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Show Till' SUGARIIOUSE BULLETIN. FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1937 ...u - ... m m 'a1 . r-.i- v. mss Sons of Diamond Daddies Good at Baseball Lux e Gallon Outing Jug Cork Ifirul aii'tl C33S An extr quality gallon jug. Keeps contents hot or cold for a long . period. Sxl4-lm- a Penn Supreme flu Our i 100 Wear-we- ll furs Pur XOO Pmumaylmmnl Per Quart Per Quart k Adjustable Glare Shield ie In ynur ran In Gallon Lota . in your can in Gallon . . Spe- These four stalwarts of the University of Florida baseball team ought to be pretty good at the national pastime if there is anything in the theory of heredity. All are sons of famous major league fathers, whose names yen household words a few years ago. Left to right are Ed Manning, twenty, son of Ed Manning, former pitcher for the St. Louis Browns; Lee Meadows, Jr., nineteen, son of Lee Meadows, old Pittsburgh Pirates mound ace; Jimmy Shotton, seventeen, son of Bert Shotton, a former St. Louis Cardinal, and Wilbur White, nineteen, whose father once played third for the Chicago White Sox. Lola cially Filtered. Thoroughly proven ble Distilled. Equal to 35c per quart 00 pure Pennsylvania oil. Provides oils. Ideal oil for high-spemotors. efficient lubrication in all service. Dou- 1 ed B739 A large, wail made fiber board shield with adjustable bracket. Swings around to protect At you from side glare if desired. xV Per Quart FINEST In Gallon WESTERN OIL twaaia night. National Museum Is to Be Erected in South Dakota. New Haven, Conn. Fossils of one of the richest petrified forests ever uncovered soon will be arranged in SaEo-PIe- ai' Auto Fan Western Giants The safe, flexible rubber blades on this new type , fan can't injure even a baby's fingers. 30 more breeze than with other INDUSTRY; UTAHS HOPE BLACK HILLS AREA Lttia frleai .lightly hlghar la tonia laemlitdn Empty Cam laamad am Small DepaUt. r FOSSILS SAVED IN types. Unity Save more now on the Welt's greatest tire values. . . Twelve types of Western Giants and each a leader in quality, safety, mileage, appearance . . . and economy! Compare Western Giants with any other First Quality tire . . . you'll find that Western Giants offer MOST for your money . . ! Ask for . ... Fog-Lig- ht With Cable and Snitch . a national museum to be built in the southern Black Hills of South Dakota. Prof. G. R. Wicland of Yale university, international authority on fossil plants, said the museum will be erected in the center of an area which includes the most complete of all North American petrified forests. He has fully investigated the area, which he early filed under the homestead laws to insure protection for the fossils. He later surrendered his equity when congress voted it a national monument. In the area were found formations 120,000,000 years old or more dating back to the age of dinosaurs. Included in the discoveries were petrified flowering cycads .whose modem Telatiycs are the rare Chinese maiden-hai- r tree and the sago palm. May Disappoint Layman. Final development of the museum will cost $65,000, Wieland estimates. , Without it the visitor would not see After anything but the scenery. all, he said, the visitor need not go there, as many have done, expecting quickly to find and take away valuable specimens. Except for some accidental fragment meaningless to the layman, nothing is to be seen at the surface fulfilling the untrained conception of petrified forests. Recently, with the aid of CCC help, quarrying brought to .light more than a ton of additional specimens. These were found just as they were left in their final resting place of a hundred million years ago. Uneroded, unbroken, of specific type, nothing approaching such a collection in one place has ever been seen before in the course of the even hundred years during which the cycadeoids have been known as fossils, said Wieland. Rightly displayed in the field museum planned for the monument, this material alone will afford a singularly fine exhibit. There is a wealth of lesser leafed, branched and more generalized columnar types so highly instructive in tracing relationships and in proving how these plants, as fantastic as the cushion vegetation of the tropics or high mountains, may yet be traced to their relatives, much like the present day magnolia. Vital to Chemists. While the specimens themselves are of interest to the biologist and geologist, the process of petrification is also of special relevancy to the chemist, Wieland believes. The greater values are only to be gained by exhibition and study of these ancient plants exactly as and where discovered. Without development and display the Fossil Cycad museum can mean but little, as a mere blurred shadow, all but lost again in the said Wieland. shuffle of time, With it come into view a panoramic beauty, educational values of the highest and all that fuller realization of those landscapes of dinosaur times, without some understanding of which we may scarce expect to learn to know life and ourselves. Designs for the museum were drawn by advanced students in the department of architecture in the Yale school of fine arts. The designs show once and for all that the place for the monument display is on the monument itself and that there alone may a primary display be set to full advantage," according to Wicland. LOW Sale Prices and about our Easy Payment Plan so-call- ed All . Real fog penetration in this smart fog light. 