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Show 1 BEAVER PRESS Scenes and Persons in the Current News t fry fi K L v ; - - - v - f - , ; i! v ;r v 2 Members of the Sailors Union strike. 2 Speaker William B. Bankhead U. S. Guycr of Kansas studying the Hoosevelt, who recently recommended Iireme court. 1 cast ballots to end the costly mui-m(center) shown with Congressmen Hatton W. Sumner of Texas and President's proposal for reorganizing the Supreme court. 3 President to Congress legislation reorganizing the federal judiciary and the Su- of the Pacific Coast as they G. B. Shaw Sits for the Sculptor CINDERELLA HEIRESS 1 sr;r h&y (ft "Quotations" for Busy Readers -B- riefly told 1936 CASH INCOME 112 AUTO ACCIDENTS PFVT POISON FEARED FARM PRICES INCREASE COMPLETE CHEESE SHOW In the final analysis no nation i better titan the individuals who compose it, Cordell Hull a Every nation builcU too many and too few friendship. Mrs. Carrie Chapman CatU Aviation has brought a revolutionary change to a world already stagCharles A. gering from change. Lindbergh. A great point in acting is tire "listen." It's more important sometimes o know how to listen than how to speak. Ethel Barrymore. It is not possible to conduct a modern war if the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth is told. Sherwood Eddy. j " H fc...v .. o..,.. Lillian Elifsen, maid in a West Englewood, N. J., home, took a day off to visit New York when she heard that she had inherited $000,-00- 0 from her foster father in Norway, but she is going to hold her job until the fortune is turned over to her. Lillian's family name is Petersen and she was born in the United States, but she was two years old she was adopted by a Norwegian shipbuilder and was taken by him to live in Norway, George Bernard Shaw, British playwright and caustic critic of modern life (left), pictured in London with the sculptor Sava Botzaris and the bust the latter is making of him which is to be cast in bronze and gilt. KING'S BIRTHDAY v.AiilWT De Forest's New "Dynathcrn" Fights Flu 5 , X tf 1... A occurred in 1936, according farm price index kept by the University of Nevada agricultural experiment station. For 19d5 the index, which takes the years 1910 to 1914 as a base of 100, stood at 107, while last year the figure rose to 115. extensive LOGAN, UT.-- An exhibit of every type of cheese sold in America, including ap- s, proximately one hundred .vane-tiewill be on display in the new dairy room at the Utah State iYgriCUllUltU the latter part of the weekPro-oiMarch 15 to 20, according to fossor A. L. Morris, in charge ofdairv manufacturing. This display will be in connection with the short course given annually for the dairymen of Utah and neighboring states. IDAHO FALLS, IDA. Ten, persons were killed and 63 wereinjured in 112 automobile acoidents on Bonneville county hii'hwavs in 1936, the annual re- port of Sheriff Harry Mcppen shows. Estimated damage to cars was $9485. POCATELLO. IDA. The Uni- versity of Idaho South, infirmary is treating but one case of scarlet fever and reports little other illness after a siege of influenza that affected approximately 120 members of the faculty and student body, says Miss Ellen Raether, nurse. Nearly 300 vaccinations against smallpox have been given since the opening of school last September. BURLEY, IDA. Poison, scattered on public domain by individuals to exterminate jackrab-bit- s, is endangering the life of livestock in this section, says a warning issued by biological survey officials. The federal workers in cooperation with the reclamation bureau, have been working from the C C C camps on such a project, but they have placed their poison in pens where it is easily accessible to the rabbits, but safe from the grazing stock. BOISE, IDA. Idaho's works administration and progress sponsors in 29 counties spent $902,513 in 1936 on noxious weed control projects that extended to 6006 farms. J. L. Hood, in announcing the figures, said the program "was the only project of its kind in the nation." There are 37,426 farms located in the 29 counties now participating in the weed program. They cover 7,270,000 acres of farm land. