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Show . i i.- ' y ! ! Shop in Sugarhouse THE BVLLETIV Published At Commercial Printing Co. tDU South 11th East j ' ngar i U I MM It 16011BC 164 Hyland i PUBLISHED IN SUGARHOUSE Vol.5 NUMBER 49. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY DECEMBER 10, 1937 HOME EDITION SUGAR HOUSE TAKES ON GAY CHRISTMAS COLOR S. II. ROTARIANS DINE AND DANCE AT CLUB PARTY Sid J. Ottley, Dave Watson, Louis M Knight, and Alton C. Melville. Making "goats" out of the "A" J. Will Lowe and Cecil Crockwell group, hosts to the "panaiea" of the "B" group, the members of the Sug- of the Salt Lake Rotary club, who ar House Rotary club and their wives were instrumental in organizing the Thurs- Sugar House club, were guest speak participated in a dinner-danc- e ers as were the Mayor and Commis day evening at the Hotel Utah. Governor and Mrs. Henry Dwor- sioner.. shak, governor of the 110th district A token of flowers' were presented of Rotary. International were the to Mrs. Dworshak by the club and honored guests of the occasion along the presentation was made by Jed with Mayor and Mrs. Irwin, Commis- Ashton, who also conducted the Sur sioner and Mrs. George Mathison and prise drawing of gifts for other lady Commissioner Pat- Goggin, Commis guesta. loner and Mrs. William Murdock. The inal speaker on the program Marv, captain of the "A" group Governor Dworshak, lent a bit of was asked to give the address of welto the occasion by com' seriousness come to which George Burbldge, capon the necessity of the Am men ting tain of the "B" group responded. erican people in showing their pat- NEW MEMBERS PRESENT in times of peace in orSeven new members of the club ritoism now, will be no necessity of there der that were Introduced and welcomed by N. war. in times of It Dee Thatcher and presented with Lorenzo Hatch, president of the The men were John Rotary pins. Matsen, Al Hlbbard, Otto Buehner, club, presided at the meeting. - Old Sugar Mill Beam Figures In Gift Classes At Libraries Free Adult Education AT PUBLIC LIBRARY The schedule for free' adult edu- cation classes to be held in the committee room of the main public library during the week Is as follows: Monday, 10 a. m. to 12 noon "Vocabulary Building" and "Shori Story appreciation with reviews and readings." Friday, 1:30 to 3:30 p.. m. "Vocabulary Study," "Poetry Appreda tlon and the Mechanics of Verse Writing."' Saturday, 2 to 4 p. m. "Correct English Usage, with Vocabulary and "Writing the Short Study," Story." Saturday, 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. "English vocabulary and construc tion and "Dictionary Class." AT SPRAGUE LIBRARY Monday 2:00 to, 4:00 p. m. Fashioned from one of the main timbers of the old Sugar Mill from which Sugarhouse derived its name. loving cup was presented to Gov ernor Henry Dworshak of the 110th District of Rotary International at the Sugarhouse Rotary banquet Thursday evening. The mill was erected on the South east corner of Highland Drive and 21st South, and sugar machinery In stalled in 1851 and this was the first attempt- to manufacture" sugar" froif beets in the western hemisphere. The machinery was purchased in France, and transported across the plains in wagons drawn by twenty yoke of oxen. The mill was torn down to make section. way for the The cup was presented to Gover nor Dworshak by Marv Ashton. - - super-mark- et "World Practical, Practicable Literature" including Literature of Practical means that which is the Bible, Sacred Books of the East adapted to actual conditions; that and literary writings from various which experience has proved to be useful. While the others were woncountries. dering what to do, Jones took pracMonday, Wednesday, and Thursday tical steps to stop the leak in the evenings from 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. boat. Evangeline was a dreamer, Citizenship and pro Joan a practical kind of girl. Practicable denotes that which may be blems. practiced, used, or followed with good results. Some solutions to maBARBERS GET RULES terial problems are all right in theLocal barber shops will Join with ory, but are not practicable in acother barbers In the city in uphold tual practice; in other words they ing the new rules recently set down cannot be carried out. To leave a by an ordinance made by the city room all you need do is to go out by whereby shops will open from 8 a. the door but if the door is locked m. to o p. m. week days, with 7 p on the outside that method of leavis impracticable. m.. closing hour Saturday's and on ing days proceeding holidays. Periscope Is Old Blinds and curtains to conceal the Johann Hevelius constructed the interior of shops is prohibited. first periscope