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Show THURSDAY. AUGUST 24, 1933 TITE LEHI SUN. LEHI, UTAH THURSDAY, AUGUST or Salt Lake & Utah H R. Routing Guarantee Careful Handling, Fast Service and Dependable movement of Freight. You are SURE of QUICK DELIVERY. Ship Via ; Salt Lake & Utah Railroad On Utah County Farms With Extension Agents cusses should be burned or burled and as a prevention of further loss the cattle In toe pastures should most decidedly be vairinated. U. S. WHEAT iXLOTJEENT PLAN Mr. J. Cartas Lnobert is working with community committees of the local and county form bureaus to get application blank distributed for all growers of wheat who expect to par ticipate In the 1933 payments and the three- year reduction plan.. All local eammifcUx snauM make ap pointments with Mr. Lambert or the County Agricultural Office in the furtherance of this program All application must be signed in the county before conixat-ta can be given out for signatures. -o Prizes Given for Canning Exhibits Prizes, totaling $106. will be award ed by jb Ear Cflaas Manufacturing Manufactur-ing corportatton to 4-H club groups and members of Vtait who enter the best canned; products In the 1933 canning exhibit, aocwrding to Miss Myrtte Davkfeon, assistant state club leader. First and second place winners of county club group exhibits will be awarded $91. and UTAH COUNTY STILL FREE FROM HORSE EPIDEMIC - No cases of Brain fever have been reported In Utah county as yet. The county commissioners have placed a quarantine against horses coming in from nil outside territory. It; has ben found In most of the northern counties. It Is not likely that a State Pulling contest will be held on this account. Our own Utah County contest will, however, be held If the disease Is not brought In The disease Is carried by mlsquo- toes and flies. Everyone should be on the lookout and report any sick animals to local veterinarians. The local veterinarians are coop- rntinir solendidlY to control the disease and to keep It out of the county. A good spray may be used to keep files away from animals and fly traps around barns will be very useful In controlling flies. Blankets may be used If necessary. Clean yards and stables will greatly help as files do not accumulate around dean yards. UTAH COUNTY FAIR The Utah County Fair will be held September 22 and 23. Saturday, September 23 will be called Utah County Farm Bureau Day. Commodity Commo-dity prices will be given and com mittees are now working on the prize collection. The fair will be free and sponsored on an education al basis. A county Horse Pulling contest will be held and the State Smith Hughes contests will be staged at the Utah county fair. 4-H club contests for between 600 and 700 club mem bers will be a main feature. The Fair Board Is meeting Wednesday at the Fair Grounds to allot space and work out further details. Watch for further announcements of the Utah County Fair. ANTHRAX A considerable amount of Anthax has been found in the American Fork district where several animals have died of the disease. Today we find one in Springville and one in Provo. The diaganosls being made by Dr. C. L. Jones of the Bureau of Animal Industry. This gives three sections of the county in which this disease has been found and It Is Important that all owners of cattle, particularly those returning in the swampy land and all pasture cattle 6hould be vaccinated and should by all means get In touch with the local veterinarians veteri-narians to have this done. The disease is carried over and lives In i the soli and damp places. All car- 11 Vk i II 1 MJ JLBATTLBCDl JiA tapwsseww jmrnmser'' m tamm mrnnm'" Dm& mmmmr -as- -m second and third place individual winners for the state win be awarded award-ed $14 of the priae money. A gold watch will be given to the club member who wins first honors In the state contest. . Counties In which olub work Is carried on, bare been classified according ac-cording to the number of clubs doing do-ing canning", the amount exhibited in the past, and! the phases requiring requir-ing fruit, vegetables, or meat canning, can-ning, as folJowr Croup A Cache, Box Elder, Davis, Dav-is, Utah, Tooele, Salt Lake, Sum mit, Washington, with $3.50 for first prize and $3 for second prize, making total aHetment of $44 for