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Show T nrarTEtp. cache county, mn, Friday, march is. imt. PRESENT ' ifRS MANY is on of the ivjur regulationnd difficult ques- plketeJ tor consid- tint will come up legisla-li- n state numerous . month Immediately the declared W. Wherry SylM several municipalities action . against the JTsnd court fights have resulted," RheBT said. In some eases, tmRr wheels have been a and the traveling bungalow wood foundations on brick or claim, nation city .official the provis-th- e $a traielr under building code. Michigan, a judge Pontiac, rin must have at trailers 'nW that four hundred feet of usable apace and five hundred cubic 2paee for each occupant the Board of Health ; jn Detroit, to move off a trailers ordered V on tlle grounds hit puking were unsanitary M the trailers An investigation gohaaitfafuL J fire into (possible ..ordered been w, and other technical yi.Vof the building code. .jens L of Balm Beach iqha Town Council reatric-lia- a decreed stringent jfu has refused against trailers and of Jadority tor establishment L.a fmp. Parking of trailers in limited to one hour, (ha highly is (advanced in the was popoeal Tjjejdy . -- rl , f Legal Nolices Order of HOME ECONOMIST UTAH THRIVES ON TINTIC MINERAL DISCOVERIES PROBLEMS o iC-- D.vioed 'T? m&.r Qtwi 1 gives :;;nts for UGHTING ROOMS V' Gloom and glare shuulJ be ovCr-ain first lighting your house ctirrcctly, awarding to Mrs, Effia S. II iiTo-.vs- , Extension economist for the Utah S'r.'e Agricultural college in speaking uu correct liglitinj facilities for the home. Too much light i Jmt as lan a.--; nut enough illumination, Kc.vu-Ilm-owV, said. One eon see to read under one foot esndle of light E. DIEHL or in full ajjplight under the 10,-0Worsley. E. M. Beck. Moroni Bill- Grand Central, from which $I.1T5,-27solidated a profit of nearly so von foul ivmJlea available out ef and L. T. ingsley was taken. Whimey. TINTIC. a ren-g.million, most of which ha.i been CHIEF Neither extreme la to he John Q. Packard. John F. Wood-ma- reinvested In property and ImIndian, was i U s Other claim were staked end The ono foot oaiulle William Hatfield and John provements. . .West' Cisi billi'.MiHir.', ihouuii during the spring of 1S70 producae did not live to know it. He and tion started. McCrysial were among the early causes eye strain nmi extreme bright E. J. Raddatz, going miles east ore was Shlpplug his followers pitched their tepees expensive business. iicr.s produces great eye dlwomforts Teamsters arrival at the new camp whose of tha recognized mineral urea of on tha slope ol what is now Eureka charged per ton for hauling to ventures In unproven ground re- Tintic. aunk 900 feet and nnido tha unless particular care Is token to gulch, 55 r,:ilcs south of Salt l.nke the Southern Facific, the nearest sulted in the production of greet Tintic Standard one of the largest cUmiivi'.e glare by suitable shading. City, and (kthi.vj all the land lying railroad. Numerous attempts at wealth and the organization of silver-leashippers und biggest hem ecu I tub latte ami the desert local concentration were Twenty-fiv- e foot randies or light importa'it im.ipaulc. The of Utah. employers the made, to the west. Then, and lor ten first two being at Diamond formed by Wood:m dci'i.'.rc.l by some to be the More than 80 minerals have been and years after Timie s death In ls;.9, Hoiuansvllle In 1S71. More than 23 man and W. W. Chisholm, Is Identified at Tiuiie. In 65 practical HViiing goal, Mrs. Baryours, the claim was undisputed. Finally mills and furnaces were erected credited with the shipment of one to said. 'Pie international 1935, $343,544,997 was realized rows car of white men discovered mineral ou within the next few ore wor.h $200,000 and net comthe nonferrous iiici.uls. They n illumination has set five the land and a new form ot title plexity of the ores, years, hutof wa- earnings of more than $15,000,000. for included ounces 231,540.158 of foot candies as the minimum to lie canto into effect. ter and crudeness scarcity of equipment Nature, however, reserved some of silver, 850.000 tone of lend, 2,226, S3 8 her richest prize for later comers. ounce of used nit student's desks. Other au Slowly the mineral showings hampered their operation. gold, 110.000 tons of Several of the greatest mines of tV, trilie; claim thut 10 to 15 foot Were expanded. Demonstrations of tons of Reand 15,000 zinc. copper Tha failures were a foretaste of TIntic were developed in the turns for rich silver-leaand gold mines oc- difficulties to be cmdics mangun-.