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Show TIlA KrLI.ETlV fp;UTAH BRANDS SHOP FLORAL 2d3f South 1 1 THRIVES ON TINTIC MINERAL DISCOVERIES th East ' SUCARHOUSE SPECIALIZE IN FUNERAL SPRAYS a s ' Sf Town of Dividend and Snv-iarMo. 2 T:rrir rj AT YOUR SERVICE Bm. Phone phone Hy. 1848 Hy. 970 FREDOVA DANCE STUDIO a F. HALL L O. 2010 Sooth 11th Emit BEGINNERS INTERMEDIATE Ad ADULT CLASSES on d SATURDAY n 1F.1L 9 A. M. to FREDA VERNON Instructor In . BALLET TAP ACROBATICS Resistor Now! Outlook Justifies ' 11 - Greatest Variety State Participation In New York Fair OF SPRING BUTTONS and BUCKLES SHOWN IN THE CITY At The UNITED 5-10- Worsley, E. M. Beck, Moroni Bill- Grand Central, from which $2,175,r olidated a profit of nearly seven 271 was taken. million, moat of which has been ingsley and L. T. Whitney. TINTIC, a renegade John F. Wood- reinvented In property and imJohn Q. Packard, Other claims were staked and man. William Hatfield and John provements. CHIEF Indian, was tho K. J, Raddatx. going miles east first billionaire, though during the spring of 1870 produc- McCrystal were among the early he did not live to know it. He and tion started. Shipping ore was arrivals at the new camp whose of the recognised mineral area of business. Teamsters ventures in unproven ground .re- Tintlc, aank 900 feet and made the his followers pitched their tepees expensive on the slope of what Is now Eureka charged $28 per ton for hauling to sulted in the production of great Tlntic Standard one of the largest gulch, 65 miles south of Balt Iteke the Southern Pacific, the nearest wealth and the organization of silver-leashippers and biggest Numerous attempts at of Utah. The City, and claimed all lift land lying jrallroad. employers companies. Important between Utah lake and the deiert local concentration were made, the formed by Wood-muMore than 80 minerals have been to the west. They, and for ten first two being at Diamond and and W. W. Chisholm, la identified at Tlntic. In 65 years, 25 More In 1871. than llomansville years after Tintica death In 1859, credited with the shipment of one to 1935, $343,544,997 waa realized the claim waa undisputed. Finally mills and furnaces were erected car of ora wor.h $200,000 and net for the nonferrous metala. They comwhite men discovered mineral on within the hext few year, but ounces of earnings of more than $15,000,000. included 231,540,158 the land and a new form of title plexity of the orei, scarcity of wa- Nature, however, reserved some of ailver, 850.000 tout of lead, 2.226,858 of and crudeness ter equipment came into effect. her richest prize for later comers. ounces ,f gold, 110,000 tons of their operation. Several of the greateit mines of copper and 15,000 tons of zinc. ReSlowly (he mineral ihowlnge hampered were expanded. Demonstrations of Tho failures were a foretaste of Tlntic were developed ia the turn! for Iron, bismuth, mangunese, rich silver-lea- d and gold mlnea oc- difficulties to be encountered li nineties and aa lata as 1915. antimony, allies, limestone, etc.,' curred periodically for sixty years, one form and another In subseJesse Knight, elderly and In bring the grand total value to bringing into existence villages, quent years sufficient to defeat all straitened circumstances, persisted about $400,000,000. towns and cities in place of tepees, but the hardiest and most deter- lu developing a location known as This money, on its travels, has The the Humbug. After a heartbreak- fed and clothed and miners and peopling the district with pro- mined of the and winners stand out conspicuously in ing struggle he drove his tunnel smelter-men- , erected homes and" gressive white workers in place of the nomadic the history of the state. Into a rich ora body. Provided with skyscrapers, endowed . libraries, . . ; GoShulea. Samuel and William McIntyre funds, Knight opened mine after hospitals and churches, financed A cowboy and a horse found the traded cattle for a major interest mine in East Tintlc. His new farming and manufacturing Indus-- V. first mineral. The animals hoofs in a prospect called the Mammoth. fortune waa devoted to enterprises tries, supported trade, paid taxes, a specimen of ora and The mine Is credited with a pro- which employed hundreds of men and it still moves tirelessly on, . dislodged tiia rider, . George Rust, took tho duction of four million dollars and and added to the Industries of repeating the cycle. Tintlc has worked out Its near- - piece, home to Payson. Although ia