this group. Group B Rich, Morgan, Weber, Beaver, Uintah, Duchesne, Sevier, Piute, with $2.54 for first prize and $1.50 for second, making an allot ment of $33 for this group. Group C Wasatch, Millard, Iron, Garfield, Juab, with $2 for first prize and $1 for second, making, an allotment of $15 for Group C. The group exhibits should in clude: Group A three Jars of ber ries, three varieties; three Jars other fruit, three varieties; three Jars vegetables, three varieties; two Jars meat, two varieties; Group B three jars each with three varieties of berries, other fruit and vege tables; Group O-three Jars of three varieties of berries and three Jars of other fruit. Exhibits of canned products should be ta uniform containers, Miss Davidson said, either In pints or quarts, and labeled on the bot-ton bot-ton of the Jars, giving the county letter and the Individual's number, num-ber, year of project, group num ber, method of canning, date of canning, and variety of product. Prize money won by a group exhibit ex-hibit must be used to defray group expenses of the club for 1933 and 1934. For further information ask a county agent or write to the Utah Extension Service at Logan. Sugar Day Rodeo Cele bration A 13ig Success (Continued from Page One) boxing and wrestling bouts were put over to entertain the crowds. Two real holiday dances werei given at Saratoga resort during the celebration i and drew immense crowds. Thursday evening an in itial queens ball was held, during which the three queens In costume reigned supreme. Saturday night a Rodeo Calico ball was held and was a great success. suc-cess. All in all the celebration was a huge success, thanks to the committee com-mittee members who worked so diligently dil-igently in putting over the events In such a splendid manner. Those making up the General Committee In charge of the cele bration were as follows: Joseph An derson, Chairman; M. S. Lott, A. B. Anderson, Jesse N. Smith, Noble Evans. E. H. AUred, E. N. Webb, Mayor Isaac W. Fox, Glenn Adam-son, Adam-son, E. J. Chrtstofferson, Ed Johnson, John-son, E. A. Bushman, Hyrum Timothy Tim-othy and J. O. Meiling. Leo Han son and Thomas F. Kirkham were co-chairmen In charge of the par ade. Committees were selected In each ward also to work on the par ade, and there was a committee over each feature of the celebra tion V . LeWs third annual Sugar Day Rodeo celebration has been pro claimed a big success, and folks, let's endeavor to keep Lehl on the map by putting over a yearly celebration cele-bration of this nature. Lehl was the center of the first beet growing In Utah and Is the location of the first sugar factory built by the Utah-Idaho Sugar com pany in 1890 and it Is for this reason that this celebration has been carried forward. ' Passion Play Coming Ao County Ancestry of Great Salt Lake Cedar Fort and Alpine Roads May Be Improved A recommendation that the state road, running through Cedar Fort and that the construction oi the proposed primary road from Al pine to Draper be Included in state make-work projects will be made to the State Road Commission by the Utah County commissioners, It was decided at a meeting held Monday. Committees from Alpine and Cedar Fort and the Utah County commission commis-sion met with Senator John Booth of Spanish Fork and Attorney A. L. Booth of Provo and discussed the possibility of improving these two highways. Construction of a good road from Alpine to Draper would shorten many farm-to-market routes, would provide needed employment and make a beautiful scenic loop, the delegation from Alpine, comprised of Mayor John A. Whitby, J. A. Forbes, J. T. Bateman, S. O. Strong and Joseph F. Marsh pointed out. The delegation stated that the road was made a primary road by the state legislature, and construe- ton Is backed by the Salt Lake chamber of commerce as well as Draper citizens, ; The project would shorten the route from Alpine to Draper to six miles Instead of twenty-one miles by the present route, and would also relieve con gestion aroud the point of the mountain, it was pointed out. Improvement of the Cedar Fort road was asked, not only to In crease employment, but to enable many citizens to pay their taxes. Objections to Juab county men being employed on the Dividend road work In Utah County was voiced by a committee