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Show WEATHER FORECAST "THE BULLETIN Published At Commercial Printing Co. 2041 South lltb East Hyland 364 . itgar For Salt Lake and Vicinity: Unsettled, tonight; Generally lair Saturday. . PUBLISHED IN SUGARHOUSE Vol.5 SALT LAKE 'CITY, UTAH, HAIL EDITION WASP PLANES FOR army win Approval Success of Craft in Spain wfiffn are ulidble tb obtain adequare supplies owing to the present blockConvinces Officials. ade of Bilbao and other cenSan Diego, Calif. Spain is a fiery export ters.. Since hostilities began between laboratory in which modern mili- the insurgents and the Spanish govtary tactics especially as regards ernment, British and Continental aircraft are being tested. ironmasters have been searching Army air corps officers stationed here have revealed that one of the first lessons learned from the Spanish revolution is the extreme value, of pursuit planes. In the United States many strat- egists have been inclined for the last few years to discount the value of the pursuit type of fighting plane, one officer of the One Hunh dred observation squadron, who refused to permit his name to be used, told the United Press. But the pursuit planes definitely have come into their own in Spain." Reports on Air Strategy. Officers stationed here said for months the War department has been compiling confidential reports evaluating certain types of strategy used by both insurgents and loyalFifty-fourt- for new sources of supplies. The geological survey at Pretoria located vast fields of similar hematite in the. Union. More than of the imports into the United Kingdom for 1935, the last available year, was derived from Spain, namely, 1,128,949 tons out of 4,547,-43- 6 tons. one-quart- er Working Girl Is Best as Wife, Cornell Discovers Ithaca, N. Y. To assure a successful marriage, marry a girl who has worked before becoming a bride, Cornell universitys department of rural social organization advises potential husbands. Girls who, before marriage, were active in community affairs, or who were responsible housekeepers in ists. their own homes, are also good on based those the .Among findings Teports were said to be several of bets. The poorest bet of all," accordft .a startling nature insofar as ing to the department, is the girl is concerned. after finishing school, stays at It was said the Spanish war also who, has given military officials a chance home with no responsibility either to observe the performance of fight- in a home, or on a job, or in a coming aircraft designed and built by munity." Future husbands were also disthe great powers of the world, and cussed Husby the department. to compare the efficiency of design, armament and . speed with similar bands with a record of regular employment and a lively interest in American craft. their are one and times The tiny, darting pursuit planes more jobs to have a likely have demonstrated, in the Spanish civil war, time and time again, it marriage. was said, their ability to overcome the heavier, but potent bombing g Once Was Post Office Sites Get Much Attention v office inspector and site agent, will arrive in Sugar-hous- e today to review proposed sites for the new federal building approved by congress last month, according to information given the Bulletin" from the post office authorities. While four bids were received in response to the advertised notice, numerous other bidders have applied for consideration. Bids presented are aa follows: Charles R. Snelgrove, 840 East 21st South, offered a lot with 178 foot frontage located betweenElght and Ninth East streets on Twenty-firSouth. George A. Goff, 2551 Highland Dr. offered a piece of ground located fct 1026 East 21st South street. Two bids were sent in by the Sugar House Lumber and Hardware Company, one for part of a lot with 141 foot frontage valued at 221,000 and another for 165 Toot frontage which would take up the whole lot for $31,000. The bids called for a plot Of ground having 140 frontage and 205 feet deep providing it was a' corner lot, of a piece 165 feet front' with a 205 foot depth if it is located in the middle of the block. The latter requlrmenta are to allow alleys on all three aides of the building connecting with the M. A. Clark, post NOT TO BLAME In a special meeting held Wednesday Acting Warden John E. Harris and his staff were exonerated by the State ' Board of Corrections, of in the' escape of two negligence who got away last prisoners BOYCOTT ON JAPANESE GOODS the maritine leader Wedesday called on the conference of leaders of Industrial Organizations to declare a boycott on all Japanese goods, because of the undeclared war on China by the Japanese, and asked the organization to make it an international boycott, . o STATE MONOPOLY ILAS COMPETITION Agents for the state liquor commis ion raided a store in the vicinity of the liquor commission store on state street and declared that by pressing a button &' compartment in the would open and bring out a full line of real liquor that did not bear the state liquor stamp. mop-boa- rd air-cra- one-ha- lf well-adjust- -- Snuff-Takin- craft. Carrying small sized bombs