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Show THE BULLETIN Friday, November 18. 1Q'a THE SUGARHOUSE - Honey, 5 gal $1.05 $3.75 $1.69 - Peas, case Onions, No. 1, 50 lb. bag 50( Salt Lake STORE 1 Polishing Diamonds Is Done by Turning Wheel TINY SUBMARINE IS STUDIED BY NAVY Swordfish Would Roam in Schools After Foe. Now Located at 1119 East 21st South WASHINGTON. The navy is considering construction of tiny swordfish" submarines that would travel in schools and torpedo enemy warships from less than 250 yards. The boats, similar to Japans suicide submarines, would be designed to permit their two crew members to escape. Tentative plana would make the boats 51 feet long, 7 feet high and about 10 feet wide. They would have the general lines of a fish and, with a torpedo for a prow, would bear a remarkable resemblance to a Hyland 364 GLASS TOPS and COVERS SEAT UPHOLSTERING WELLINGTON AUTO TOP CO. Motor Ave. Was. 7446 141 swordfish. The two crew members would Complete New Line from 59c to $59.00 USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN THE PAINT POT Wo Hake tbs World Hy. 8739 Brighter E. 21st So. 1074 CUT FLOWERS Funeral Designs Corsages KINGS Forget-Me-N- ot FLORAL Flowers That Satisfy 2157 Highland Drive Hyland 8199 MITCHELLS House BEAUTY SALON Permanent Only GOOD COAL Hyland 2520 EXPERT Shoe Repairing Quick Courteous Service sit The process of polishing diamonds has not changed for more than $00 years, with the exception of the manner of turning the wheel. At first this was done by hand, then by horse power, next by steam and later by electricity, notes a writer in the Washington Post. The composition of the diamond wheel is a secret carefully guarded by those who possess it. It is said that no one in this country 'knows how to make it. During the war, when it was very difficult to obtain chemists tried in vain to discover the secret. Experts have analyzed the materials and found that it is composed of a mixture of iron and steel in certain proportions, but after having got the proper constituents and constructed the wheel, they found that it would not cut the diamond as it should. It would cut a little but not enough to make it worth while to use it. It is thought that the secret of the diamond wheel lies in the method of cooling, but no one is sure. This wheel, like good wine, grows better with age. This is because the diamond dust gets into the pores of the metal and makes it cut better. The earliest records obtainable of the lapidarists art is mention of several cut diamonds among the treasure of Louis' of Anjou toward the end of the Fourteenth century. The method of brilliant cutting L generally ascribed to Louis de Ber quern, of Bruges, who in 1475 cut several celebrated diamonds for Charles the Bold. From that time down toward the end of the last century the industry has been almost entirely connected with the history of Holland. Only within the past generation' has any country been able to compete with her, and as yet only in quality of output and not in quantity. Named for a Pioneer Lassen peak, the southernmost in the Cascade range, elevation 10,453 feet, was named after Peter a pioneer of the 1840s, says Nature Magazine. It dominates the topography' of the area yet is easily accessible to a normally active perron. A trail, two and one half miles in length, leads to the top of the Piouiitain. REDUCED RATES e, Lon(j Distance telephone calls AU DAY w, PROGRESS SHOE REBUILDERS 1059 East 21st So. Mary-le-Bo- Hy. 8175 WELDING? -- Just Bring In the Pieces" Granite Welding & Wire Works 8021 South 11th East Hyland 458 THANKSGIVING The same low rates that apply every night after 7 pan. and all day Sunday A telephone call to one of your family, a relative or friend who cant be with you on Thanksgiving, will make the day happier for you and for them. The Mountain States Tel. Refused to Vote for Monroe Historians often state that one elector withheld his vote from Monroe in order to prevent him from charing an honor previously granted only to George Washington. This is a myth, notes a writer in the Indianapolis News. William Plum-e-r, of New Hampshire, was the elector who refused to vote for Monroe. He explained the reason for his action in a letter to his son, William Plumer, Jr., dated January 8, 1821. He wrote: I was obliged from a sense of. duty and a regard to my own reputation to withhold my vote from Monroe and Tompkins; from the first because he had discovered 'a want of foresight and from the second because he had grossly neglected his duty. Plumer voted for John Quincy Adams for President and Richard Rush for Vice Presi- & Tel. Company Plans to Cross