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Show THE BULLETIN Thursilay, September 1?, I03S Presidents9 Book TrIESUGARHOUSE BULLETIN t Tastes Poles Apart, A WEEKLY PUBLICATION Printed at 2041 South 11th East Sugarhouae, Utah Issued eveiy Friday p. m. Librarian Reveals Wilton Liked Fine Literature! Theodore Roosevelt Most Avid Reader. Business Offire and Plant at 2044 South 11th Eaat Advertising Kates on Application O. C. CONNIFF, Publisher ORDERS RUNS INTO QUITE A TIDY SUM A Bit Rough; but iCs a living! FURNISHING THRILLS FOR THOUSANDS IS THE JOB OF THESE GENTLEMEN. SOMETIMES THE THRILLS ARE A LITTLE TOO REALISTIC FOR COMFORT. period in which v.c are liviifj changing sequence of events. a y constantly DIFFERENT KINDS OF NEWS editor runs the following on the top of the front prop of bis paper: "We only print news, wc do not make it. If Y'T.i don't like tils' ml ni news v.v print, don't make that A mid-wester- n 1 kind." Western Auto Manager Adviser. Car Owners In order to enjoy full satisfaction from seat covers you purchase for your car, be certain they are correctly Installed, advises E. L. Jcppcrson. local acting manager of tbe Western Auto Supply Company, who believes that proper installation not only affords a comfortable, smooth fit, but aloo assures longer wear. That scat covers soon pay for themselves in enhanced trado-i- n value of the car and prolonged life of the upholstery la readylly appreciated by thrifty car owners, for thousands of them make It a regular practice to Install them as soon as they purchase a car, Mr, Jep-pers- declares. Our yean of experience as one Figuratively, the Installations be rsys, while the coverk are still in the ctate of manufacture, for there they are cut to afford full width, seamless seats and backs, t b a t cover completely without sewed sletching. They arc also with double ceam and lock atitch for strength, well built of straps ample length arc securely fastened to the covers wherever needed for a smooth fitting appearance. Every man entrusted with the find installation of scat covers for Westrcn Auto is an expert, having been trained to to give every detail proper attention, so that the final job Is practically tailor made. Proper allowance is made for the flexing and pulling of the seat under the passenger's weight and all edges and corners are securely fastened." Mr. Jepperson suggests that Motorists who are planning to equip their car with seat covers should do no before Fall and Winter weather acts In, for they are particularly valuable then. be-gl- tie-do- of the largest seat cover retailer. In tbe nation has proven the advantages of careful workmanship In putting seat covers on the car, and every step, from the opening of the full width material bolts at the factory to the final fasteneiln actual Installation is planned to assure the First Flows of Tree Branches customer a long wearing, smooth The first farm plows were made of crooked tree branches and fitting Job. worked by man power. literature, while with Presi- Soon after this picture of A1 newsreel cameraman, hang- Ming-alon- e, ing like a gondola from a cluster of balloons over Old Orchard country club, was made, the anchor rope broke, and Mingalone, who had gone aloft for some novel shots of golfers tnd traffic beneath him, started on a thrilling sky shots by rescuride. ers in pursuit of the drifting photographer finally punctured several balloons, and Mingalone came down in a cornfield unhurt. le Well-place- d you. Theodore Roosevelt once took Marshall to Oyster bay when he moved his library there, the little white mustached man recalled. He was so devoted to those books that he helped me rip the boards off the boxes down in the basement and carry the books upstairs to the li- brary. President Taft, Marshall said, had a legal complex. I horestly believe he never read a book while in office but legal books. Calvin Coolidge measured up to his reputation as a very austere man, who had no use for anything frivolous or humorous. Roosevelt II Prefers Stamps. Marshall said he had done little library work during the Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt administrations. But Hoover read very little scientific things mostly, he said. And I dont see how President Roosevelt has any time to read, Marshall observed. Hes the dumdest stamp collector I ever saw even has them bring them to him in bed." The navy Jnst a few minor scratches was all that Crash Waller netted in the spectacular flip of his racing car while going at high speed in the final races held at Lakewood Park. Here Crash is shown removing his goggles after climbing out from beneath the wrecked racer. Written words cannot replace the personality of your voice. Ihe telephone reaches out to other towns and brings happy, familiar voices to you in return. The long distance operator will be glad to tell you the rates to any towns without 0 obligation. Whose voice wou!J you like to hear? ... (j.ini.i A I I Trlf-i;rni- 'iii pit n jr Auto Tops - Seat Covers de- extended to 500 feet by the use of synthetic air. World record sea dives to 500 feet under artificial conditions and to more than 400 under actual conditions have been made by navy divers using standard rubber diving suits and a new mixture of helium and oxygen for breathing purposes. Tot Presnell, Dodger rookie Navy officials said the new synthetic atmosphere is the result of knuckle-baileis stretched out on more than 10 years research. They the diamond after being hit by a mixsaid that the oxygen-heliuline drive off the feat of Ival Goodture considerably advances the art man, Reds outfielder.' The Dodger of deep diving and has no harmful hnrler had to be carried off tbe field effects upon the diver. on a