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Show THE KOiAKIIOl'SE FRIDAY, FERRUARY 25, 1938 Remodel .Tour. HOME Without Mortgaging It (Comments, Continued from Page 1) MOST MODERN AIR Third Presbyterian Church Notes lltli East at BULLETIN authorizes the painting of a colored stripe on the car. Police seeing this stripe are liaLle to stop that car any'jJtacefhnd "it is just too had if the driver is found to have been indulging in alcholic Leverages. Accidents due tu drunken driving have measurably decreased in that town since this rule has been in operation. It looks as though it were a good thing. FORCE AIM OF U. S. Army and Navy to Have 4, COO Plar.cs by 1S40. 17th South Rev. J. Elbert Nash, Minister The most Washington, D. C. world by in modern force air the Barker, General Superintendent. 11 1940 is the goal set by the army and SEE a. in. Morning Worship, theme A navy, with both branches of the raWorld Oicicoinc"; Junior Sermon, tional defense speeding construction :30 p. in. programs as rapidly as possible. Wot king With God." BilOilicially, the United States is not leaden Young Peoples Meeting, to keep pace with the lie Stevenson and Bob Clenny, Tues-ilu- attempting building being pushed forprojects 7:30 p.'m. Choir rehearsal at the ward by powers, but it is European If It Goes In The RuiMing. We Sell It I,, li. Ilmnmill home; Friday, Boy an open secret thet continuance Scout Troop No. 33 and Saturday 2 of the present policy through 1940 M. O. Ashton, Mgr. Phone Hjr. 555 will give the United States what p. m. Cuh Pack No. 8. some experts have described as the speediest and most modern and efficient been air army in existence. lias E. Rev. Nash J. Public recently All Makes of The meet8 army contemplates having master cuh Pack of appointed WASHING MACHINES 2,020 first-lin-e fighting planes by in Church Third with Jack Berrying The number sought REPAIRED June 30iM). The schedule for free adult eduea man as den thief. Mr, Emil Nyman, by the navy-- is somewhat smaller, We .will check, oil and grease tlon classes to be held In the com j former cub master, found it neces-- j bu( the combined strength of the two your Washing Machine for mittee room of tlio main public libr :j eary to relinquish his post in favor forces should total approximately of his larger work as Cub Coinmls- - 4,000 planes all of which are exary during the week is os follows. Pitted to be the equal if not the ll Vacuum Cleaners and Monday, 10 a. m. to 12 noon book sioner for the District. Mr. Nyman of orei8n shiP3 I roners Repaired devote his energies toward review "Singing In the Wilderness Foreign Strength Summarized. A!l Makes of Wringer Rolls the life of Audubon. The mystery of noting a larger and finer Cub proThe estimated air present his birth, the wonder of his life, the gram In all the Churches, clubs and of the major foreign pow- ctrength other bodies fathering this fine pro-,eis Bummarized as follows: purity of his lnmortality. "Vom. 3:30 to 1:30 . Russia has about 3,000 planes p. gnm. Friday, Sea Ship StanBbury, sponsored by organized in squadrons and ready 2386 So. 11th E. Hy. 2111 cabulary Study, "Poetry Appreciathe Third Church, held a very inter- to take off immediately if war were Verne of tion and the "Mechanics in addition to approxiesting program last Thursday when declared, Writing." other planes. 1,500 mately Saturday, 2 to 4 p. m. "Correct a members of lxiys received promo2. Italy has an estimated 2,250 English Usage, with Vocabulary tions and honors due to faithful and first-lin- e military planes and perand "Writing the Short earnest work with their ship. This haps 1,500 other ships, including Study, J'lp is r.re of the finest in the coun- training types and reserves, for a Story." INSURANCE m. 7:30 9:30 to try and elites toward becoming Na- tctal strength of around 3,750 planes. p. Saturday, 3. Germany, whose air strength tional construe and Flagahip. "English vocabulary is one of the most guarded military tlon and Dictionary Class. Truck and rassenger Car secrets of Europe, is believed to 1:30 to 3:30 p, m. In Wednesday' have approximately 2,300 modern is Third Repossemlons Chjich rapidly progressing tho Board Room of the main public and perhaps 1.400 other planes new of their under the C Ford Sedans and a few re leadershipf could be rushed into military library "Elementary English and Ac- pastor. This Church is favored with ecrvjce almost possessions all priced below cent Correction" for foreign bom. overnight, bringing :ta iocalion being in one of tbe finest rs fuu p0wer to about 3,700. he market. 