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Show fins THE BULLETIN dl routes make WARLIKE HABITS OF it absolutely neces- sary that the forms of "The Bulletin be closed not later than Thursday Published by Commercial Printing Co. fctttttft BUTTERFLIES BARED South 11th East Salt Lake City, Utah. Copy Some Show No Hesitation in for news items, social and Attacking Birds. sport activities, must be in the office Phone copy for news items and not later than noon Wednesday, foj events of Interest to "The Bulletin publication in the following issue of or Commercial Printing Co. "The Bulletin." . Washington. Butterflies sra not pa- dflstn Boldness and pugnacity are mingled In siiecles whose habits hare been studied Intensively by Austin 1L Clark, Smithsonian Institution blolo-gist. Some of the smallest species are among the- - most Impetuous and war--! like. Thus, Mr. Clark observes, the llt-- l tie buckeye butterfly, common after midsummer In northeastern United States, will fearlessly attack wasps, large flies, and butterflies much j hoes, larger than Itself. They will assault any other Insect that passes within six or eight feet of them as they sit upon the ground. Involved In Constant Feuds. They are very quarrelsome among themselves," Mr. Clark saya. "There Is a constant feuil between them and the males of the pearl crescent butterfly, which swarm In mnlater spots along the roads. "Perhaps the most Interesting peculiarity of the buckeye Is Its Intense dislike for the common Carolina locust. If ont of these clumsy Insects Jumps up and takes to flight and there Is a male buckeye near, the latter at once gives chase, flying behind, or on either side of It, lint always keeping from two to four Inches sway. If the locust slights on the road, the butterfly slights simultaneously four or live Inches to one side and slowly waves Its wings In a menacing fashion. If the persecuted locust takes off again the butterfly Is after It once more. If locust pursued by a buckeye passes within 10 feet or so of another buckeye, the second will Join In the pursuit, and sometimes a third will join. "A Carolina locust pursued by i buckeye and trying to escape Is a sight j that may be witnessed a hundred I times s day wherever the two Insects are common. Pearl Crescent a Fighter. Another lighter, Mr. Clark finds. Is (he pearl crescent, one of the com-- j monest butterflies In weedy fields. It will dnrt viciously at larger greashop-pers, flies, bees, and .especially at the larger brown butterflies, against which ; It seems to maintain a special enmity. I Some common butterflies, Mr. Clark says, have no hesitation In attacking I birds. One of these Is the Camberwell 'benuty, which he describes as "bold, j pugnacious, and aggressive. When two meet they will often rise battling to a j In the height or 20 feet nr more, oicn It will dnrt viciously st the larger dragonflies that venture too near the ! willows on which It rests, and will also dart at the smaller birds, sending them to cover. The only other butterfly that attacks birds Is the common '"milk-wee- d butterfly, which nonnnlly : Is one of the most peaceful In disposition of all Its race. Between males of tills species there are only feeble, i d fights; but It entertains 'a special animosity for hummingbirds, "In spite of Its essentially - peace-- ! j ful disposition, Mr. Clark says, "It .Is not without courage, for.lt will at-- : tack most viciously a hummingbird so Incautious as to approach too near the j flower on which It Is feeding, always badly frightening the bird, which makes 'off In a straight line as fast as poa-- ! slble. . ! Hyland 364 ATTENTION Post Office distribution In the Ru ANNOUNCING ! away; Paris.' "Rain, rain, Thla come again another day! little nursery rhyme has lost Its neanlni to French holiday makers. For the French Nord railroad has guaranteed to protect trippers to Le from Freport and Boulogne-aur-Mc- r searain or pay the coat One-da- y shore excursionists get an automatic Insurance with tbelr tickets. If it rains more than three millimeters between the hours of 2:30 and 5:30 p. m., the Nord company will reimburse them the price of the ticket or give them a free pass fur another day. go a. m. 2044 Weather Guarantee by French Company '"The Bulletin circulation and die tribullon in this district