even now paying dividends to Utah. He built a town and smeltore. It must now depend' financed surface coal . it waa John Beck, five mlnea, er, developed of ltuste neigh their grandchildren. winter, bore went acoutlng and located the after losing one fortune, acquired factories and started a great tun- on deposit lying 1000 to 2500 feet in-- .' first claim the Sunbeam simul- by perserverlng labor on tho Bullio- nel and irrigation project at Tintlc. deep, the recovery of which made another, lost It, Walter Filch, coming from volves tho risk of larger capital,. taneously organizing a mining dis- n-Beck, trict, on December 13, 18G9. The and died a poor man.700-fo- CoL EL C, Michigan, solved a geological prob- intelligent use of scientific equip-shaft lem brought a new area into pro- ment and large investments in ex- claimants were 8. B. Moore, Wil- Loose, by sinking a B. T. and spending $125,000, opened the duction and gave the Chief Con liam Harris, Joseph Hyde, By I. E. DIEHL -25c STORE kt 1069 East 21st South in Sugarhouse - Whalen Voicea Opinion in Inviting Governor and People to the 1939 Exposition NEW YORK, (Special). In a letter oi invitation to the governors of 47 Grover Whalen. President of the New York World'! Fair 1939 CorpiraUon. points out that the commercial consequence! of the international exposition under construction in New York City arc so great and important that they alone would Justify the active participation of every state in the nation. Fifty million persons from every wsik In life, from every stats in the United States, from svery country In the world, are expected to attend he Fair,1' writes Mr. Whalen. The great American market with Its tremendous consumer purchasing power will be represented by these visitors. They will comprise a true cross-sectiof America. The Worlds Fair, according to Mr. Whalen, will be a magnificent spectacle, entertaining and instructive, It will atWhat tempt to answer the questions: kind of a world hast wt built? What kind of a world art wt building? What kind of a world cos we build? With collateral Improvements. It will represent a total Investment of more than $125,000,000 by the Fair Corporation and the governmental. Industrial and other participants. The Fair site park Is tract of 1216)4 acres, almost at the geographical and population centre of New York City. Construction of buildings and roads, grading, dredging, planting and landscaping arc already under way, based upon a schedule which calls for completion of all construction operations before January 1. 1939, to allow four months for final decorations and Installation of exhibits preparatory to the opening of the Fair on April 30. The opening date commemorates the Inauguration, on 4prll 30! 1789, of George Washington as thk first President of the United States. In the government area, and near an Imposing federal hall to be erected by the United States Government the Fair will provide a "Hall of States". In which the significant contributions of each state in laying the foundation! for the better World of Tomorrow can be proudly displayed, says Mr. Whalen. His letter supplements an Invitation to participate In the Fair extended to the governors on November 30 by Governor Herbert H. Lehman of the host state of New York. Governor Lehman pointed out that the State of New York has already appropriated, to date, $2,130,000 for commencement of construction of boulevards, service roads, bridges, and certain other basic Improvements the State will make at the exposition site or its approaches. The New York legislature, further, during 1936 passed an act creating the New York Worlds Fair Commission of J8 members and providing funds In aid of this bodys preparation of plana for a state building and exhibit and tor active state participation In the Fair. metal-seeker- mine-owne- - EwfmatTt Fair Says Whalen by TO READ COVERING THE FAR EAST Miles Vaughn Nine yean reporting in the Orient, often amid grave danger. $3.00 THINK FOR YOURSELF .Robert P. Crawford ' . You can Increase your power of solving problems and thinking creatively. $2.50 PARNELL Joan Haallp A highly interesting biography of "the uncrowned King of Ireland. $3.00 DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 EAST on SOUTH TEMPLE Books For Every Mood1 EYES on the ROAD (Continued from last week) A few states have already recognised the Importance of this step and now include this extra mely vital test In examining all applicants for driving permits. With eye tests, such