Show THE OGDEN THURSDAY EVENING JANUARY 2 1936 Burial Rites Will ARMY BUILDING OFFICER VIEWS Liars Protest ABUNDANT ERA Take Place Friday BY CHEMISTRY ARSENAL TRACT J I t Yp $300-00- '''' 4 v site-Workm- en -- j -- CCC CONTINUES TERRACE WORK i Runoff Measuring Devices "' Installed In Several Canyons CCC Bountiful camp are continuing construction of terraces and installation of runoff measuring devices in several canyons north of Lime canyon on Lake highway near the Ogden-Sa- lt Salt Lake City despite the recent snows George Craddock of the forest and range exsaid today station periment Besides the CCC men engaged on the project f which is designed to check erosion and prevent washing one of debris on the highway is used tractor being large Craddock said a crew from the on a experiment station will leave 15 three-da- y to about trip January measure snow depths on the summits of parrish creek Fork creek and Farmington canyon above the Davis county flood and erosion control project 1 j MUSKOXONCE LIVED IN UTAH r— -- Skulls Found In Pit Give Promise of Other Fossrls PROVO Utah Jan 2—AP)— Dr " George L Hansen head of the geology department of Brigham Young university said musk oxen ranged the mountains in this local ity when downtown Salt Lake City was under 800 feet of water and - what is now Provo was submerged to a depth of over 450 feet He based his statement upon re cent finds of musk ox skulls in pravel pits near here Should Utah lake be diked into a smaller area Dr Hansen said he expects many more interesting fossils of musk oxen and their prehistoric com pan ions hairy mammoths camels and bison It is easy to tell a musk ox skull from that of the buffalo Dr Han sen explained "Musk ox horns turn down but buffalo horns turn up" he said -- j- Accidents Caused By Snow Conditions CONTEST HONO ANNIE K GREEN Funeral services for Mrs Annie Katherine Green 74 will be conducted Friday at one p m in the L D S Taylor ward chapel under the direction of Bishop Lawrence Mrs Evans" of the Sixth ward Green widow of Ammon Green Sr died of heart troubje Wednesday at the home of her only daughter Mrs Adam M Hunter in Taylor following a long illness Mrs Green was born in Burfus Sweden June 3 1861 a daughter of Peter and Katherine Abramson Mattson She came from Sweden to this country in 1869 settling in Weber county Mrs Green had however spent most of her life in Ogden and had lived at- - 2338 West court She was married to Joseph Harrop in 1879 He died several years ago She was married later j to Mr Green who died in 1910 She was active m the sixtn wara Renei society Surviving besides her daughter are seven grandchildren and two sisters and a brother Mrs Josephine and David Mattson Ogden and Mrs Sophia McFarland Rose St Anthony Idaho Friends may view the body this evening nad Friday until time of services at the Hunter home in Taylor Burial will be in Ogden city cemetery under direction of Lind-qui- st & Sons nd race INFLUENCES IN OTHER FIELDS Dr Clark said that not only agriculture but also the building in-- dustry transportation textile manumetal facturers fuel producers trades and medicine owe their greatest changes to chemistry The discoveries already made or on the point of being brought into practical use he said are such as are capable of revolutionizing the processes of modern life even more than has been done in the past "The fact is that our industrial system is based on the requirements of an age of scarcity" he said "We need a new system of distribution and social control Science has made it necessary and there will be a new outlook for science if we get it" He declared that chemistry has gone beyond the mere concoction of substitutes for natural products It is creating new products that are better than the originals NO LONGER SUBSTITUTES "We have got beyond calling our creations "leatherite' and 'subber-ol- d and 'artificial he said "We - are giving them names of their own they are not substitutes any ionger "Have we wrecked the farm? Perhaps we have Since the chemist turned to agricultural 20000000 fewer people are needed to feed the United States" As examples of the manner in Is which chemistry has displaced the labor of the farmer he cited: While-Worker1 Use of artificial compounds for s natural products In the production of indigo-blu- e 1600000 acres used to be used now none is grown and its former price indigo is 2 Pulp substitutes for textile maCAMBRIDGE O Jan 2— AP)— A Pennsylvania freight train arrived terials artificial wool cotton and late today because the crew stopped silk are better- - than the real and to untangle a dog from a wire fence cost less 3 Improvement of inferior prodthat had held it since Sunday while ucts cottonseed and other inferior 14 to below temperatures dropped oils are made into high-clafats zero The crew said they noticed a and oils 4 Use of cultivated raw materials beagle hound hanging by its hind alcohol for instance can be made legs Sunday but thought the animal