is approx !mate three miles long by two mile ; wide. j Deseret Lumber Company -AT 2210 South 7th East Street Phone Hyland 2130 j COMMENTS UNCLE SAM CHECKS HEALTH In this day and age when statistics arc so necessary in planning for the future it is regrctablc that public health is one of the few subjects on which no figures are available. Of course the Census Bureau and Public Health Service have dependable and fairly recent data on how many children are born and how many persons die every year but this is not sufficient for the Public Health Service. It is to render full service to humanity it wants to know also how many never get sick? How many get sick and get well again? What is the cause? How much And many other things. In other words, it fime was lost? wants to know what the average health- is of the man, woman and child in the nation. Never before has there been a general health survey. The nearest thing to it was one conducted in a small Maryland city While these figures have been widely used they arc in 1933. not considered a representative of the United States at large since it is not known just how far local conditions might affect In order to get statistics indicative of the nation as a them. whole the Public Health Service is spending $3,4(X), (XX) for employment of some 6,000 trained workers to conduct a health sur-vc- y in 19 'states on a basis. . house-to-hou- . se . "Getting out a weekly paper is no picnic. If we print jokes folks say we are silly. If we dont they say we are too serious. If we publish original stuff they say we lack variety. If w'e clip from other papers they .say we are,too lazy to write. If we stay If we hunt in the office we ought to be out hunting up news. in office. business we If we arc the to not tending ui news, If we wear new ones, theyre wear old clothes, were stingy. not paid for.. Like as not, some one will say we swiped this We did. article from another newspaper. ' BROTHERS TAKE OVER rear of the home of L. Foreman, Lake street, waa damaged to the extent of $150 by fire Tuesday at 12:50 p. m., firemen reported. Alfred and Howard Beat have re- Hot ashes caused the blaze, which cently taken over the new Utah Oil waa extinguished by three companat Twenty-firService Station ies of firemen directed by Assistant Couth and McClelland atreeta. Chief W. J. Hancock. The Beat brothers will give their patrona the very beat of service with REQUESTS THE EXPANSION Lpmost courtesy. OF METROPOLITAN AREA SERVICE STATION 1963 ! st NEW MARKET OPENS IN SUOARIIOUSE Inclusion of a tract north th Attention people of the southeast! A fruit, vegetable and meat market it opening at the old Hyland Market in Sugarhouae at 2186 Highland Drive. Fruits and vegetables are being hauled In trucks direct from Loa Angeles and Idaho by Jim Bratt, therefore giving a direct connection and assuring fresh merchandise at SOUTHEAST BOY WINS PHOTOGRAPHY HONORS a cheaper price. Mr. Bratt la an merexperienced fruit and vegetable chant with over four years experA photograph submitted for John ' ience. f M. Matsen Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Visit the new market and get John M. Matsen of 1990 McClelland The beat the market acquainted. street, won first for him among affords awaits your inspection s Salt Lake City entrants in the national photograph contest, it was learned the fore part of the MEAT SPECIALIST OPENS Fourteen others from here WITH NEW MARKET week. received honorable mention. Photographs entered by Salt Lake A meat apedallst opens In conneccontestants were reported by City tion with the new Hyland Market, the Judges as the most outat&nd 2186 Highland Drive with the pering" offered since the contest's sonal Jack Hutchinson and Sons. Mr! Hutchinson's meat loaves and special meats are sold In many PILOT AWARDED MEDAL store. new are at their FOR ACTS OF BRAVERY They featuring market pork sausage, 'Dellcha" moat, sandwich loaves which they One of seven similarly honored by are the sole manufacturers of. the president, Roy IL Warner UnitThe "Dellcha" spice special and Air Lines Pilot flying from Salt ed luncheon meat are the talk of the to Portland, Ore., TuesLake break-lasCity t, town. It can be fried for served with eggs, a real sand- day received a medal from .Presicourwich meat for lunch, can be baked dent Franklin D. Roosevelt for herosim. and age tot dinners, has a flavor of a deliThe. award was made to Filot cious spiced ham when baked in the Warner for his bravery in saving at Items You can these oven. buy wholesale prices. It will pay you the mall from a burning plane at to visit our New Market before' you the risk of his life, August 22, 1930 He was flying for Varney Air Lines buy your meats. Our motto "Quality at that time. and Price." 