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Show TIIE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST j For Salt Lake and vicinity Published at Fair tonight Commercial Printing Co. 2044 South 11th East Hyland and Saturday; warmer Saturday. S64 j If PUBLISHED IN SUGARHOUSE FRIDAY, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, VOL. 6 Local Notes of Interest Fish and Game Association Will Not Plant Fish J Will Robinson Discusses U S i Government i Mr. and Mrs. IV. A. Fawcett, and Mrs. Paul Frederickson, from of middle the week returned the proprietors of the Sugar House Cafe a trip to the National Parks In the were in Alpine during the holidays. Southern part of Utah. Mr. FredMiss Jennie Smith, spent the week rickson is one of the personnel at Mr end in Bingham. the local Ben Franklin Store. Willard B. Richards and son John and Mrs. Carl Ebmeyer and of the Granite Furniture Co. are at returned last week from a the furniture Markets in Los Angeles fourteen days spent in the Yellow- and San Francisco, California. stone National Park, while there Mr. Mr. family Ebmeyer took the trip to Yellow-lak- e. Margaret and Sarah Richards, Fern Walton and Beth Hartley, all Southeast girls are on an extended Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Jepperson and motor trip" to the northwest and Canfamiy, returned 'Monday from Amer- ada. ican Fork canyon where they spent the week end. Mr. Jepperson is actMr. and Mrs. Phil Grimm, accoming manager of the Western Auto panied by Mr. and Mrs. Maicom Supply Company's local store. Sterling, motored to the Grand Canof the Snake river Sunday going yon Miss Ruth Sorensen, Sugarhouse of Evanston and Woodruff. way by beautician, spent Sunday and Monthe river high and someThey report day in Spanish Fork visiting relawhat muddy. tives and friends. Information gained fiom Scott Linnell, chairman of the project committee of the Sugar House Chamber of Commerce this week regarding fishing in the lake at Fairmont Park, was to the effect that although the Salt Lake County Fish and Game asociation, through it9 representative, George Knapp, had arranged for more trout to he planted at the lake for the children, tho difficulties encountered with the parks department in keeping the lake open a reasonable length of time for fishing, prevented their doing so. Mr. Linnell stated that although verbal permission had been given from Pat Goggin. commissioner of city parks, for fishing, attendants at the park locked the gate at hours earlier than arranged at the opening of the fishing season. Buildings Remodeled For Street Widening Mrs. Eva Haffner of Billings, Mon. Henry and Steven Richards, and Having the financial assurance tana, la spending the summer with Johnnie Kimball, motored to. Grand-dadd- y that the property ' on Twenty-fir- st her sister, Mr Karl Kelleratrass, Evanston lake district, via South street would be purchased for 1909 South 11th East street. They report fishing good at Marsh widening the street, a number of lake. owners of buildings that will have to Mr. and Mrs. Allen Seegmiller and be remodeled started work this week. Mrs. Mr. the and of Paul Strand, the family spent holidays in WyomChecks for the properties puring fishing. Returning home via Ft K. A K. Plumbing and Heating Co. Brldger. Mr. Seegmiller said that are vacationing at Santa Monica, Cal- chased have been mailed owners the fishing was good, but failed to ifornia. They are expected home who are able to supply the proper state Just where. Mr. Segmiller is the first of August. papers and deeds. the genial manager of the J. C. PenActual work on the street will beney Store in Sugarhouse. gin soon according to officials of Mr. and Mrs. Bren Peterson, spent the state road commission. the week at Bear Lake. Mr. PeterP. L. Rosa, Sugar House Fender son is manager of the Meat departand Body Shop, spent Sunday at ment at the Success Market in Sug- SUGAR HOUSE LUMBER Utah Lake. DEFEATS ELKINS MILLS arhouse. Declaring wage-ho- ur that the problem of bills Is one for the entire people and not just the politicians, U. S. Representative J. Will Robinson addressed members of tbe Sugar House Rotary club at their weekly luncheon Thursday noon at Weasku Inn. Mr. Robinson recited some of tbe problems facing tbe people because of unemployment. Discusses New Post Office When ask what was holding up tho contruction of the new post office for Sugar House, Representa- tive Robinson said that all work was done towards site selection and approval and that plans for the building were being drawn before he left Washington, D. C. He assured the Rotarlans that he would send a telegram