OCR Text |
Show THE BULLETIN 1938 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, Former Home of King Seeks Tenant BULLETIN THE SUGARHOUSE A WEEKLY PUBLICATION Printed at 111B East 21st South Street , ' Utah, Bugmrbouse Birthplace of Duke of Windsor Rich in Tradition. I. M. CONN1FF, Publisher Advertising Rates on Application Business Office and Plant at 1119 East 21ft South LONDON, The birthplace of the duke of Windsor and home of British royalty for 200 years is for rent. The White Lodge, Richmond, where Lord Lee of Fareham and wife entertained his American-bor- n friends from the United States for the last 11 years, the girlhood home of Queen Mary, and to which the then duke of York, now king, took his bride, is on the market at a Phone copy for news Items and events of interest to "The Bulletin1 or Commercial Priuttng Company Hyland 384. Subscription Pric e One year (52 weeks), in advance -- 1.50 "reduced rent SUGARHOUSE TOY MAN 103 PIECES OF THE FOLLOWING: High Chairs With Ironing Board. Cabinets, Chiffoniers, Doll Beds, Dropleaf Tables, Small Tables & Chairs. Hand Painted Decorations, $1.35 to $12. . S. A. Saussman 1980 DOUGLAS STREET COMMISSION OKs PIICNE BOOTH Mir e has been no labor trouble. Perhaps we can help solve the i merchant-marin- e problem," Stapler said. "If we can show youth how to make good at it that'll be something." Consent of the City Commission tc Incidentally, with less than a the Mountain States Telephone com years experience, the youths are pany for construction of a telephone planning an expansion program booth on the Plaza in Sugarhouse was that will take their ship farther north along the coast to get cargo gained Tuesday, according to R. K from the fish canneries. Richmond, manager of the Highland But," Stapler says, "thats anexchange. other story." Mr. Richmond staled that the booth will be erected as soon as satisfactory arrangements can be made for elecLine Intended as Link in tricity and exact location. The erection of the booth came Cementing Empire. about after efforts of the Sugarheuse Chamber of Commerce were put forth NEW YORK. Over the mounand a committee appointed. tains and plains of southern Canada a fleet of airliners is laying out a route which Great Britain proposes to use as a link in its system of communications binding together the world's mightiest empire. The fourth transcontinental air, way in North America, from the terminus of which planes Three New England College western the Union Jack ultimately bearing will span the Pacific, is still Boys Repair Old Hulk Youths Win Out In Ship Venture For Cargo Run. . Not until next summer will- the Trans-CanaCanadian government-owne- d air lines start passenger, express and mail service between Montreal and Vancouver. But the implications of its establishment are evident The plans for a were not crystallised until work was started on the big transatlantic seaplane and land plane base In Newfoundland. The job of the new airline is to link Canada's east coast with Vancouver, the proposed jumping-of- f place for a Pacific route to Hongkong, New Zealand and Australia. From the other side of the Pacific, Britain is reaching out to bridge the gap between its lands "down under" and its North American dominion. The 13,500-mil-e England-Australroute, longest single airline in the world, will be extended to Auckland, N. Z., before the sum- da Three youthful collegians have turned back the recession" this year and have gone down to the sea in a ship. : Actually the trio were aided by four others, but the originators of a plan to revive an abandoned, coastwise shipping line were three New England boys, the eldest a 1938 graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The leader of the bold pioneers was John C. Stapler, a graduate of Techs ship operation course and employee of a New York steamship line. With him were Alden H. Anderson, a classmate and employee of a Boston ship agency, and Fredn erick E. Drake Jr., who left the to around ship college world as an assistant purser. ' Stapler is credited with or blamed with the business venture. Old Hulks Tied Up. Early in 1935 the Eastern Steamship lines suspended operation of line and, detheir Bangor-Bosto- n spite protests of a few shippers, tied up several old hulks and announced 'they never would run again. But Stapler had other ideas. He called a score of meetings with Anderson and Drake where they pored over maps and charts, figured gross tonnage and discussed maritime labor problems. The upshot was that all three threw up their Jobs and gallantly dumped their savings into a common