stretcher. Dodger teammates The depth was attained snrround the injured player at field. by Master Divers J. H. McDonald, Las Animas, Colo., and William Badders, Annapolis, Md., in the Tick-Toc- k of 125 Clocks Washington navy yard diving tank. Makes Home Lively Place Sea conditions were simulated by When Charles S. CLEVELAND. applying air pressure to the water in the tank equivalent to sea pres- Mills has time on his hands he goes sure at 500 feet. out and buys another clock. He already has 125 clocks in his home, all in running order. Man Rescued From Bog; an automobile mechanic Mired to Neck for Week andMills, machinist, started with an old ONT. BELLEVILLE, Hugh square mantel clock, bought for a farmer, was res- dime. lie took it apart and put it Jones, cued from a bog in which he had together and it ran smoothly. been mired to the neck for six Soon he had 50 clocks. His hobby days. Clinging to a log with one absorbed all his spare time and arm, Jones was forced to watch money. I broke up 75 old clocks and kept searchers pass within a few feet of him. With only his head visible the works and I gave away 50 above the muck and prevented from clocks before I cut my eyeteeth, crying out by the pressure of the Mills said. When I come home from work I mud on his chest, he was unable to attract their attention. go into my clockroom. Sometimes I The efforts of several men were start them all going at once. It required to extricate him from the takes an hour and a half. morass. He is suffering from exHis clocks ages range from 65 to 170 years. It is at the even hour haustion and starvation. that he is happiest. At this time the cuckoos cuckoo, the chimes chime, the grandfather clock booms forth 50,000 Carp Fattened and the Swiss musicbox clocks tinOn Corn for Markets kle melodiously. FOND DU LAC, WIS. The Indians of 13G0 Lived 0 conservation commission put of corn soaked a diet on carp In Apartment Houses to fatten them up for the eastern The first CANYON. TEXAS. market. When the last shipment on record in the houses apartment New in York, dealers arrived tanhandle of Texas have been excomplained that the fish were too on Antelope creek, northcavated from The thin. carp, ranging of east Amarillo, officials of the 4 to 35 pounds in weight, were State Teachers college Texas West seined from Lake Winnebago to disclosed. have in fish and kept protect game Indian dwelling ruins, inhabited d ponds and marshes. about 1300 A. D., have apparently of com fed 1,100 are pounds They been found in the Antelope creek daily. area. Eb-bet-ts ot 50,-00- Car Upholstery Cleaned - $1.50 and up Furniture Cleaning, set - $5.00 2-pi- ecc HUGS CLEANED AND SIZED SUN-BRIT1128 E East 21a iSoulji Zt. CO. Ph?aa fjy. - land-locke- G419 EXPERT Shoe Repairing Quick Courteous Service PROGRESS SHOE .1 REBUILDERS 1059 East 21st So. t Ily, 8775 I WELDING? Just Bring In the Flecei" Granite Welding & Wire Works 2021 South 11th East Hyland 458 ft fy 3 SEVERAL WALLPAPER REMNANTS LEFT AT UnilEARD OF PRICES Dec them tins week at THE PAINT POT We Make tbe World Brighter Hy. C739 1074 E. 21st So. THE BULLETIN ADS Tays for Final Order. m to hear your voice Flowers That Satisfy1 2157 Highland Drive Hyland 8199 22-ce- Postmaster Fellinger did not r, Its great FLORAL East Orange, N. J. Postmaster Though the truck driver had no money at the outset of the transactions, no charges have been made or are contemplated against either the truck driver or the druggist, since ro shortage or irregularities in the books of the substation resulted from the business. The transactions, Mr. Fellinger explained, were in themselves simple and were based on the postal rule that a substation does not have to turn into the main postoffice the proceeds of its money order business until the business day following the sale. Six months ago the truck driver told his friend, the druggist, that he had to make a payment of $30 on a truck. He did not have the money, but said that his sister had agreed to lend it to him the next day. The druggist made out a money order for $80, which the driver cashed to make his payment. Makes Out New Order. The next day the driver told the druggist that his sister had been unable to lend him any money. After some deliberation the druggist made out another money order, slightly larger, to cover the amount due for the first. The driver cashed this and returned the cash to the druggist. For six months a new order was made out and cashed each day. On the first money order of $30 the truck driver paid 20 cents. The second order, which had to include the 20 cents on the first order, totaled $80.42, the rate for money orders from $30.01 to $J)0 being 22 cents. The largest money order issued is for $100. When the payments on each of the money orders had brought the total to more than $100, two orders had to be bought each day, the first at the rate and the second at the following rate: six cents on orders from one cent to $2.50; eight cents on those from $2.51 to $3; 11 cents on those from $5.01 to $10; 13 cents on $10.01 to $20, and 15 cents on $20.01 to ot $40. partment has revealed that the posdivsible depth to which deep-se- a ers can descend safely has been 500-fo- Forget-Me-N- 22-ce- Diver Reach SCO Feet Using Synthetic Air WASHINGTON. Corsages KINGS Loen cf $80 One Grows Into $2,003 Order and Agent Alone Is Loser. of $2,000. i dent Harding, all was grist that came to his mill good and bad, veteran recalled. the An with library training, Marshall joined the staff in McKinleys time as a messenger. There were only ten White House employees then. Letters were written in long hand. Tom was alternately doorkeeper, newspaper clipper, social bureau assistant, file clerk and general handy man. Roosevelt 1 Loved Books. President McKinley, he said, He let wasnt much of a reader. Mark Hanna do most of it for him. But Theodore Roosevelt loved books more than any man I ever Tve known saw, he continued. him to absorb a book's content in an hour and discuss it page by page with the author. But no trash, mind Funeral Designs an East Orange drugstore because the station had sold $90,000 worth of money orders to one customer, a truck driver, revealed that postal authorities had fathomed the mystery of the sales, which brought an original money order of $30 to one COM M E N T S fine CUT FLOWERS Phillip L. Fellinger, who announced that he had rlosed a substation in Phone copy for news items and events of interest to The Bulletin" WASHINGTON. After a busy or Commercial Printing Comjiiy Hyland 884. 