Sea In Sailing Barrel N. Y. Ernest Biegaj-s- ki plans to make a trip from New York to London in a barrel. Biegaj ski made a voyage beBATH, tween Cleveland and Buffalo two years ago in a barrel of foe same design he plans to use for his transoceanic voyage. He estimates foe ocean trip will take 40 to IN) days. The barrel, he said, win be six feet in diameter and 10 feet taa length, specially reinforced. It will have a telescopic mast carrying 320 square feet of sail with an jib. Biegajski plans to take along an auxiliary motor to be used when sailing conditions become 18-fo- ot adverse. dent w LOBBS SUGAR HOUSE CO. bell-peal-s. n Paradise (Sweet) Paradise MUSCATEL WHITE PORT (Amber Sweet) QUART QUART Code No. Code No. 947 970 GALLON II Li Code No. 948 BB FOB SALE p. F. W. KIEPE THE TAILOR Suits made to order and remodeled for Ladies and Gentlemen r THE S' Pressing Cleaning 1060 East 21st South 1 .11 II !!'" MtBMfttMMMMdlMMhl 33 d. ad-wa- y. THEY DO BREAK Heavy winds, boys baseballs once in a while do crash a window. DONT WORRY! Just call Hyland 928 SUGAR GLASS COMPANY ' 2023 South Ulh East l for your guiding the craft toward an enemy ship until a hit was almost certain. Then they would release their torpedo and return to their home port or mother boat. Like Schools of Fish. If one school were discovered, it would attract the attention of Sugar most of the enemy ships defense weapons, leaving it vulnerable to another school' attacking from another angle. VERY THE ARK FEATURING The vessels could be built with BEST IN assembly line methods for about $12,000 each. Waves Among the innovations suggested by the designers is use of gasoline AT or Diesel motors. Larger submaSPECIALLY rines when under water are operated by batteries because of the probREDUCED PRICES lem of supplying fresh air to combustion motors and then disposing FOR THE HOLIDAYS of the fumes. The swordfish" submarines, however, would not submore than 30 feet and theremerge 1053 E. 21st So. Hy. 8553; fore would be able to use breathing tubes to bring fresh air to the motors. Easy to Detect. Powerful Diesel engines would Buy give' the craft added speed, but the air tubes projecting above the water would make the vessels easier tip detect. Call Plans for the boats, it is understood, will be inspected by the Electric Boat company, which builds Almost American submarines. CASTLE GATE ready drawings have been submitted to Chairman William H. Sutphin CLEAR CREEK of the house naval affairs subcomABERDEEN London, mittee investigating new naval in- St. Mary-le-BoKING COAL ventions, and Rep. Melvin Maas, Gets Title From Arches (Rep. Minn.) ranking "minority Agents for Sentinel Stokers Bow church or St. in member of the house naval affairs Coal Stoker Prepared derives its Cheapside, London, committee. name from the stone arches, The submarines would have a bows, of its Norman crypt, built 150 miles, but about cruising range of only 1090. The church was reON THE could be carried on battleships. built by Sir Christopher Wren The swordfish" would be particabout 1680. The crypt probably is a JOB ularly useful in this manner when relic of the church built in Norman the mother ship entered a mined times and is in Baedeker as given area. the oldest surviving ecclesiastical structure in the city of London. The COAL Find Simpler Trend in church has long had one of the most John Dun, 1191 Highland Drive Tombstones Is Growing celebratedin 1472, Hy. 9520 two tenements mercer, gave SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Anto maintain the ringing of Bow bell gels, doves and lambs are not so night at nine oclock, to diSEQk popular as they once were, accord- every dSMEggg rect travelers on the road to town; ing to James S. Walker, who for and in 1520 William Copland gave a 68 years has been cutting and polishbigger bell for the purpose of ing gravestones. sounding a retreat from work. Markers these days seem to be The Bow bells are twelve in num1929 Hudson V ton Pick-Ufollowing the modem trend they ber, states a writer in the Detroit Flat Bed, New Paint, runs good are more streamlined than they News, eight of which were recast once were, Walker said. in in 1762. According $65. Once the demand was great for to Whitechapel it was the sound of Bow legend, the extra frills such as flying doves bells which inspired the 2030 South 11th East poor boy, or angels, but now, conforming to Kichard in the FourWhittington, the times, our marker designs are teenth century, to return to London more simple. and become its famous lord mayor. Walker said the practice of inIn the Middle ages the term scribing the deceaseds life history BULLETIN cockney