in 1637, his object beThe ordinance was drawn uo to ing to provide armies with an inprohibit "bootleg" labor and uphold strument by means of which they could observe the enemy from cov sanitary and health regulations. er, as, for instance, from a trench. Pint Plows of Tree Branches He called it a "polemoscope" and The first farm plows were made it consisted of a field glass equipped of crooked tree branches and with two plain mirrors inclined at worked by man power. an angle of 45 degrees. During the World war it was called a "trench-mirror." Rear row spectators use them at games and parades. Social-Econom- ic OR RENT STRICTLY Duplex Duplex Adults Only. MODERN The move to do away with raw- mill; was tabled by the city commission Wednesday, when they tabled a measure to ban raw milk distribution in the city. Evidently the commission was not ready to vote on the question, but wished more time to investigate, so voted to hold the ordinance on the committee of the whole. The mayor was the only one to vote for the mo tion. -- Bottles, Tin First Used for Prcssrving in 1809 Nicholas Appert of Paris, France, discovered the crt of canning and was awarded the prize for it by Napoleon in 180D. He used glass bottles, with cork d stoppers. A year later, Peter took out an English patent for preserving food in this way. but sealing it up in "canisters" of tin as well as glass, etc. Ezra Daggett and his nephew, Thomas Kensett, introduced the canning of salmon, oysters and lobsters in New York in 1819 and Ken-se- tt was one of the pioneer developers of the tin can, with the Englishman, Peter Durand, its inventor, in 1825. Oysters and sea foods were the first canned foods to become popular and Kensett soon moved to Baltimore, which became the canning center. Small canneries sprang up all along the Atlantic coast, but until Civil war times they worked under difficulties. The cans were crudely made by hand and were expensive and undependab'.e. The canners were without scientific knowledge of the principles involved and each had his own secret methods. Tinsmiths or cappers sealed the food in the cans, and their demands were sometimes unreasonable. Processing was done with boiling water and took several hours. Gail Borden took out his patent for canning milk in 1356, fruit canning in California began, also the Pacific salmon canning. The Civil war demand for canned foods gave the industry its great impetus, machinrjy was invented for performing the various operations and the use of canned goods became widespread. While some branches of the industry, such as meat packing, are centralized, other branches such as fruit and vegetable are scattered canning, throughout the country. wide-mouthe- Dur-an- - Tests Indicate Speed for Ocean Liners 40-Kn- ot Wallsend, England. Liners which will cross the Atlantic at 40 knots almost 10 knots faster than the Queen Mary are foreshadowed by secret experiments now being conducted on Tyneside. A firm of shipbuilders is testing a model of a streamlined hull of revolutionary design. It has proved too fast for the Teddington tank of the National Research laboratory, and to enable it to be tested at full speed, a special tank has had to be ordered. If the tests are successful, the firm will place on the stocks an ocean-goin- g yacht embodying the new principles. Engineers believe that the next Atlanstep will be to build a tic liner and destroyers doing up to almost 60 knots. A liner with that speed would cross the Atlantic in approximately three days, compared with the three days twenty-tw- o hours minutes with which the Queen Mary won the record in August, 1936. 40-kn- ot fifty-sev- en .S5. $45. 930 Wilson Ave. ' Apex Electric Co. Headquarters For ELECTRICAL GIFTS in Sugarhouse DONT WAIT UNTIL I'M GONE When I quit this mortal shore, And mosy round this earth no more Don't weep, don't sigh,' don't sob I may have struck a better job. : Don't go and buy a large bouquet, For which you will find ill hard to pay ; Don't mope around and feel all blue I may be better off than you. Don't tell the folks I am a saint, Or any old thing I ain't; If you have jam like this to spread. Please pass it out before I'm dead, T 11 you have roses, bless your soul Just pin one in my button hole, Whjlc I'm alive and well y to-da- 1079 East 21st So. d NOTES OF INTEREST IV AVIO ACCIDENT Bird, 1346 Bryan avenue, and Kenneth A cocks, 841 Ramona avenue, two southeast residents, were Gliglitly injured Wednesday evening when an automobile in which they were with Mr. and Mrs. Wlirord Burton and Joseph Smith, collided with another automobile. Milton Christmas with its carnival of gav colors, toys and sentiment us taken a wry definite form in the various store windows and ' lenartments in