4 child-.-en- e STUDY NEW POLICY School officers, faculty members, JOHN TAYLOR DESCENDANTS CELEBRATE BIRTH ANNIVERSARY representative students and Ushers' club; members held a symposium The birthday anniversary of John Tuesday In the East High social room to evolve a more stringent as- Taylor, late president of the L. D. S. church, will be celebrated by desembly policy. scendants at the Lion House social center Friday. ''The entertainment., OlMAGEiAKD CHICKEN COOT BY DAMAGED FIRE is In charge of John T. Harrington, a Mrs. S. Y. Taylor and Virginia Taylor. chicken the coop iq Asjfrragal aqd . ) of . i i South street between Twentieth East and Twenty-thir- d East streets In the Salt Lake City metropolitan area waa asked of the city commission Tuesday by Harold F. Beck, 616 Harmony court, and other owners of the land. The request was referred to the streets department. Twenty-seven- BITS OF FRANCE IN ABSOLUTELY You will find a complete line of building materials at our Store and Yards. is CLEAN Every last bit cf this stock of Merchandise iuid NEW. ; half-hearte- . j ' Woman Heads Bureau of Criminal Identification Indianapolis. A comely, thlrty-two- -. year-ol- d blond, the first woman ever j to head s state police bureau of crim-- , Inal Identification, lifted her eyes from ; a microscope and smilingly remarked that the field In criminal identification work Is unlimited for women She is Marie Grott, who aided in Identifying John Dllllnger, late un-- 1 d lamented outlaw, when he was with members of his gang at Tucson. Aria, In 1933. Beaming with delight over her appointment, Miss Grott smoothed her ; flaxen locks and surveyed the huge steel cabinets which contain 140,000 fingerprints and Bertlllon records. She was engaged In classifying additional J cap-;ture- ' prints. Just beyond the massive flies snt 'two young men and a stenographer, the only other member of the depart- ment now undergoing revision In a Both men, far more experienced In years, are openly proud of their new chief. Miss Grott started In the department as a rlcrk live years ago. state police shakeup. Deg Keeps Greve Vigil A dog which followed family to the cemetery here for memorial services remained behind ami vigil at the grate of kept a flre-d.i- y his former master. Tiffin, Ohio. Seek Potato Bugs That Prefer Canada Thistle Kenton, Ohio. Specimens of s unique type of potato bug, prevalent In Hancock county, were sought by llardin county farmers following culation of general report that farmers of the Blanchard county need no longer fear the spread of Canada thistle. The potato bugs In that section have abandoned luscious potato vines to browse on the less desirable Canada thistle. To date Hancock county farmers have failed to give explanations as to methods used to prodace this unusual aid to agriculture. dr .... AMERICA RECALLED Strong Influence Seen in merous Names. Nu- v SEE FOR YOURSELF In celebrating Its biWashington. centennial recently, Sulnte Genevieve, Mo., calls attention to the strong Influence the French have exercised In the United States, particularly In the Mississippi valley, says the National From the Great Geographic society. I.sites to the Gulf of Mexico, the region on each side of the Mississippi Is sprinkled with French names. Towns, rivers, lakes, and forts hear the appellations of French saints, of French, monarch. or early fur traders. In the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries, when French towns were, strung like beads along the banks of. the Sr. Lawrence, the woods of south-- ! eastern Canada swarmed with coureurs. ' de bola. These were fur trappers try- ing to make fortunes by shipping furs' back to France to be made Into the; muffs, capes, and beaver hats demand-- : ! court. ed by s luxury-lovin- g coureurs! end thwe daring, "Ilnrdy de bnls adopted the hnhlts of Indians, j setting their traps in frozen solitudes., paddling down stream and lake to new : hunting grounds, enrrying their hlrch bark canoes or dugnuts, overland from , j headwater to headwater. Fur Tradsrs Corns. WANTED! 