from Elber- ta. The county commission was advised by Mr. Carr that the mon ey was being spent in Utah County because no roads in Juab county needed repairs so much as the Div idend road, and the projects was being done to help unemployment In the mining camps of Juab coun ty. t5 Second announcement of this great otter good only until August 2Gih THIS way, ladies and gentlemen, to the supply of Frca Coal- enough for everyone who places his order for genuine Heatrola during the period of this the 12th Annual Heatrola Free Coal Campaign. And that isn't all. During this campaign we will sell at the old low prices all Heatrolas now in our stock. A real money saving for you, because prices on all Heatrolas went up July 8th, and further advances are expected. Remember, it's the GENUINE GENU-INE Heatrola we're offering, with the Intensi-Fire Air Duct and other exclusive features. And this year there are more models to choose from a size to suit every heating job, a price to fit every budget. Cash isn't needed. Pay only $2.00 down to assure getting a Heatrola at the old price PLUS supply of Free Coal. When heater is installed, start easy payments, if you wish, on our generous time-payment plan. i r era :u'w.; f mSm 1 f --a tmum m 11 A u i I C iff ' Dixon-Taylor-Russell Co. Although Its placid waters belie the fact that It was ever anything but an inland saltwater sea, Great Salt Lake was anciently a fresh water body with an outlet to the Pacific Ooemn. This was told to vants from all over America by Professor Hyrum Schneider of the department of geology, University of Utah, who delivered a lecture on the ancestry of Great Salt Lake as a feature of the convention sessions of the American Associa tion for the Advancement of Science, Pacific division, held on the university campus recently. Three hundred forty-dx miles long, and 145 miles wide, with a depth of 1,000 feet, Lake Bonne ville had an area of about 20,000 square muew mdout, tne size oi Lake Huron, and ten times as large as the area of Great Salt! Lake. The lake was named after Captain Benjamin Bonneville by Grove K. Gilbert, first Geologist completely to chart the outline of the ancient Inland sea. The lake stood at this level. Dr. Schneider said, long enough to cut a shore terrace 210 feet wide In quartzlte, very hard matamorphic rock. Then with increased moisture mois-ture In the area the lake rose from this leveL known aa the "Bonne ville" level, and developed an out let at Red Rock pass at the north end of Ctache VaBey. For a com paratively long time the lake dis charged a targe volume of water to th ParffVs Ocean bv way of the Snake and CwumWa, rivers, xms copious discharge of water continued contin-ued until the channel and lafcj had been lowered 375 feet. Then the actual phenomenon of salinirVcation occurred. The rainfall rain-fall and other moisture conditions, because of changes for a drier climate, cli-mate, were no longer able to maintain main-tain the lake at this discharge level. and tt dwindled to its present size by desslcatfoa Although the climate was colder Welcome Home Party Honors Missionaries Elders Homer Royle and J. Nile Washburn, recently returnee miss ionaries, were guests of honor at a welcome home party In the Fifth ward Monday evening, planned un der the direction of the Seventies and Elders quorums. Elder Royle recently returned from the Mexi can mission, where he spent thirty- three months and Elder Washburn returned recently from the Central States mission, where he spent three months. The following program was car ried out: Congregational singing. Invocation Arnold Hunt. Saxaphone Duet Boyd Larsen and Dean Worlton. Comic Remarks Bishop James H. Gardner. Vocal Duet Evelyn Peterson and Vera Anderson. Comic . Reading Mrs. Rhoda Johnson. Accordian Solo Hershel Manning Remarks J. Nile Washburn and Homer Royle. Vocal trio Gail Webb, Flossie Webb and Arva Wing. Dancing followed the program, the music being furnished by the Third ward orchestra. A large crowd was In attendance and en Joyed a gay evening of entertain ment. PONTIUS PILATE Played by EGMOUNT RICIITER The Utah Stake has secured and is sponsoring for a two performance engagement, the "GREAT EUROP EAN PASSION PLAY" in Elgllsh, on August 24th and 25th. Thousands of Americans evec 10 years are traveling to Europe to