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Show 1 1938 JANUARY 6, ,arESDAY, i X 1 1 local -- iff .-- "I o JHELEHI FREE I ci... , ciiimi.la,. ;.J!StTl 1 cn.n . sr KSi. 1 I called to to 1119 was Mr. - j and Mrs. dautrhu. . i , I .. ai.d. Luke. wrru f I '. ' - ...i.rv M v. - rs. . Mr- and Mrs. - " J .. . h..t.-.-c M..j. ......!. .;:. - Shermau illd. ' s " ' . , ': . We v.. r;:jv.h Fv ... Evai: - ' - -v earr.i-- . M "k m,v.,v i 1 ' . ,r t x .Nt.. .... - T'' w.-n'- J UTAH'S ENDLESS ASSET f 'v" 1 . fy 6, 1933 Ca:ir i.i. , i ' i h ,., - ; . Mahas and sons j son of Taylor-vilk- -, r Mri- Gu New Years Day day visiting with Mr. Freir.ci sjr.l Mr. and sister, Mrs. Mab, l p. Mahan parents, jij)p i other relatives. Littkford. F ' '., ; ...:t- J:; j - " I 1 .tit- i a.'.ii . . ' A'J tJ, t;hie- - th- - iScttl relatives and friends. - I f, "' Mri Jwn Sherwood and at Cedar Valley, r riday, ellH f f" R;,iu,s Saiuriay, Evi,-- Yt-ar- s jjjj. Annie 1... Leola -- j. M- r- A. E. Coffmanof Day visiting nt New "..J ' .. Mis ,"". l:.t v;., JANUARY THURSDAY, 'V-- . 1..; i;r,yu V' St t.- CT'.. ' -- ;- i i - - DRY CLEANING J AND TAILORING l WELL DONE! THE WORLD'S A: GOOD NEWS will come to your horn troy ,,:,,a-- h"L,! J'"' day &Mgh THE CHRISTIAN" SCIENCE rvfONrfuR An International Daily Newspaper ..i.. v M' s. I'. E. J tl ,;- - Ihe Christian Science Publishing Society Street. Boston. MassachusetU One. Norma Please enter my subscription to The Christian Science Moc'tor tat a period of 3 months 12 2& months $4 50 1 year 19 00 1 month Tr Wednesday Issue. Including Magazine Section: 1 year 52 60 6 issues 25e and Mrs. lf -s. eluMren X visit-- ! at the home of Jona-nstar.d, turn Mr. and Mrs. Sample Copy on Request nfl iimiiiwiii rirrT" Wii ii - iViv Misses Luci!lL. an(J Vera Anderson, are employed in Salt Lake, and Miss Gertrude Anderson, a student of the B. V. U. at Provo, spent New Years holiday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Anderson By OTTO you need for your laund- Even-thin- clothes-baske- t. ry. Lightweight folding reeL Automatic clothes-lin- e rubber Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Anderson, and Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Goates and children were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Anderson of Salt Lake, New Years Day. Mr. Vernon Anderson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Anderson. h and stick. filler hose. Rubber apron. 36-inc- Clothes-pin- s f Clothes-sprinkle- r. marvelous value free A I supply lasts. VALUE ' Sy reIIr price Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Kirkham and daughters Phyllis and Ronnie Jean, who have been visitinsr in California during the holidays, have returned home and report a very enjoyable time. While there they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kirkham and Mr. and Mrs. Lenord Fourup of Los Anjreles, and Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Shield, and Mr. and Mrs. T. F. McCall of Santa Ana, California. They also attended the Rose Carnival at Pasadena, California. I j'jK 6495 I WASHER Nations of World Opportunity of a lifetime. Genuine Hotpoint quality atabargfcin price. j G-- cushioned E power moior.Lov-elwringer. BOTH Allot Year 1939 l To New York Fair Porcelain finish inside and out Act F0R now World Already Growing Up; Seeks Active Participation of State today. Take advantage of this amazing value. Available with pump for $10 additional. NEW YORK, (Special). The New York World's Fair, in which every state In the nation must inevitably take small or prominent part, is out of its Infancy. construction goes on night POINT RANGES, REFRIGERATORS, GRAY BAR SEWING MACHINES, ROYAL Preparatory and day at the Flushing Meadt w Site of 1216V4 acres at the geographical centre of New York City A steady flow of activities and announcements emanates from the Fair Corporation headquarters buildon four floors of the Empire State the Fair is ing. Judging from ill of these, will a lustv. growing institution that reach full maturity no question about it by the scheduled opening day. April ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS. If you need electrical equipment see C. L. us- - Johnson Merc. LEHI JUNCTION " '''U'WIIU.,,,,-..u M A 30 . r... gill .. .. r ..