today and ask for a report on the progress. C of C Meeting Set For August.lO Arrangements for the program for the monthly meeting of tbe Sugar House Chamber of Commerce are under way this week, according to Wm. (Bill) King, chairman of the program committee. The meeting will be held August 10. Mr. King, Lee Sheets, and Glenn Tripp, were appointed as a program committee to take charge of the next three meetings, of the Chamrecent meet-o- f ber of Commerce at-Sugar House Lumber ft Hardware the board of directors of the Company softball team defeated El- organization. in the game played kins Mills, 5 Wednesday evening on the Highland Park school grunds. a Mr. and Mrs. Ray Snowball and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holmstrom re family, accompanied by Miss Ella Miss Bonnie Anderson, Roy port fishing exceptionally good In Davis, the Upper Provo river, where they Turner, and Leo Eddington, spent vacationed. Mr. Holmstrom is as- the holidays in Logan canyon. sistant cashier at the Sugarhouze Branch of the First National Bank. 7-- Mr and Mcs. Fred Griep, and S. daughter Freda, accompalned by Mr. L. Hemingway, were at Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Tripp, return-e- d and Mrs. lake three days. They said Tryol Wednesday from Madison river Prizes in Montana. Mr. Tripp is manager that fishing was very good. Mr. Griep is proprietor of F. of the Apex Electric Company. Griep Sheet Metal and Heating Work, and Mr. Hemingway is emPlacing first In the Childrens Mr. and Mrs.Helmer Nylene, spent ployed there. Parade staged Saturday under the the week end at Bear lake. Mrs. Nydirection of the city parka departlene is associated with the Merle ment as part of the Covered Wagon Mr and Mrs. Hugo Slink, spent HOlmes Frock Shop. Days, and winning first honors in Sunday at Brighton. the grand parade Monday morning, the float built by the Sugar House Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Watkins and Mrs. Lucille Mrq. (Emily Maxfield and Mrs. Playground supervisor, family were at Yellowstone for a Sugar House in week. Miss Mildren Watkins, Sylvia Michels, were visitors at Morgan,oneplaced for number parade honors,. place at the Granite Mart returned Lonesome Valley Lodge in Emigrat"A Grass Shack Little The float, to the store Tueday. ion canyon. or "One Night in Hawaii, had all the Hawaiian atmosphere with its Mr. and Mrs. John Jasperson and brown natives dancing and singing Miss Elaine Cropper, stenographer family, spent the week end on the during the parade. The shack was Provo. Mr. Japerson is manager of at the Peerless Laundry returned made of long grass snd the costhe Hardware department of the from Deseret where she has been tumes were made under the direcvisiting relatives. tion of the playground Instructors. Granite Mart Children on the float were Clarence Dell, Elvera Dell, Earlene Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rockwood, and Dr. and Mrs. Richards and family, Barbara Jacobs, Bonnie Me Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cutler ' were returned from the Pacific Mllllen recently (queen), Mark Caffall, Don in Yellowstone for a week and on Northwest, and Vancouver, where Russell, Dick Russell, Dixie Morgan, Thursday they accompanied Mr. and Dr. Richards attendend the Pacific Bonnie Jean Frisby, Lorraine Plow-giaMrs. N. K. Whitney to Klcth Thompson, and Ruth Grandaddy Coast Dental Convention as a delelakes, Mr. Rockwood is manager of gate. Morgan. the Rockwood Furniture Store in Sugarhouse. Mrs. J. Brand and son Hugo and Lena Gladys, and Joyce Mr. and Mrs. Kiepe are spending daugters, a two weeks vacation at Pinecrest Louise will leave Sunday morning for a vacation in Yellowstone Natin Emigration canyon. Mr. (By the Editor and other Kiepe is ional Park. the local tailor in Sugarhouse. H. Playground Float Takes Parade book-keep- er Bel-frema- n, n, C O Mrs. Hawxhurst Answers Call Final rites for Mrs. Elsie L Hawxhurst, 83, widow of Elisha Hawxhurst .were conducted today in the chapel of the Third Presbyterian Church with Rev. J. E. Nash in charge, assisted by Dr. R. D. Steele. Mrs. Hawxhurst was the mother o f Clarence Hawxhurst, former manager of the Mario Theatre, and has lived at 1060 Blaine Avenue for a number of years. She was a charter member of tbe Wasatch Literary club and a member of the Mlzpah Chapter, Order of Eastern Star. Musical numbers were given during the services by Louise Bowman Engle of Westminster. Surviving besides her son, Clarence Hawxhurst, are three grand- r - Water Carnival To Be Staged At Fairmont Park FARM WORK CUT BY MODERN EQUIPMENT i Labor Saving on Par With Industry, Say