see the Passion Play and now for the first time, this Great Play of all Plays, "This Drama of Dramas" will be staged in Provo at the Y Stadium, The Passion Play first was played In the year 1264 In Freiburg, Ger many, and during the occasion of the plague was given to Oberammer- gau in Bavaria whose inhabitants, during the terror of the black plague, almost were wiped out Then was the time when the Oberammerguaers made a vow that if the still living people of the town should be saved from the plague, they, as a thanksgiving thanks-giving would present the Passion Play every 10 years. And so, since 1633 the Passion Play in Oberam-mergau Oberam-mergau is presented every decade. The Passion Players are a group of fifteen players, which appear in all the spoken parts and which now are speaking the text in English as a special feature to the American people. peo-ple. The players, trained especially for their parts, are devoting then-entire then-entire time to the parts they play. me Passion Play is a literal translation of the Bible and presents the last seven days of the life of Christ on earth. The text Is taken in Its entirety from the books of Mattnew, Mark, Luke, and John and no religious creed that believes in the "divinity of Christ- can pos sibly lind in it cause for offens: The piajers are devout Christians, who feel it a sacred duty to carry the divine teachings of Our Lord to the world. Special prices have been arranged within the reach of alL Children 25c, Adults 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $150 plus tax, -rith all seats reserved Tickets may be reserved by designating desig-nating the desired section and mail ing check to Mr. C. S. Boyle, Gene ral chairman. Care Passion Play Headquarters. than now, vith attendant glaciers In the Wasatch and Uintah Mountains, Moun-tains, such animals as the musk ox, mountain sheep, horse, camel, and mammoth lived along Its shores, acconting to Dr. Schneider. Wards Hold Outings at Mutual Dell Members of the First ward M. L A. enjoyed a delightful three day outing at Mutual Dell during the forepart of the week, Monday, Tuesday Tues-day and Wednesday. During the forepart of last week the Fourth ward members visited the'DeH ' and report a merry vacation. vaca-tion. The three days were filled with varied activities for everyone. Seventy people were at the Dell all during the three days and on the evening of the special programs over two hundred people attended. The first night, Monday, the following fol-lowing program was carried out under the direction of Miss Ruth Rothe: Vocal duet by Jean Fowler and Fern Rothe, comic reading by Leo Russon; stunt under the direction direc-tion of Ruth Rothe; vocal duet by Ivy and Elolse Russon; harmonica selection by Dean Rothe; stunts by the scouts; vocal solo by Ernest Rothe; paper of Jokes by Floyd White; piano duet by Ruby Chris-tensen Chris-tensen and Ruth Rothe, and remarks re-marks by members of the Bishop ric. The second nlgfit a big bonfire program was held out-of-doors and a splendid program was given by the group and by C. C. C. boys. Dancing In the Dell followed. Tuesday a large part of the group hiked to Mount Timpanogos. The Fifth ward M. I. A. members will attend the Dell next week. o SEPTEMBER PROJECTS FOR MELCHIZEDEK PRIESTHOOD QUORUMS Following are the projects for the Melchizedek Priesthood Quorums Quor-ums of Lehl Stake for the month of September: -Personal Welfare September 10th Appoint mem ber to give ten minute talk in group meeting, on Sanitation and fly control con-trol Also Melchizedek Priesthood Quorums in each ward to Join together to-gether in selecting one to give similar sim-ilar talk in Sacrament meeting sam date. Make written report In duplicate September 10th. Class Instruction-Contact Instruction-Contact Quorum members and encourage them to subscribe for improvement Era. See that pvpi-s member Is visited before M. I. A officers make Era Drive. Make written raport In duplicate September Septem-ber 17th. Church Service Ccheck over Quorum roll and list names of all Quorum members who nave not attended Monthly Quorum meetings, Sacrament meetings, Gospel Gos-pel Doctrine Class or Activity class during month of August File lists with quorum or group secretary for future reference. Make written r poo in duplicate September 