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Show TOE LEHI SUNt LEHV UTAH THURSDAY, JULY 4 1349 TITLY4. 1940 bscoe ft- IsKewChieiui .mm fr0vo Division Bailey, manager of the Kfit " T.iPht company's rJETflvWon for M years, has rt City notrM. 0f the com- ;CSe Southern Division, jounced today by R. H. ; general superintendent ftiley succeeds George L JTwho recently was placed of the company's Ogden Southern division man- Ta veteran power company rl having worked up through :er!foower salesman in Novem-rjysP0- L w iQis he was I 101. ID Ltw""" ' - Ki to superintendent of pow-w pow-w . t. assistant to SJmanagerinl924. l.j commercial Illinois. Lduated from electrical engi-tfP.t engi-tfP.t i t. thP stats imiver- S completed his educational Antral Station Institute of the inwealth- Edison company, i r.n Vile n1eft.rl lltll- riuo. BCBa ... tL, with the Illinois Northern iities company in 1914. Considered an uuuuuub -iu ..nn7fit.fon of electric l-w on "ic , ., , r ... mininer. Mr. Bailey also icryicc u ui"""o' - Lbeen active In civic affairs. He Ust president of the Park City trams Cluo, pas ucuivu"v t- nor, northern division, uian-iuaiiu vioTTATiis International. titer member of the Salt Lake taanls club, memoer ranc uwy Fnior chamber of commerce and U member of the Salt Lake tatier. No. 1 Salesman The United States ranks as the bio. 1 exporter and No. 2 importer U the world, foreign trade statistics meal Over 7,500,000 of the U. S. industrial population is said to be dependent on export trade. Gorillas Are Sissies The ferocity of the gorilla, terrify- lii "booeey" of screen and fiction, M been disproved by explorers. hey agree to saying that the anl- kil li extremely shy and difficult ho catch sight of, often hiding in the West part of the woods on the epproach of man. Meteorite Nursed To lave what remains of an lroa fieteorite which fell near Mel-me, Mel-me, Australia, many years ago, las been placed in an air-tight ftie in which the atmosphere con-ilu con-ilu only nitrogen. The gas was taped in at a pressure equal to a pind blowing at 45 miles an hour gainst the sides of the enclosure, pith the nickel iron of the fragment ;ii i chloride of iron which rusts padiljr. The rusting splits up the meteorite to such an extent that in P H years stay at the Melbourne peum it has lost more than 400 founds. Wool From Whale Meat 1am ue reoortpd mAar d n manufacture of artificial wool m Whales, SCCOrdlnff in nrnxHi Wected by a scientist in Japan. I turn WAV piUVGBfl puts of reducing the whale meat f 1 eU mass, whica is forced rr1 man holes and spun Into Wu 1 a' flber floats 1x1 water r . to have considerable FPb, The new wool is expected f wopete with that made In Amer-Qsnd Amer-Qsnd Italy from casein in News In Brief Mark Nilson 4-H club member of Smithfield, Utah, was recently awarded $6 by the International Harvester Company as a prize in the company's sixth annual accounting ac-counting contest. Participants were required to show receipts and expenditures, ex-penditures, an opening and closing inventory, and an analysis of farm, home and crop enterprise accounts and suggest means of improving the net farm income. More than 50OO boys and girls submitted records in the contest. "At a time when the productive capacity of Europe is being destroyed de-stroyed and diverted from the satisfaction satis-faction of normal human wants, a heavy demand on raw materials will be an Inevitable accompaniment to a program to speed our national defenses. In making those defenses more secure the farmer and the farm cooperative are bulwarks of security," says A. G. Black, governor of the Farm Credit Administration. "It will not be necessary to set up new Government services, or new organizations of farmers to carry on agriculture's part of the national defense program. Farm people themselves, through county extension organizations, AAA committees, com-mittees, planning committees, and government agricultural services in the Department and Land Grant colleges are set up and staffed to do whatever needs to be done, according ac-cording to Secretary Henry A Wallace. Four-H pheasant clubs In fifteen counties of Utah have received 5020 pheasants from the State Fish and Game department. Club members will grow the game birds and sell them back to the state this fall. The project Is unde? the direction of Darl Frischknecht, extension poultryman and J. Whitney Floyd, extension forester of the Utah State Agricultural college. Frank Andrews, agricultural statistician sta-tistician for Utah, estimates that this state will harvest 3,646,000 bushels of winter wheat this year. This is about 800,000 bushels under the estimate of May 1, due to lack of moisture in most sections of the state. France was the fifth best customer custo-mer for United States farm products prod-ucts during 1939. Farm products were nearly 30 percent of all U. S. exports to France in 1938 and over 