100 CHILDREN TO TAKE PART IN A BIG CHRISTMAS SHOW TO BE STAGED BY FREB0VA DANCE STUDIOS 967 East 21st South - REGISTER Saturday, November 2 at 10:00 A. M. Monday, Novmber 4 from 1:00 P. SL Wednesday, November 6 from 1:00 P. XL 6:00 P. XL ALL TYPES OF DANCING TAUGHT. Phone Hyland 5111-"UTAHS FOREMOST STUDIOS OF THE DANCE" BABY CLASSES A SPECIALITY W SCHOOL STUDIES ! "The fur traders went up the St.; Lawrence and westward through the! Great Lakes; they poured southward by hundreds into what are now Mich-- ; Igan, Wisconsin, and Illinois. Frequently accompanying the fnr traders, or exploring the wilderness' Jes-- : alone were groups of black-robetilts, bent on Christianizing the ns-- ; lives. "After Joliet and Marquette and Laj Salle explored the Mississippi valley,.' traders In canoes and boats traveled down the Mississippi, es--' tabllshlng on Its banks trading posts over which flew the banner of the fleur-de-li- 1:00 P. SL 6:00 P. XL ARE HARD ON EYES, BUT THEY' NEEDN'T BE. TWENTY OUT OF EVER HUNDRED SCHOOL CHILDREN HAVE WEAKTHAT'S THE TOLL THAT . ENED EYESIGHT. EYE-STRAI- N TAKES. Only an examination by a qualified Optometrist can reassure you and enable you to take corrective measures if they are needed. DR. W. H. LANDMESSER 1090 East 21st South Optometrist Hyland 7749 s. "The Mississippi valley not only received fur traders and Jesuits from the North, but In the South It drew from France, exiled Acadinns from Nova Scotia, and refugees from the French West Indies. These found ed New Orleans, naming It after the Duke of Orleans. French names, such as the Rue dee Bone Enfants, and French customs are still so prevalent In the city that It has frequently been called the Tarts of America.' "As early French settlers roamed up and down the Mississippi valley, even venturing as far afield as what Is now Pennsylvania and North Dakota, they left behind a scattered trail of unmet that tell the story of their travels, beliefs, and their dealings with In- Exclusive Inexpensive act-tle- rs diana Many French Namea ."In Missouri where one finds Snlnte Genevieve, one also finds St. Ixtula first established as a French fur trad-l- g post, and still a fur center of Importance. Des Moines and Dubuque, Iowa; La Salle, 111.; EaO Claire, Wia, all show French Influence. Idaho claims Boise and Coeur d'Alene, 'heart of an awl,' fhe epithet which French traders applied to shrewd Indians of that region. Marquette, Mich., Is named In honor of the famous Jesuit explorer who tried to Christianize the Indians of that section. Detroit stands on the bank of a strait, the French name for which is 'Detroit. "Terre Haute and Vincennes are found In Indiana; I'lerre end Rousseau In South Dakota. Minnesota has Cloquet, Duluth, and SL Charles. an orig"Around Pittsburgh, I inal French settlement called Fort Duqnesne, are many French names, among which are Versailles, Du Hois, and the city of Duquesne. Near Erie is Presque Isle. Three Pennsylvania counties Fayette, Dauphin, and Lure rue bear the names of French noblemen. "Central Kentucky Is sprinkled with French names: Tarls, Versailles, and La Grange. "Louisville, Ky.. though bearing a French name, was not settled by French but by English colonists, who named It In honor of Louis XVI for his help In the Revolution. Louisiana, however, whs christened In honor of Louis XIV by La 8alle. One of the earliest French settlements In that state Is Baton Rouge, meaning 'red baton or stick. Tradition Make Prince Pay $5 Rent on Riviera Golfe Juan, French Riviera. The prince of Wales pnld only $5 e month rental for the sumptuous villa "Le Roc" where he spent his summer holiday. Christmas Cards H Imprinted in Gold, Silver or Bronze ORDER NOW Have the Best Selection See Us For Your Holiday Stationery Colorful Commercial I Letterheads Folders Calendars Blotters Art Greetings, j COME IN AND ASK TO SEE SAMPLES YOU WILL NOT BE OBLIGATED IN ANY WAY. CALL AT THE' SOUTHEAST PRINTING CO. (Formerly H 2034 South :: 1 The Herald Press) 1th East 2044 South II th East k " Sugarhouse Hyland 364 Vote For for City Commissioner The Man who has kept his word in politics City Election -- Tuesday, Nov. 5th i |