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Show THE SUGARIIOrSE Army Air Corps Awaits Signal Opening Special Wright Field Nerve Center For Expansion of Plane Service. Guaranteed Recapped Tires 55 WO " -- x 17 .$5.50 $6.25 x 16 DAYTON. When congress gives the signal, the experimental branch of the United States army air corps at Wright field will be ready with contracts for S30.000.000 worth of (on your tire) NEW and USED TIRES airplanes. Final enactment of the war department's appropriation bill and the secretary of war's signature on these contracts will inaugurate an air corps expansion program that Sugar House Tire & Battery Hy. 9913 1117 East 3,000 new fighting contemplates planes in two years. Wright field has been the birthplace of all modernization of the army sir corps in the last dozen years, but never have the flying line, the laboratories and testing departments been the scene of such highspeed activity as in the early months 21st South Choice PEONIES- - of 1039. A staff of 1.CO0 officers and civilian employees has been working long hours tor weeks in preparation for building America's greatest and deadliest sky fleet Several hundred more employees, from engineers down to shop mechanics, probably will be added when the expansion program gets under way. Lowest Prices Ever Brand Floral Shop Hy. 970 2034 So. 1 Establishment la Enlarged. The main laboratory building, with 148,920 square feet of floor space, is being enlarged and rearranged. A new wind tunnel, the largest in the country, which will plane at permit testing a 20-fo- nth East MAXFIELD'S Sunshine windspeed of 400 to SOO miles an hour, is planned. Brake testing facilities have been installed recently. New equipment for testing engines and propellers is expected V be added. Most important tests at the moment are those being made on three attack bombers capable of carrying half a ton of bombs and heavy machine gun armament With an estimated top speed of 400 miles an hour, these ships, designed by prk vate manufacturers, are expected to be equal or superior to any attack planes ever built These can be e used for bombing or for attack ground troops. Interesting but secret tests are being made on new pursuit planes. they are expectTiny single-seater- s, ed to go well over 400 miles an hour. According to Brig. Gen, George H. Brett, chief of the air corps material division, these pursuit and attack bomber planes will be the backbone of the enlarged new air force. Giant Bombers la Vanguard. Additional strength. General Brett said, will' come from the "flying fortress" bombers. These sky giants will be the answer to the problem given the air corps by President Roosevelt, of defending the Western hemisphere against foreign invasion. Formerly Wright field officers had the viewpoint on development that constant advancements in aviation would make mass production of any certain types undesirable. The corps did not want obsolete planes on its high-altitud- PAINT Economical Paint for ROOFS, GARAGES, OUTDOOR BUILDINGS Also Brick four-en-gin- Phone or Call at the Maxfield Plant in Murray Call Murray 490 dir we awe uou hands. European developments, however, created a demand for a large air force. The policy has been changed to one of standardization on the best of present-damilitary planes to air defense. sn adequate provide y Much of the new personnel coming to Wright field, it is understood, will be attached to a new production department to put manufacture of fighting planes on a mass produo-tio- n basis. Officers to head this department have been assigned here but details of its function are se- cret The emphasis on mass production does not mean that engineering development will lag. Research work will continue on an even greater scale so that swifter, better aircraft will be ready for production when the current best ships are outmoded. We're speaking of its equivalent for you to consider: Every year this newspaper brings you at lent three out standing novels in serial form. Purchased as books each would cost not less than $2, making a total expenditure of at least SS per year. Like yourself, we could find plenty of uses for that SS. Soma member of the family is always in need of a new pair of ahoes ' or some other necessity. But at the same time your requirements for good reading material must be met By accepting these three novels each year we feel you are treating yourself to real enjoyment, at the same time giving your purse a substantial boost These novels are a source of constant pride to us. Every year we select them from the season's most outstanding best sellers, offered in serial form by a large newspaper syndicate organization. We'd like to feel that you as a subscriberalways look forward to reading the coming installment in the next issue. It gives us a great satisfaction to know that here is another reason why our paper is popular in the home. You are invited to begin reading our novels now. These regular brief visits to fictionland will prove a delightful interlude from your work-a-dactivities. And it win make us happy to know that you are getting enjoyment from them. , ay . FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1K0. College Education Pays, Alumni Show Find Hotter Jobs, Quicker, Survey Finds. WASHINGTON.