Strati Ramsey. Mrs. Marie Hed-quist Hed-quist Homer, Provo soprano, will sing, "Old Glory." The history of Sowiette park will then be read by Mrs. Grace H. Cheever, one of the prominent workers in the D. U. P. organization. A duet will i besung by Mrs. Sarah Ramsey and Mrs. Emma Egilson followed the dedicatory address. by Two "old-timers," John Johnson and Andrew Knudsen will sing the old favorite, "Hard Times Came Again, No More." The pioneer Tesidents of Provo, more than 40 in number, will be the guests at a banquet to be given at 12 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Electa Dixon, 418 North Fifth West street. Following the banquet" ban-quet" the pioneers will go in a body to the park where they will occupy seats as guests of honor during the program. The commjttee in charge of the banquet consists of Mrs. Dixon, Mrs. Hattie Speckart, Mrs. Sarah Passey, Mrs. Elsie "Bennett, and Mrs. Chestina B. Larson who is in charge of the program. k FORD DEALERS PLAN CAMPAIGN The Authorized Ford dealers in Ctrifornia. Nevada. Arizona, Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and Southern Ore gon released a new advertising campaign on September 10th, in western newspapers. The program prepared, is the result re-sult of a two-year study of t'he market for low-priced cars. The many talking points in favor of the Ford V-8 which will be stressed include, in-clude, the fact that the 1933 car is the biggest in the low-priced car field by actual measurement; that this car gives from 17 Vj to 20 miles per gallon of gasoline; that its aluminum head is cool after a hard run; its x-type. frame, its general sturdiness and comfort, its ability to do more than 80 in high, and more than 60 in second. McCann-Erickaon. Inc., the largest larg-est advertising agency on the Pacific Paci-fic coast, has been appointed by f.ie Authorized Ford Dealers to prepare pre-pare and handle the advertising program. The agency plans also to conduct an intensive dealer campaign cam-paign at the point of Bale, incorporating incor-porating many features of a highly localized nature. - We ni)isii ism ALirCns QMllEtoi?fl We Buy Hides, PelUv " and Wool COLORADO ANIMAL: BY-PRODUCTS : COMPANY C. Camps, Too the Indian emergency conserva TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION LOST YELLOW steel truck wheel with 7.50 balloon Firestone tire near Zion's Park. Reward. I. J. Burr. Route 2, Box 47. si 9 FOR RENT UNFURNISHED 3 ROOMS screen porch, partly modern. Phone 1048. sl9 PLACE OF BARTER 160 ACRES, irrigated, improved. Roosevelt. Want smaller place here. Phone 190M. sl8 FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS ELBERTA peaches now ready. Get them at Wm, Kocherhans, mi. east of Sharon school, Orem. sl5 ITALIAN prunes and Concord grapes. Joseph Carnesecca, Mapleton. sl9 GOOD Elberta peaches ready for bottling at "Flavor Pak" fruit farm. Call 040J2. Gillespie. sl9, RIPE Bartlett pears, cooking apples. ap-ples. Thomas. Phone 1048. sl9 550 WHITE Leghorn pullets, 60c ea. 259 No. 2 E." Springville. sl7 WALES IN PARIS PARIS, Sept. 13 U.R The Prince of Wales, concluding his vacation, arrived incognito today from Biarritz. Biar-ritz. He planned to leave for London Lon-don in his private airplane this afternoon. ANNOUNCING The Opening of LAMAR SCHOOL OF DANCE Latest Work in -Hallet - Tap - Tumbling To 3 - Acrobatic and lialJroom Under the direction of MARY LOUISE WINTERS 220 South Second tyest PHONE 1425 PHONE Interprise 30 Sp. Fork 1- ." VV On Utah County Farms .With Extension Agents TRAVELING EXHIBIT A traveling exhibit, which was set up in 25 communities of 20 different dif-ferent counties of the state by the extension. service of the Utah' State Agricultural college, has - just been dismantled after a successful tour, according to W. W. Owens, assistant assist-ant director, who had charge of the exhibit. The purpose of the exhibit was to show improved methods and practices in various phases of agriculture agri-culture and home economics. Much interest was shown by the 4252 persons per-sons who attended the meetings, in the mountings of alfalfa weevils, in various stages of development, and the alfalfa weevil parasites, Mr. Owens said; also, in the ice cream-making and fly-trap-making demonstrations; rug