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Show THE BULLETIN THE SUGARHOUSE BULLETIN Printed at Costs No More It To Hire EXPERTS ; i TOUB public ortlolala bill bMU Used dsflnltaly bp law written kjr T0U8 npnintitivM Thu pubUo must pap aa muoh for Inuparlsnead aad Inefficient uarvanta aa for thoroughly trainad, highly artist act maa and woman with jraara of axparlanca. Why taka chancai with TOUR tax monayf (4-yr- . .) Roseoo Boden WHIiam J. Korth ...... Assessor Treasurer . . . . . Recorder Auditor Attorney . . Surveyor $. Grant Young A. J. Skidmore J. R. Jarvis Mrs. Cornelia S. Lund . Ferrell H. Adams . Harold E. Wallace . George M. Haley r FOR STATE SENATE Gordon Wcggctand Stanley N. Child Grant Macfarlane FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE Your Dcmocratie District Candidate WE'RE MARCHING ALONG TOGETHER WITH ROOSEYELT FOR PEACE AND PROSPERITY KEEP UTAH IN STEP! VOTE DEMOCRATIC IPaljLPoMtlral STRAIGHT Adv. by Demo. County Committee! -- The Bulletin" 1.50 find for use in concrete nuilding construction, have done much toward lessening noise and vibration. A recent seminar on timber and concrete held by Prof. John M. Lee sells at Massachusetts Institute of Technology at Cambridge, brought out the three-fol- d purpose of the to reduce maintenance cm the machine itself; to save the concrete, or other foundations from deterioration, and to reduce physical fatigue and make for more efficient workers. Rubber Mountings Ilelp. Automobile engineers new know positively that the maintenance on parts of both engine and chassis has been materially reduced by the use of rubber mountings on the engine. Punch presses, and other badly vibrating machines, now ride on rubber. Science, however, has not confined to cities all of its efforts toward vibration and noise elimination. Tractors which formerly clanked noisily across field in front of plow or cultivator, now glide quietly over the same surface. on pneumatic tires. Farmers and residents of the smaller communities are also beneof fiting through the the railroad companies in the drive for less noise, with the introduction of xnellow-tone- d train whistles which provide the same warning signal but eliminate the screeches of former devices. The Florida East Coast railroad now has the muted whistles installed on all its engines. The installation followed a ballot by persons living along the after four whistles had been demonstrated. r: ear-splittin- g RACKET FIGHT ON Fly Time is Past Now you can THE PAINT POT Hake the World Brighter We Hy. 8739 1074 E. 21st So. X 3C CUT FLOWERS Funeral Designs Corsages KINGS Forget-Me-N- i "Flowers That Satisfy 2157 Highland Drive Hyland 8199 EXPERT Shoe Repairing Quick Courteous Service PROGRESS SHOE REBUILDERS East Slat So. right-of-wa- y League for Less Noise to Campaign in Country. NEW YORK. Noises that disturb sleep slow up industry and produce Jangled nerves are no longer a problem which concern only the big city, according to Earnest II. Peabody, president of the League for Less whose organization has Noise, launched a battle against "racket.' Gone are the days, says Mr. Peabody, when the farmers little white cottage by a country road provides a haven from the raucous clatter of automobile horns, the roar of traffic and the screech of car with fourbrakes. flow continuous a traffic lanes, way of express trucks all hours of the day and night, impatient drivers clax-og pounding on and the staccato roar of open exhausts, have taken the roar of the city to the wide open spaces. Down With Clatter. The League for Less Noise, molded by civic indignation and allied is campaigning with science, against unnecessary clatter. While Mr. Peabodys organization fights for city and town ordinances that do away with useless tooting of .car horns, blaring radios and phonographs at unseemly hours and unneeded blasts from steam whistles, science mores ahead with its fight on machine and construction vibration, producer of much of the noise and discord that slows up efficiency in industry. Apologists for unnecessary noise, Mr. Peabody pointed out, often urge are merely that cranks. Any normal person, they have insisted, can become accustomed to any kind of noise or vibration in a few days. Investigation and study, however, have proven the fallacy of this belief, he deSuper-highway-s, ot FLORAL 1059 PROBLEM