17 percent in 1939. What the situation situ-ation will be since capitulation is a conjecture. "Trees which promise at then-present then-present rate of growth, to triple or quadruple their normal sizes, are being grown by the Swedish natural scientist, H. Nilsson-Ehle. His experiments ex-periments are described in the newspaper Aftonbladet. He has been experimenting with colchicine, a chemical product which when sprayed on plants changes their chromosomes. The latter are , tiny particles, barely visible under microscopes, mi-croscopes, said to control heredity, including size. Mr. Nilsson-Ehle is experimenting particularly with Sweden's aspen, trees and larches. He wants to grow bigger ones for Swedish forests. He has doubled the chromosomes of the giant Sequoia, Se-quoia, one of California's famous big trees," according to the Christian Chris-tian Science" Monitor of June 14. LOOK! Your present Mattress remade ith new covering and inner springs FOR AS LITTLE AS $795 "ALL WORK GUARANTEED" we call for and deliver FREE! 0v UN Oman's Mattress Co. 0rth foxu& WestBOVO or Phon. 90-W, Lehi Utah State Press Association Completes nans Jtor Annual Summer Outing Utah now supports 124,000 deer, 5000 elk, 200 antelope, 50 bighorn sheep, T moose, and 450 bear, according ac-cording to the last big game census conducted by the United States Department De-partment of Agriculture. t.- 4 r .., "I . ' V j . . '.. ;t -f A '! L if-. y . j v- r , . J 4 ivauiw. Atilllb vatwjica wirtc made before the middle of the forenoon fore-noon on the opening day this year. Fishing on the streams above Moon Lake, which will be opened July 1st, always provides ideal sport lor the angler. A walk around the Mrs. A. E. Doll in eompany with lake makes the stream feeding it j Mr. and Mrs. Byron Crookston spent available , by foot; horses may be Sunday In lleber City and at the oDtainea to carry the angler to ' Hot Pots. either the streams or to any of the Local Items Mrs.' It. C. Allred spent Monday visiting in Salt Lake City. Scenes at Moon Lake, wh ere the Utah State Press Association will hold its annual summer outing July 13 and 14. Top, Io oking toward the northwest shoreline from the center of Moon Lake; center, left, looking nor th across the lake from the vicinity of the lodge and camp grounds; center, right, a lane in the spacious camp grounds built and maintained by the V. S. Forest Service where outdoor fireplaces and other facilities make camping Ideal. Lower, Duchesne, Du-chesne, Utah, from the south, where visiting newspapermen will gather to leave Highway U. S. 40 for the trip into the moun tains to the north. The Duchesn e Lions will be their hosts at the outing. Duchesne, Utah, July 1, Plans are complete for an enthusiastic welcome and interesting entertainment for the Utah State Press Association whose members will gather here July 12, for their annual summer outing to be held at Moon Lake, it was announced this week by Roy A. Schoniari, president of the Duchesne Lions club and chairman of the Press Association summer outing committee. Reservations already received indicate that a large number of the visiting newspapermen and their families will be in Duchesne Friday evening, July 12, to reg- ister and Join in the preconvention dinner at the Plaza hotel in Duchesne. Du-chesne. These early arrivals will many other lakes available in a 10-mile radius. Of these higher lakes, Brown Duck and Kidney lakes, about 7 miles from Moon Lake have always been famous for their fishing. fish-ing. In 1935 a reservoir project was started at Moon Lake by the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation, with Governor Gov-ernor Henry IL Blood officiating at ground breaking ceremonies at the dam site on June 28. A million dollar earth-fill dam was constructed construct-ed approximately a half-mile downstream down-stream from the original outlet of the lake, raising the water level over 60 feet and creating a storage capacity of 36,000 acre-feet of water. Tliis dam was completed sufficiently to catch the 1938 spring runoff and in June, 1938 the lake was filled to capacity. It has since proved in- ' valuable to farmers of Duchesne Iand Uintah counties and Is the only hope of having most of the crops in the Uintah Basin this year. Officials of the project will be on hand to conduct tours through the dam and auxiliary units for all the visitors who care to take them. It has long been the ambition of Uintah Basin residents to share the recreational advantages of Moon Lake with a greater number of the state's residents, the Duchesne Lions said, but housing facilities at the lake and roads into the Basin have been a serious handicap. Enlargement Enlarge-ment of the facilities for housing and the completion of Highway 40 to a dustless standard during the past year have now removed this handicap and the Duchesne Lions club welcome the opportunity of entertaining the newspapermen there from all sections of the state. Have Ton $938 Insurance? Life insurance in force in the Unit ed States is equal to approximately $938 for each person in the nation, insurance statistics state. Policies total $117,338,324,032. naming caurorma California got its name from the Spanish explorer Cortez, who applied ap-plied the name to the bay and the country, which he supposed to be an island. It is the name of an is land in an old Spanish romance where a great abundance of pre cious stones were found. WANT ADS SEE MAX SHARP For Large Latham Raspberries or Telephone 31, Lehi. 7-4-tf FOlfc SALE Dewberries. See Mrs. James Hartshorn. 