and machine guns the little ships are able to perform deceptive maneuvers around the more cumbersome flying fortresses" and evade the heavier armament while disabling the larger craft with sprays of machine-gun fire and the small bombs. Then, too, it was pointed out, the pursuit planes are particularly valuable in harassing concentrations of troops on the ground by demoralizfire. ing them with machine-gu- n Orders Fast Ships. Army Army officers here said the lessons of the Spanish war already are being put to use in this country, with the army having placed orders for what were described here as the "fastest pursuit planes in the world. Eighty-fiv- e of these little fighters already are under construction at the Seversky Aircraft corporation in the East, it was said. Then, too, the army, according to officers here, has developed what is known in military circles as the XFM-1- . This plane, the officers say, is capable of "overhauling any air target thus far constructed." This new XFM-- 1 carries a crew of five men. Is operated by pusher rather than tractor propellors a decided innovation in modern fighting planes. This plane, the top speed of which is a secret, is capable of fighting at an altitude of 30,000 feet or more. At least five, and possibly machine-gun- s more, are mounted on this craft, it is said. -- o heavy-calib- . red-blood- New Industry in Africa Johannesburg. Civil war in pain may bring into existence another important industry in South Africa, if certain negotiations being handled by the union department of mines are successful. Hematite ore, for which northern Spain has hitherto been. the principal source, soon will be going for- ward. ,to...nyr.:as bla., ui oaers. Electrical Repairing Old Stand Lamps Remodeled . 1079 East 21st South in Sugarhouse Ily. Sugarhouse police were on the lookout Wednesday, for a man who al- WESTMINSTER COLLEGE legedly accosted a school girl in the ASSOCIATED WOMEN vicinity of Seventh East and Twenty-- TO HONOR GRADUATES first South street Members of the 1937 Graduating o class of Westminster College will be HEAR RUM0R8 honored Saturday afternoon at the Although unable to establish any Lounge of Ferry hall by the Associdefinate word, rumors that the name ated Women, of WeatminsUr of Fairmont Park would be changed Luncheon will be served at 1 :15, Bulletin' office this followed by a short business meetreached the week. ing. Arrangements are under the o direction of Uii. Toby Welch. ' YOUNG WOMEN INJURED - Suffering from cull oh the fore1 head and nose wfeeh the motorcycle on which she was riling with Raymond Rollins overturned, Dorothy Allen, 16, was treated at the general hospital and then released to go homo Thursday. . o GOES ON BRITISH MISSION C. R, SNELGROYE it Charles Snelgrov, cream manufacturer of will depart Saturday evening via Union Pacific train for the east Where ha will sail October 19 for the British mission of the L. D. S. church to serve a- six months mission. ice well-kno- 1738 e, Sugar-hous- - - Important Industry at Last to Get Attention. Washington. The vast Atlantic coastal fishing industry, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, at last is to get a share of the federal governments protective attention. Commerce and State department officials, it was learned recently, are making plans to negotiate important fish treaties with Canada, Mexico and several additional countries, for the protection of the existing schools of migratory fish in the Atlantic. On the basis of this treaty it was learned, congress probably will be asked to enact some migratory fish control legislation for interstate as well as international application. Proponents of the treaty pointed out that constitutional limitations made it impossible for congress to enact any migratory bird legislation until the bird treaty with Canada was negotiated and ratified, but a Supreme court ruling held that this treaty made it incumbent upon congress to pass legislation to effect the treaty. The same system is being followed in the case of migratory fish. Most important among the migratory fish, from a commercial as well as sporting point of view, are the striped bass and the bluefish. The latter are particularly important, in that they spend most of their existence either moving from north to south along the coastal banks or vice versa. .While some states have highly protective legislation, others have little or none. Latin-Americ- , APEX ELECTRIC COMPANY About Allergy The Modern Home Medical Adviser defines allergy by saying that the person with allergy is an individual who inherits some peculiar constitutional make - up which causes him to become sensitive to certain things. Thereafter these particular things become violently poisonous to him, even when encountered in minute amounts. Allergy patients may become sensitive not only to material things but also to physical agents such as light, heat or cold. Sensitiveness may develop to such an extreme in certain people that they may be badly affected by a millionth of a milligram, of substance which may be devoured as a food by a nonsensitive person. Hay fever, asthma, hives, eczema and