4. France is estimated to have growing sections of the city and is 40 Others to Choose FromAT SFItAGLE LIBRARY e planes and 1,000 preparing to put on a program that 2,100 Monday, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. "World will make it a leader among the training planes or reserves, for a strength of 3,100. Literature including literature of churches of the city. Because of the toal 5. Great Britain is reported to the Bible, Sacred Books of the East strictly community type of its work. have 2,000 modern ships and unand literary writings from various it should command the support of known number of reserves, which 702 So. Main St. countries. this community. It is, at present, has been variously placed as high Was. 6105 Monday, Wednesday and Thursday providing Sunday School a full pro as 3,000. Stresses Time Faetor. evenings from 7 p. m. to B p. m.. gram of scouting. Young People's So- - j Grant Morgan, Mgr. Pro- ciety and Cub work for the boys and Secretary of War Harry II. Wood-girCitizenship and blems. and young people of the com-- ! r'n2 recently said that it should be borne in mind that modern airm unity and expects to expand this craft cannot be quickly improvised. program as quickly as leadership can The construction hf planes necesbe procured and facilities arranged. sarily takes considerable time. The adult program is rapidly ex- Hence our peacetime strength panding. The women have maintain- should approximate rather closely ed splendid organizations; an adult our requirements in war. Furtherin a major war our air arm Bible Class is growing rapidly, meet- more, would probably be engaged almost ing at 9:45, variour teachers are be- immediately on the opening of hosing invited to teach this class but a tilities. Therefore it is desirable regular teacher will soon be elected. that it be practically on a war footing in time of peace. He pointed out that foreign counMl iX'K BANQUET AT tries are making heavy increases THIRD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH on their air arms and asserted that most of the powers have Prof. L. H. Creer of the University many mere airplanes on hand or unof Utah spoke to about 50 men at a der construction than this country. banquet held at Third Presbyterian However, he added, in quality Prof. oi:r new planes are at least the Church Wednesday evening. Creer described the causes leading o equal and probably the superior, war and graphically indicated Hut type for type, of any military airin the world. wo have four of the six causes pres- planes "Our program of airplanes proent in our international situation to- curement does not contemplate atday. He briefly outlined the causes taining the number possessed by leading to Fascism, Nazism and Com- other countries. With our favorable munism and contrasted them, with geographical position and our dethe Democracy of America, pointing termination to use our military only for defensive pur- -' out that American Democracy em- strength we believe that 2,320 military ' poses, phasizes the worth of the individual airplanes will be sufficient for our while the "Isms" of Europe today r.eeds." emphasize the worth of the stale. A fencing duel by a team from tk; Inccme From Vegetables University, a trumpet solo by If. II. Rises to Billion a Year Hammlll ami several numbers by the Washington. Vegetable growing Salt Lake Symphonic Choir complet- has become a evei-- l el a special Moath-Enlesions and batteries eilere Tina ' ed a very profitable evening. The industry. Department of Agriculture effective at Western Auto Thursday. Friday and Saturday. February II men expressed themselves as looking records show. eales. i a el Above, the local the to company. 28. manager 25 and according Gross income from vegetables man explain! to pretty Claire Sullivan the savings afforded by tbe event forward to another mens dinner soon. the lust five years has averduring Rev. Harris Pillsbury, a foimer 22 per cent of income about aged A most timely event for local mo- - will also readily appreciate the extra beloved ppastor of Third Church, v till- from all crops, and more than 10 avings afforded by the special price ed in Balt Lake City last Monday. per cent of total farm income from torists is the three day Month-En- d on Western Giants effec- lie spoke to the students of West- - all sources, department economists reductions ,;ale, featuring greater savings on tive this week-enThey will be minster College Monday morning ana raid. Average annual income from tires, batteries, oil and many acces- quick to take advantage of the fact spent a portion of the day renewing vegetables exceeded that from cot- ton by $50,000,000; grains by $10,- sories, that has been announced by that Western Giant first grade qua! old friendships. ru'its and nu by $350, 000,. Many were disap. 000 Mr. J. W. Halliday, resident manager ity is now available at big extra sav- pointed that he could not occupy the 000 0(; and tobacco by $600,000,000, the of tbe Western Auto Supply Com- ings. pulpit of Third Church during his department reported, Its Farmers who plant about 1,500, with visit but he found it necessary to cool weather "Continued on pany. Especially reduced prices these Important automotive needs hard starting demands a powerful leave for his home in Chico, California 0W acres 3 per cent of oil crop lands in vegetables receive an will be In effect February 24, 25 and dependable battery for sarijfactory A Pastors Training Class, in two overage income of approximately v cf divisions, Is meeting with tbe pastor 51,00 26, he says. starling and the full convuii-i.an acre, compared with an Although February is generally the car's electrical accessories, he to train for Church membership One, average of $15 an acre for all crop lands. thought to conclude King Winter's adds. Selection of a Western Auto The American diet is made up of Fury, Mr.' Halliday declares that cold, Battery during this event insures an increasing proportion of vegea conveniences these at weather continues saving. rainy usually according to department extables, 'The oil