4th ward, Lehi. '. , .A - 7-4-2t CHERRIES For Sale-r-tanibert or Napoleon. Charley Thompson, Third ward, Lehi 6-2d-2tp Modern Equipped Home For Sale: Terms can be arranged to " suit buyer. M. H. Knudsen, 270 No.' 2nd West, Lehi 6-13-tf HOTPOINT ELECTRIC Range For Sale Cheap. Mrs. Alice Crooks- ton. 5-31-tf. RASPBERRIES For Sale Alex Christofferson, Tel. 301-M., Lehi. 6-27-tf BOTSEN BERRIES For Sale Call Mrs. T. F. Kirkham, Lehi. 6-27-tf FOR SALE 5 room modern home. Full sized lot with chicken coops and chickens. Phone 135-W, Lehi. 6-27-2tp FOR SALE My farm of ten and one-third acres with crop on. A good buy. See Janus Schow, Lehi. 6-13-2tp FOR RENT 4-room frame house on Gardner's ranch, across river. $5.00 per month. Call Lehi Sun or see Rulon Allred, Lehi. 6-20-tf Applications Being Accepted For Army Air Corp. Sergeant Francis V. Abell, in charge of the U. S. Army Recruiting Recruit-ing Station, located in the National Guard Armory, Provo, Utah, an nounced today that applications are now being accepted for enlistment in the U. S. Army Air Corps. Young men who have a high school education or its equivalent or a journeyman's rating in a me chanical trade are urged to take advantage of the many excellent opportunities now offered men who apply for enlistment in the U.- 6. Army Air Corps at this time. Vacancies are now available with station assignment to the follow Ine costs: Hamilton Field, Cali fornia; Moffett Field,' California; March Field, California; and the Philippine Islands. Sergeant Abell further said that anyone desiring information in con nection with the Regular Army, Regular Army Reserve, or appoint ment as flying cadet, should call in person or write to the U. S. Army Recruiting Station, National Guard Armory, Provo, Utah. Remember too, that such request places you under no obligation whatever. Your questions will be cheerfully answered in detail, but you will not be urged to enlist against your own Judg ment. The Army has many worth while advantages to offer and asks only the opportunity to tell you about them. FOR SALE Large Bing Cherries from young trees, 5 cents lb. T. W. Riedel, Third ward, Lehi. 6-20-2tp My farms, teams and tools, range cattle and milk; cows, grazing land. home and barn, for sale. Terms to the right party. See Ben C. T-itt. ThL 6-13-tf WANTED: Two passengers to go to Alberta, Canada. Leave Lebl July 10 for ten day trip. See Mrs. Leah Bushman at L. O. Christoifer Extinct Passenger Pigeon The passenger pigeon, so numer ous that its flocks once darkened American skies for hours at a time. became extinct within a few years when market hunters knotked down the adult birds systematically from their roosts at night. Shanehal Child Refugees Kmiline for the first time in months, 400 child refugees in Shanghai Shang-hai were transferred to Chekiang province where they are beginning life anew. American Family Income waif nf America's families receive less than $22 a week, half receive more. College Attendance The chances of attending college, which were one in 33 in 1900 are now one in six. County Workers Receive $7,830 In Job Insurance be entertained following the dinner by a showing of films taken at the National Editorial Association con ventlon in Alaska last summer and some wildlife and trails pictures taken in the High Uintahs Primi tlve Area north of Duchesne, and by an evening of cards and danc ing. Registration of the guests will be made in Duchesne Friday eve ning and Saturday morning. Following a business session Sat urday morning the group will form a caravan and leave for Moon Lake 36 miles to the north in the Uintah mountains, where two days of recre ation and sports have been planned for them. Plans for the outing were cont pleted at a recent meeting at Moon Lake, at which Ellsha Warner, Spanish Fork publisher, president of the association, C. K. Perry of Coalville, Mr. Cchonian and mem bers of the Duchesne Lions club host organization, met to approve the program. , .' Opening the festivities the Lions will .entertain the visitors with a barbecue luncheon served in the camp grounds on the southern shore of Moon Lake. Following the luncheon the annual Softball clash between the northern and southern publishers will detrmine whether or not the