OCR Text |
Show . I A' A THE BULLETIN WEATHER Published by the For (tommereial Printing Co. 1119 If I PUBLISHED IN SUCARHOUSE - Ml SUGAR VOLUME VI. HOUSE, SALT LAKE C1TY( OCTOBER UTAH, 14, NUMBER 193S u. U. OF U. RED SKINS vs B. Y. U. COUGARS The football championship of the in Big Steven conference may bang Utah of when University the balance Redskins clash with B. Y. U. Cougars on the Utah University gridiron this Saturday, October 15. Both tffiws are highly touted as strong contenders in the seasons scramble for Rocky Mountain football Supremacy. With a powerful line and a brilliant backfield, Coach Ike Armstrong's bunch harks back to the the redskins put their yfin :when on the Rocky Mountain brand it into the drove and Champion Ute corral with the frequency and itregularity of the football season Utes the Initial game, self. In their Bobtrampled ovtj the Montana cats to a 34-- 6 victory. In doing so, Armstrong broke precedent by manthe ning the field a good share of time with second and third string reserves, with which the team it rather generously blessed. Never in the history of their football rivalry has the B. Y. U. beaten a Redskin team, but the 20-0 defeat of Denver U at the hands of the Provo team proclaims Brigham Young as a truly dangerous rival The Y team is the best in years, nd in regards to beating Utah, it is now or never. Who bears the seasons football crown depends much on Saturdays score. Utahs schedule follows: October 15 Brigham Young at Salt Lake. October 22 Utah State at Logan. October 29 Denver at Salt Lake November 5 Colorado at Boulder. November 12 Colorado State at . Fort Collins. November 19 Wyoming at Laramie. November 24 Idaho at Salt Lake. December 1 7 Hawaii at Honolulu. FREE ADULTn EDUCATION CLASSES MF.IJ1 AT PUBLIC LIBRARY The Free Adult Education Class to be held at the public library for 'the week, is as follows: In the Committee Room; 1:30 to 3:80 p. m. Vocabulary Building, JThe Mechanics of Verse and the Appreciation of Poetry. Vocabulary; Short Story Reviews with Analysis. Saturday, 2 to 4 p. m. The Short Story, 3 Practice in Creative Prose Writing and Vocabulary Study. In the Board Room: Wednesday, 1:30 to 3:30 Accent Correction and FngHsh for the Foreign born. Friday, 1:30 to 3:30 Elementary English. a LOOSES WALLET W. Ted Arnold, 2468 Alden street, theft of his wallet conthe reported in cash and 315 in check $9 taining and other valuables from his over coat pocket hung in a city church Sunday. Gymnasium Classes For Adults At Irving Thou who are interested in physical and mental attainment combined with pleasure, should attend the classes which are conducted twice weekly at the Irving Junior High School, Monday and Thursday. Mens classses will include drill volley work, floor work, basket-bal- l, ball and other forma of exercise under supervision of LaMarr Smith. Those wanting a strenuous work-ou- t can be accomodated, as well as thou desiring lighter forma of muscular training. The womens program will have diversified traning likewise and this proved very suceesful last season. M. Morgan, Instructs Mrs. Lucille this group. All adults over 18 are eligible to participate. Membership will be limited. Classes are from 7 p. m. to 840 New Site For State Prison Recommended Who Discovered Removal of the State Prison from Sugarhouae to a more advantages spot was virtually assured Thursday when announcement was made that a site located in the Crystal Springs area near the point of the mountain bad been recommended to Governor Blood, as a suitable place. The ground consist of 848 acres and is valued at $84,929. This particular site was recommended after careful study was made of all types of soil and irrigation possibilities as the major consideration for removal of the prison has been the lack of farming facilities at the local prison. Residents of Sugafhouse have cooperated ith businessmen and civic leader to bring about the removal of the prison as it hamper the natural growth of the Sugarbouse district and is too small to properly segregate prisoners and permit reform rather than punishment. Both Leif and Columbus, It Seems, Were Late By Centuries. America? Wrong! Rotarians Take Turn At Program p. m. No clothing regulations except Willard B. Richards and Charles gym shoes. And no fee required. Bring your friends and Join now, B. Petty were the speakers at the while this splendid opportunity is Thursday meeting of the Sugar House Rotary dub discussing "Voavailable. cational Service." Mr. Petty took up the "Buyers STRUCTURE PLANS ON POST OFFICE and Sellers Relationship, remarkNEAR COMPLETION ing on business ethics and the high Architects plans for the structure standards of American living. He to be the new Sugar House Poet pointed out that success in business Office will be completed In Wash- was not merely survival of the fiting D. C. In the very near future test but the