-- .t lori, ni n imwm Mm mmmnvrrw-'- fk.ee: FAMILY PASS TO ROYAL WITH EACH 50c PAID ON SUBSCRIPTION Send I One Year for $1.00 Six Months for 50c j !1 i I Paper That Sets and Prints All Local News and Ada in Lehi. WHY (iOT DUILD Win j tTAH is fortunate In having J one of the largest bituminoUH coal fields la the world. Engineers estimate 350 million tons available within fortv vears anil forty-sibillion tons of present value for mining after forty years. Total production has been about tons. About 127,735,000 comes from seams at least 16 feet thick. Only V'c of the nation's deposits worked are as thick. Utah's coals are notably free from impurities, containing, as a rule, less than l".'c ash and .i'o to .1','0 sulphur. Palms and vegetation bordering a shallow Inland sea millions of years ago were burled under sediments and compressed Into coal. The outcrops were flTBt mentioned by topographic engineers In 185t. In '54 4he Utah Legislature offered ?1000 for the discovery of coal not less than 18 inches thick within 40 miloa of Salt Lake City. The search was two Welsh fruitless. However, era opened a coal bank- - at ales. In Sanpete Cgunty, and ahipped coke by ox team to Salt Lake In 1858. Commercial ooal mining began With completion of the Union Paci-flx one-thir- semi-tropic- iii.l o c railroad in 1869. In 1878 the Rio Grande Western was built Into the Carbon County field. Large cale smelting operations swelled consumption in 1900 to a million tons. From 1914 to 1920 the State's output doubled, reaching 6,005,199 tons in the latter year. The coal horizon, extending from the Wasatch mountains Into Colorado, is from 200 to 700 feet thick in alternating beds of sandstone and shale. Workable beds vary from 4 to 28 feet in thickness. They differ greatly in dimensions and become unminable in places. In certain instances the coal has burned out for miles along the outcrop. Twenty Utah companies ship by rail. Smaller properties at Coalville and elsewhere in eastern Utah bring the total to 40. Twelve mines, averaging more than 100,000 tons s a year, produce about of the State's outpnt. Modern machinery plays an Important part. In 1935, &S7o of the coal mined was cut by machines 30"v loaded and mechanically. Electric haubge 1p common and hoists and long surface tramways are often required. Workers are safeguarded by the use of waler sprays and sprinkling of coal dust, electric lighting, rock dusting, permissible explosives and protrr-ticlothing. Steel tipples anil sov-timepreparation plants, cost in;.' n quarter million doll.:-.- ; or more, function in cleaning, s'n m L C I - ; .:(! : es ' of Utah. "ill ' Y0000 'fAimm I ? ; , Come in and give ua a trial, work done while you wait. STATE STREET SHOE SHOP it HAROLD OSBORNE, Prop Z STATE STREET, LEHI, UTAH I r mm WANT ADS WANTED Girl or Lady for House Work. Call 71-- J. ONE JERSEY COW FOR SALE Call 81. 193 FOR SALE See Vernon Davis. Ford. Model A Call Reo or Cecil Evans for your Ceaning and Dyeing Phone 66-- J. SECOND HAND PIPE FOR SALE to 4 inch Lehi Cereal Mill. st ; . la LANDIS 1 FOR SALE CHEAP 24x30 Co-oSee L. D. Racker. p. General Truck Hauling Call or see Grant Littleford, Lehi. 75-- W 5p LOST Black Holstein Heifer, I year past. Branded 2 with half circle on right ribs. Notify James Clark or Phone 317-J2. Chester White Boar For Service See Frank Barnes, Phone 130-Ml Black Beauty Pop Corn For Sale 1st place at State Fair 2 lbs. Fred Adams, 61 loc, 4 lbs. 2.rc. North State Street, Lehi. Won BUTTER WRAPPERS We will print your butter papers on better quality paper at a cheaper price. Try, the Free