pile, but it was scarcely sufficient to meet their personal needs, So with an inspired sales talk on i their tongues and an armful of showing the advantage of a d ship for coastwise use, the frantic financiers sold stock to their friends to business men or anyone who would buy. They sold stock and bought the d ship Penobscot. They sold stock and bought paint They sold more stock and hired a crew. Last spring they announced a shipping schedule, loaded the vessel with 38 tons of cargo and nosed out of the harbor for points "down East" Beat Hard Luck. Oil Rockland the engines broke down and the good ship Penobscot hobbled into port, unable to proceed for many days and with the cargo still undelivered. By hiring trucks the young owners delivered the cargo on schedule and repaired the giotors, but their bank account was woefully depleted. However, at Bangor the shippers were delighted at the resourceful skippers who delivered the goods on time and despite the accident were ready to ship again, That was the beginning of success. Since then the ship has increased tonnage on each trip. The engines have., held .together . and - T BOSTON. i Bow-doi- ! , I pa-'re- ra Diesel-powere- ' 150-fo- ot Diesel-powere- island-dotte- - d Trans-Canad- ia mer of 1939. The line over the Pacific would take one of two courses. One would Jump from Hongkong up the China coast and across the sea of Japan to Tokyo; then to Siberia, the Aleutian islands, Alaska and British Columbia. The other would speed from Auck land to a group of islands such as the Samoan or Phoenix isles, then to Hawaii, San Francisco and Vancouver using the stepping stone" principle inaugurated by Pan American Airways in reaching Manila from Oakland. mid-Pacif- ic Art Treasures Revealed By S?an:sh Civil War SPAIN. One of the strangest results of the Spanish civil war is that many rare art treasVITORIA, ures are being brought to light whore worth is being appreciated for the first time. Often working under fire, members of the insurgent "Service for Recovering Artistic Treasures" are unearthing remarkable finds among the villages and towns of Huesca and Lerida. At Rods, a little town in the foothills of the Pyrenees, a royal throne was recently discovered. It is said to date from the Eleventh century, when the kings of Aragon were striving to drive out the Moorish invaders. Known as the "Throne of San Ramon," it is believed to be the only piece of Spanish furniture in existence dating from that period of savage warfare. A gilded mitre which was once worn by St. Valero- -a Thirteenth century saint was also recovered at Roda. It ie decorated with exquisite Moorish designs. Nearby were found two episcopal crooks, one adorned in enamel. A famous picture the "Immaculate Conception" by Murillo which has been shown at several International exhibitions was also found at Roda, together with a remarkable collection of ecclesiastical relict. war-shatter- ed of But any prospective purchaser the lease must be prepared to pay at least $12,500 a year in rent, rates and taxes, for although White Lodge is a royal residence and one of the three "grace and favor" residences within Richmond Park, the tenancy of which is the kings gift, this privilege ceased when Lord Lee took over the tenancy 11 years ago. The king and queen, then duke and duchess of York, lived in the house immediately before Lord and Lady Lee took possession. A rambling old house with few modern convenience!, the White Lodge was also the home of Queen Victoria and Edward VII. There are 20 bedrooms, nine bathrooms snd five and a, half acres of what the house agent describes as established and well stocked garden. Lord Lee, who gave Chequers to the nation as the prime minister's country house in October, 1920, is moving to his country home at Avening, Gloucestershire, for his health. He has numerous links with the United States. He married Ruth Moore, elder daughter of the late John Godfrey Moore of New York, in 18S9. Sage Brush Oil Seen as Basis for New Industry SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH.-Sa- ge which carpets millions of acres of waste lands in the West, may become the basis of a widespread industry, as the remits of brush, experiments being conducted by a1 college professor and a plumber. A crude open-a- ir laboratory has been set up near Holladay, Utah, by Dr. Corliss R. Kinney, associate professor of chemistry at the University of Utah, and A. J. Bird, university plumber. There, in four years of experimentation, they have perfected method! of distilling sage brush blooms and leaves into an essential oil composed of camphor, eucalyptol, pinene and turpentine. The principal drawback to profitable commercial exploitation of sage brush. Dr. Kinney said, is in harvesting. At present it is necessary for men to go out with banana knives and cut the tops by hand. He is studying the possibility of developing a mechanical cutter, somewhat similar to a sugar beet topper. ' The oil extracted from the brush can be used. Dr, Kinney said, as the base for perfumes, cosmetics, medicines and a score of other products. "Farmers 'living on marginal lands of the West are hard pressed, he explained. "Distilling the oil could be a home industry for westWith very lit. ern homesteaders. tie equipment the oil could be distilled at home and the farmers could make badly needed 'extra money." Vienna Scholar Is Happy To Study at Oklahoma U. The turn of events in Europe made Dr. Lilly Lorentz happy that she left Vienna to come to the United States. Dr. Lorentz landed, in the United States with S5 and a year's scholarship at the University of Oklahoma. The daughter of a soldier who died before the World war. Dr. Lorentz was reared and educated in Vienna, and at the end of four years' study at the University of Vienna she received a doctor's degree in chemical physics. Four years after her graduation she worked in the Vienna movie industry, although she received no pay. Dr. Lorentz has a years research fellowship in physics at the university here where she will work with Dr. J. Rud Nielsen in the field of Raman spectra," continuing a N study begun in Vienna. Although her plans beyond the yesr are indefinite, she will remain in the United States, she said. She will be a candidate for a doctor's degree in physics from the university here in June. NORMAN, OKLA. Sudeten-Ger-ma- n Trained Gorilla Tekts His Life in Stride Now CINCINNATI, OHIO. Susie,, the only trained gorilla in captivity, now seems to be taking a philosophic attitude toward life at Cincinnati's famous zoo. Evidence of her emotional maturity was witnessed when Bill Dressman, her trainer and constant companion, took a week's vacation. In the past Susie refused to eat while Dressman was not present to set as waiter. This time, however, she devoured her daily rations with gusto although she was a bit wistful. Medical Marvel Dead A man who amazed the medical world by marrying for foe second t.pifi at foe age of 70 and then having five children has died at Fareham, Hampshire, at the Sia of 90, LONDON. Doctors Make New Stomachs GLASS TOPS SEAT COVERS and UPHOLSTERING Small Part of Organ Made To Grow; Advance in F. W. KIEPE THE TAILOR v Suits made 'to order and remodeled for Ladies and ' Gentlemen WELLINGTON AUTO TOP CO. Treating Ulcer. Pressing Cleaning 1060 East 21st South Motor Ave. Was. 7443 141 NEW YORK. New stomachs created by surgery were described to the American College of Surgeons, who met here recently. Their creation follows discovery that if even a smssmavLmumiimeaa Buy Only little bit of a stomach remains it can be spliced to an intestinal organ that will grow like a new room WELDING? GOOD COAL added to a house, to replace some of the lost area. "About a nickel's worth of stomach is all that may be needed," It was stated. to h A nickels worth Is of a normal stomach. It is so little that at first the patient may be unable to hold even a small meal at ordinary eating pace. Desperate Operation. How these new methods have been discovered aa the result of desperate operation! to save life when stomachs were found far gone from ulcer or cancer was told by several surgeons. Dr. Hans Finsterer of Vienna, one ' of the foremost ulcer surgeons in the world, reported it is sometimes better to throw away most of the stomach rather than try to save aU. He criticized a standard stomach ulcer operation, gastroenteroscopy, as a cause of still more dangerous ulcers. This operation makes an opening in the bottom of the stomach, to detour around an ulcer situated at the exit. High Bate of Cures. Doctor Finisterer said that by reof the stomach he moving has effected 95 per cent of cures, a figure much higher than that achieved through the more conservative operation. stomTo complete the ach left, Doctor Finisterer fastens to it one of the canals of the upper intestine, the jejunum, and they unite. Another surgeon told of man who ate as much as his tomach would hold the day after about of it had been removed. This man recovered as quickly as from an appendix operation. Warning that inhaling tobacco smoke may lead to cancer of the lungs was issued in a report by Dr. Alton Oschner and Dr. Michael Debakey of Tulane university school of medicine. Just Bring In the Pieces" Call Hyland Granite Welding & Wire Works CASTLE GATE CLEAR CREEK ABERDEEN KING COAL one-fift- one-six- th H a Hyland 458 Agents for Sentinel Stokers nTeva.