from return dead On the waterglass or woodpulp for 16 trip however one of the men saw the: dog move cents a gallon a fraction of the The railroader's brought the dog price of the product made from here where a veterinarian fed and grains treated it The crew said they NEW PLANTS CREATED would adopt the animal "On the other hand" Dr Clark said "we have given the farmer fertilizers distilled from the air we have created new plants for him Fills Cars In and protected the old We have out what his plants eat and Boston Tube found given him the stuff to feed them with BOSTON —(UP) — Motorists pass"We have just recently discovering through Sumner Vehicle tun- ed the hormone of growth - There nel under Boston harbor were is no reason why the farmer now shocked recently should not grow chickens as big as el The shock was caused by pigs that will lay eggs as big as bodies of automobiles that act- footballs pigs the size of cows and ed as a Leyden jar in storing stat- cows the size of mastodons with no ic electricity Thus when the mo- more food than they use at prestorist touched 'the hand of the toll ent collector in passing a coin it com"The only place we haven't penepleted a circuit and both felt the trated yet is into government With shock all this connection of science with Now attendants have been inagriculture when the United States sulated with rubber-cole- d shoes farm board was formed all and there have been no more shock- cists chemists and biologistsphysiwere ' ing experiences excluded from it" —— Train this-and-tha- t'" Delayed Rescue Animal one-ten- th ss Static Harbor —- f Blaze Attributed To Woodmen Will Have 'Short' In Radio Wires Installation Tonight Pingree avenue and one driven H Peck ot Ogden collided W by near the mouth of Ogden canyon at three-twent- y! p ra Wednesday Nel son told police he saw Peck's car skid and that he stopped but Peck's car skidded into him Weather Cheated j one-sto- ry -- A 2922 car driven by Carl Nelson of SALT LAKE CITY Jan 2— (AP) — It Canada Wheat Shortage By Drouth neck-and-ne- ck WEBER STAKE MEET PLANNED Pictures of Holy Land Be Feature Sessions On Saturday and Sunday Quarterly conference of the L D S Weber stake will be held Sunday Jan 5 at 10 a m and 2 p m in the Ogden tabernacle with Presi dent George E Browning presid ing A representative of the general church authorities will be the prin- cipal speaker A stake priesthood meeting will be held Saturday at 7:30 p m in "the Eleventh ward chapel when pictures of Palestine taken during President Browning s trip to - the Holy Land will be shown Smith 16 school She was married to George W Hill on December 23 1913 in the Salt Lake temple and had since made her home in South Weber Mrs Hill was active in the Mutual Maige Ogdenr the only ones available are more ex- lrmave ones LAjnuauznion repon- ea Business is good in Washington L ii pnd a spirit of optimism seems to said prevail tins cast es SCIENCE TAKES CHARGE OF EGG YOLK COLORING A January thaw is soon due en If anything is "froze up Maxi- LE " Bloody Trail Leads To Idahoah's Arrest i ' two-cylin- der m er : i m Mr Lund was a member of the high priest quorum of the L D S North Weber stake and he directed the Plain City ward choir and the Sunday school choir for a numberof years Funeral services will be held Sunday at one p m in the Plain City L D S ward chapel Bishop George A Palmer will officiate Friends may call at the Lindquist & Sons' mortuary Friday from four to nine p m and at the family home in Plain City Saturday and also Sun-- " day until time for the service Burial will be in the Plain City ' cemetery —l 560 Fire Alarms Met By Department In '35 Ogden fire department answered calls during 1935 Just four less than the record year 1928 One reason for the large total during 1935 was prevalence of grass fires during summer months In July alone 188 grass fires were : listed 326 were answered durcalls Only ing 1934 an unusually low total as' compared with the 560 for 1935 The only deaths from fire in 1935 were two guests who died of burns received in the National hotel fire September :16 560 f — OMAHA CITY Jan 1— -- CAP) — Earl Herron Oklahoma A & M colcouldn't run fast lege to trousers He lost his enough keep a race with a burglar evidently a sprinter who made off with Her- ron's trousers and $6 Herron however was handicapped — wearing pajamas and no shoes half-rmile- r Winter having arrived ahead of schedule Russian scientists on Dickson island have been working against time 'to lay in food and fuel V er statistics peculiar to each branch of trade 111 'i l I River Becomes Pet jfsismmjKfM ' if " £ - KACKLEY Kan — UP)— A coon rescued from the Republican River flood last June by Thaine Mash does not care to return to the wild life The coon has become tame and follows Mash about his farm Mash locks up the coon at night for protection from dogs on his farm —— J FtD RS H ®(M SHOES GOON ( jf' IC $350 ba gs an '& gloves $500 bags an gloves """""" " j $235 $285 $385 Six months is i Pri sizes in styles SOME be S7ir R-2- 2 green stamps I fi ij mill m V —t jR?3tt£JW£&&KBtM- on till the next sale &reen stamps : top-fashi- that are so new they'll still ijg?J ! - - ' s i w i i i - months hence So if you've a hunch to get enough to last you 89c - sub- - stantial reduction in price That means all - t±—Z- but it's stock of these famous shoes takes a i dais evening bags and gloves 3 to wait from worth it At this time our entire regular I style t long time one Florsheim Sale to the next dexdalLe hosiery Reg $115 i ' j - - ' vive Special Meeting Set Loses Education Board Track Star Race With Burglar $295 bags an$ gloves m Shampoo Finger Wave V25c Brow Arch 15c & 2Se Brow Lash Dye SOe Electric Facials SOc Miss Johnson and all her pupils are now here OVER EGYPTIAN TIIEATKE Wyo George Whitesides IdaFalls Idaho and Vance White-sidho Yo-h- d and a 6now blow Endicott Wash Funeral services will be announced The baby wizard gizzard bluz-zar- d er blizzard brought 08 inch later by Lindquist & Sons —or about an Inch of precipitation snow — by seven a m His second wife and the follow- ing children survive: Mrs Annie Draney Wheeler Plain City Willard Pocatello Idaho Mrs Almlnda Johnson Plain City Hyrum E Lund Ogden and Marie and Arleen of Plain City Fifteen grandchildren and 25 great grandchildren also sur- Bags ahdGl oves — 2 j " 1917 SALE Continue WPA Funds f Improvement and Primary associations of the L D S church Surviving are her parents now living in Burley Idaho two daughters Kathleen Hill a- graduate of the U S A C now teaching in the Layton schools and Mary Hill of South Weber a son John W Hill of South Weber the following brothers and sisters: John W Myrl Burley IdaThe ski ? jumper has to be most and Reed Whitesides Saxon Mrs Katherine ho Burley level headed when completely up Evan-sto- n A Zona Mills Mrs Idaho i in the air ' urn V - And it was still snowing Trying to make up with snow for all the fair weather we've had But winter can't be too tough Willard Richard Lund 77 prom- toewt churciunan and f armer ol Plain City died Wednesday at p' m -following a long illness Mr Lund was bom in Barnholm Denmark June 2 1858 a son of Dedrick and Karen Lund who wer early converts to the L D S faith When Mr Lund was 13 his family came to this country and settled in Weber county where Mr Lund had since resided with the exception ol a brief time spent in Cache valley He was first married to Bertha Anderson in the Salt Lake temple Mrs Lund died December 3 1916 He was married to Anna Anderson sister-- of his first wife December 20 ! 1936 ) and DEAD ten-fifte- en two-thir- ty LIFE GUARD QUALIFIES AT 74 BLAIR Neb — (UP)— The oldest life guard in the middle west Jonas M Burcham 74 has received a 1919 renewal of his appointment as ex44 American Red aminer for th Poland is pushing its public works Cross lif saving service He is : credited with saving 93 persons program Apartments Scarce Expensive Ones Open t 17 both of started marriage license activity in Weber county for 1936 by Obtaining ft license from County Clerk Lawrence M Malan on New Year's day The application was dated today The couple obtained application No 29 of the new series started by the county clerk December 19 The new series was started when the numbers reached 10395 on December 18 The 10395 licenses had been issued since May 122 Atkinson : tain an apartment in Washington— Ramona W Hill 41 of South Weber widow of George W Hill died in an Ogden hospital this morning at o'clock of pneumonia after a brief illness Her death followed that of her husband by just a little over k year Mrs Hill was born In Laytpn December 7 1894 a daughter of John A and- Catherine Adams Whitesides pioneer residents of Davis county She was a graduate of Ogdea High ITHACA N Y — (UP) — Poul-trymnow are able to govern the mum temperature on New Year's shade of the yolk of an egg accordday was 40 degrees with 22 degrees ing to Professor Weaver of minimum last night At seven s m the New York State college of ag(stormy morning) the mercury said riculture Depending on what the 26 degrees and barometric pressure hen eats the professor said she 3015 i i can transfer different shades of yellow to the yolk Skies were clear one year ago By substituting white corn for with mercury readings 42 degrees yellow corn and limiting the maximum and 10 degrees minimum amount of green feed v the hen temperature tends " to produce eggs with light -- 7: j Yolkss with richer yellow yolks shades of yellow come from increasing the amount of yellow corn and green feed The yolk can be given a deep color orange-re- d according to Weaver by adding small amounts NAMPA Idaho Jan 2— (UP)— of pimento or chili pepper to the Police ran across a trail of blood regular feed of the hen leading tb the home of Russell Allen They followed it right into SCOPE DEFINITELY FIXED the kitchen of the house pulled and whatsoever with any agencies or open the? door ato an oven turfound nice brown