Sugarhouse. in cotton scene worked out is the :r.i;w Especially attractive and snow at the (iranite Mart. Petty Mutor Comjuiny has shown be can what accomplished with silver and blue and the beauty just vast array of toys at the J. C. Penney Company gives the "kids" something to think and talk about. The ladies at the Suirar House Jewelry, Arteraft Shop and Af- ton (lift Shop have shown the results of what the feminine touch hnstmas decorative way. can do mat Firmage Shoe Store fairly glitters with Christmas and the huge tree at the Sterling Furniture glows with its Wide Selection colored lights. Christmas many THIRD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Sugar House Lumber presents an Third Presbyterian Church, 11th Gift Seekers array or coiorea ugnia ana siuray East at 17th South, Rev. J. E. Nash, toys. Minister. Sunday School 9:45 a. m.; W. Many homes have timed their at J. Halliday By Morning worship, 11:00 a. m.; Theme "Dunder" and "Blitzen" and all the tention to Christmas decorations and "Your God and Mine." are the formerly sombre looking State Public cordially Invited to worship rest of old Saint Nick's steeds due for a hard earned rest, for it Prison now glows with the lights of with us. has been rumored that the beuevo-le- che fuletide season. old gentleman has been convin NEW PASTOR AT THIRD ced by the great number of auto ac STORM SPEEDS UP PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH CIIKISTMAS BUYING ceaaoriea he has delivered to - car Rev. J, E. Nash, has moved with Minds have gone "a drifting" that his wife and family to Salt Lake owners that motoring can be made in the recently prolonged Indian with where he will preside at the Third safer and more comfortable took sudden Jolt Friday a Summer, car as car extras radios, heater, Presbyterian Church, 11th East and such storm which the realized when and they uew seat covers, horns tires, 17th South. in was a heavy reminder had set accessories automobile other Mr. Nash and family moved here many Not only does he plan to make his that Christmas was only two weeks from Thermopolis, Wyoming and are own Christmas automotive, out ma away. residing at 936 East 17th South. Merchants report that sales of legion of helpers have been buying Yule-tid- e Chribtmas articles needs greatly Increased for so many motoring IX HOSPITAL when the skys darkened and rain stores Auto Western at gifts Mrs. Lawrence Thorstenburg. a began and in many stores additional Westminster Avenue, Is recovering that he has undoubtedly ordered a help was called to handle the rom a recent operation at the L. D Christmas that will spread year-round joy for everyone. S. Hospital. That Western Auto is preferred by these "layman Santas" as a source NEW FASHION SHOP their gifts is due to the fact that for The Fashion Dress and Apron find gift budget goes further Shop opened its doors to the public they of the lower prices and sat' because this week at 964 East 21st South performance that gifts with a varied array of ladies house isfactory Auto are guaranteed Western from and aprons. dresses, frocks, lingerie to give. J. B. Priestly, distinguished Eng Among the things that have been SUGARHOUSE RECREATION. "author who" was' to Tecture Dec-- " lish are found as popular especially gifts Classes are being held at Irving Motorola car radios. Since Motorola ember 7th on the Master Minds and High School every day from 3:30 to 6 p. m. in handicraft for Adults and affords radio entertainment for all Artists Series of the University of Come make your Xmaa who use the car this popularity is Utah Extension Division, has found Children. one quickly it impossible to bo in Salt Lake City gifts. Mrs. Morgan rooms, D 7 and easily understood and be would a most en- at that time. A tentative date for realizes it why D 4. to or to any the engagement has been set for the the joyable family Also Gym classes under City Re gift creation Monday and Friday, 7:30 to one else for whom the giver wishes first week of Mar., 1938. Mr. Priestto increase the pleasures of driving. ley's manager1, stated that his thea9:30 p. m. The wido range of prices and con trical affairs in New York had devenience of an easy payment plan, veloped more rapidly than he anticiSUGARHOUSE P. HAS of two of Mr. BIG MONEY ORDER DAY plus the opportunity of giving Mo- pated. The rehearsal Is as a gift package on Christ Priestley's plays responsible for. Sugarhouse Post Office Money Or torola r the postponement. der receipts passed any previous mas and having It installed at the The Honorable Agnes MacPhail, mark in the history of the station nearest Western Auto store after on December 2, according to Cecil wards, make Motorola something first and only woman member of as Is