Preas first and be satisfied BICYCLE REPAIRING Complete stock for all makes of bicycles. Work guaranteed. See Mark Bradshaw, Phone 97-- J. J. Chester White Boat For Service I Barnhart, Phone 95-- 10-2- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carter and Mrs. Blanch Pierce of Salt Lake, at Alpine Sunday, Modern Home For Sale Cheap was visit inp" with her sister, Mrs. children, were Sadie Saboy, Sunday visiting with Mrs. Carter's parents, See Ijouis Christen sers, Fourth Ward, Mr. and Mrs- Joseph A. Forbes. WANTED Will call and pay for Mrs. John Brown had as her quests worthless horses and dead animals. Mark Austin and Monday Mrs. Keith Davis a student of the B. Y. See C. O. Holmstead. Phone 83-Jf Salt Lakedaughter U. has returned to school after If your Sewing Machine or Lmm 'spending- the New Years holidays Mrs. A. E. Doll entertained at her with his Mower needs repairs. Sissora or Saw Wr. MrsMr. A. and parents, home last Wednesday for Miss Ida Davis. Sharpened. William Oeborne will do and Mrs. Thurman. Miss May it for yoa. ttt lone Gilchrist. Mr. and Mrs. Delhert Adams and children of Salt Lake, returned to as had MATTRESSES REMADE Mr. and Mrs. Eldon B'ne their home Sunday evening; after Hattio Mrs. their guests Friday. the week-en- d Mrs. OLD MATTRESSES MADE SAME with Bezzant, and son, Mr. and Mrs. Roy spending Adams' Mr. Geo. and Mrs. Mr. parents and AS NEW Green, of Pleasant Grove, H. Winjr. of and Harris son, Have your mattresses renqmated, and Mrs. Arthur Orem . cleaned and recovered with new tickMr. and Mrs. Roland Sabey and ing for only $4.5e Mr. and Mrs. Junius Banks en- children of McGill, Nevada, returned We convert your cotton mattress to the friends at a New Years home Sunday after spending tertained f a rnringfUl and make those feather Eve social at their home. A delicious New Years holidays with relatives mattresses and pillows. dinner was served and fames were and friends here and at American Phone Mr. Fork. Mr. Sabey is the son of Mrs. played by the following truests: L h finished in about eight weei and Mrs. J. Freeman Rople, Mr. and Sadie Sabey of this city. - submitted within four SOMETHING NEW AT A BARhe L pnMrs. Hyrum Anderson, Mr. and . Construction Is schedthPrMfte-rMrs. John Brown entertained at GAIN A Package of Our Town Fine Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, the design, uled to start immediately Mr. her home on New Years Day for Mrs. Sationery Printed with Lehi, Utah, Joseph Anderson f Salt Lake, aVommsCTheme centre will radiate- and Mrs. Milton Knudsen, Mr. and I. L. Iott and daughter, Lois, Mr. ot. Ietter Paper and on hack flap of Trtt h to be the 1939 Fair as con- Mrs E. B Garrett, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Denzil Brown and daugh envelope for ONLY 10c This Is Mrs. ters of Provo, Mr. and Mrs. Howard cheaper than you have been paying J. Nile WasTtburn, Mr. and Mrs. of Use printed Marsh Timpson and daughter of American for any stationery. F. Alpine, Joseph Randal Schow, and Mrs. Bertha Fork, and Mr. and Mrs. Lowell stationery at a cheaper price than you Brown and children. Knudsen of Provo. pay for Wank paper. Lehi Free Prees. 3. - - f y tI head-quarte- In Your Subscription Today 1939 The task of grading the site Is about with half completed. Battalions of men3,000,-000 truckt have already moved over cubic vards of dry fill in the process of the of turning the waste marsh land: ground. into basin park River Flushing "meadOther battalions are scooping out soil for fertile top use .s for mat" ow excavate the made lands, and in so doing feathe beds for the two large lagoons tured in plans for the Fair. The first of the 300 structures which, will house the according to estimates, and Is completed been has 193Q Fair, r, the is This rad- for occupancy. o forces field the for building department today and the employment of the exposition period. new ear Scheduled for early in the of construction