therein bureaus outside that of the cenI By sus" Gosnell asserted "Informa- key Allem went to jaili The trail of tion gleaned from any individual to his door from the A special meeting of Weber county or group will not be used as a ba- blood led Produce company Campbell' of education will be held in board turkey sis for governmental regulation of will be asked to ex- the board offices Saturday morning Allen yards taxation" Jan 4 at ten o'clock it is announcFederal officials anticipate- - no plain why — ed by Superintendent Keith Wahl-qui- st difficulty in obtaining informaBUGGY" "EXPLOSION tion Representatives of leading Among business to come before NEWTON Iowa— (UP) —A 1907 American retail trade organizamanu- the body will be further discussion automobile tions already have conferred with a gymnasium-auditoriuaddition the census bureau and many of factured in a Waterloo Iowa plant of to Burch school Creek and erection L Has Fred been by their suggestions have been acceptpurchased North ' ed Maytag II grandson of the part- of an elementary structure in outlined the units Ogden remaining The auto firm estab- ner in the pioneer Approximately '5500000 in the PWA-Webcounty $300000 lishments will be covered The sur- "explosion buggy" as the car was building program was first when called it appeared vey will reveal the total number of businesses classified in detail the purchased from the estate of v an Poland expects a further increase who had used it until his number of employes salaries and owner thj-ein its building-boodeath ago years othpayrolls sales or receipts and New Year Granted to Youthful Couple Joy 77 vices Siinday e First License of - i — 4-4- To OTTAWA Ont — (UP) — Canada's 1935 wheat crop ravaged bv nw± drouth and frost is 2000000 bu shels lower than in 1934 the Dominion bureau of statistics' latest es NILES CENTER Til Jan 2 — timate reveals — Snow and freezing weather (AP) The bureau attributes the dwlirv —— r — — of Niles Center can't its cut deprive mainly to the ravacps rr frrct in to Illiallotted in WPA funds the Saskatchewan and Alberta a nois townsfolk The cir up put — 4 cus tent over a 500000 gallon reser AID SOCIETY TO MEET voir construction project put in The Children's Aid will mepf af electric — furnished stoves three o'clock Friday afternoon at so 50 lights and workmen could proceed Housing is one of the major uie dispensary problems in Washington D C according to Charles A Connaughton of the intermountain forest and range expeiment station who was Auto Repairing back in his office today after two SPECIAL 4 months in the "national capital duror A Night Day PERMANENTS v ' A V ing which he assisted in a special i FRANK B S3IITH land manageinvestigation ' of wild 1 Service Manager : ment Ph 247 OGDEN SCHOOL OF "It is practically impossible for BEAUTY CULTURE the man of ordinary means to ob1 commerce surveys In 1929 figures on retail and wholesale trade and the construction industry were recorded and in 1933 business services retail and wholesale trade were covered by field workers This will offer a convenient basis of comparison with which to chart recovery Gosnell said However he added the present census is the first complete survey of American business ever made by the government COMPLETE SURVEY PROMISED "This project will be just as complete as the federal census of population every 10 years" the chief statistician said "Our field workers will go into every city town was a race tpr the honor of being the first baly born in Salt Lake City in 193j6 and for the gifts to the infant ar d its parents offered by local bus -ness concerns On the record books Baby Mul-le- tt son of Mr and Mrs Arthur Mullett was designated the winner But handlers of Baby Sevy son pf Mr and Mrs J A Sevy have appealed from the decision ERROR IN TIME When the stork bringing Baby Mullett flapped his wings ovr Holy Cross hospital his backers clocked the time as 12:01 a m Bat a doctor and a nurse at the Sery home caught the historic bird is the nation" crossing the finish line at two sec- and hamlet in returns from the en Complete onds after midnight New Years tire country will be ready for the eve ' In reporting the time however public about July 1 and further the nurse gave it as two minutes tabulations will be released at latafter midnight and Baby Mullett er intervals For example one dewas acclaimed the winner Hence partment of commerce publication the appeal from the judges' decis will reveal business statistics of every city of more than 2500 populaion tion The project is being operated under a works progress administration appropriation of $8077000 It will provide "white collar" jobs for 26500 persons in all parts of the United States all-ste- Installation of officers will be held by Ogden camp No 74 Woodmen of the World tonight at eight o'clock The following will be installed: Philip J Hooper past consul commander George E Berry consul commander Alma I Wharton adviser lieutenant "T Clyde Gale