-Pr- oof that a college education pays dividends has been found in a survey of 48.000 alumni graduated from 31 colleges and universities in the United States. The report was announced by John W. Studebaker. United States commissioner of education. The survey covered graduates from 1928 to 193S. The survey showed that 98 per cent of all the men and 93 per cent of all the women were employed either temporarily or permanently. Their average age upon graduation was 22 years. Among the 48.000 who replied to questionnaires, only 2 per cent of the men and 1 per cent of the women have been on relief. Salary scales paid to college men generally were higher than paid to women, although older college women earn more than young college men. The typical salary of a male college graduate the second year out of school was found to be $25 a week, while the average woman graduate two years out of school could command only $21. Salaries paid to men were found to increase about $150 a year until they were earning about $45 a week eight years after graduation, while women's salaries increased only $9 a week to $30 after eight years. Sixty-fiv- e per cent of the alumni reported themselves in the professional groups. Teaching attracted 17 per cent of the men; engineering. 13 per cent; law, 9 per cent and medicine. 6 per cent Forty-eigper cent of women graduates found teaching positions, while 29 per cent had general occupations, Including 16 per cent in domestic work. convention of the 28th District to be held June 16 and 17 at Vernal, Utah. Nothing has been dofia'tely by the local club as to participating in any of the programs scheduled for the convention but district officers will be voted upon and items of business of interest to the various committees will be taken up at meetings. ar-rag- ed i J st DR. BURBIDGE TO REPRESENT LIOXS CLUB Dr. and Mrs. Leslie D. Burbidge will attend the National Convention of Lions Club at. Cleveland, Ohio, in July and will represent the Sugar House Lions club, several other members arc considervice. ing attending the convention. Ted Woody's Market Is in of th meat department A. It. CX'RTM TO COAST at the store with Ted Woody A. R. Curtis of the Curtis Coal manager. Company, spent the week in California on business. Mrs.. Curtis accompanied her husband and if Here's Siirple Guide for time permits, they will see the Diagnosis of Turaxyachs San Francisco Exposition. SIOUX CITY, IOWA. If one has charcre "- abdominal pain but is able to get Three New Cases of Mountain Fever upstairs and into pajamas, that's ht ds WHITE PORT 947 970 AUrm )m gallon 948 Average Typist Expends More Energy Than Digger CLEVELAND. The average typist, by actual scientific tests, does acmore work than a ditch-diggecording to Frank M. Slough, Cleveland patent attorney. "When the effort required to strike a typewriter key is multiplied by the thousands of TUCSON, ARIZ. Upon their return from a trip into Sonora, arche-ol-o gists of the University of Arizona reported they had apparently traced the beginning of the Arizona Papago Indians to a now extinct tribe in Sonora, called the Soba Indians. Evidence found at La Playa and Las Trincheras convinced them. Dr. Emil W. Haury, head of the anthropology department of the university said, that the Papagos may have migrated into Arizona from that part of Mexico. A prehistoric village, opened by erosion at La Playa, revealed the Soba Indians were chiefly food gatherers, a characteristic of the Papago ging" Slough said that a young Cleveland man bad Invented a revolution- ary electrical typewriter, "simpler, cheaper to manufacture, easier to operate with Interchangeable typeface, and many other advantages." Future Home Life Revealed NEW YORK. "Tomorrow Town" at the New York World's fair reveals how the community of the future will function. The "Town" covers five acres. Fifteen homes are being erected to give spectators an idea of what to expect for prices ranging from $3,000 to $17,000. tribe. DUBLIN. Progress has flattened the old Irish custom of boys roping the newly married bride as she left the church and taking her away before the bridegroom could kiss her. In County Kerry, about the only place where it is still practiced, Bridget Guerin and her nephew, Richard Guerin, were arrested recently at Dooncaha charged with obstructing a' wedding party by placing a rope in front of them, the rope having damaged a wedding car. The Judge said that as automobiles had replaced jaunting cars, the custom, was dangerous and must be Keeping in line with the trend bigger and better markets, the Christensen Market opcefi its new store this week at 2UJ3 South