trophy won for the past two years by the Northerners will become their permanent possession. The annual banquet will be held Saturday evening In the Moon Lake lodge, followed by dancing. Sunday's program includes the annual fishing contest, a picnic luncheon in the camp grounds and boating on the lake. The entire facilities of the Moon Lake resort have been reserved for the outing, Mr. Schonian said, and it is expected that every available cabin will be filled to capacity by the visitors. Arrangements are being be-ing made for the erection of auxil iary tents to house the overflow, should their use be necessary. Moon Lake, so named from its crescent shape, lies in the Uintah mountains at the southern edge of the Uintas Primitive Area. It marks the end of the road Into the area, the Primitive area itself being closed to all but forest trails. It is located on the Lake fork of the Duchesne river, in the Ashley National forest. ' Lying a little over 8000 feet in altitude, it always aifords cool and Invigorating climate and has become be-come a favorite retreat for thousands thous-ands who seek escape from the summer heat Fishermen find It a paradise; the lake itself offers fine catches either from boats by trolling or casting and from the shore where casting usually brings Mr. and Mrs. James R, Atklmon end children of Salt Lake , City spent the week end here visiting with Mrs. B. O. Webb. -1 Mr. and Mm Golden P. Moffett of Murtaugh, Idaho, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Trtnnaman, last Thursday. ' i -,' Mr. and Mrs. Suel Zimmerman entertained at dinner last Ftlday evening in compliment to Mrs. en tell Young of San Francisco, : Cali fornia. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Evans and chil dren of Salt Lake City spent. Sunday Sun-day here visiting with Mrs. A. J. Evans. Mrs. Vern Webb and three daugh ters, Shirley, Elaine and Janet. have returned home after spending' three weeks in Blackfoot, Idaho, with Mrs. Webb's parent, Mr., and Mrs. II. M. Wray. Mrs. Charles Sabey, Mrs. Annie Young and Mrs. Sadie Beck spent Monday in Salt Lake City dolnjr temple work. Mrs. Sabey visited with her sister, Mrs. Blanche Terry, while there. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Willes and children of Salt Lake City and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Willes and children of Benjamin were visiting here dur ing the week end with Mrs. Chris tie Willes. On Wednesday of last week Mrs. Booth Sorenson and two children and Mrs. Geneva Stewart enjoyed a trip on the Show Boat to Bird Island with members of the B. Y. U. summer school. They report a delightful trip. Unemployment insurance paid the workers In the district served by the Provo office of the department of placement and unemployment Insur ance during the month of May amounted to $9,661.90, according to Harold F. Tucker, acting manager of that office. Unemployment insurance p a y-ments y-ments for these counties were as fol lows: Millard, $102.00; Utah, $7,830.- 00; Wasatch, $541.00; Juab, $1,188.00. Mr. A L. Wilcox, Mrs. May Bloke, Mrs. Irvin Johnson and Mrs. Alice Austin left Tuesday morning f for Rexburg, Idaho. Mrs. Austin will continue her trip to Moran, Wyoming, Wyom-ing, where she will visit with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bauer and Miss Virginia Austin, who is employed at Moran. Mr. Wilcox, Mrs. Blake and Mrs. Johnson will spend the 4th with Mr. and Mrs. Emery Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wilcox. 5,000 Years In 1 Although it's one of the world's eldest industries, glass making has developed more in the past 10 years than in the previous 5,000. jo q pmoqs uonoip ,jaounou -ut Bm ti S5jioMau oipbj jofaua m ;o fjuauiajmbsj etn jo euo aoipia ,tj33unouuy oiph Mrs. S. J. Taylor entertained on Thursday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Roberts and two small daughters of Washington, D. C. Be sides the : guests of honor, those present were Mr. and Mrs. Afton Peterson and two children, Mrs. Ella Manning and Mrs. Emma Jane Roberts. Mr. and Mrs. Roberts and children left Friday for American Falls, Idaho, where they will visit with Mr. and Mrs. Ford Roberta, then continue their trip to Yellowstone Yellow-stone national park .en route tb their home In Washington. WANTED!!!., HIGIIEST PRICES PAID FOR Bones, Wool, Hides, , Pelts, Furs and Dead or Useless Animals. Pelt Prices Paid for Dead or Useless SheepPrompt Service.' Utah Hide & Tallow Co. PHONE 88 Three Miles West of Spanish Fork DEER HUNTERS We Pay Highest Prices for DEER SKINS Be Assured of The Best Buy - - - Pasteurized MILK When you buy your Milk from the THREE-BAR DAIRY you are getting a product scientifically guarded for your health's sake. Cleanliness and Sanitation follow fol-low most complete modern methods. Call 83-J Have it Delivered o Your Home THREE-BAR DAIRY State Street Lehi son residence, Lehi 6-20-2tp |