'day in the White House, what does a President like to read? The man 1.50 in a better position than anyone Subscription Trice One year (52 weeks), in advance else to know says that the tastes of the last seven chief executives are as far apart as the poles. from 1) (Continued Page Tom Marshall, dubbed Librarian of the White House back in Theodore Roosevelt's administration, has not only catalogued many Presbut idents libraries, personal checked out the books they wanted from the Congressional library. Marshall has Just retired after 38 years of service. Woodrow Wilson was very careand newspaper readers uf Lite towns r.nd farms want.t-- know what ful about his reading chose only it is all about. It is a lopsy-tur- f JUGGLING OF MONEY re- veal how many money orders were drawn and cashed in the six months nor would he break down the $90,000 total to show how the money orders grew from the original $30 to one of nearly $2,000, which had to be made out when the druggist became worried and put a stop to the transactions by paying for the final order himself. On a final order of $2,000 the rate of payment on the money orders, considered as interest, would total 2,400 per cent. The druggist was out the original $30 loaned to the truck driver plus $1,920 which the cost of the money orders inexorably added on to principal. Yet, despite the terrific cost, evThe erything was satisfactory. United States government had received its share of 22 cents for each $100 on $90,000 worth of business; the truck driver had paid an $80 installment on his truck, and the druggist, though he had had to pay $2,000, had never had the slightest irregularity in his books. Man-Mad- e Quakes Assist Arkansas to Find Oil El Dorado, Ark. e earthquakes are being utilized to locale oil in south Arkansas. Artificial quakes arc made with charges of dynamite. Seismographs record the resulting sound waves which sink thousands of feet below the earths surface. The seismograph records do not specifically show the presence of oil, but reveal the underground structure, from which geologists are able to judge if oil might be present. In exploring for oil with seismographs, a small charge of dynamite is placed several feet in the ground and exploded. The sound waves spread downward, strike the anhydrite and are reflected upward all in a few seconds. The seismograph records the time required for the sound to be reflected. The earthquakes are repeated at other sites, approximately a half mile distant. For yiars geologists have known that nil, being lighter than water, seeks subterranean domes places where underground layers of anhydrite have buckled and formed highs. By comparing the time required for the sound waves to be reflected at the different sites, geologists determine the presence of domes. Man-mad- Record in Brothers The local police force bel'eve it holds the American record for brothers in the department. There are ten sets on the force and one father end son team. Honolulu. For the extra fun that comes of buying more and buying better and buying wisely . . . shop The Bulle-ti- n The merchants who advertise in The Bulletin are the dependable merchants in Sugar House . . - the merchants, who offer the best values, the best prices, the best quality, tho best service. Their aim is to serve you better and The Bulletin ads are their way of telling. you about it! ad-wa- y. 2044 So. 11th E. Hy. 364 - Ventriloquisin' Dummies' ! Ancestors Are Preserved New Haven, Conn. Ancestors of Charlie McCarthy, best known of ventriloquism dummies, are spending their days in this city. A collection of such dolls is in the home, of Harry Edward Parsons, musician, whose grandfather, the late Lewis Jay Parsons, performed to enthusiastic audiences during the Civil war period. The dolls were carved of wood by Lewis Parsons, and his wife, Lydia Streeter Parsons, designed their clothing. They are stored in their original traveling trunk, which in itself Is a relic of the period. Cincinnati. The man who has an aversion to cats is likely to have had some trouble with women. That s, is the belief of Dr. Charles M. professor of psychology at the University of Cincinnati. Cats, Dr. Diserens explained, are highly feminine. Men are naturally hostile to women. But, afraid to show their hostility to women, they take it out on cats. Dr. Diserens has noticed that at least ten men to one woman dislike cats. All of the cats characteristics, he pointed out, are those that men fear in women. The cat is graceful, beautiful, ingratiating when it wants to be, but dependent and sly. The psychologist called attention to the fact that men who have con--! trol over women usually like cats. For an example he cited the Frenchman, who is at ease with women and likes cats. The cat is cherished by various he said. It is innationalities, teresting to note that men of those nationalities usually have control over their women. . - Dis-eren- i v 7 |