sale will be enthusiasticalthrough the early Spring months, The use of fresh vegetables perts. making driving as hazardous then as ly received by the many local motordoubled since 1920, due has virtually in stormy weather. ists who realize that Western Auto Planes Bomb Hawaiian to improved methods of shipping lubricants are equal to, if not better Thin ne :essi titer Waste With Tree Seeds which make marketing tires for proper safety, a powerful than, oils ordinarily selling at prices practical. The canning industry virHonolulu. Millions of has doubled in the last twenty battery for convenience and continu- higher than our regular low prices.' consisting of tree seeds are tually and now supplies a market years Mr. Halliday anticipates a marked being dropped upon barren and ined use of winter grade lubricants for from about 2,000,000 acres. for crops accessible of Hawaii the' regions by full protection of the car engine. Interest in this event on the part of United States army air corps in an. Wise, economical automobile own- local autolsts and bus Increased his effort to reforest denuded mountain ers, who appreciate the need for de- stocks to meet the extra denjand of areas. Tho "bomlra" are filled with Girl, 23, Qualities pendable tires in all kinds of weather these three days. tightly packed seeds of the koa, silas Tugboat Captain ver wattle and ironwood trees. Remote Kauoi island, one hunTort Albcrni, B. C. Dorothy dred miles northwest of here, is one Clarice Bluekmore, a GROUPS WILL PUSH league. scene of the bombing. blonde, is planJAPANESE BOYCOTT Tree seeds have been successfully They said that at a boycott meetto be Canada's first woman ning Plans to carry an unofficial boy- ing In the City anil County building planted by air fur nine years in the tugboat captain. cott on Japanese goods to all eei Wednesday night, 200 army authorities said. In poison pledg territory, Dorothy recently passed her in the tions of Utah were announced Thurs- ed support to the campaign. The 1028 the army for a tugboat masexamination first of such experiments ever tried certificate under Supervisday by tbe chairman of a boycott meeting was addressed by Paul M. in America. ter's dropped at that committee compose J of representa- Peterson, president of tho Utah Slate time ing Examiner Lionel 11. Lindsay sprouted :n I took root, resultof Vancouver, and confirmation tives of the Salt Lake City Federa- Federation of Labor, and William H. ing in the of a large front Ottawa is expected soon. tion of Labor and the Union Label Taylor, labor education specialist. area. 9:45 a. m. Church School, Lincoln SUGAR HOUSE LUMBER & HARDWARE CO. At y, Library $1.00 - su-wi- pro-'Pcri- IDEAL REPAIR SHOP 1 or DOES THIS APPLY TO YOU Following a hearing in juvenile court this week, two groups of parents learned to their amazement that they themselves were partly responsible for their childrens being disobedient. A careful investigation by the court officer previous to the- hearing revealed the following. The parents of the first child continually bickered with each other over the type of discipline to be administered. If the father gave a command, the mother' invariably countermanded it and took the side of the child. The parent of the second child frequently threatened the youngster with a whipping but never carried out their threats. On several .occasions they sent their daughter to bed because she misbehaved when guests were present. After the visitors departed, they contradicted themselves and permitted her to get up. So long as parents countermand their; own orders or fail to carry out a warning they can expect disobedience. When children do not learn obedience in the home, there is very little the school can do to correct them. Eventually they are brought into court and must pay the penalty for the failure of their parents to teach them obedience. Wyoming State Journal - rs y-c- x. r-n. AUTO LOANS fj3 -- first-lin- DUGAN MOTOR 1 FINANCE CO. Social-Econom- ls ic 1 ! SAVINGS OFFERED first-cla- ss billion-dollar-e-ye- ar d : d. j i sure-grippi- T ycar-aroun- d ng "live-bomb- s twenty-Ihrco-ycar-o- -- ld Wanted To Rent FANTASTIC FIGURES 8 . or 4 Room house or apartment ADORN NEW VESSELS near Sugarbouse. Call Tho Bulletin," . - Hyland 364. Figureheads Are Coming Back Into Fashion. Are ships figureheads coming back into fashion? A Norwegian line, plying between Oslo and Antwerp, has lately revived this ancient form of decoration for two of its new ships. One the Bretagne, or Brittany, carries at her bow the majestic figure of a barefoot lady in a swing skirt, personifying the French province of the same name. The other, the Bayard, bears on armored chevalier on whose unfurled standard appear the words "Sans Peur et Sans Reproche. To frighten their enemies, propitiate their gods, or merely to beautify the ships they loved, sailors through the ages have set fantastic, heroic, end sometimes comic creations at the prows of craft, says the National Geographic society. Subjects ranged all the way from crude native deities and dragons to plump Victorian maids and knights on horseback. One of the simplest decorations was that used by early Egyptians and Chinese who painted two eyes on the stem of their boats. Many elaborate wood carvings and bronze castings later bore witness to painstaking