Show THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINE- SUNDAY MORNING JUNE 26 1938 R WoT3SS3U F R'S D CRY TO ‘LIBERALS’ S' LONG DECLINE President Surprises U S In Outspoken Backing Of Candidates 4 t A i "X'W June '7' I A traFmck COUNT ISSUED June Mont paradise - '!' — ? v 1 -- - zero-conve- a f rting The Baptist Mission church was organized in 1883 and was located on Wilson lane in Weber county The first services were conducted in the home of Wilson M Barry by his daughter Jo sephine from 1883 to 1887 In 1887 a1 small frame building mile f was erected about of east the present sugar factory on property owned by a Mr Sewell Funds for the building were supplied by the Ladles society of Fremont temple Boston Mass The society also sent a missionary Miss Williams to conduct the mission Following Miss Williams Mrs Coffin conducted a day school and religion classes in the building until 1898 when they were discontinued The building belonging to this mission remained empty until 1903 when it was sold to the Margaret Taylor Memorial Sunday school Ninth Street Church The Ninth Street Baptist church was organized in 1891 and used a small frame building seating about 50 persons located in the 300 block on Ninth The Rev M M Lewis was the clergyman from 1891 to 1895 Regular services were discontinued in 1895 and the building was used as a Baptist Sunday school until 1898 with Miss Anna Oberg as superintendent when services of all kinds were discontinued Ensign Mission ’he Ensign mission was organized in 1922 by Rev C V Brant-iwho served until the organization was disbanded in 1925 Meetings were first held one-hal- Irisher Takes Oath As Erin Chieftain j 4 c DUBLIN June 25 (AP)— Dr former Douglas Hyde electunanimously college professor ed first president of Ireland took over hig $75000 a year post Satur day Twenty-on- e guns boomed in sa lute as Dr Hyde took the oath at a ceremony In great hall of Dublin castle and received from Chief Jua tice Timothy Sullivan the great sea of office - - V '''T® 9 Gfifi-mi- le PUBLISHER PASSES KANKAKEE 111 June 23 (AP)— Arthur B Holt 87 former newspaper publisher in Wisconsin and Illinois passed away at his home in Culver Ind Havana Cuba has a huge tree that grows In real soil The earth around it was obTan-Americ- w-cr- tained from every country in the western hemisphere e h Plain City in 1871 A large number of persons joined but the or- the ganization was discontinued same year when most of the members joined the Reorganized church Street Names Changed On December 19 1870 the Ogden city council adopted the following names to bemused for streets in Ogden commencing on the east side of the city: East Green Pearl Smith Spring Franklin and Main Young Wall and from First to Tenth streets from the south side of the city The present street names and numbers were adopted by the city council on April 5 1889 during the term of “Fred J Kies-e- l as mayor In this erics of articles on churches the present street names and numbers are used in all cases g an DEATH LURKS FOR EXPEDITION gry Colorado river roars defiance at man’s elforts to negotiate its torturous channel Death lurks in the 300 rapids over which the river churns Down this perilous stream are cardrifting three fragile craft four-meand women rying two who dare disaster for scientific exploration I ’eared By Natives They are following a course of tragedy that has been enacted in the mighty gorge since Maj n 4 jrv REFRIGERATOR ' ' ' 4 i ? r St Milwaukee the Chicago Paul and Pacific railroad said Saturday that 191 passengers had been aboard the speeding transcontinental train which crashed through a trestle into Custer creek Sunday Regan said 46 bodies had been recovered 39 of which were seven were known identified to be missing 51 survivors left on a special train Sunday night to continue their journey west and that 47 hospitalized at the time of the accident Of the difference between the 153 persons thus accounted for and the 193 announced to have been on the Olympian Regan were V t s''-- V 1 1 '"'' z' Jts w f it refrigeration Visit our display now See for yourself why the tide of preference is swinging to Ilotpoint Sizes and styles to fit every need and purse " 1 t rf It L f S - y L v - tf J Jl£ J y ‘At- 'r ' V s '7 ijS) erjoyi the Your ?hvt‘te liquid Oin y-- Tetrftl yliu OGDDi £376 Vt i vtjutit f - y ty now rt! Miidf Association “ 1153! on tUd SALT LAKE I fete! UuH £Uf Carpenter will conduct an Auction College at the Healy Hotel in Ogden starting July rth The Carpenter Auction School recognized nationally a one of the fluent achoola of lt kind Tull ion V B XV 1 ' x kr ' J 4 f I 4 - ' : h teyp-- tl y rt 't - - J" $ fr 4 ' ' gSG y tA ' ' 3 A ' ' s PS ' 7 try e 'X - ' y i 7 '’ J 04 x v Z y Z ' A v y Soon You'll b© off to a secluded spot in tHe mountains for a happy holiday or wherever fancy leads you A-outing over the Fourth t Is your car in l condition? station for Drive in at your neighborhood Pep co these important services and supplies: ‘I Tho Amazing New SPEED FREEZER Ilotpoint Speed fttntr powered by the Thriftmaster makes Ice and froten denert faster than ever at operating cost Keeps