Experts. WASHINGTON. Farm production has been mechanized to a de- gree comparable with industry, according to the department of agriculture. Power machinery has largely replaced horses and mules during the last 20 years in most sections of the country, W. M. Hurst of the bureau of agricultural engineering said. Machinery development makes it possible for individual fanners to grow 100 acres of corn with the same amount of labor that his grandfather used in growing and harvesting five acres in 1838, R. B. Gray of the same bureau said. Labor Saving Shown. Recent investigations. Gray said, show that the modem farmer expends no more time or labor in producing 5,000 bushels of com than did the farmer 100 years ago in producing 250 bushels. In 1855, Gray said, the corn farmer used a walking plow, and planted and harvested by hand. He needed 33.6 hours of labor to grow one acre of com. The amount of labor per acre was cut to 15.1 hours in 1855 and 6.9 in 1930, he said. "Further improvements in machinery within the last eight years including four-roplanters and cultractivators and general-purpos-e tors make it possible now to produce an acre of com with five hours of labor, Gray said. e The development of the tractor, Hurst said, probably has affected American agriculture as much as, if not more than, the development of the reaper and steel plow of a century ago. Tractors More Practical. Only during the last 10 or 12 years, he said, have tractors been developed suitable for planting and cultivating row crops, for plowing, disking and belt work. Use of pneumatic tires Aas greatly, increased the practicality of tractors for farm work and road hauling. "Adapting of field machinery to use with tractors," Hurst said, "constitutes the recent major development in what is generally known as farm implements. New machinery permits higher speed and increases effectiveness in turning under cover crops." Mechanization has progressed further in the cultivation and harvesting of grain crops than in cotton. Labor in cotton fields will be reduced by half when a mechanical cotton picker becomes commercially available, it was said. Although arrangements are not yet complete, supervisors of the . Fairmont and Sugar House playthis week that plans stated grounds are going forward with a city wide Water Carnival to be held at Fairmont Park near the middle of August. The theme of the canlval will be Hawaiian, with music, swimming, dramatizations and dancing, according to Mrs. Lucille Morgan, and will embrace the experiences of travelers to tbe Hawaiian Islands. Board Of Directors Of Rotary To Meet A meeting of the Board of Directors of tbe Sugar House Rotary club wil be held Monday evening at 6 P. M. at Sprague Branch Library, according to information from the office of the club secretary, Charles Lobb. Several matters of importance to tbe club are to be discussed at this meeting and Mr. Lobb urged a complete attendance. w NEVADA E-- N TS Friends of "The Bulletin) REMODELING BUILDING FOB ASHTON HEATING COMPANY Work on remodeling a portion Of the Hygeia Ice Company building to accomodate the Ashton Heating and Ventilating Company shops was startsd this week. Tbe Heating company Is "moving to make way for a new bowling alley in the building they now occupy at 1127 East Twenty -- first South Street. HELENA DARLENE WARD. OBSERVES ANNIVERSARY Miss Helena Darlene Ward, daugh- LONDON. British convicts soon may go to the seaside to work and ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Ray Ward, Jbperved her tenth birthday anniversary Wednesday afternoon by sntertainlng ten little friends at a birthday party at the borne of her parents, 1150 Ramona. Miss Ward's guests were ColeneCox, Beth Brown, Beverly Billings, LaRae Collins, Betty Ruth Hatch, Mclene Edwards, Betty Jane Snyder, Carina Lund-ber- g and Patsy Ward. ct Chipman, Flrmage Shoe Co. rocom pained by Mr. and Mrs. M. A TAXES TAKE 24 CENTS OF EACH DOLLAR EARNED Marx, spent Sunday in Ogden. $2.95 WILL PAINT YOUR CAR WITH NU-ENAM- EL Sold Exclusively By Apex Electric Co. 1079 East 21st So. In Sugarhouse i Hy. 1738 Mrs. Afton Strong, of the Hyland Lumber Company left Salt Lake July 20th for an extended trip to California and Hawalla. Mrs. Strong was met in Los Angeles by Miss Bertha Strong, who accompanied her on the ocean trip. They sailed from San Pedro July 22nd, and expect to be away about a month. Taxes will consume 24 cents of every dullar of earned income by every worker in 1938 as compared with 5 cents per dollar that went fur taxes in 1890, according to the latest tax studies based on official records of local, state and federal