as are now a part of the examination given to prospective drivers, it would be impossible for a World War veteran, receiving full compensation for blindness, to drive an an autonjoblle, as was discovered is Washington when visual teats for drivers were put Into effect An even worse case was uncovered In Baltimore where the driver of a fire engine waa found to have such an Impairment of vision that he could scarcely see Yet he raced his engine through the streets every day of the an awful menace to life week,because of the tremendous speed at which he traveled.. (Continued next week) - . Dr. W. H. Landmesser OPTOMETRIST Charter Member of the Foundation 1090 East list Booth Hy. 1749 1939 WorltTs Fair Has New Ideas About Amusement Features NEW YORK.' ( Special ). Only seeing will be believing," says President Grover Whalen of the New York World's Fair 1939 Corporation, as he tries to envision what the Fair Is planning, more than two years in advance. In the way of facilities for recreation, entertainment and amusement. , Every man, woman and child In the United State, he says, has an Interest In the 1939 Fair and to some degree or other has a part-ithe building of that Fair. The exposition, therefore, will surpass all previous fairs, not only in tho demonstration of the wonders of the world or life and In the projection of present-da- y the World of Tomorrow, but also in providing the utmost variety of entertainment and amusement for every man, woman and child. ' The entire world will be tapped for every amusement posiibility. The tiresome mediocrity of stunts and side shows relics of the amusetho ment world of yesterday will give way to a new and modern etandard of excellence. The plan of the New York World's Fair has anticipated the for entertainment and. is making them a part of the general scheme ui the Fair, rather than cllowinr them to spring up as an appendare or Even th tiny childrro w.i have a playground reserved exclusive for their own use. de . New York mat nappens, tne traveler :.a; pay two tips since the public porter is not allowed in the railroad station, toting in terminals being a red cap monopoly. Public porters, in the past, have acted as steerers for various minor hotels, often talking strangers out of going to places where they had intended with consequent loss to those who yielded. . LL STEVENSON ' NEW YORK. (Special). Grover Whalen, President of the Fair Corporation, announces that official support and foreign participation in the New York World's Fair of 1939 are reaching new highs, ' and that here, is an already obvious opportunity for every 'state to display advantageously its accomplishments and future posaibllities'anj to Join in making it one hundred percent erymans Fair. Ev- Nets Lighting , Even Bubbles in Cclcr To Beautify Fair of the NEW YORK. (Special scientific discoveries or developments being hurried (rum the laboratories to make the New York World's Fair unusual and thrilling will produce more startling results than the latest technique in. ilurse lumination. This statement was issued hy Grover Whalen, President of the Fair Corporation, at the inauguration of experiments by the Fair's stall of engineers and illumination experts r their consultants These men are already at work with scale models of the Fair, quarter-inc- h types of lighting equipment never before used in comprehensive manner, and utterly new principles never developed practically. They arc dealing with everything from fluorescent dies and colored bubbles to concentrating lamps and, floodlight systems. The plan is not to create spectacular effects in the usual tense of the term, says Mr Whalen, but rather to create designs in light that will make their appeal through their magnitude and their sheer beauty. Youngster Gives Up Pip,4! for Spinach Camden, N. J. Twenty-two-months-o- ld Joseph Noon has given up smoking a corn cob pipe. His new love is spinach and Mrs. Noon, the mother, is just as well satisfied. She says little Joe started smoking when he picked up Grandpa Joe Noon's corncob pipe while the owner was listening to the radio. He puffed on it and grew to like it, she declares. But today since he has switched to spinach little Joe could cat his weight of it if given the chance, according to his parents. - Colorful and picturesque were those youngsters who kept late hours and danced among, the bright lights. They were also tough as steel. That tough as is the reason why they no longer congregate about the theaters, before