man who survives with according to members of the office service and honesty. Mr. Richards discussed "Relationstaff of Postmaster I. A. Smoot, and plans will be sent to Salt Lake ship with Competitors, stating that and offered for bids by local con- the man who is a good looser In business as well as a good winner not tractors for construction. gains the respect of bis custodionly men were House business Sugar in hopes that the building would be ers and competion but establishes started before cold weather prevent- himself in their minds as a man. Dr. L. L. Richards of the Vocated construction. ional Service committee took charge of the program and Introduced the SWEDISH MASSAGE OFFICE OPENS IN SUOARHOUSE speakers. George Burbidge conduct ed the meeting. Modem in all Its equipment, the Vapor Steam Baths and Swedish Massage office will open in Sugar-hous- e WeeksMonday, October 17, at 2120 A case of infantile paralysis, South 11th East street. in Weber County, and a case Druella Kennedy, lady attendant, ot man attendant R. Ernest lutremia, reported from Box Eland Riggs, state that the office will offer every der County, are the outstanding modem treatment of body massage features of the public health report released today. as well as health baths.. The infantile paralysis case is the second to be reported to the Board Drive of Health this year, according to Winters coming, and with It, the Dr. McKay. need for safe tires increases, deThere have been 6 cases of tulclares E. L. Jeperson local manager aremia reported since the first of of the Western Auto Supply Comp- January, 1936, compared with a toany. He states that id view of this tal of 41 cases for the entire year the accessory firms Annual Autumn ending December, 1937. The total number of communicable Sale, now In progress at his store. Is a most timely event, for it not disease cases reported during the sav- week ending October 7 was 112, an only offers on Giant famous Western tires, increase of five cases over the proings but also on batteries, motor oils, seat ceeding week. Increases in the number of cases cover, accenasories scores of other of measles, mumps, pneumonia and motoring needs. "The time to take precautionary scarlet fever were noted; while chickmeasures to- - prevent skidding Is en pox, tuberculosis and whooping Our cough showed decreases. now, Mr. Jepperson asserts. double trade-i- n Tire Sale permits There was no new cases of or influenza reported for the greater savings than ever to motorists who wish to turn a dangerous week. driving liability into safe, non-klprotection at a saving. Talk of Cape Cod One of the outstanding tires Quaint Preserved for Posterity presented In this offer Is the WestMASS. HARWICH, The quaint ern Giant Silent Grip. Its scienand of a pronunciations phrasing! tifically designed tread incorporates generation of Cape Coda squeegee action in which the sev- vanishing ders have been preserved for posen circumferential riba squeeze terity. water aside Into the groves between Postmistress Esther Harding of thesd ribs, leaving a dry surface North Harwich has collected 300 rewhere the tire grippe may more cordings of Cape Cod voices. One record concerns an aged mother and firmly grip the road. her daughter who, at a church supDuring this Annual Autumn Sale per have taken seats at a table red motorists may enjoy this served for the minister. When those performance as well as other Deluxe in charge of the event asked them to tire features of Silent Grip tires for move, and the daughter starts to do less than they would expect to pay so, the mother says: Now, you sit right down and eat elsewhere for an ordinary tire. vittels. You waid for your tickyour sale et, sames the ::The same double Trade-I- n rest, and you got a applies on other popular tires In the puffect right to sit right down and famous Western Giant line of tires, eat your vittels. The ideal And us so hungry we could eat a horse and Including the distinctive Super Whipthe driver. Vittels is vittels; Double cord, the sturdy Duty, and the chase no matter where you eat em and bus Traveler. Truck, long wearing thats for the minister, too, if hes and tractor tires are also on sale, , - Health Report ng With Safety greater-than-usu- al diph-the- ia IreSernowI at Fredova Dance Studios ! 