banker William F Muller clerk Moroni E Brown escort Percy E Deeter watchman Daniel I Bates sentry John Hartog manager Following the Installation a buffet luncheon will be served by the social committee - Matter of Seconds Divides Birth Time of First 1936 Arrival tistician said Statistics which will be compiled at the national headquarters established here will be compared with previous department of AGED Ramona W Hill Passes Early Resident of Plain City Passes Funeral SerOne Year After Her j TOOsX BABES VJiLLARD LUND BY PNEUMONIA - Firemen were called out at two twenty-thre- e a m today to ext— I the first fire of 1936 tinguish Slippery pavements and poor yisi a Flames from short originating bility due to snow resulted in sev circuit in radio wires burned the accidents eral minor today and front room of a frame Wednesday police reported house at 101 West Binford street An automobile driven by Mack occupied by M Causee and owned Nelson of 2640 Washington avenue by the Ogden Union Railway & was in collision with an automobile Depot company firemen said and owned by W H Sackett of 536 scorched the wall paper and woodstreet at twelve forty work of other rooms in the house Twenty-thir- d — — five a m today at Twenty-sixt- h street and Washington avenue crushing the frent and rear fend Shows ers and the running boards of the two machines j ifCpnshine IN BUSINESS was challenged today "How can us amateurs compete 3000 Field Workers To with a professional who lies for a Cover Nation In Six-Mon- th a said living?" telegram signed by Survey Olaf Q Zeezark Scroee's Junction Kan Other were in the complaints VANCOUVER B C — (UP) — The same vein By JOHN F FKANKISn Jordan is a lecturer United Press Staff Correspondent chemist is gradually displacing the using the name "Fibber McGee" PHILADELPHIA — (UP)— The farmer in Canada and the United But Club President O C "You're States Dr Robert H Clark pro- Another" Hulett laughed them off federal census of business to chart fessor and head of the department progress toward recovery "There is no such thing as a pro- American of chemistry of the University of fessional with started the new year he averred "Lyitig liar' British Columbia believes 23000 of A field workers total is a labor of love" will conduct the Addressing the Vancouver instiwhich will survey Jordan's winning whopper tofd cover tute Dr Clark estimated that business establishment every a bothersome rat fewer agricultural workers how he trapped a of cheese under in the United States on which staby piece putting are needed today to produce the a thermometer during & cold snap tistics are not already collected by food consumed in the United States The went down so fast and government agencies before March because of the discovery of substi- so mercurythe that far rat was pinned to 31 tutes for natural products floor- he explained Scope of the census will include the We have embarked on an age busiretail and wholesale trade of plenty leaving behind one of ness service transportation conhe said "To chemistry scarcity' struction real estate development more than to any other factor do sale insurance and finance and we owe the changes that have ocTO AID BUSINESS curred in manufacturing and the a businessman's census and is "It employment ofn labor The chemical we are going to make it a valuany other has industry more-thato American business as posable raised the standard of living on this ' A Gosnell chief stasible" Fred continent and of the entire human i — -f - DEATH CAUSED 20-000- Mc-Farla- from workers CHARTS RISE CHICAGO Jan 3 — (AP)— The amateur standing of Jim Jordan tne uuriington Wis Liars club's 1935 champion liar of the world Industry Takes Credit For Raising World Standards Capt E M George Arrives d From Oklahoma To Direct Work Captain Edward M George In charge of construction of Ogden 0 arsenal being started with a WPA appropriation arrived in Ogden Wednesday night and today began a survey of the arsenal grounds He was accompanied on the inT spection tour by Captain Carroll H who has been chosen as ) - 'Deitrick commander of the arsenal during its reconstruction! Captain George was assigned to the task while on duty at Fort Sill Okla He has been in charge of construction on a number of large government projects Capt George called Upon Frank M Browning president of the Ogden chamber of icommerce today and they with Captain Deitrick visited the old Browning gun factory on Kiesel avenue Captain George expressed himself as pleased with the territory as an arsenal have started overhau- the ing the locomotives used on arsenal rails) A "shipment of ties arrived today and will be placed on the seven miles of line which ) serve the ammunition depot Ten thousand ties have fbeen or-- 1 dered at 30 cents each loc the track repairs according to R W Craven district administrator of He reported 25 men are PWA working at the arsenal WPA CENSUS About Champ HELD ASSURED 3 STANDARD-EXAMINE- R you'll not be sorry! ? |