-n- , iron, give a mule illumination for bismuth, encountered It 'nineties and as late as 1915. curred periodically for sixty years, one form and cte liniLsionv, w.rk. efficient silica, antimony, another In subseJesse In bring the grand total valuo to bringing into existence villages, The must favorable type of lightyears sufficient to defeat all straitened Knight, elderly and towns and cities in place of tepees, quent circumstances, persisted about (400,000,000. but the and most deter- ia ing to he used is either dire at, and peopling the district with pro- mined of hardiest developing g location known as This money, on its travels, has the Ilia or lighting. Each s and clothed miners gressive white and and winners stand nut conspicuously In the "Humbug". After a heartbreak- fed smelter-mein a simple manner. obtained is hie drove he tunnel ing worker in place of the nomadic the homes struggle erected and history of the state. into a rich ore body. Provided with skyscrapers, Goshutes. endowed The d'rect plan nf lighting is libraries, Bamuel and William McIntyre funds, Knight opened mine after hospital and churches, financed A cowboy and a horse found the traded cattle for by overhead hanging, or a Interest mine in East Tintic. His new farming and roiinufacturlng indusfirst mineral. The animal's hoofs in a prospect called major that direct the light lamps the Mammoth. fortune was devoted to portable enterprises tries, supported trade, paid taxes, dislodged a specimen of ore and The mine is credited with a pro- which (the downward direction. The in only ot hundred men moves and employed it still tirelessly on, the rider, George Rust, took the duction of four million dollars and used are apaguo So as to and added to the lnduetrlea of repeating the cycle. piece home to Fayson. Although is even now paying dividends to Utah. He built amelt-ea e town and out II s hue worked Tinile rv'lect a fid not tnansmit light. InIt was winter, five of Rust's neigh- their grandchildren. John Beck, developed coal mines, financed ore. It must now depend direct lighting is accomplished (Tim bors went scouting and located the after losing ouo fortune, acquired factories and started a great tun- on deposit! lying 1000 to 2500 feet first claim the Sunbeam simul- by perservering labor the use uf inverted lsv.vla that trans-m- il on the Bub nel and Irrigation project at Tintic. deep, the Inrecovery of which tlie light upon the light colored taneously organizing a mining dismade another, lost It, Walter Fitch, coming from volves the trict, on December 13, 1869. The and died a poor man. CoL E. C. Michigan, solved a ceiling which reflects it through the geological prob- Intelligent claimants were S. Moore, Wil- Loose, by sinking a shaft lem brought a new area Into pro- ment and roam. The veiling must always be liam Harris, Joseph Hyde, 8. T. and spending $125,000, opened the duction and gave tha Chief Con ploration. in good shape for the sake of the ' . beauty of the effect, however, more ran lies of power is used in the 1 followers. t0 the ,rea,iin8r' rilin Seven- - indirect method than in the direct. cprl with 101 D fl EtUIMPflDTABJT'131 City of Washington to prohibit trail- I ftW I ( rithmetic occupation, while only 2C6, j is a combination girls have stated that limy The era from parking except lung enough the 310 of last yeara j wiH graluatc fiom the schoul of of diiect and indirect lighting thru to compared to had and unload hut Vnis ?us- - SAY COLLEGE COEDS which llic lamps uro placed in a aiktoy gave vo definite aim in life medicine, five in llie uvh.tul of law lmw h.i geatlsn met with strenuous ppposi- designed as to reflect some