OF FARMER clran and be ready for winter Ily. 8775 nerve-shatterin- WELDING? Just Bring In the Pieces Granite Welding & Wire Works 2021 South 11th East Hyland 458 F. W. K1EPE THE TAILOR Suits made to order and remodeled for Ladies and Gentlemen New Fall and Winter Samples To Choose From. Pressing Cleaning 1060 East 21st South ns -- noise-hater- s" clares. Supporting the contention that noise and vibration alow up workers, Mr, Peabody oilers as an example the experiment of two investigators, H. C. Weston and S. Adams, who selected comparable groups of workers engaged in weaving cloth on factory looms. Loom rooms where such weaving is done usually are very noisy. Two rooms were chosen; one of about average noisiness, another which had been quieted as much as was practicable, although even this still was noisier than the average New York street Production of cloth in the two rooms Workers in the was compared. quiet room came out about 8 per cent ahead, confirming the conclusion from all similar investigations that noise hinders successful human effort and that quietude assists it Introduction of rubber mountings, to put called machinery in its "stocking feet "vibro-insulators- ," TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25 - 8p. Phone copy for news items and events of interest to vibro-insulato- County and atata gOTsrnmants oparata moat artldantly whan In bar mony In prlndpla, purpoaa and Ideals. To support your county government and your federal government elect legislators In sympathy with their programs, their alma and their platforms. . UPSTAIRS or Commercial Printing Company Hyland 864. Subscription Pric e One year (52 weeks), in advance . J. 8. Mulling .) (2-yr- At Sprague Branch Library ROOM Plastic Surgery Is Added To Skills of Embalmers DENVER Plastic surgery has been added to the skills which the modern embalmer must understand. C. W. Porterfield, of Holton, Kan., first vice president of the National Association of Funeral Directors, annual explained to the forty-firconvention of Colorado Funeral Directors that many embalmers have become professionals in their skill as plastic surgeons. "A knowledge of plastic surgery enables the embalmer to make lifelike the features of persons marred in automobile accidents and through mutilating diseases," he explained. Psychology is another field of learning in which the undertaker should be informed, Porterfield said. The funeral director, he said, "is learning a better understanding of the psychology of grief and how to assuage that grief." st CANADA TO RETAIN ANTICOSTI ISLAND No Foreign Power Will Con- trol Historic Spot WASHINGTON, D. C. No foreign power will control the island of Anticosti, at the mouth of the St. Lawrence river, Prime Minister Mackenzie King recently assured the Canadian house of commons. The statement answered an inquiry concerning a reported option of sale given by the islands present holders after a visit from a German delegation of forestry experts, including military and naval officers., "Anticosti, now an island appendage to Quebec, has changed hands many times in its career. points out a bulletin from the National Geographic society. Last leased in 1926 by the Anticosti Pulp and Paper company, it has served in reverse ordqr as a pulpwood empire, a rich mans social experiment, a pirate's stronghold, and an explorers reward. A Dramatic Biography. "Roughly in the shape of a great whale, its tail in the St. Lawrence river and its head in the Gulf of St. Lawrece, Anticosti island is about 140 miles long and averages 35 miles across. It is a sportsman's paradise, with cool, brisk summers. Great forests of spruce bring green down to its very shores ; game fish fill its streams, and flocks of ducks and geese stop off there regularly on flights north and south. "So conspicuously placed and accessible is it that for the past 400 years this island has been the scene of mans activities and experiments, "In 1534, Jacques Cartier, seekto the ing that mythical short-cu- t East, first officially recorded the island and called it lie de 1Assomp tion. Already, however, Basque fishermen, familiar with this region from early fishing trips, had described it as Antccosta, or island 'before the coast' the name which still (ticks, slightly changed in spelling. r,In 1630, a king, Louis . m- - Upon School Amendments to be voted