and after the show and between the acts. That is why also that midtown cops get less exercise. The authorities figured that it would be better for the urchins if they were chased once and for all. So instead of merely making gestures, the police made arrests. Parents were brought into court and made to see why their children should be in their homes and not on Broadway late at night. So now the youngsters who danced and sang have disappeared. So have most of those with tearful faces and soiled newspapers. case-harden- ed Not so amusing, colorful or pathetic were those car watchers who infested the theater district in such numbers that a motorist couldnt find a space that wasnt under their control Various locations were taken over by gangs who had ousted other gangs and the motorist who failed to tip lived to regret it. In fact, conditions reached such a stage that some of the guide books advised paying a fee rather than suffer damaged car bodies and tires as well as the removal of everything that could be detached. Matters reached a climax when a motorist who tipped only a dime was assaulted. Then the police took a hand and now there are no more , car watchers. In their place is an ordinance which forbids them to engage in such business. .Taxicab jockeys have also been eliminated by police activity. The jockeys were boys and men who swung onto the running boards of taxicabs and when they stopped, opened doors and stood by waiting for tips for the alleged service. The practice was not only annoying but dangerous. Doormen are not forbidden by the new ordinance to perform such services, and thus they get a break on rainy nights. They hustle out and bring up cabs and acquire tips. That cabs would arrive anyway never seems to ocd New Yorker. cur to the time-harrie- Public porters are still licensed by The City. They station themselves in various places and pounce on. the baggage of travelers. Wh?n My Neighbor Says 1 Plan tor an earlier and longer sea- son of bloom by planting indoors or in flats ageratum, salvia and aster weds. - , - Before applying linseed oil to outside of soapstone sink or tubs, first go over with sandpaper ' to make them smooth. . The return of prosperity has caused the return of the hat grabber. When times were dull a number of establishments dismissed the hat grabber and thus patrons were not reGrease spots on leather may be quired to ransom hats and coats. .removed by applying benzine or But they are back now and seemingturpentine. Wash the spots pure more ever. than are rapacious ly n afterwards with It has been said that the New York- ; white of an egg. the er pays $5 for a hat and then expends $10 buying it back from check Lemons should be cut with clean rooms. The only solution seems to ' when used to garnish all edges cusand bareheaded that be going and boiled fish as well, as baked Bare-heatom is not what it used to be. fish salads. For decorative purposes ce not nearly so numerous they may be cut 'into many fancy as in ti.e past. shapes. : well-beate- ds BeU Syndicate. e e n stock-in-tra- of The theater district these winter nights does not seem the same without the ragamuffins who in the past entertained the passing throngs in various ways. Their specialty was dancing, and the dancers for the most part had exceedingly nimble feet. They were up on the latest as well, and Charleston experts in turn gave place to those who did truckin. Sometimes there were harmonica or vocal soloists. But they too had to be nimble of foot. Between the gamine and the cops, there was constant warfare. An essential member of the troupe was the lookout and when he gave the signal, the youngsters were gone with the wind. But they never departed, no matter their hurry, without gathering nickels and dimes that had been tossed their way, since those nickels and dimes were the objective of their efforts. on NEW BOOKS Lights I ' ii J r mi in : WNU Service. c , White Ants Wanted London. Fifty white ants and a recipe for keeping them alive are wanted by a radio company in London. Black specks, which frequently . appear on silver, may be removed if covered with a paste made of whiting and olive oil. Let Jand until dry, then polish silver with a chamois cloth. ft The Friendly Store Use Your Z. G M. I, CHARGE ACCOUNT HERE Sugarhouse Representative For S. W. P. PAINTS A Few Discontinued Colors S. W. P PAINTS Va OFF We Have Just Added A Large Assortment Of WALLPAPER At Popular Prices Over 1500 Patterns to Choose From. WHOLESALE and RETAIL |