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Show "TOE BpiETlX" Published at Commercial Printing1 Co. 2044 WEATHER FORECAST Fair tonight and Saturday, little change in temperature. Southllth East Hyland S64 PUBLISHED IX SUGARHOUSfi VOLUME 4 HOME EDITION GIRLS GOLD SEARCH STIRS PROSPECTORS i SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, NOVEMBER 27. 1936 ROMANCE AT LAST COMES TO HITLER ! I Nevada City, Calif. The treasure hunt conducted in this mountain d country by Jean K lister of San Francisco has set old prospectors tongues wagging all along the Mother Lode on a subject of which they never lire lost bonanzas and hidden treasure. The objective of young Miss Kus-tis a spot pointed our to her several years ago by her grandfather, Jefferson A. Casserly, a miner who died last month and named her his heir. i Gold Nngget Legacy. i "Remember this spot, child, it .will make you rich," Casserly was quoted as saying. And in support of his promise, he left a legacy in his strongbox for Jean a single gold nugget worth $5,000. j . But whatever the girl may uncover at the mysterious site can be no more dazzling or romantic than the other lost caches of gold with which legend so liberally endows the Southwest. Several hundred miles south of Nevada City, another woman treasure hunter, Rose White, pursued a long and fruitless quest for the lost Padre mine. She received the i secret from E. H. (Doc) Bragg, a friend of her fathers, as be lay dying. Bragg claimed to have ' bought the mine from Indians and to have taken out $300,000 in gold before he was driven away by an sixteen-year-ol- er I : ! l ! 'early-da- racketeer, y More widely known is the Brey-fog- le mine, on the rim of Death valley. Breyfogle, sole survivor of a prospecting party that tried to cross the valley in 1CS2, found the lode while wandering about by thirst. The ore samples he carried back to civilization made mining men gasp. Although he made several trips back to the valley he never could get his correct bearings. Many parties have searched for Breyfogles mine. . Famous Gunsight Mine. ..... In the same region is the mine. A man straying from an emigrant train broke off a piece of rock to hammer his gunsight into position and was astonished to find the rock almost pure silver. .He kept his secret to himself for the time being and stayed with the party. Later he was unable to find his way back to the vein. There is said to be a treasure of Mexican gold and jewels buried near the summit of Cahuenga pass, a heavily traveled thoroughfare to Los Angeles. It had been sent to this country from Mazatlan to buy munitions for the revolt against The Maximilian, and was stolen. authority for this legend is Major Horace Bell, a Los Angeles pioneer. half-craz- ed gun-sig- ht HEADS LADIES G. A. R. Visitors to Adolf Hit- Munich. Bavarian Alps say there is a new joyousness in the general atmosphere of the Fuehrer's summer White House. Some attribute this to the influence of charming Countess Maedi von Castell, who has been Hitler's personal guest on frequent occasions in the lest year. The importance of Countess Maedi in Hitler's social life also is evidenced by the assertion of visitors to his Bavarian home that the counteas occupies one of the thirteen villas around Hitlers Berghof which were bought as homes and offices for his staff and his guests. Countess Maedi is in her early thirties. She was bom Countess von Schaumburg. Her first marriage proved unhappy. She obtained a divorce but was compelled to leave her child in the custody of her husband. She then married the dashing flyer. Count Castell, who is rarely in Berlin or Germany because he flies for the Lufthansa lines in China. The countess, who is quite has an estate in Silesia and for some time had a small flat in Munich. She met the Fuehrer through the sister of her flying husband, Princess Schaumburg-LippPrince Schaumburg - Lippe is one of the numerous aids of Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels who, with his wife, attempts to bring the most beautiful women of Germany into official Nazi society. Magda Goebbels herself is a woman of such striking beauty that she docs not hesitate to invite other beautiful women to her numerous brilliant parties. The eagerness with which the Fuehrer of Germany seeks the company of Countess Castell has started the rumor in Nazi circles that for the first time in years a womans influence can be felt in the life of the Fuehrer. well-to-d- o, e. Australia Lets Down r Barriers to Immigrants The depression has Canberra. been sufficiently overcome in Australia to permit lowering of barriers that were raised originally to prevent too great an influx of alien job seekers. According to official sources both economic conditions and employment on the island are normal. With the lowering of the temporary banders that had been raised, aU aliens who desire to enter the island for permanent residence will be permitted to do so when the necessary permit is obtained. Under the classifications governing the latter, preference will be accorded dependent relatives of persons already residing in Australia subject to a satisfactory guarantee of maintenance from the latter; other aliens nominated and guaranteed by persons in Australia and who have assured work or $250 landing money; aliens without guarantors in Australia who will engage in trades and occupations and who have lauding money. 