food safe andcrispy-fresin agently float- blanket of frosty air— air held SCHOSS-REA-D 310 Zlth Street Specialized Lubrication lot your comfort and safety Tires inspected repaired or replaced with new ones Lights Battery tested and serviced tested Fan belt and radiator checked Spark-plug- s tested and cleaned Crankcase drained and refilled with proper motor g grado of Vico tho tough d oil Tank filled with Pep 88 gasoline for maximum power and mileage SMALL DOWN PAYMENT INSTALLS YOUR HOTPOINT rtOW Balanct out of tarings on taty monthly terms exactly at the right temperature by anccd freezing control Speed Freezer is an exclusive Ilotpoint advance-in- g meat 5 years' performance protection bal-low- est long-lastin- climate-controlle- ELECTRIC CO OGDEN 333 21th Street Ld Our Trailer Store Save You Money STATIONS EVERYWHERE IN UTAH AN D n A 1 4 tic t e i - y Cs (FREE IBOOCSS h CONVEIIIEIIT VITIIDRAWAIS NOTICE Col ' AS'W ¥ AjfM 5- f e jS3r caused by yon were destroyed In the blaze for-suc-h ” S Vs & i 'I' 3 94 A --’"""’ll ' A e " r r old-fashion- of- old mine buildings in Buike can- p :y": St un- lightning An abandoned prospector’s cabin near Sunset peak and two anti-slee- ( s&Uo' TtAVj x v ' 88-Vi- Forest of-cou- 9 fir Iloipoint has created a new standard of values Now you can have a refrigerator that actuallyrcezes ice and desserts faster than ever before — keeps your food safe and fresh for weeks And thanks to a new principle of cooling the Yacuum Sealed Thriftmaster operates on a trickle of electricity— costs much less than I'' w 1 'y ‘ t vA Fires Controlled In Forest Areas 25— Cocur d’ non-sto- p p J II Regan divisional passenger and freight agent for June NEW YORK CITY June 25- -r O’Briefi the man of motion pictures is beginning to crack up He was In town for ten days not so long ago and no sooner had he left than an ugly rumor started During his stay it w'as whispered he had gone to bed twice Not for long to be sure but long enough to make It fairly certain that he had got some sleep This sort of thing outraged all precedents Never before had O’Brien slept W'hile on a visit to the city When he lived here he had more or less made It a habit to sleep a bit as a gesture to custom Since he went to Hollywood however ho had done away with such foolishness Like the sun on the British empire tho O’Brien ejes never sot on the metropolitan scene O’Brien never was known ns advocate but on an his visits here there always was something better to do Usually see a he came for a purpose--t- o of a This play fight a race accontinued for course called Before the scheduled tivity event it was foolish to go to bed when he could talk of what was to come After it was over it was impossible to go to sleep because he had to talk of what had happened and why O’Brien is an ideal man to be constructed along suclr lines It a man would be easy of a threat to become something out a a man who could room or even an entire clubhouse merely by removing his hat and sitting down O’Brien’s aappearances however call for crowd to collect lie is a grand story teller and has an apparently inexhaustible fund " (Copyright 1938 NYIIT Pat John Wessley Powell first explored the Colorado in I860 From ancient times the Colorado has instilled fear in men The Ilopt Indians believed it flowed into the underworld from which came their first ancestor Early explorers looked upon the dull red torrent in awe but none dared follow its winding gorge path into the mile-deeThe rapids and high flood waters are the major obstacles besetting the party now going down the rivch The stream's present volume is more than twice its normal The women members are Elza da Clover 40 and Lois Jotter 23 University of Michigan botanists Their companions arc Norman D Nevills Mexican Hat Utah guide Eugene Atkinson University of Michigan zoologist La Phene Harris of the If S geological survey and W C Gibbon San Francisco artist -(- UP)-— SPOKANE Wash (AP)— Eight fires in Alone national forest der control Saturday ficials said they were ' the oars 23 made no statement Observers pointed out that many slightly injured 'were treated in places other than the hospital and that still others could have left by means other than the "survivors' special" Sunday night h By rose from five feet above zero mark in 1831 to 75 apoye 1855 declined to 25 in I860 and 146 then rose to a high point of lowdecline in 1873 A gradual ered it to 11 feet below zero in 1905 It had returned to 67 above conby 1910 and remained fairly stant until 1925 No Use Worrying "There’s just no use in worrying about the future of Utah’s dead sea" observed Purton "After all our records on the water level extend back loss than 90 years— and that’s' not very long in the life of a lake" r oth- For that purpose he sharply though not by name at free speech suppression under Mayor Hague’s rule in Jersey City By contrast he hit out O--also at John L Lewis and C I F of L tactics In labor's jurisdictional warfare although again naming no names MILES CITY But Great Salt lake Is still such a dense solution of sodium chloride that swimmers bob about in it like cork With one part of salt to every three