on Novembef"8th Also Lecture on the A. A. A. O. C. CONNIFF, Publisher Vote Democratic November 8 and Elect These Tried and Experienced Officers Commiuioncr Commissioner Clerk Sheriff East 21st South Street Sugarhouse, Utah 1119 Issued every Friday p. m. Advertising Rates on Application Business Office and Plant at 1119 East 21st South UirlM of Wi FREE LECTURE - EVERYONE A WEEKLY PUBLICATION SPONSORED by PRO AMERICA MV of France, presented Anticosti 1 Drums Use Nail-Ke- g Urbana, Ohio. In an impressive Louis Joliet For explorer-trade- r In many of their holiday pageants a decade Joliet enjoyed fur and fish ritual 60 American flags "worn out Jamaicans sing their trade with nearby Indians, till he in service were destroyed here by the native to the accompaniment of nail aid his wife were made prisoners members of the H. M. Pearce post, songsdrums with goatskin stretched keg by Sir William Phipps raiding par- American Legion. across the heads. There ars the nor tight Neither French-Englis- h the army, current in navy, the ty American Legion heretofore has no drumsticks, except for the large conflict. the smaller drums; soon ysed a ceremony on such occasions, bass drum the after beginning "Finally, Lieut. Col. William Vance, army re- are played entirely by hand. The V the Nineteenth century, Anticostis oddest character came into the serve corps, who drafted the one music is so lilting that many of the bystanders at these celebrations find, here, said. , picture.feet tapping in time with the, their This ritual prescribes an outdoor "Called a sorcerer and a pirate, uis Olivier Gamache was also a service with officers and members throbbing drums, and frequently, Frenchman with a sense of humor. assigned to stations around an open they, too, join the strutting, sway, :j Natives believed that demons fire. The ceremony opens with the lng procession. him rob passing craft, and sergeant-at-arm- s helped presenting to the told tales of brimstone smells and commander all flags to be destroyed blue flames that followed his ship with these words: SUGAR -- .. I wish to present a number of "There was little humor connect-- , flags of our country for inspection ed with the enterprises that followed and disposition." the death of the colorful Gamache. After their condition has been "The island was almost barren of noted the commander declares: Furniture Moving fish and game when Menier a They have reached their present French chocolate manufacturer, state through a service of tribute in . bought it, taking possession in 1896. and memory and love. Vans Closed Interested in the possibilities of soA flag may be a flimsy bit of cial experiment, Menier not only printed gauze, or a beautiful banwith . built himself a luxurious chateau ner of finest silk. Its intrinsic value Personal Attention and turned his domain into a valumay be trifling or great. Its real able game preserve by importing value is beyond price, for it is a deer, beaver, rabbits, elk; he also symbol of all that we and our comHy. 1220 planned and developed farming rades have worked for, and died communities, lobster factories, and for a free nation of free men, true a village equipped with hospital, to the faith of the past, devoted to school and church. He even built a the ideals and practices of liberty, railroad line and a canal. freedom and justice. Buy Only "Later, realizing the potential inThe flags are then ordered dipped dustry in products from his forest in kerosene and placed cm a rack COAL land, he embarked on woodpulp pro- over a fire. Aa this is being done in duction which, however, proved the bugler sounds To the Colors, Call Hyland time to be uneconomic and was and the entire company stands at finally abandoned. The chaplain says a attention. 