00 Alaskan Pelts Are Up 15 Per Cent Over Year Ago St. Louis. More than 20,000 pelts, mostly Alaskan seal, representing the entire seasonal catch of hunters in Alaskan island preserves, sold here at prices from 15 to 20 per cent higher than a year ago. ' . The auctions are held by the Fouke Fur company under supervision of the United States government. Receipts from the fall sale totaled $610,310. Seal skins brought an average price of $30. Fox Skins brought about $25 each. Three sea otter skins, confiscated from hunters who had violated the closed season, brought prices ranging from $8.50 to $125. Seventy per cent of the receipts of the Bale goes to the federal government. The balance is divided equally between Canada and Japan. .' semi-annuall- NU-ENAM- EL PAINTS SOLD EXCLUSIVELY DY APEX ELECTRIC 1073 East 21st South ; la Sugarhoiise Ily. 1738 :: ler's summer headquarters in the $1,-0- " Two-Yar- d y Shirt Tails Evade Singapore Duty Singapore. How long should the tail of a shirt be? That is worrying customs authorities here. The shirts in a shipment on arrival here were found to have tails two yards long. After some discussion the shirts were allowed to enter the colony, but an official inquiry is to be made into the maximum reasonable length of a shirt tail. Japanese exporters have been making double - size garments to evade the quota applied to textile imports,' according to Singapore merchants. After the garments are landed they are taken to pieces and gold by the yard,- . f LOCALS v Life of Fuehrer. . Mrs. Frances M. Kuhns, former Greensburg, Pa., resident and superintendent of the ladies G. A. R. home in Swissdalc, Pa., who is the new national president of the Daughters of the Grand Army of the Republic. She was elected at the organization's convention in Washington. New Liskeard, Ont Wallace McGirr, Ilaileybury police chief, his has been given another job thirtieth. He was holding down 29 different positions when the Town Council decided he didn't have enough to do and appointed him weed inspector. Number 47. German Seagoing Automobile Womans Influence Now Felt in Old Stories of Lost Mines Revived in California. N i himi . - FOREST P.-NOTES T. evening, December 4 In the ward recreation hall. Murray Snow's Old Mill orchestra will furnish music for A. Mrs. Lawrence R. Giles A meeting of the Forest P.- - T. A. NovCouncil will be held Monday, ember SO, at 2:30 In tbe lunch room of tbe building. Mrs. George F. Bol-t- o, president, urgently requests that all council members be in attendance The very latest in automobile design, a German seagoing automobile, plunges into the Gruenwald sea for a trial run. It is capable of a speed of 100 kilometers an hour on land, and 20 kilometers an hour in the water. WOMEN OWN BULK OF Townsend Club No. 4 A pail of Townsend club No. 4 met with Jim Morrow, 2 Highland Drive, Tuesday evening. A good Tclal Wealth of 23 Estimat- speaker the gathering. The club will meet with Mrs,. ed at 210 Billions. Emi, 1045 East seventh East, TuesNew York. That the great day, December 1, at 7:30 p. mp. financial combine is United States not a group of mighty industrialists ELDER WENDELL ASHTON or Wall Street magnates, but a vaet RETURNS FROM MISSION framework of comfortably off, Elder Wendell Ashton, son of and really rich widows" is the Mrs. M. O. Ashton of conclusion drawn by Fortune Mag- president and 'returned home last Stake, azine in an intimate study of the Hyland twenty-thre- e richest United States Saturday from a three year mission women. in England for the L.JD. S. church. Seventy per cent of the countrys On arriving in New York, Mr. Ashentire private wealth, or the "sky- ton was met by his parents and Mrs. shooting sum of $210,009,000,030," is Markus Jensen, his slaters Alton the estimate of the golden flood While in New York they andElenor. that has streamed into the hands "not of the oligarchy, but of a were entehtained by Abe Jenkins while seeing the sights.. Elder Fred-ri- c matriarchy," Fortune declares. Glade also returned on the same to That this transfer of the keys the greatest private coffers does not with Mr. Ashton. indicate any supremacy of women over men in earning power is ex- ELDER GLADE RETURNS plained by the magazine on the RETURNS FROM MISSION grounds that the overwhelming Elder Fredrick Glade of Highland of been billions women's has part Park ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl left to them." In analyzing its. selection .of the J. Glade, returned Saturday from twenty-thre- e weightiest members England where he served as "misof this matriarchy, the Fortune sionary for the L. D. S. church. Mr article shows that these huge for- Glade was met in New York by his tunes "derived from two sources. About half were made in finance parents. Who accompolned him home Bnd basic industries. About half in merchandise sold over the counter, Mrs. Ltosweil Milter, with motorcars remaining for transMrs. Alexander Hamilton Rica, Mrs. Hugh Dillmen, portation from one to the other. The first type (banking and basic Mrs. Alfred George