craftsmanship of experts trained for decades in the art. One famous English family, the Hellyers, carved ships' figureheads for 200 years. Another great name in the business was that of Grinling Gibbons, employed by Charles II, and to Sir Christopher Wren. Some Early Types. "Curving out from the hull, high above the sea, both bow and stem of primitive craft offered a conrpie-uou- s and natural point for the first forms of ship adornment. Carved Viking Tong ships' and Siamese 'snake boats,' built like dragons, are examples of the earliest type. "As the shape of vessels changed, a separate figurehead in wjod or other materials often took the place of simple decoration of the stem itself. Gradually typical figureheads on ships cf various nations began to appear. On the prow of Phoenicians' boats was often displayed the horse's head, symbol of speed. The Romans followed the lion and crocodile that once represented tutelary deities of mountain and river, with busts of their distinguished warriors. In the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries English and Dutch featured their national emblems of the lion, while Spaniards liked their craft headed by the figures of their favorite saints. An era of expanding merchant shipping, the Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries were prolific ones for American figureheads. At the prows of Yankee clippers, frigates and brigantines of war, heroic-size- d females in flowing robes, naval heroes in uniform and famous American statesmen in ordinary street clothes plowed through walls of spray along with conventional images of Neptune with his trident and classical goddesses of the sea. Elaborate and Unwieldy. t No country, however, maintained more interest in ships' figureheads than the England of Queen Elizabeth onward. So elaborate and unwieldy was some of this decoration that in the words of Sir Walter Raleigh, The ocean fairly groaned from their weight. An example was that of the British Sovereign of the Seas, with a mass of carving on her prow representing King Edgar mounted on horseback and trampling on six subject kings, und beyond it a figure of Cupid ridWashington, D. C. sea-rovi- ing a lion. Eventually, British craftsmen developed their art to include carvings of characters from Shakes-pear- e and Scott, the Knights of the Round Table, American Indians, Chinese mandarins, witches' and goblins. They came to represent no, pnlv imaeinarv chac.?r.-bu- t PUBLIC HEALTH COLUMN Communicable diseases reported to Utah State Board of Health durthe week ending February 18th lumbered 462, according to a report eleased today by Dr. William M. McKay, Director of the Division of Com- die ing municable Disease Control. Measles showed an increase of 61 jases. "It is apparently a measles A recent year, says Dr. McKay. Government bulletin showed an increase in measles all over the U. 8." Increases were also noted in the num-iof cases of diphtheria, Influenza and German measles. Chickenpox dropped from 191 to 148 cases, with mumps, pneumonia, jcarlet fever, smallpox and whooping xragh also showing decreases. One case of tularemia, incurred from the handling of an infected rabbit, was reported from Tooele. This is the second case reported this year. Five counties reported no diseases for the week, while only incomplete reports were received from Kane, Rich, San Juan and Utah Counties. er actual persons irum puuil. ill. members of shipowners v families. From time to time the use of the figurehead was banished or limited. In 1785 France suppressed sucl decoration for state shipping. Ten years later the British admiralty ordered elaborate ornamentation of ships discontinued. But the habit died hard. Up to the end of sail, superstitious men of the sea declared that a boat without a figurehead was haunted. "Among commercial lines in general there is an increasing tendency to use some sort of design on their ships to symbolize the name of the Present-da- y company. warships, too, often carry a badge or escutcheon on their bows. High Cost of Tooting Has Been Figured Out Omaha. The Union Pacific railroad has figured out that every time an engineer toots the steam whistle for a crossing it costs of a cent. It takes .2037 pounds of coal to toot the whistle one second. Six seconds is the average toot, so 1.22 pounds of coal u required. At current prices the cost is of a cent. one-eigh- th one-eigh- th Away With Mustaches! Kent, Ohio. Men at Kent State Normal school can quit counting those hairs on their upper lip. Most of the Kqpt dont like mustaches, anyway. co-e- ds Bones of 4 Persons Lie in Tree Heart 50 Years ; London. A mystery of the jungle ' is disclosed in the Colonial office's' report on the state of Brunei, Borneo, for 1936. The bones of four persons were found completely inclosed in an ar- -' tifici&l cavity in the living trunk of a tree. The tree, which was about four! feet in diameter, had fallen in the ordinary course of nature when the , discovery was made. Examination of the tree indicated! that a panel six feet in length had' been removed from the side of the! tree and the heart hollowed out to' contain the bones, the panel being: ; then replaced and grafted. Watches Once Small docks Watches originally were small clocks and were worn hung from the girdle because they were too largf for the pocket. Q |