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Presi- dential approval has been received by the local W P A offices for a project calling for the stave replacement, of wooden pipe with iron pipe on various Salt Lake City lines in the county outside the city. The project will employ 260 men for six months or more and will furnish water service and fire protection to a large area in the southeast section of the county. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. The 1936 cash income for Utah and six other Pacific slope states was $938,000,000, an increase of $115,-000,0- 1 t . V .'- - V AI life V 1 ' King Farouk I of Egypt, whose seventeenth birthday recently was observed throughout his nation by his subjects. The only son of the late King Fuad and Her Majesty, Queen Nazli, he acceded to the throne last April upon his father's death. 4 Dr. Lec De Forest, wizard of radio and talking pictures, took a look ni the influenza epidemic and decided something ought to be done. So, he offered his latest electrical invention in Los Angeles, the "dyna-.them,- " to a world suffering from coughs, sneezes and aching muscles. Built on radio principles, the dynathcrn uses ultra-showaves over a small field. The patient is placed within the range of these impulses. It attacks the organs internally, relieving congestion. rt Two Men Escape Uninjured in Freak Accident over the 1935 figure, savs a release from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. The other states included were: Tdaho, Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, Washington and California. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Some 9.588 Utahns were on WPA payrolls on Feb. 1 out of a total 13,568 registered for work, according to a report released by Allen T. Sanford, state director of the National Emergency Council. The report classifies the workers as to sex and occupation of those employed 8,443 are male and 1, 145 are females. Some 222 of the 229 professional and technical workers were employed. SALT LAKE CITY. UT.-C- opper production in Utah advanced near 100 per cent in 1936 compared with the previous year, it is shown in the annual report of the U. S. Bureau of Mines. Increases were also noted in lead and zinc production, the lead output being 368,000 tons compared with 331,000 in 1935 Zinc production was 576,000 tons compared with 517,000 the previous year. LAS VEGAS, miles northeast of Las Vegas a city whoso origin dates . back 1500 ycars sovv) js hcj dated by waters of Lake Mead e largest body of water in the world. Created in the can yons of the Colorado river and its tributaries by Boulder dam i.umu nns grown steadil-sincgates of the closed until it is now mole wen tha 100 miles lone. The ake is no ancicnt Indi'-- ' ,th City AMERICAN FALLS, IDA -Amcncnn K.,ll3 reservoir re rlii'r over 1,250.01)0 nee f,et increase ,)Vf.r ,:,( around 750,000 acre feet GOODING, IDA The hall. amort , ,nXc which ha" with im feet registered NEV.-Sevcnt- L Via ii ;;t - v j ( ? f- JLJ--r- rrr ill"- J .. e KrT T W lV"Znnn' SALT LAKF riTv .. War .1 --U Stock rai M . loans .reived M.721.00" from the Utrti ' Uv Association, it wM dur inR me on., ' ,ncrun of ck holder! 1 freak accident Two men In an automobile crushed between two street cars luckily escaped Injury In In downtown San Francisco. John A. Toso, driver of the machine, said he attempted to get ahead of a street car. Another trolley car coming from the opposite direction cut him off with the result that he was trammed between them. the year 687 lump. whio, 2i ed itr i house) lsulA until f1' . if" i " i, Bnd i . but mastery, " Legs bUck .l0 W stone throw It nn tt, were first by 1257 was so great in Eleanor, Queen ZtM xorcea the of M to leave account of it. become such a mJL edict forbade aru in their furnace executed for "gj rf JM smoke! j THIS SILVi PIECE for only 25c complete with , .1'. - "moeai iducel one-- " 11 boo Easier. 