6" amber ribbed lens. . . chromium plated except bracket. Sport Goggles CZS3 Very Comfortable. Well Made Large new shape glareproof convex lenses. 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A big value priced battery, $3.95 $5.20 $6.45 Ak About to ' WitfcOtdJattary Our Eaty Payment Plan $1&95 $12.70 a wits Rnrtfy om OWlHi QM Rettery Other Batteries as Low as Veit, 51 Hate 105 57 Plate With Old Rettery Sugarhouse Store 1049 East 21 st South Hyland 3062 lt .M small-etemme- ' ,. Construction Speeded on New Unit of TV A (In the THE ' ' ; non-ferro- xfr-t- ' non-ferro- ' non-ferro- ' non-ferrou- ' 2; ' ' 1 d XL and a few make more than 4 of them do and also because much To Aseoclated Civic Clubs of of the ore Is low grade and yields Southern Utah a very low margin of profit to the metal mining producer. The industry, we must remem- In Utah from 1920 to 1930 distributed In wages, sal- her, is In severe competition with aries, purchases of supplies and mining in other states and coun-In i services in Utah $526,000,000, or tries. We are in competition somewhat more than $1000 for each securing capital for the develop man, woman and child In the state. ment of our mines. If other regions The greater part of this huge dis- - offer better commissions than does bursement was spent within the' Utah they will attract Investments state at least once before the money und the Industry in Utah will slowleft the state, which would account ly die out. Utah mines must also for more than $2000 of per enpita be able to produce a pound of gross Income, which amounts to metal and sell it In consuming about 45 of the total gross Income centers as cheaply as competl- of the people of Utah having been tors. The grade of ores In Utahderived directly and Indirectly Is generally lower than In comour taxes 2 to 2 from the metal mining and our Industry. These disbursements In times higher In Utah above the somewhat Utah represented approximately UL..p,.ing costs As offsets; Our ore ' 77.6 of the gross value of the average. ores produced In the bodies are generally continuousfor long distances; Salt Lake Valstate In this decade. s ore In ley is the greatest The gross Included abvit 3 and state and local taxes, in federal smelting center In the world contaxes about stockholders of electric power and climatic favorable. are dltlons 8.2 In received mining compsnles net earnings and the balance was Mining is in a delicate balance. absorbed In freight charges outside Unwise legislation will not close the state, refining costs,' metallur-- every mine in the state, but it gleal. losses and selling expenses. could easily slow mining down nn- U we Include the last six years in til it plays a minor part In our thl6 average, the net pro-- industrial economy. We know little of the wealth of fits of mine stockholders have aver-- ! of the natural resources ia Utah except aged slightly less than 4 that they are very great. A 60- value of the ores produced. There are two ways of Intcrpret-- i mile radius centering at Land lng such figures. One, unfortu- Junction Incloses a huge raontonl- nately the more popular, is to pro- - tic bathollih which, where It has test that 3 of the $659,000,000 of broken through the overlaying ore, representing state and local sediments, has deposited gold, sll- taxes, ts an Inadequate return of ver, lead, zinc and copper ores for the wealth produced. The other. which a quarter of million, dollars j and the way we should adopt If has already been realized. Near j the mineral Industry in Utah is to Cedar City are the greatest degrow, Is to compare the earnings posits of aluminum ore In the of mins stockholders with the new world at least 200,000,000 tons. wealth this industry distributes Oil drilling In southeastern Utah directly and Indirectly In Utuh. In has disclosed huge deposits of of to 13 decade the people of salines containing 10 the 1920-3Utah received about 91, times as magnesia. Utah's coal deposits. much from the mining industry as estimated at over 130,000,000,09s did the (stockholders; from 1920 to tuns, are six times the reserves of 1935 Inclusive, they received more the great coal state of Pennsyl- than 20 times as much Income from vania. In Iron county alone the Iren oro reserves arn greater than mining as the stockholders. e over which If Utah can get its natural ro--; those cf sourcci converted to money wealth France and Germany have fought nnti have distributed tn this state for the last 850 years. In Utah, for a time at least, we of this wealth for an 73'., to 50 average commission, over years of have reached the limits of our surWe must get prosperity and depression, of nut face development. We do not to. exeeed 4 of the wealth pro-j- ! below the snrfsca. duced, and if those receiving the need, nor should we expect, a commissions fur.ish ail the capital rapid development of our mineral and assume all the risks, then we resources. If we can expand them have made a very good bargain only a few, percent a year ws shall Indeed. Tills Is possible because be able to care for our growing every mini! operator hopes to population. ADDRESS OF PAUL H. HUNT . . 19-ye- 1 . ' ' j ' 0 far-aw- ay Like bones of some huge prehistoric monster the skeleton of the TV A dam at Pickwick Landing on the lower Tennessee river rises into the air, showing the retent progress of the work. flnt half of h!i uMreu Mr. Hunt hu pictured the lou bp Utah of two-thiof Ita yount propl and nnotealcd indurtriallxatioa aa a remedy. Thla last half dealt anceilically with induitrialixation). Alsace-Lorrain- ' ; r j! I |