dyeing, proper washing of blankets and quilts, and the proper arrangement for convenient kitchens with attractive color schemes. Other Interesting units of the exhibit ex-hibit included: Homemade-dehydra-tor, miniature houses showing results re-sults of proper insulation, iceless refrigerator, sanitary garbage pah and incinerator, remodeling of clothing, common noxious weeds and their control, proper feeding of dairy cows, higher unit production produc-tion of wool and a recommended mixture of pasture grasses. Members of the extension service staff accompanied the exhibit and explained in more detail the meaning mean-ing and purpose of the various phases of the display. The following are the communities communi-ties in which the exhibit was set up: Fountain Green, Bicknell, Junction, Junc-tion, Escalante, Panguitch, Order-ville, Order-ville, Washington, Kanara, Para-gonah, Para-gonah, Minersville, Nephi, Tooele, Price, Blanding, Monticello, Moab, Ferron, Huntington, Rock Port Morgan, Randolph, Laketown, Farmington and Salt Lake City. 4-11 CLUB MEET Plans are being made to accommodate accom-modate 160 4-H club representatives representa-tives and their leaders from 20 counties during the state club institute in-stitute at the Utah State Agricultural Agricul-tural college September 18, 19 and M3&ME ii ii 11M EIGHTY MILES an houror better -hour after hour! Well over 60 miles in silent second! Instant starting swift acceleration ! PERFORMANCE that only 8 cylinders cylin-ders CAN give yet with the 33 FORD V-8 you also get 17Vi to 20 miles per gallon gal-lon of gasoline. Thousands of owners report even better mileage in cities, on highways, over hill and dale. Unbelievable? Don't take our word for it we Ford dealers who have road-tested road-tested this V-8 in every conceivable way. You Test this 75-h. p. V-8 Engine You drive it! Your nearest Ford dealer will let you try a stock car of your own choosing. You make the test, clear through. No matter what make or model your present car take the 33 FORD V-8 where your car has gone. Up the grades you've always dreaded! Along your favorite boulevard or fairway! fair-way! Through traffic tangles you've always al-ways longed to conquer ! It's your test. You're judge, jury and prosecuting attorney! We rest our case the moment you take the wheel. And when you return thrilled, and more than satisfied you'll realize that, wonderful as they are, power, speed and swift pick-up are not the only fine points this modern motor car offers. Big Car Comfort Roomy, Easy Riding You'll realize your test-drive was rest' ful. Always, it' after a run that you appreciate ap-preciate riding comfort most. The more you drive the 33 FORD V-8 the greater your appreciation of the new riding standard it sets in the low priced field. munjji van. 20, according to D. P. Murray and Miss Myrtle Davidson, state club leaders. The event marks the close of a season's work and. the delegates are chosen because of their outstanding outstand-ing records in home economics or agricultural projects; their attitude atti-tude at home and in their respective respect-ive communities, and because of their desire to continue as students of home and farm problems. Each county enrolled in 4-H club work through the extension service of the college and the United States department of agriculture, is entitled en-titled to send eight boys and girls to the state finals. The college will provide housing quarters and the individual, local organization, or county will meet the expenses of transportation and meals. The program calls for home economic eco-nomic and agricultural team demonstrations; dem-onstrations; agricultural and home economic judging contests; health examinations and a style revue of garments made by the club girls. Winning demonstration teams will be awarded scholarships to the Utah State Agricultural college; medals will be given to the boys and the girls who score highest in the health examinations, judging, showmanship and for special clothing cloth-ing exhibits. A free trip to Chicago to attend the national club congress in December, De-cember, awaits the winner of the style dress revue, Miss Davidson said. Recreational features during the institute will be directed by Professor Pro-fessor Joseph R. Jensen of the physical education department. CONVICTED OF MURDER SALT LAKE CITY. Utah, Sept. 13 (U.R) Convicted of voluntary manslaughter, Chester Hougcsen. 