as to it is to Canada's Parliament, will be the that give easy Crockwell, superintendent. next number on the Master Minds receive. The number of orders was 78 and And speaking of radios Western and Artists Series. Described as "a the amount of money Involved 81,050. Auto's 1938 line of famous Western glowing orator with a fund of wit Air Patrol radios are astounding dis- and interest" she will speak on "WoEARLY XMAS MAILING In order that the public cooperate cerning radio buyers of the west man in Our Present World," Janu To replace ary 28th. with the postal department by hav with their high values. set in the "family-best" an outmoded ing their Christmas packages in the There is nothing to suggest tem mail early enough to allow delivery living room or afford an extra radio before Christmas day, the postal de in breakfast nook, nothing could give perament or artistic eccentricty in Katherine Meisle, the Metropolitan partment issued a bulletin this week as much pleasure for so little cost star who thrilled a large asking postal employees to impress as one of these new sets, thousands Opera In crowd be Kingsbury Hall at the Uniwhich of will it upon the minds of the people on saying "Merry of Utah November 28. Per as Western versity in Christmas" their delivery routes. There will be many haps it is due to the fact that her no delivery of mail on Christmas Homes this year. Of training is wholly American. An arBut back to the automobile. day except registered and special all the car's needs, we are often least dent movie fan, the singer also ex delivery. Much time may be saved, accord prepared to replace tires at this time pressed a strong liking tor Utah d safety of trout. ing to Mr. Crockwell at the local of year, yet the Tho notable contralto,' who appear new tires is very important on win station, if people will wrap packages ed under the auspices of the. Extenhow so think ter address on one appreci side highways securely, plainly Division of the University, said sion of the package only and refrain from ated would be the friendship of one and constant work was the only hard "dolling" the outside of the package whoso gift was a set of new tires, to a way operatic heights. with "Do Not Open Till Christmas'' Should that friend happily choose She deplored three things in the brand as famous and as dependable stamps. as Western Giants, that appreciation American musical situation: the un would be even more emphatically ex- ionization of musical artists, the arE FROCKS Other most acceptable gifts that rangement of classics into dance AGAIN 8HOWN IN S. IL music, and the aspirations of young The Critzy-Bell- e frocks, manufac pressed. who hope to appear: with the artists on tured by Mrs. C R. Coin and her son (Continued Page 4) Metropolitan Opera company while Raymond, are again being shown In in 'teens. their still Sugarhouse at the Afton Gift Shop, Finds Parading Oxen Mrs. Margaret Borg is in charge of Profitable Business Tho student Union Building of the tho department N. D. E. E. SimBenedict, University of Utah, which is cele - The Coins feature dresses made mons has added a new job to the upon order for extra or odd! sized operation of his farm brating the building's sixth birthday women, as well as individual styles near here by taking advantage of in early December, has averaged almost 2500 functions a year, or about covInterest in the old for the feminine world. 12 daily, since its opening. This reered wagon. Simmons and his four oxen cord takes in dances, parties, conAncient Hygiene make a profit each year appearventions, recitals, etc., but does not While methods of disease Iran. His ing in historical parades. include the tens of thousands of mission are discoveries of recent portable historical exhibit, Simgames played each year. mons, said, has never had an acyears, the Mosaic laws made pro 350 in of cident miles mm are irBitwiiiasiuu vision BgHuisfc parading. imilar to our own. but co a Ion p. Simmons denies he is Women Open Law Firm to the core." inns wav further. A person who Kansas City. What is believed to animal or unclean an 26 an automobile touched "I bought thing be the first women's law firm in. caught the uncleanness and had to years ago and have used a car the Middle West has been opened wash himself and his clothini in for business and pleasure ever here by Mrs. Gladys J. Miniace running water, sometimes the since," lie said. and Mrs. Gladys B. Donovan. lor many days. cleansing lasting ' Offered nt University of Utah NOTES a non-ski- - CRTTZY-BELL- FOR RENT Furnished room. Well heated. 1937 South 12th East Street Raw Milk Ban Tabled By City Commission Hy. 1738 Don't wait until I've gone away. Anonymous. 500-ac- re ox-dra- "old-fashion- . rs rt |