governments. In 1890, 5 cents out of every wage earners dollar was sufficient to cover the cost of all government services, local, state and federal. leaving 95 cents for living expenses, recreation and savings. By 1912, the cost of government had so increased that 8.4 rents out of every dollar of earned income was required, and m various forms of taxes. REMODELING OF THEATRE By 1929, 12 cents out of every income dollar was required. In 19.38 the 24 cents that will be collected by all the various PROGRESSES RAPIDLY The Mario Theatre remodeling is taxing and licensing agencies of the govenment out of each dolMr. C. L. lar earned will fall short by 7 cents per dollar of paying the total progressing rapidly. j , : i I Two Propellers, One Motor Condon, manager, said, "as yet no opening date has been set." (COMMENTS, Coqtinucd on Fage 4) er t ........... i ; U. S. Fighting Plane Has WASHINGTON. The war department announced successful completion of tests of a airplane powered with a single motor. The twin propellers, operating in opposite directions, were expected to solve a number of aviation problems resulting from constantly increasing power of airplane motors. The propellers are operated on separate drive shafts, one enclosed within the other. The propellers are mounted one immediately behind the other, and both in front of the motor and the plane. The tests were carried out with a small single-seatfighting plane. They indicated that the use of the dual propeller would enable plane builders to reduce the size of the propeller and eliminate engine torque without a loss of propeller efficiency at high speeds. American history has been carried back a million or more years by bones found in a: western Maryland cave, according) to Dr. C. Lewis Gazin, of the Smith-- ! sonian Institution. The bones of 47 different kinds of animals were; gathered from a limestone cavern opened when a railroad cut was made. They represent a strange as- sortment of creatures ranging from mastodon to crocodile. The presumption, Doctor Gazin, said, "is that in the Ice age the! cavern was a natural trap with ani opening directly on top through which the animals fell. Once inside there was no way to get out." The skeleton zoo is from a period probably far antedating man in this part of North America. It includes near relatives of most of the ani- -' mals now found in the Appalachian; region and several which have long been extinct. The cave revealed. Doctor Gazin said, that monster cats, as big as lions or tigers and probably just as fierce, were the terrors of the Appalachians a million years ago. It contained a curious assemblage of. northern and southern animals.1 Bones of wolverine and marten, types now found only in the northern woods, were mingled with those of tapirs, which now range no far-- ; ther north than Central America.. ures Bones of mink beaver' and of wooded streams were mingled with those of ancient horses and coyotes, whose relatives today, J range over dry plains.. WASHINGTON. ed C. VISITS Master Bob Russell, of Sparks, Nevada, and formerly of Reno, "the Biggest Little City in the World, is visiting with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stain, 1977 South Twelfth East street. This is Bobs first trip to Salt Lake and be is very enthusiastic about our city, and our Covered Wagon Days' celebration. Master Bob plans on staying In ' Salt Lake two weeks." England Plans Seashore Camp for Good Convicts good-condu- YOUTH WITH GRANDPARENTS general-purpos- play. Under the home secretarys latest scheme to add to the "attractions" of prison life, a big camp will be built on the south coast, where men "on their honor" will be able to relax and work away from the atmosphere of prison walls. Convicts chosen to have a holiday at the states expense will have no more supervision than that ordinarchildren. ily given to navvies engaged on road or other reconstruction work. EBMEYERS HAVE GUESTS After a working day of eight AT CANYON HOME hours "guests of the camp will Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Ebmeyer en- spend their evenings in rooms detertained a hundred friends Wednes- voted to entertainment, writing and They will not be permitday evening at a canyon party in reading. ted to leave fiie camp at night. Parleys Canyon. Work will be reforestation, land After a buffet supper was served reclamation and agriculture, and the guests joined in community sing- there will be no barbed wire or walls around the camp, which is to ing and fun making. be built on a site well away from t seaside towns. MM NUMBER 21. 5c The Bulletin Single Copies of JULY 29, 1938 1 , otter-creat- |