career is and four will enter the field of thit is as far as on the ceiling and some directly light : Dan Cupid takes a decided back concerned. fourth estate.. the ilwn.ml through the bowl. directly Other questims. Mh fixation. One hundred reven of live group ,n the livcs of nio.t of tll8 schooling of children, and so n coeds at one cf the universities in have a desire to enter into the are among the krr.tiy problems that Utah it was revealed here recent-hiv- e business world with 105 girl hoping to become expert in home been erected by tfie ' ever-- ! ly. women students who les .that is, on professional basil Out of growing ar.d peripatetic tr.tiler pop-- ; hive been emfr.rted, 455 wish to' Art ranks fourth in chosen car-ulition. r 7- If ' Mp j r. s 00 1 Jo i $- -5 d eeni-niisaii- iu In-dir- metal-seeker- semi-indire- ct mine-owner- s r, Proclamation OF THE BOARD OF OFFICE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, COUNTY OF CACHE. STATE OF UTAH, A. D. 1937. Uon-Bec- a 700-fo- n THE MATTER OF THE PETITION FOR THE . ORGANIZATION OF CACHE COUNTY DAIN-ibS- E IN DISTRICT NO. 8 ORDER OF PROCLAMATION UU'IU f.t tRlMrllll ty-nh- w Homi-indire- 1 -- Ihe petition having been heard ia the manner inquired by law, and the Commissioners having duly examined said petition, and having betid evidence concerning the same, aad considered all objections to the lame, it is ordered by the County Commissioners that the petition be, and the seme is hereby granted; and the County Commissioners further find that the work - proposed In said petition to he done will be useful for agricultural or sanitary to the owners of land purposes within said proposed district and tha also find Commissionen County that the persons who have signed mid lawful are of petition end are a majority age of the adult land owners, a .majority of tha land to be affected by each proposed work. The County .Commissionen further find that .the said drainage district to be known as dacha County Drainage District No. eight is duly established as provided by law. That the .boundaries of said district are hereby .established Be follows, to wR: Beginning at the .$quth West corner of Section 10, Township 14, North, Range one West Salt Lake Base and Meridian; thence, North W rds; thence East 16Q rods to the North and South center line f Section 10; thence. South along center line 40 rods; thence East 45lf rods; thence South 180 rods; thence .West CO rods to the North and South nter line of Section 10; thence South 80 rods along said center line to the South boundary of Section 10; fonce West along the South boundary of Section 10, 56 MS rods; thence South in Section 15, Town-hi14, North, Range one West, 100 tods; thence West 2.74 rods to tha Bast boundary of the Union IHwifk Railroad, formerly the Oregon Short Um Railroad, right of way; thence North 4 degrees 18 minutes West al ong East boundary .of the Union Pacific Railroad, formerly the Oregon Short Line rods; Railroad, 80.24 thence West 53 rods; thence North al g West side of Section 15, Township 14 North, Range one West, 20 red to palce of beginning, containing 403J acres more or less. The following named are to b hnown as the Board of Supervisors tor the terms set opposite tlieii near-surfac- - 't r C& REDDY KILOWATT nnADE rep-raenti- ng ounce: Manuel C. Nacgle uf Cornish, Utah tor the term of 8 yours, Melvin of Cornish, Utah for the tonn of 2 yean; Jack Pearce of Cranish, Utah, for the term of 1 proof SOURBONWHISKE OlSnatD AND BOTTlED Y OLD QUAKER COMPAQ Beddy Kilowatt i always at your service. He interpret , Attest J. Croekston, ' Wm. Worley A. W. Chambers L. C. Nielson, County Commlsswm'.C Bute of first publication, waft 1037. N. of last publication, W37. Adv. Interests. aim is to promote Mmvh 8, 1987 Bat also as a citizen whose interests are YOUR Clerk . our company not only as your most fcfrni and most economical servant, but Tear. N. Maren UWRENCEBUHa. INDIAN welfare In every possible community way. Schenleys Old Quaker brand 90 proof straight bourbon whiskey. Also available ia rye. Copyright 1937, The Old Quaker Co., Lawrenccburg, lad. -- |