actual of start the 1, The debunding. Administration 000 $000 let under arsigns for this structure, a few weeks ago are contract chitectural of their approval Ir. the omces. Upon completion in August, 193., the of thH building, late baggaRe and ,a.e bag. Fair headquarters, si e the to exposition moves omces. and slgniflcan "The most splendid for the 1939 international deSxpos lion " the Theme building as is also well scribed at Fair headquarters, u. lng and shipping the coal. Many companies hare built and maintain towns to house their employes. Depression, drouth; natural gas, fuel oil, hydroelectric competition and Increased efficiency in coal burning had cut Utati's coal production In half by 1934. Then an upturn was Indicated. Output for 1936 was about 3,150,000 tons, worth at the mines about $6,500,-00Of this, It la estimated, $4,000,000 was paid out in wages and salaries; $1,000,000 for equipment, supplies and power; $150,000 for taxes and royalties; $225,000 for compensation and other Insurance, and the remainder for miscellaneous expenses. The Industry aa a whole has not shown a profit or paid dividends in recent years. cents of the coal dollar, Sixty-twit Is computed, goes for payrolls; 15 cents to Utah business concerns for supplies and power; 7 cents for taxes and royalties and the rest for Insurance, maintenance, replacements and Interest. Miner, under a, union agreement, work 35 hours a week underground at wages ranging from $5.78 to The bulk of the $7.50 for 7 hours. coal sold Is slack, used for industrial purposes and domestic Markets are found in stokers. California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and, to a lesser extent, In Nebraska, Kansas and Alaska. About halt the tonnage is sold outside the state and brings money into Utah to apply on payrolls, supplies, freight and other local expenses. Coal mining and transportation is essentially a large volume, low-cooperation and it may be assumed that when Pacific Coaat consumption approaches that of the Atlantic seaboard Utah's tonnages and freight rates will approximate those on the East coast. Before fuel oil prices dropped, coal was taken by most western railroads and many ships on the West coast. Mines and smelters, public utilities, cement and beet eugar industries and packing plants are now large users. Known suppliea of petroleum, as measured In the life of a nation, are extremely limited. New wells are needed to maintain a supply ahead. Coal resources are sufficient for centuries. Low temperature carbonization of coal probably will supply the country with some petroleum substitutes. H ydrogenation of coal to gasoline has been successfully developed on a commercial scale. Because Utah coal is particularly suitable for such processes, its pos-- ' siir' 'ii s in this connection are most interesting. The future, with its di cliipment for processing vt !. may mainthat mineral ny ,ar :'- - t.mst important of the many three-fourth- Hotpoint PILOT HOT Exposition HERRES Vice President and Gen'l Manager United States Fuel Company who I KB B u: ' 4 and Mrs Luther dates spent Sunday at Goshen visiting with their sf'U, Mr.. Carlos C ates and family. say?' 1 ' 17, J. """'WBsMsiBsl U. S. Fuel Coal Tipple, Mr. jm ' 1 fr Address. Ruben Christensen, Agent 102-Pleasant Grove We call every Tuesday and Than. PHONE Jhn Winn enter-- ' tamed at their home New Years Day Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Smith, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Adams, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stine. Name l MADSEII CLEANING j dau,rh-- ! Jhn ike, u,re Ml - l his parent,, Curl f anther. a!"' worlds clean, constructive doings The Mnt.it.,, cot eiploit erlme or sensation; neither does it d"u corrective with them. Features for busy i&b "nd , jjjmlr. including the Weekly Magazine Section. It records for you the All Work Guaranteed n..w tn, L-t- SS?i. i-- t ft-- S |