was applied to a pamon his gravestone was also going out pered child, a person petted and of style. made effeminate by over indulto used he It that be, ADS said, information regarding a person gence. Later it was applied to city by country folk who could be obtained only by reading dwellers scorned the soft habits of the town-brehis gravestone. As in English eyes London Now, however, county and city was the city, by 1600 the term records of birth governments keep and death, so that a persons his- cockney had become applicable to Londoners, and particulartory doesnt have to be carved in solely born within the sound of those ly marble. The latest thing in graveyards is Bow bells, in the heart of London. the family plot, he said. A large As it would be difficult for anyone marker bears the family name, and to claim birth in that region cf small individual stones are placed, city offices and warehouses, a cockis anyone possessed of the usually flush with the ground, about ney the centerpiece, as occasion de- London peculiarities of speech, etc. For the extra fun that mands. Woman Saved Crown Jewels comes of buying more and When Cromwell was Lord Protecand better buying buying Indians Beat White Men tor of he sent an expedition BulleEngland . . The . shop wisely to Scotland because the Scots had to Use of Gum Chewing The merchants tin Charles II from exile in 1651 brought CALIF. deThe BulBERKELEY, who advertise in The and crowned him. Cromwell also partment of anthropology of the Uni wanted the crown the dependable letin jewels. The wife of California reports that the versity merchants in Sugar House in the South of the pastor of the church at Kin-neTubatulabal Indians Parish smuggled them through . . the merchants who ofFord valley of the Kern river in fer the best values, the best California made a chewing gum the British lines and her husband from the milky sap of a species of buried them in .the walls of his prices, the best quality, the church. remained hidden until is Asclepias long before the white man Scotland They aim best service. Their to a parliamenconsented it. invented to serve you better and The Few of the tribe remain, but an- tary union with England. One of Bulletin ads are their way of the agreement was the thropologists have found that they the provisoswere never to leave the of telling you about itl jewels attained a high perfection in the concoction of things pleasant to the country. The jewels were taken to taste. Among their accomplish- Edinburgh castle and have been on 2044 So. 11th E. Hy. 364 ments was the converting of honey public view since 1817, which action was taken on orders of King dew into sugary cakes. George IV. side-by-sid- MIRRORS 2245 Highland Drive be well pleased with our Service will Where you INSIDE WASH and LUBRICATION With each $10X0 in merchandise you will receive a FREE WASH and a Certified Lubrication. U. S. TIRES, TUBES and ACCESSORIES I. M. (IRV) GOFF, Manager Hyland 8208 Phone copy for news items and events of interest to The Bulletin" or Commercial Printing Company Hyland 364. 1.50 Subscription Price One year (52 weeks), in advance Wasatch 411 I Wasatch 4612 STORE Murray 111 ASS0CIATED1SERVICE STATION I. M. CONNIFF, Publisher Advertising Rates on Application Business Office and Plant at 1119 East 21st South Maxfield Feed & Coal Co. Murray u Hyland 4907 YOUR NEW A WEEKLY PUBLICATION Printed at 1119 East 21st South Street Sugarhouse Utah LOOS THESE OVEP. Wheat, bu BULLETIN are ff B1KEGUA SWEET ALCOHOL St HELENA OURKNIA DRY WINES BBOLCEUARl WINES 20BY VOLUME ALCOHOL 12 BY VOLUME FAMOUS BEAULIEU VINEYARDS WINES Rutherford, Napa County, Calif. 1037 Beaulieu Sherry XXX Pale Dry Fifth SERVED WITH WILD GAME. RED MEATS OR LAMB CODE 867 SIS 991 915 917 916 9S2 940 1057 105S -- NO- - Beaulieu Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth Beaulieu Haute Sauterne (MeL W.) Fifth Beaulieu Muscatel (Sacramental V.) Gallon I04S Fifth Fifth Tenth Quart Gallon Quart Gallon AS A COCKTAIL OR WITH SOUP OR ANY TIME OF DAY Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Paradise Faradlse i27 Paradise 828 Paradise 616 Burgundy Burgundy Zinfandel Zinfandel Quart Gallon Fifth (Red Dry) (Red Dry) (Red Dry) (Red Dry) Gallon Gallon Paradise Riesling (White Dry) Paradlse-Sautern- e (White Dry) rnrsdise-Sautern- e (White Dry) Gallon i(18 815 825 836 TYPE) Sparkling Moselle (Pink) Sparkling Burgundy Sparkling Moselle Port (Red Sweet) Port (Red Sweet) Angelica (Amber Sweet) Angelica (Amber Sweet) Beaulieu Beaulieu Paradise Paradise Paradise Paradise SERVED 10S5 (CHAMPAGNE Beaulieu SERVED WITH PISH. FOWL OR EGGS SEnvED FOR ALL OCCASIONS Fifth Fifth Fifth |