34, will be sentenced Monday by district Judge James W. McKinney for t'he -staving of Frank Miller, 30. in a cafe May 30. Hougeseri was charged with first degree murder for the slaying, which climaxed a quarrel in Houg-esen's Houg-esen's cafe. EFORE YOU BUY AMY fl n mir rnirmnn n J TTM Steps out of its Price Class in PERFORMANCE and POWER 80 miles an hour! 17 Vz to 20 miles per gallon, minimum! Automaticride control! All-steel All-steel safety bodies ! Low Time Payment Plan available. Ask your Dealer. ECONOMY- PERFORMANCE COMFORT" English Tests For 4Y' Freshmen To Start Sept. 21 English placement tests for freshmen fresh-men will commence at Brigham Young university on September 21, according to Dr. arley A. Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, head of the English department. depart-ment. They will be continued throughout the registration days, September 22, 23, and 25. He urged students who are in or near Provo to take the test on the 21st, so that as many papers as possible pos-sible may be checked before the rush of the registration period begins. be-gins. "The object of the tests is to place the students in the group in which they can work to the greatest advantage to themselves," said Dr. Christenseri. As soon as the papers have been checked, the students will be assigned to the appropriate sections of Freshman English. Tests will be given twice a day, probably at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m., but definite announcement as to time and place will be made later, said Dr. Christensen. MY OWN TASTE HAS CONFIRMED THE FACT THAT CAMELS ARE BEST FOR STEADY SMOKERS . THEY ARE MILDER. .THEY NEVER WEAR OUT THEIR WELCOME ! .. if f S Guuei's ccidi&r chcuco never cjetcn crLvrllcrcS . . fHttie tire tjoirloste o u u- roiBUD I HWESTMEOT TO SERVE 30 DAYS Joe Hapi was sentenced to 30 days in the city jail Wednesday morning by Judge pro tem I. E. Brockbank of the city court, when Hapi pleaded guilty to a charge of petit larceny. He was arrested by Provo police Monday afternoon when he was alleged to have taken money from a room occupied by members of the B. Y. U. football squad. HUGE GOLD SHIPMENT CHERBOURG, France, Sept. 13 (U.R) The liner Quitania today landed 195 barrels of gold, valued at 250,000,000 francs ($13,997,500) from the United States. The gold is destined for the Bank of France. Gtneral Wolfe was only 32 years old at tht capture of Quebec; Wellington was 46 at Waterloo and Blucher was 73 at Waterloo. Expert HAIR CUTTING 25c ELMO LOVERIDGE 158 S. 1st W. Phone 1159 CAR . . - - It's roomy actually the largest car in the small car world; longer inside and out (112-inch wheel base), wider, deeper and with deeper seats. And between rider and road are Double Dou-ble Acting Houdaille Shock Absorbers only one size smaller than those used on the Lincoln, They smooth out every road, assuring you endless comfort through automatic ride control. New Stream-line Beauty Standing at the curb or flying down the highway from dashing, slanting radiator radi-ator grille to rear fender flare the '33 FORD V-8 is distinctive, a fine example of new motor car designing. Inside, appointments combine with roominess to establish a new style of beauty a new standard of comfort In this, the most powerful and most distinctive dis-tinctive Ford ever built. The New Standard in Motor Car Value One other thing you should not overlook: over-look: Ford Motor Company has always made a good car. The oldest Fords are still in service still in demand. As they set the pace for value in their day, so the '33 FORD V-8 stands out as clearly today as an investment, for power and performance, for comfort and for unparalleled operating economy Before You Buy ANY Car Before you buy any car at any price drive the33 FORD V-8. Phone your nearest Authorized Ford dealer for a test drive ! AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS 3 r THE MERRYMAKERS Ttw fastest, funniest Revue In the West KSL 10 toll NLS.T. Each Sunday Night KFRC KMJ KWG KFBK 9 to 10 P nil 1 ! t ft - ! j i in I "at , 3. 1 I - y "-m ! O IKS T NCA KAVICt . . .- ..- i . . ' . . t i Sir ' 1 - - t I |