Wilson, Mrs. Dodge Sloane, industries), is older than the second and, as would be likely, of more Mrs. John T. Dorrance, olid social background. Mrs. Edward V. Hartford, Mrs. Vadim Makar off, Only one of the twenty three Mra. W. B. Reilly, is of article the subjects wealthy Mrs. Joseph E. Davies, credited with occupying her posiMrs. Charles E. F. McCann, tion because a woman took a hand Mrs. James Donahue, in founding her own wealth. She is Countess Mrs. Matthew As tor Wilks, daughter Mrs. Charles H. Babcock, of Americas only great woman Mrs. James H. R. Cromwell, fortune builder, the sensation of anMrs. Duke Biddle. other age: Hetty Green. The other twenty-tw- o constitute the . richest In the course of the revealing United States women today "not bebiographies of each of these heircause they amassed fortune! themesses, the magazine outlines the selves but because they were the various sources of the immense forwives and daughters, heirs and astunes that have gravitated into twenty-thre- e signs of some of the nation's richest pairs of hands. They, men. range through banking, Wall Street,' Standard Oil, steel, traction inter$25,060,009 the Smallest. ests, the Dodge 'motor car earnings twenty-tThe minimum riches of the and those of Campbell soups; two who form the basis of the great chain store systems, the A Fortune article is placed at & P. and the Woolworth stores; breakfast and other food products "On the basis of certain key qualwhich contribute to the Post fortune; ifications and characteristics, women "tend to and the Reynolds and Duke tobacco these twenty-thre- e , split up into smaller groups. They industries. .are not "one obvious type, although they are "not so many unrelated Man r the Eye Injury Keeps and distinctive personalities, Year and Half article states. Hungry ' "Fourteen are in social registers, Fitchburg, .Mass. Ernest Eaton !nine are not. Just about fourteen settled down to eating his first real meal in a year and a half the other (not by any means the social register fourteen) go in heavily for day.-- . 'A year ago he fell on some ice and s;s:etyw about nine avoid it. Half shattered his glasses. A piece of the bf ine women take little or no interest in handling their affairs, half lens about a quarter of an inch long take an active interest. . . . Eight lodged in his face below his left eye, of the women are young, eleven are causing jaw. pains which prevented middle-agefour are old. ' Besides him from eating solids. A short time ago the glass dropped those who manage their estates, one out. The pains disappeared and he woman is a sculptor, one has a bookshop, two are proprietors of racing has resumed normal eating. stables. None of the women is strik- Steal Railroad's Middle ingly active in politics, very few are active hi religion, but better than a Leaving Only Two Ends half take an interest in philBecause of some Washington. anthropy." mysterious and backbreaking skullA footnote explains that "certain duggery in the dead of night on women are potentially wealthier Hannah street, the interstate comthan" some of those "who are con- merce commission authorized the sidered" in the article; "but they Pittsburgh & Susquehanna railroad have not yet come into their monto go out of business. It cites Josephine Ford and ey. The embarrassing truth is that Ailsa Mellon Bruce as examples. somebody stole a couple of blocks of the railroad, leaving it with two Raster of the Rich. ends, but no middle. Walter N. Todd, e twenty-threFortunes roster of the of the P. & S., has a pretty "richest United States wom- receiver who ruined his railroad, idea good en reads as follows: but hes not telling. Nobody much tor As Mrs. Matthew Wilks, rode on it, anyway. One night, when ' Mrs'. Payne Whitney, Receiver Todd was looking the other : Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, way, mysterious marauders ripped Mrs. Charles Shipman Payson, up all the rails of the P. &. S. on Mrs. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Hannah street. They also dug up all Mrs. Moses Taylor, tlv2 tics. Mrs. Andrew Carnegie,4 PRIVATE FORTUNES well-to-d- o, . . -- Haugwitz-Reventlo- hree $25,-000,0- . d, w, Tbe Forest school library has been enlarged lately by the addition of seventeen volumns of books given to the school by the Parent- - Teachers Association. Five volumns of Adams' United History, for use In the sixth and seventh grades, are included. For the following ten years the author, James Truslow Adams, will each year write a history of the proceeding year, which will be sent to the school library and hound Into the last volumn of the set, keeping the set up to date. Will James' stories for children were also added to the library shelves; these books are Smoky, Sand, Big Enough and Lone Cowboy. The P.- - T. A. Shelf, a part of the library, was increased by tbe complete works of John Galsworthy eminent English writer. Seven of Calwortb'ys plays and novels make up the set. The Parent teacher magizlne, a monthly publication , was also added to the r.- - T. A. Shelf. Over three thousand hooka arc now available for the Forest pupils to read, both for study and pleasure. The most complete and set of reference books obtainable, the WorldBook Encylopedla of twenty .volumes, was presented to the A librarylast year by the P.