parts of water It’s still not a diver’s o GRAND CANYON Ariz June awesome 25— (AP)— In the struck depths of Grand canyon the an- er er and less briny Dimensions Change Salt lake sprawls on a saline basin through northern Utah almost from Salt Lake City to the Utah-Idahborder It’s dimensions change from year to year but it’s from 70 to 80 miles long I from 33 to 40 miles wide and f tf) covers some 1000000 acres i 1 4 For 10 years from 1923 to I ' dwint 1935 the tidelcss blue lake shalI dled each year becoming i i lower and more salty ' In 1923 the lake was 82 feet i above the arbitrary "zero mark" i1 j accepted as tho official gauge V Its salt content was from 16 to i ' 1 4 18 per cent J a' By 1935 the lake level had t ' W fallen to 31 feet below 4( several thousand ’ V i ' into salt marsh and salt acres f f desert — and saline content had 1 r-increased to 28 or 29 per cent ) Alarmists feared "Old Salty" -- v was drying up 4 Level Rose Three Feet But during the last three years said A B Purton district en"X ' h‘ gineer for the U S bureaulev-of Tiiii geological survey the lake Four men ami two women pushed untried el has risen almost throe feet CORGK BECKONS sojage It Is now only 4 of a foot be boat into the Green riser at Greenrher' Utah on a down the Colorado river through tho Grand canyon to Boulder dam agent and Upper: Don Harris left United States geological surveyLower: Lois of the leader Neville trip pilot etjM'dition Norman and botanists of Colver Michigan Elzada University and Jotter at student Eugene Atkinson University of Michigan zoological liberal supporters In other parProgresty ranks Republican or any " I Warning Attacked was coupled with the plain It that warning by the president election of "liberals" of any other party faith would be more welcome in New Deal eyes than return to power of Democrats openly hostile to or rendering obonly lip service to New Deal declarthe jectives This mademore signifiation a challenge cant than its relation to any particular primary contest In the light of that Roosevelt naspeech and of the probable ture of the many others he has arranged to deliver within the next three weeks the fighting for control of the Democratic more than party In 1910 was nohimself pre started Roosevelt diets although he deplores the And delivery of vicious blows even the obvious stake at issue if the president did not mention it Is his hope of the Democratic party into an to outright liberal party shaped so enforce New Deal political cial and economic philosophy Strikes At Tactics Roosevelt has In effect of the Demoout ter read sought cratic party at one sweep all opponents to liberalism as ho defines that term Again as In his acceptance speech at Chicago in 1912 he has reache dout to gather into the New Deal fold Farmer-Labo- r June 25— (AP)— America’s saltiest body of water after 10 "recession" years is becoming larger deepSALT LAKE CITY (f- tervene in Democratic primary contests wherever liberalism by 'New Deal standards was at stake came ns a surprise sive T y- 23 (AP) volt s rallying president Boose over the councry to ‘'Liberals"of party lines try regardless heralded another advance toward some form of party realignment by 1910 While the fighting character of the Friday night presidential chat with the "real rulers of this voters" was fully country-t- he expected the outspoken manner in which Roosevelt declated his inpurpose as party leader to ' At ' Part Salt - ss beEditor’s note: This is sixth in "There is every reason to the to return a series of Ogden church hislieve the lake may of years many tories being published in The old high marks f Standard-Examine- r In previous cycles the lake Hugh1 O’Neil ‘Big Drink Is Third A in rented quarters at 2468 Wall and later at 255 Twenty-fiftThe Gospel mission was organized in 1919 by the Rev R S Blakeman who served until 1920 when the organization was disbanded Meetings were held in a rented store building at 131 Twenty-fiftduring the life of the organization The Gospel City mission was organized in 1927 Ijy the Rev M J Bowersox who served until 1930 when the organization held disbanded Meetings at 138 Tw’enty-flftduring the life of the organization The Gospel Lighthouse was organized in 1930 by Mrs M C Vellinga Meetings were held at 2329 Kicsel until 1931 when the organization disbanded A branch of tjic Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was organized at 1870 by Baird and Mcin Lynne Cord missionaries In 1872 this organization was discontinued when all of the members moved to Council Bluffs Iowa Edwin Dlx Jonathan Moyes and George Musgrovo organized a branch of the Godbeites in h ed Still No Haven to Divers ? By KIrke L Simpson Associated Tress Staff WASHINGTON had "Irrigation maywithhave dethe do something to a Home In Wilson Lane Was that believe long cline but we and summers of Used As Place of dry period winters was chief- assertWorship ly responsible" Purton semi-snowle- HERALDS LIOVE 1883 CHURCH IN of about 24 per cent GROWING AFTER 1 X MISSION BRANCH low zero and has a salt content SALT LAKE IS ‘Raconteur’ French Word Describes Irish Pat O’Brien DAPTISTSDEGAN IDAHO rse J |