2040 Vi South 11th East 323 Vi So. State Street FOR TRAINING IN THE ;; ART OF DANCING 4 ;; Mothers! Your child needs this marvelous type of Ac- tivity to Develop properly, ;; 1! Dancing promotes Health. ;; Individual Attention is Given Every Child. I I ! ! BALLET ; ; :: TOE ACROBATIC TAP REGISTER SATURDAY from 9 A. M. to 1 P. M. '! Phone: X Miss Vernon - Ily. 2377 4 Mrs. Richards - Hy. . Vk-lnlt- y Pair tonight and Saturday. Little plunge in temperature. East Slat South Hyland 364 :: salt Lake and ; ;; d non-ski- Mr. Jeppe-.io- n concludes. CHICAGO. Heres one for the Scribner quiz: America was discovered in . . . (1) 1492 A. D.; (2) in 1000 A. D.; (3) sometime before 8000 B. C. Most people offhand, will say 1492, and chalk up a score for Christopher, an Italian boy batting for Spain. Others, on their guard, will say 1000 A. D., and give three rousing cheers for the Scandinavians. Both aides will be wrong. The careful sciences of anthropology and geology cast their vote for the third answer. If you picked answer No. 1 or No. 2, give yourself zero and do better next time. For both Cristaforo Colombo and Leif, son of Eric, when they arrived found human inhabitants, and plenty of evidence that America had not only been discovered but to a considerable extent settled by men and women long before any Europeans got around to it How long is a question discussed judicially in a brochure issued by the Field Museum of Natural History. No Dogmatic Answer Given. No dogmatic answer is given, but scholars are sure of one thing: humans discovered America so long ago that there were camels here in those days. We must accept what information the most competent geologists can give us concerning the length of time man has inhabited the New World, writes Paul S. Martin, chief curator of the department of anthropology at Field. This is in his introduction to the brochure, which is entitled Archeological Work in the Ackmen-Lowr- y Area, and indicates the importance of excavations and analysis of prehistoric human remains in that area. All evidence seems to show that he had not arrived in North America before the last glaciation, the Wisconsin. All possible routes through western Canada were probably blocked during the period of time from 65.000 to 20,000 years ago. However, there was one exception a break in the ice which occurred about 40,000 years ago. Open Route From Alaska. At that time it would have been possible for man to travel from Alaska, Bering straits, through down the Mackenzie river, and along the eastern part of the Rocky mountains or along the plateau between the Rockies and the Coast range, although there is no conclusive evidence that this occurred. I e .1 S. H. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE HOLDS ELECTION a Lions Organize ' Sugar House Club Completing its organization Mon day evening, the Sugar House Lion's Club Is now a full fledged member of the International Lion's Clubs, according to Erwin Peterson, president The organization was completed with the assistance of Lawrence Sleater, International representative, and members of the Salt Lake Lion's club. Meetings will be held each Monday noon at 12:10 at the Jeannes Tea Room, 3022 Highland Drive. ffleers elected are besides the president; A. Ray Curtis, secretary, S. Richards, Ray Free and Louis T. Rock wood, vice presidents; Milton Christensen and Wm. F. King, two year directors and A1 Mackie and Lincoln T. Hansen, one year directors. Dr. Leslie D. Burbidge was elected Tailmaster and J. O. Rhead Liontamer. The membership Is made up of Ervin Petersen, Milton L. Christensen, Wm. F. King, Ray D. Free, A. Ray Curtis, Lincoln T. Hansen, Stephen C. Richards, Joseph Barney, A. M. Mackie, J. C. (Tony Rhead), Louis T. Rockwood, Don C. Hardman, J. Knell, Joseph Peery, George Z. Aposhien, Paul Fredrickson, J. Henry Grey, E. T. King, Lawrence J. OBorn 3r. Waddroups, Silas Brady, Dr Leslie D. Burbidge and Leo Dalebout The Lion's Club is an organization consisting of social and business meetings. Each member chosen la . representative of his particular business and only member of each classification Is accepted. .Twenty-fiv- e members of the Salt Lake Lions club attended the or ganization meeting Monday evening as it was through the permission of that group that a second club was organized in the same city. The local club will receive its charter November 4 at a specially arranged banquet. Study of Malaria Goes Forward With Canaries ATLANTA. Beneath the golden feathers of the singing canary may from Alaska southward. Careful in- lie the secret of new methods of malaria, according to the vestigations conducted by the staff treating of Emory university medical theory of Gila Pueblo, Globe, Ariz. students. 1937) show that there were Officials of have anpeople living on the beaches of now nounced a $3,000Emory from the grant dry lakes, which were formed dur- Abbott Laboratories of North Chicaing the rainy periods that were go, 111., to continue research synchronous with glaciations. It is work on canaries. present Dr. Elizabeth difficult to date the stone impleinstructor in bacterioloments found along the shores of Gambrell, will direct the research, which gy, these vanished lakes, but these artiwas begun several months ago on a must be more than 10,000 facts $1,000 award from the years old, as the lakes were prob- preliminary research organization. In existence from 30,000 to ably Dr. Gambrell said that the re10.000 years ago. search would be conducted on more The next trace of man in the than 50 canaries. The canary is the Southwest dates from about the beonly animal known to be affected by ginning of the Christian era. Skipmalaria in the same way as human ping over the long period of at least beings. 