't'J; fnfesslon your purchase L of one can of 01 confession a the laired U T. Babbitt's Nationally Known B. Brand of Lye r" "M1'M'T-11iltiiwll- Set knife, This lovely pure fork, soup spoon and teaspoon in aristocratic Empire design is offered solely to get you to try the pure brands of lye with 100 uses, shown at right. Use lye for cleaning clogged and frozen drain pipes, for making finer soap, for Bweetening swill, etc You'll use no other Lye once you've tried one of these brands. silver-plate- lii ij itiihYmjjn to B. T. Babbitt. Fourth Ave., New d iL1li Inc.. Tlr,f ttm York City.N. V C 1o nm paid. You'll thank us for thn St jT introducing these brands of Ljetoji on wy. OFFER BABBirrsi GOOD How to Get Your Silver Set To get your Silver Set, merely send the band from any can of Lye shown at right, with 25c (to cover handling, wailing, etc.) with your name and address I WITH EITHER BRAND lower that te.m.,? .tor i I o& The smallest flowering plant, one that spends its life floating on the surface of quiet ponds, may be found among a lowly and primitive group of plants called the Lemna ceae, says Nature Magazine. In large numbers they may be easily distinguished as yel low green mats. The species is im portant as waterfowl food. Decimation, a Punishment uecimation was a punishment sometimes inflicted in the armies of ancient Rome. In instances where a crime had been committed by soldiers en masse which would merit death to the individual, of the whole number would be put to death. Selection was made by one-tent- lot Spiders Travel Through Air Even though spiders have no wings, they use the air as a means of traveling from place to place. A spider will sit on a post or a branch and spin its silken threads. If the wind is strong enough, the animal will float away on a current of air buoyed up by the silken mass it has spun. Doing Good Never did any soul do good, but it became readier to do the same again, with more enjoyment. Never was love, or gratitude, or bounty practiced but with increasing joy, which made the practicer still more in love with the fair act. Oldest Competition The Irish claim the oldest nationally athletic contests, the Tailteann Games, first held in 632 B. C. The Greek Games began as a nationally organized sports event in org-mize- d 572 B. C. Good Neighbors It is a small thing to a man wheth- er or not his neighbor be merciful to him; it is life or death to him whether or not he be merciful to bis neighbor. "Storm and Stress" Period In the literary history of Germam the name "Storm and Stress" wa given to a period of great tatefe tual convulsion, when the nation began to assert its freedom from the fetters of an artificial literary spirit The period derives its name fromi whose drama of Klinger i ' Ltadlnfl Df 9 G ' ; and novels tragedies high-wroug- ht reflect the excitement IIog-Nose- of the time. Snake Harmless snake, says Nature d hog-nose- d Light Colors in Light consists of seven to $400 si lot us.- -Fi IS No mat Gaining Knowledge do you know so much about everything? was asked by and very the wise and intelligent man; afraid never being answer was, "By or ashamed to ask questions as to ifr anything of which I am How norant American History Dated 150 of According to the Dictionary nu- American Dates, American tory goes back to 450 A. D., when Buddhist monk was supposedconti have visited the American nent Nicotine Named for Nicot known a from name ftioir ant ti!ro Nicot, who introduced their grw Our brother, tobacco, into France. memoriaL , word nicotine is his niCO" flowers HOTEL IVEWHOISE Hotel mm 400 BATHS It is our aim to serve you manner most pleasing to Dining Room Mrs. J. H. Waters, Cafeteria Prtt.-- W. have' cold or bi eet Klie: Serious t you can nith an; Hon, wfc ot the soothe branes Is loose primary colors red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet and the color that we see is the color that the object cannot absorb, and so throws back, or reflects, to our eyes. Thus a green leaf is not green it all. It merely absorbs all the other colors and reflects green. HnrHpn you Even tailed, The Finest in Hotel Accommodations at Moderate Prices Rates in the $2 h Nice, and The Magazine, variously known as the "puff adder," "blowing viper," and "red adder," is generally re garded as an extremely dangerous serpent while in reality it is quite harmless. If he fails to frighten intruders with his swine-lik- e snout, he rolls over and plays dead. Hotel Invites YOU 400 ROOMS us Let (1753-1831- ), Salt Lake's Most Hospitable The Newkouse y?urkfc 1? Just on fliid ttubbo" y-five man-mad- ' The and soot are not! war-eliip- considerable RENO, NEV.- -A Nevada Increase in the prices received ranchers and farmers for their agricultural products to the 1 Ranged frTsTij Intermountain News you- - Buffet MP- E. Sutton, Gtn. ! i druggi: Creom mone Tesult: I Get C KOI |