-AU grades, from tbe third to the seventh, enjoy the useof the library, the third grade having the privilege of a library period once a week and the other grades twice a week. Miss Lucilla Gallyer is in charge of the library work. During the weekly third grade library period Mlsa Gallyer reads to the and the Weekly Reader, a email folk current events paper, is stud' led. One period of the four higher grades' library work is devoted to study of more advanced issues of the Weekly Reader, and to discussion cf events of the day. During the second library period the pupils may make their own reading selectthe supervision of ions, under Miss Gallyer. Tbe purpose of guidance and direction in the choosing of reading matter Is that the pupils may acquire Interest In a wide variety of literature. Bun-U- p, vol-umn- es up-to-d- T. cu-dr- en, . SOCIAL Dr. and Mrs. A L. Huether enter- tained pre-holid- ay Ur. and Mrs. Stephen A Cobh, entertained at an attractive dinner party Saturday evening, November 21, at their home on Alden street. Late autmn flowers, in shades of yellow and rust, formed the centerpiece for tho table. Twelve guests were bidden. Miss Elsie Madsen entertained at a bridge party Thursday, November 19, at her home, 1778 South Ninth East. A centerpiece of pink chrysanthemums and rose buds decorat- ed the serving table. The guests num bered eight. SOUTHEAST MAN WINS AIRPLANE TRIP The airplane trip given .by the Sea Gull Drug Co., was won by Mr. C. L. Youngdal of 819 East 21 South the ticket was to Lcs Angeles and return via the Boulder and southern Utah parks. ELDER NEPHI MORRIS WILL EE SPEAKER AT SERVICES ON THANKSGIVING Impressive services were held at the Granite Stake tabernacle Thanks giving morning. Elder Nephl L. Morris gave an inspiring talk oil Importance of the day. SUGARIIOUSE BUSINESS MEN PLAN PROGRAM FOB CHRISTMAS A Christmas program for Sugar-hous- e was planned at a meeting held Monday night in the Sprague branch library, under the direction of the Sugarhouse Business Men's League. Plans were discussed for giving of prizes for the best decorated window display and other attractions that could be used to attract people to this district. Members of the Rotary club will meet with the League at a later date. at a bridge party Friday evNovember 27, at their home, RETURNS FROM TRIP Mr.. Clyd Edmorids, general man1729 Princton avenue. Twelve guests the Utah Poultry Associatof ager enjoyed the evening at cards. Light ion from a business trip returned refreshments were served at small to the New York markets during tables. the .week. ening, Mr. and Mrs. William Leaver have recently returned from a vlslte in Kentucky. Mr. Leaver Is an athletic ccach at Westminster college, and is a son of Dr. and Mrs. S. A Leaver, 1427 South Fourteenth East 1903 Mrs. William Landmesser, South Eleventh East, left by plane Saturday, November 21, for . Los Angeles, where she will visit her son. Mercer Stout. Mr. Stout came to Salt Lake City by airplane to accompany his motherr to the California dty. Miss Margaret Block, daughter of assistant postmaster W. E. Block, and a librarian In the public library, has gone to Los Angeles to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her sister Laura, who is attending col' lego there. Ur. and Mrs. Ezra Palmer, recently left by motor for a tour of the eastern states, following whichthey will go to Florida for the winter months. . - dancing. During the Intermissions a floor allow of professional caUbre will be presented. Tap dances, singing and ballet numbers will be given by terplachore&a artists from the Granite high school. Skating experts from the Woolea rink will entertain with some unusal exhibitions. Under the direction of Roy McDonough of tho aunday school, ana Ralph Jones ef tho M. I, A. the following committee is planning the affair: Miss Dorothy Knapp, Mlsa Marion Tuckfleld, Mias Mary Searle Ted Sperry and LaVerl Shriever. The most enticing refreshments the moat attractive decorations and tho utmost in entertainment is promised everyone who attends this delightfully planned party. The moat gala event of the autumn season is promised in tho dance to be given by tbe Richards word M. I, A and Sunday school Friday Irving High School Brent Goats Editor On Wednesday, November 17, the Spanish club held its first meeting under the direction of Miss Florence Bennlon, Spanish teacher. The purpose of the meeting was to elect officers for coming year. Some very capable students were nominated for each office. The students who were finally victorious are Dick Wetzel, president; Joe Plant, Maxine Olsen, scretary and Dolt Gibbons, student council representative. With these outstanding students a3 officers, the Spanish Club should should be a real live organization during the coming year. A business meeting of the Latin Club of Irving high school was held Thursday, November 19. This club Is sponsored by Mlaa Ethel Law, teacher of latln. The meeting wa a presided over by Dick Mathews, president of the latln club, business was transacted as fallows: The constitution was read by Dick Mathews. And after several amendments were added, It was then approve. . vice-preside- |