10.000 years, which still remains a mystery, we come to that period in Shelter Belt Aids Quail Southwestern history about which a MANGUM, OKLA-- A 50 per cent great deal is known. The basket increase in quail in this area can be maker Pueblo culture dating from attributed, believes Sam Byars, fedabout A. D. 500 to about A. D. 1700. eral nurseryman, to the governments shelter belt program of tree planting. Quail are massing in Honor Indian For the last 20,000 years, however, there has been an open route (Mac-Curd- y, Chief Who Saw Death of Tecumseh the tree strips, Byars said. 100,000 Miles on Beat HASTINGS, MICH. Chief NoonSAN JOSE, CALIF. Careful calday, Grand River Indian of the late seventies, is honored in the re- culations by Police Sergt. Lloyd Bufchristening of Mud lake by Parry fington have demonstrated that durcounty officials. It is to be called ing 26 years as a policeman he has Noonday lake in memory of the old patroled the citys streets for more Ottawa chief who fought in the War than 100,000 miles. of 1812 and, it is said, saw the death of Tecumseh. This scene he described to the President of the United States when summoned for the purpose to go to the White House. Records of those days describe Noonday is associated in Barry him as six feet tall, of erect and history with the famous tavern of dignified mien at the age of 100 Yankee Bill Lewis at Yankee years, wearing the paint and circlet Springs where he lived as one of of eagle feathers and the blanket the Slater Mission Indians. A for- befitting his rank. A young brave mer chief of an Indian village at during Pontiacs conspiracies he Grand Rapids, he in the came to the encroachments regard of the mission and later of the whites with founding He followed the Reverend Slater to died in 1840 and is resignation. buried at Yankee Springs. f Si Election of seven members of the Sugar House Chamber of Commerce to take the poets of officers during the following year occupied the major part of the monthly meeting of the organization held Wednesday noon at Jeanne's Tea Room. Members elected are Jack Holm-stroR. Louise Hoggan, Clinton Strong, Altarx MeivW, Sidney J. Ottley, Scott Lionel 1 and Lincoln Hansen. These seven people will bold a meeting in the near future and appoint a president and secretary. The remaining four of the number will act aa board members. Ervin Peterson accompanied by Mrs. P. C. Stevens, gave several vocal selections during the meeting, furnishing a musical program while votes were being counted. The election was conducted by Earl Free, chairman, Carl A. Brown and Robert Raddachtef, comprising a nominating committee. LIBRARY LOSE8 PATRONS DUE TO POOR BUS SERVICE .In asking the Sugar House Chamber of Commerce if something could be done to keep bus service operating East of Eleventh East street after six o'clock, Mrs. Eleanor C. Bartlett, librarian of the Sprague exBranch library at plained that a marked decrease in the number of people usually qend-in- g evenings at the library, especially students who live far away to walk home after dark and who cannot get home as bus service is discontinued at 6 p. m. Sugar-hous- e COMMITTEE NAMED ON PHONE PROBLEM The erecting of an outdoor telebooth at a vantage point In Sugar House that would offer an ail night service was discussed at the monthly meeting of Sugar House Chamber of Commerce Wednesday and a committee headed by Jack Holmstrom, with Carl A. Brown and Clinton Strong, was appointed to go Into the matter. Harold Richmond, manager of the Hyland Exchange and a member ot the organization, was asked by A. Ray Curtis, president, whether or not there was a likelihood that the telephone company would be Interested In putting up an offlee In Sug- -. ar House where patrons could pay their bills as they do their light phone bills. Mr. Richmond stated that when the matter was taken up by his company once before, it was determined that they would be unable to offer a complete office service on a small scale as records were necessary when It came to adjustments and service. However, Mr. Richmond said he would secure the papers telling of the findings of his company in this matter and present It to the board df directors at an early date. CHILD ILL Gaylen Hansen, two and a half year old son of Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Hansen, 2133 Berkeley street, ana grandson of Bert Smoot, has been seriously ill at his home this week from intestinal flu but la reported to be improving today. $2.95 WILL PAINT YOUR CAR WITH NU-ENAM- EL Sold Exclusively By Apex Electric Co. 1079 East 21st So. In Hy. 1738 Sugubouss |