-eStoker Coni j d EXPERT ON THE Shoe Repairing SUGAR HOUSE COAL CO. REBUILDERS 1059 V V "Flowers That Satisfy 2157 Highland Drive Hyland 8199 MITCHELLS ARE FEATURING TIIE VERY BEST IN THE PAINT POT "We Make the World Brighter" FOR SALE FOR THE HOLIDAYS ton Pick-UFaint, runs good 1929 Hudson Flat Bed, New ! E. 21st So. E. 21st So. 1074 Hy. 8739 REDUCED PRICES Hy. 8553 p. ' $35. East 2030 South 11th Paradise (Sweef) Taradise MUSCATEL WHITE PORT (Amber Sweet) QUART QUART Code No. Code No. 947 970 GALLON a Code No. 948 fcRANDs Airplane Stewardesses Come From Small Towns irt of airliner. Some of foe towns represented on foe roll include: Lapwal, Idaho; Pierz, Minn.; Celina, Ohio; Hells Canyon, Mont.; Valencia, Kan.; Brush, Colo, (the girl from this town is Alice Razor!); Petersburg, Alaska; Yoncella, Ore.; Soldier Summit, Utah; Brighton, Iowa and Tonga-noxiKan., and Wamego, Kan. e, ' BISCEGUA BR01CEL1ARS SWEET ALCOHOL alfi it?7 833 815 831 830 033 9lfl 1057 stHEUHA(mromgf WINES DRV WINES 20BY VOLUME SrRVEs CDE SIC 1058 WITH WILD NO- - ALCOHOL 1236 BYVOUIMC oaks. USD KEATS OR LAMO Paradis Burgundy (Red Dry) Paradis Burgundy ((tod Dry) Paradis Zinfandel (Itad Dry) Paradise Zlnfandd (Red Dry) KlPvrg '"ITU Fw. FflWL OR EOOS Paradise Riesling (Whltn Dry) Paradlse-Sauter- n (White Dry) Paradise- Sauterae (White Dry) eeRvro roe ccmioni Paradise Pori (Red Rwert) ramllse Port (Red Sweet) Paradise Angelica (Amber Sweet) Paradise Angelica (Amber Sweet) Fifth l. AS A COCKTA'L OR WITH OR ANY TMR OF DAY Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) I04S Paradise Sherry' (Amber Dry) 1035 Fifth Fifth Gallon Fifth Quart Gallon Quart Gallon SOUP Quart Gallon . BEAULIEU VINEYARDS WINES Rutherford, Napa County, Calif, 1037 Beaulieu Sherry XXX Palo Dry Fifth 8fi7 Beaulieu Burgundy (Red Dry) Fifth 813 Beaulieu Haute Sauterne (Kiel. W.J Fifth 991 Beaulieu Muacatel (Sacramental W Gallon FAMOUS 915 917 DIO (CHAMPAONE TYPE) , Gallon Gallon' - SERVED 8,000-mil- J SPECIALLY 1053 to $59.00 59c USE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN Permanent Waves two-mil- 100-pou- Complete New Line from BEAUTY SALON human intelligence. The dog is Beau Rex, an Alsatian, belonging to Jim Murphy, a miner and prospector of Edmonton, North Queensland. Beau Rex, his owner claims, can carry two rifles and 50 rounds of ammunition ; a miner's pick and shovel and 30 pounds of stores; two sets of golf clubs and 30 balls; first aid kit weighing 40 pounds; six umbrellas and hold a seventh one in his mouth; also retrieve any hidden object over a distance of two miles, day or night; find a buried object over the same distance and return e with it after following a trail through heavy traffic, around comers, over fences and through shops and houses; fetch anything up to 40 pounds in weight from the water on cry of "Help." Also run out 100 yards of field telephone wire on a spindle strapped to his back; arrest any person by right wrist on command; guard any object placed in his keeping. These, says Murphy, are just "a few" of the things Rex can do. SAN DIEGO. CALIF. Insured German for $1,000, a shepherd dog recently completed e an journey which began at Nuremberg, Germany, and ended here. The dog accompanied three others from Nuremberg to Minnesota and made foe rest of foe trip alone. The animals had been trained by foe German police department to track, throw and hold criminals; to find lost objects and guard persons and property. MIRRORS Sugar House Aus- Seafaring Pocch Ends 8,000 Mile Trip -- -- AT United Air Lines present 140 stewardesses have home towns of under 3,000 population, according to company records. Apparently foe country or small town girl who becomes a nurse, is likely to be ambitious to see foe world, too, and is foe pleas- ing, attractive, healthy and friendly type required for foe exacting duties of a stewardess on a modern b Funeral Deiigns Corsages KINGS Forget Me Not FLORAL tralia claims to have a dog with o i' CUT FLOWERS v Australian Says His Dog Has Human Intelligence Sixty-tw- VV AWT z five-sixt- hs CHICAGO. Hy. 8775 East 21st So. Z rd BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA. h PROGRESS SHOE Hy. 2530 Highland Drive ,r'j Quick Courteous Service two-thir- ds one-thi- f yy LOBBS JOB !191 South 11th East 2021 V ' Ccaulleu Sparkling Moselle 'Fifth Beaulieu (rink) Sparkling Burgundy FlfUi Beaulieu Sparkling Moselle Tenth I |