other diseases ara linked with aller. gic conditions. Turpentine Uses The paint and varnish industry use about 80 per cent of the turpentine sold in this country, the next largest use being for shoe polish. Turpentine is also used in making shatterproof glass, synthetic camphor, insecticides, etc. st street. PROWLER ANNOYS GIRL snuff-takin- er War in Spain Opening 0 Dainty and Elegant In 1759, George Washington, a Virginia planter, shipped 55 hogsheads of tobacco to England. When .the national capitol was built, tobacco had reached such an important place in American life that its leaves were used on some of the columns, along with com, another New World product, relates a writer in the Washington Post. To Sir Walter Raleigh goes the credit for popularizing smoking in the Elizabethan court and so in Europe. School children loam the story of how his servant threw water on him when he began smoking thinking he was afire. The spread of the habit, however, was not always clear sailing. King James termed it a filthy weed. Shah Abbas of Persia, fearing its effect upon the birth rate, prohibited the use of tobacco and burned a merchant alive in his stock of the plant. In Connecticut, in 1647, smoking in public was forbidden. During the fashionable reign of g Louis XIII was pronounced far daintier and more elegant" than puffing out tobacco smoke." As late as 1900 cigarettes a South American invention-wer- e considered too sissy for use by Americans. One of the interesting things about tobacco U that it adapts itself peculiarly to the soil and climate in which it grows. NUMBER 41 15. 1937 NOTES OF INTEREST WARDEN oo FRIDAY. OCTOBER an Utah Unemployment Fund Passes Two Million Dollar Mark The Utah Unemployment Compensation FUhfl gUMsed the twn million dollar .marie feariy in Gctobef) according to Ray R. AddmS, tor of the Unemployment Compensation Division of the Industrial Commission. This fund Is made up of contributions from about 2700 Utah employers. The rate of distribution is .9 of 1 of the 'pay roll for 1936; for 1937 and will be 2.7 for 1938. 1939 and 1940; Mr. Adams estimates that about 80,000 Utah employee are protected by this Fund. Benefit payments will begin next January. The amount of benefits for each worker will .depend upon his employment record. A person who had not had much employment will not; be eligible for many benefits for total unemployment benefit will not exceed $15 a week for 16 weeks in a 52 week period. , Some folks have asked us why . EMMANUEL OF ITALY Coin Collecting and Agriculture Occupy Time. Rome, Italy. Completely liberated from many onerous government duties which are now jealously guarded by Benito Mussolini and his lieutenants, King Victor Emmanuel divides his spare time between his coin collection and agriculture. A passionate numismatist, the kings coin collection is said to be one of the most complete and richest of the continent. Coins pour into the Quirinal from faithful Italians scattered in all corners of the world. Since the advent of fascism agriculture has caught the kings fancy. The Mussolinian. slogan, Back to the Earth," is respectfully observed by the Italian ruler. Shortly after the World war King Victor Emmanuel donated a large part of his private property to needy war veterans. He now possesses three large estates: Castelporziano, in the picturesque Roman Campag-na- ; Tombolo, in fertile Tuscany, and his favorite estate of San R attached to the summer villa of the royal house of Savoy. Studies Summer Plants.-Throyal estate of Castelporziano is famous throughout Europe for its excellent hunting preserves. Its acres Overlook the Tyrrhenian coastline. Seven thousand acres are covered with thick wOOdl, principally pine trees. A small section of the estate is dedicated to an experimental center for the study and growth of summer plants and flowers. Queen Helen supervises work here, The rest of the estate only recently had been dedicated to the production of first quality wheat. The wheat fields are under the direct control of Sen. Nazzareno Strampelli, a master mind in wheat problems, whose studies and works are carefully followed in Canada, Australia and Argentina. The Castelporziano estate of his majesty iiOtv produces 75,000 quintals of excellent wheat a year. The Tombolo estate, belonging to the prince of Savoy for centuries, was a boggy waste of marsh lands before King Victor took to agricul-tiltf- f. Its 3,000 acres were reclaimed quickly. The reclaimed land now has a regular ouiptit of two and a half quintals of sugar beets per acre, a notable contribution to the nations autarchy promoted by Premier Mussolini. Vineyards Also Rieh. Its rich vineyards produce excellent Wine for his majesty's table. The king'i pet estate is San lie spends hit summer vacations there with the royal family.. A fertile forest produces excellent lumber while large fields yield rich wheat, maize, sugar beets And grapes. Following the footsteps of his father, Crown Prince Humbert also is showing increasing interest in agriculture. Following his marriage to Prinof Belgium in 1930, cess Marie-Jos-e the king donated to his only son the royal castle of