2520 In 1926 the island was taken over prayer. by its present holder, reorganized as the Anticosti Consolidated Paper Children Bad in Good CASTLE GATE corporation, Menier retaining only CLEAR CREEK his home and certain sporting Weather and Vice Versa ABERDEEN For a while Anticosti rights. Milwaukee. A study by probation KING COAL boomed, its population rising to officers revealed that when the more than 4,000 souls. Agents for Sentinel Stokers weather is bad children are good. But physical conditions here John J. ofchief Prepared 8toker Coal Kenney, probation make lumbering operations hard. In ficer of the said that court, juvenile winter months, ice is a problem; LOBBS delinquency increased 25 communications are uncertain. Rec- juvenile cent in the first five months of per ON THE ords show that in the last three 1937 over the same period pf 1936. of the Nineteenth century, quarters In 1936, Kenney said, snowdrifts JOB more than 130 ships were wrecked and zero weather kept children inon its treacherous reefs. doors, but in 1937 the winter was "Anticosti, however, with its long so mild that the youths were outSUGAR HOUSE history of abandoned enterprises, is doors much of the time and more of still a 'graveyard of hopes. Its them got into trouble. COAL CO. population has sunk to mere hunKenney said there always is an 8191 Drive Highland keepers Hy. 2520 dreds, mostly lighthouse inverse relationship between the and their families, with a few fisherchild weather and delinquency. men, and attendants for fox and muskrat farms lately developed. to . ... o - HOUSE TRANSFER ovAc-tka-cal- er GOQD Pearling Industry Fast Losing Its Old Glories JOLO, P. I. The glories of the pearling industry in the Sulu sea are fast fading. European rearmament and world depression have left little money in the pearl market, according to Jack Marco, who has been buying Sulu pearls for 16 years. Eight fishing boats are carrying on a business that a few years ago occupied 70 vessels and 700 men. Pearls once valued at $10,000 are now worth a tenth as much. Moros were the worlds best pearl divers until the advent of diving suits, and Japanese are gradually replacing them, Marco said. Moro swimmers could plunge to the bottom of the sea and collect oysters for three minutes before returning to the surface for air. The Japanese have adapted themselves more readily to modern equipment Worry Is Normal Worry is nothing to worry about because a certain amount of worry is normal, according to Dr. Beverly Tucker, Richmond, Va., psychiatrist People who say they do not worry are either overoptimistic or Dr. Tucker said. Very untruthful, abnormal people often do not worry at all. "Insane asylums are often full of the happiest people in the world since they have ceased to worry about anything. Few people go insane from worry although they often get in what is known as an 'anxiety state. IIead of Halibut Flat The head of the halibut is flat It is colored like the rest of the fish, gray above, white below, and in no way resembles a human head by any stretch of the imagination, according to a United States Byreau of Fisheries authority. Although the halibut doesn't have a head like a human, it does things that even the most dexterous magician cannot do. When a halibut is born, it has two eyes, one on each side of its head, like any other fish. But as the fish matures, one eye migrates, and the halibut swims on its side, the two eyes on the top side.' This twisting of the fish's eyes is due to the fact that halibut, like other types of flounder, spend most of their time resting on the bottom of the ocean. This apparently explains the evolutionary quirk of the migrating eye. WHITE PORT Paradise MUSCATEL QUART (Amber Sweet) Code No. QUART 947 Code No. w 970 GALLON Code No. gallon 948 Code No. 977 'it . : . : fJ' ?, &BAN IDs BISCEGUAMM.CELIAM SWEET ALCOHOL WINES 20BV VOLUME St HELENA (AUIMNIA ' DRY WINES ALCOHOL 12 BY VOLUME l Served with .Wild Game, Red Bleats CODE NO. 816 or Lamb Paradise Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth Paradise Burgundy (Red Dry) Gallon 827 Paradise Zinfandel flnH"n (Rod Dry) 828 Paradise Zinfandel (Red Fifth Dry) Served with Fish, Fowl or Egga 815 Paradise Riesling (White Fifth Dry) 825 Faradise-Sautern- o Gallon (White Dry) Paradise-Sauterne 826 Fifth (White Dry) Served for All Occasions Paradise Port (Red Sweet) Quart Paradise Port (Red Sweet) Gallon Paradlae Angelica (Amber Sweet) Quart Paradise Angelica (Amber Sweet) Gallon Served as a Cocktail or with Soup or Any Time of Day Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Quart Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Gallon FABIOUS BEAULIEU BRANDS The King of All Occasions Beaulieu Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth Beaulieu Haute Sauterne (Mel. W.) Fifth Beaulieu Muscatel (Sacramental W.) Gallon Beaulieu Sparkling Moselle fifth (Champagne Type) Beaulieu (fink) Sparkling Burgundy Fifth 818 d |