17th. MbeeOaneoas Make drive to increase attendance of Quorum members and on temple excursions from stake during dur-ing month of September. Make written report In duplicate Septem- Missionary Visits Jamboree Word was received from Orville Gunther that he had the distinct privilege of visiting the Boy Scout Jamboree In Gondollo, near Buda pest, Hungary. There he was es corted to places of interest by Brother Bro-ther Oscar Kirkham, a representa tive from America. He became ac quainted with a number of the scout leaders from our own as well as other countries, and had the un ique honor of an introduction to the Arabian Chief from the Sahara Desert. Among the groups of scouts, every language was spoken and hundreds of flags were on display over the camps of each nation. Orville Or-ville says the georgepus things to De seen, heard and felt were be yond description. Previous to his trip there. Or ville had acted as guide to Brother Kirkham in Vienna, and an Inter preter to him in an L. D. S. meet ing held in Vienna, where Orville is laboring as a missionary. - Orville is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gunther of this city. o -' Fourth Ward Outing Satur. The Fourth ward will hold an outing at Saratoga resort Saturday afternoon and from all reports it will be a gay affair. The groups will meet at the resort at 1:30 p. m. and spend the afternoon in games and sports and bathing. In the early evening dinner will be served and later dancing will be enjoyed. en-joyed. A large crowd is' expected to join In the festivities planned for the day. fr- - Raise Made In Countv JTax U County cornrnSL . 8.60 mills on Tuesday raise of .63 mlllsk. The raise is necessanT budget on th VZ711, The county valuation drS year from $42,513,606 in 1933 or .T.J535 718,013 for the year "H-Practically "H-Practically all taxing., the same problem u Lr1 J levies in general wiliu yZ Alpine School District from 12.5 mills to 13.737 Eastern Visitors" Return Home Mr. and Mrs. a aw . aid of this city, Mr. and vC. Ray Gardner of Amerir1 and Misses Barbara and Kirkham of Salt LakeCltjS home Monday evening tmt 2 to Chicago and oth ....7 points. Leaving Lehl they travS on Highway 40 to Denver, CoC then through the state of s2 to Kansas City, Missouri hZ souri they visited at IndependZ Outstanding places they here were the Josephite Andiiohan and the old temple site. is stopped In Illinois and visited & ijiucivy ou.il, me tfcrthage m si other outstanding historical j In Nauvoo they visited the Joseph Smith property and m other points interesting to etocfc history. They report sleeping k the Oriental Hotel at Nauvoo seeing many unique and Were ing relics here. From there they went to Cbicjp and spent seven days seeing World's Fair and places of interest in and around Chicago. On the turn trip they took the Old llx mon Trail. They traveled on tit Old Oregon Trail, stopping at Jit Bridger and the markers along flu way. They were gone two and a k! weeks and report many happy thrilling experiences. o FORMER LEHI GIRL TO LEAVE FOE MISSIOS Lehl friends of Miss Bessie Kit ham, daughter of Mr. and Mn James M. Kirkham, of Salt Lake City, formerly of this city, il be pleased to hear that she will to soon to fulfill a L. D. S. wim in Texas. A farewell party was given Miss Klrkham's honor Sunday tu ning at the LeGrand Ward in Ss. Lake City. Elder David 0. McE of the Council of Jhe Twelve n the principal speaker. A spleni. musical program was also came out. Miss Kirkham attended tte schools here a few years ago is well known by many of ft younger people in this communiti Irib Peat Very little coal i found b Inland. In-land. In Kilkenny county and accent ac-cent counties, coal of an wftn variety is found, but not in W quantities. There are huge W tn Ireland which furnish peat fuel, the bog of Allen being largest. - " FREE COAL WITH THE GENUINE ESTATE HEATROLA Prices Positively Advance Aug. 28th. D-T-R. CO. p bill! Now Is The Time To Have That Job Done Prices on Plumbing Material are going up- ce your order for material now then have your job done later if you are not ready for it now. Never in history has PLUMBING FIXIES and MATERIAL been priced so low. Call us for an estimate. DO IT NOW ! DON'T LET THIS OPPORTUNITY PASS M S. Lbtt Plumbing & Heatinj PHONE 23 STATE STREET rig Ts |