Racconigi, in Piedmont, famous for its beautiful gardens. In 1935, when 52 nations enforced sanctions upon Italy for having invaded Ethiopia, Prince Humbert ordered the ornamental parks of Racconigi to be transformed into wheat fields. He divided the estate into small lots, which were distributed among poor farmer of the surrounding countryside. . os-sor-e, 12,-0- 00 Ros-sor- d. it is that those who work little, get only a small amount of unemploy- Wooden Salt Mortar Is ment compensation benefits, while those who have worked steadily are entitled to comparatively more benefits when unemployed," Mr. Adams Some think that those who said. have worked the least should have the most benefits. We answer by pointing out that unemployment compensation la not any form of relief, It Is not a new system of taking care of the needy. It is not some way of contributing to those who do not work. State Unemployment Compensation ia a system which will tend to stabilize employment. It will protect purchasing power for a limited time for those who have had jobs, lost them and cannot find employment It will help the stable Utah workman, protect . his meager bank account (if he has any) for a few weeks after he has lost his job. It will be of benefit to those who want work; it offers no solan ce to those who do not , new-fangle- d" Social Notes TAKES THINGS EASY Prize Relic of Druggist Eaton Rapids, Mich. A prized relic from old England now belonging to Harry G. Heaton, Eaton Rapids druggist, is a wooden salt mortar more than 300 years old. It was made by a Heaton ancestor in 1616 and, with documents explaining its history, handed down from father to son. Although the papers have been lost, the story is remembered by Mr. Heatons father, Henry G. Heaton, of Carson City, Mich. In 1616 a hard maple tree on John Heatons homestead in England blew down during a storm. Ftom the wood of this tree he made utensils of all sorts, including the mortar and pestle which he considered his masterpiece. It stands inches high, with eight and inches in a base four and diameter, and it measures five and lf inches in diameter at its larg ist circumference. No stain or other finish was ever put on the wood, Mr. Heaton says, but age and use have so polished and darkened it that it looks like finished walnut. one-ha- lf one-ha- lf one-ha- JlXNER PARTY FOR PAIR BRIDAL Mr. and Mrs. George A. Goff entertained at a prettily appointed dinner party Tuesday evening at their home, 2551 Highland Drive, in comMias Lucy Rowland who pliment to ' will wed their son, Arnold, October 20. white chrysanthemums Stately formed the table decorations and covers were lalded for sixteen member! of the bridal pairs families and friends. A candlelight tea waa given evening in honor of Miss Rowland, by Mrs. J. Louis Riley at the home of her mother, Mrs. Fred Brain. . Wednesday ENGAGEMENT TOLD; WEDDING 29 OCTOBER The engagement of Ml Ludle West, daughter of Mr. and Mra. W. Howard West, 2188 Eighth East to Irwin Harold Johnson of Cedar City, la announced by the parents of the bride-to-b- e. The marriage ceremony will take place October 29 and will be followed by a reception at the Lion House. Miss West Is a graduate of the University of Utah and Mr. Johnson graduate of the University of Minnesota where he was a member of the Alpha Zeta honorary fraternity. The young people will take a honeymoon trip through California before returning to Cedar City to make their home, 6 1 : .! Little Theater Head ."T Addresses Rotarians J. B. BURNAM, president of the little Theatre, nonprofltable civiq organisation, told the members of the Sugar House Rotary club .of the splendid opportunities this organisation affords the dramatically inclined people to gain actual stage experience, at the weekly luncheon Thursday noon. Mr. Burnham compared the stage and screen, explained that the stage plays would be favored over screen work If it were possible to have the same scenery and music the movies have. He said that play patrons like to see the actual acting and hear the voices but the settings offered screen work by mother nature provided aa added attraction. - Musical selections were rendered from the Fourth grade of by pupils the Highland Park school and were directed by Mias Almond and Louis A. Bridgland. A directors meeting proceeded the regular luncheon Thursday at which several proposed memberships were reviewed. Chief Cafe Reopens The Chief. Cafe, located at 1119 East 21st South street has reopened under the management of T. M. Gatherum, an experienced restaurant manager. Home cooked food ia being nerved and a hot dinner at noon each day la a specialty. Good food at reasonable prices, combined with quick, courteous service is what we offer Sugarhouse people, Mr. Gatherum said. Dove Tree Is Found in Three-Ye- ar Hunt Honolulu. The first "dove" tree ever seen here has arrived via Clipper from China. While the tree figured prominently in ancient Chinese literature, it required a three-yea- r search to find .the present specimen in the Yangtze valley. It has been planted on the island of Kanuai. Blossoms are similar in shape and color to a dovr. Pan-Americ- an |