Thirteenth East street, according to Milton Christensen. owner and manager. Mr. Christensen, who has be- come active with the Sugar j House Lion's club, has been in business in Sugar House for sev eral yours, first with his father in the B and C Market on Nintn East and Twenty-firSouth street. The new market hs become a member of the I G A System. The new store was built by Elbert Curtis and lias been constructed for a drive in accomodations as well as a delivery ser- the for of the Lion's club will attend pppendicitis. acule and painful. If a person is unable to get upstairs but has to lie down on the right now. that's a gall Two cases of typhoid fever and davenport bladder attack, also acute and pain, three cases of Rocky Mountain ful. If, however, the victim falls down spotted fever were reported to the Utah State Board of Health and lies there, it's a ruptured stomfor the week ending May 9, as ach ulcer, still acute and painful. That was the simple guide to diagagainst one case of Rocky Mount- nosis given members .of the Sioux ain spotted fever and no case of Damages Asked of City Valley Medical association recently typhoid fever in the previous by Dr. Howard Gray of Rochester, For the Effects of 'Flu' week, ,and no cases of either for Minn., a member of the Mayo clinic SEMINOLE. OKLA.-M- rs. Addle the corresponding week last year. staff. Womack thinks the city of SemiDr. Gray several months ago opare communicable diseasThese nole should pay her $5,075 damages, on James Roosevelt, son of erated because, she says, it is the cause of es, which are definitely preventthe President. able. Dr. Jones said that while her being susceptible to colds. She filed a damage suit for that there is no immediate danger of Child Abuss Increases; amount against the city, and cited epidemics of typhoid or Rocky the following events to "prove my Mountain Society Blames Drink spotted fever at this claim": Drunkenness as s BOSTON. should be extremely Municipal workmen dug a ditch time, people of child abuse and neglect cause to these cautious guard against across the back lot of her home. last year reached the highest peak She alleges the workers broke a diseases .in all cases of possible since repeal of the eighteenth gss line running to her home and exposure. People who are going on amendment, according to the sixtithat she was without heat for 24 vacation or business trips into eth annual report of the Massachudays. the mountains or communities setts Society for Prevention of CruMrs. Womack, 44, contends that sources of water supplies elty to Children. where she contracted Influenza during the was a major facknown to be torIntemperunce period the gas line wss broken. This are not definitely in 26.5 per cent of the cases caused her, she alleges, to become safe and where there is posaibio handled by the society in 192ft. susceptible to "exposure." exposure to tick bites should pro- Though the highest percentage since tect themselves against these 1920. it was less than half that of peak year. Texas Co-e- ds diseases by Inoculation. Your fam- the Slender; Most serious cases resulted from Dr. is the Paul says ily physican, homes broken by death, desertion Weight Below Average best to advise you in this or divorce, according to General person AUSTIN, TEXAS.-Te- xas college matter. Secretary Thomas A Lothrop. girls are more slender than co-eof the "corn belt" and the North, Miss Leah Gregg, physical education director at the University of Texas, has revealed. Paradise MUSCATEL Average weight for college girls Paradise (Sweet) In America is 121 pounds, Miss (Amber Sweet) Gregg said, based on average height QUART QUART of 5 feet 4 inches. The average co-ed Code No, Code No. University of Texas freshman is 17 yesrs old and weighs 115 pounds, at least six pounds under the average poundage for girls In GALLON Middle West and Northern colleges. Sixty-on- e Code No. per cent of Texas girls are five pounds or more underweight and 42 per cent 10 pounds or more under 121 pounds. per day," said Slough, "the total effort actually is greater than that required in eight hours of ditch dig- Lassoing of Irish Brides Runs Into Legal Obstacle LIONS CLUB HAVE Christensen Market CONVENTION Opens New Store Fifteen or more local members Papago Indians Traced To Extinct Sonora Tribe cash, of course. NOT inhere is something BULLEtlV Two Unrelated Girls Can Qualify as Twins KEARNEY, NEB. Miss Samuelson of Wilcox, Neb., and Miss Maxine Samuelson of Elmcreek, Neb., aren't related, but they could be twins. Both were born February 21, 1921; both are blondes; both sre seniors in high school; both are of Swedish descent and both live on farms. Added to that, the middle name of their fathers is Theodore and the initials of their mothers are E. M. S. The girls livs within a radius of Kearney and have corresponded for three years, but did not meet until recently. Max-in- e 25-mi- ni r BIKEGUaBWJXEUAH SWEET ALCOHOL WeiMsiKia i. ,' 'sFwar WINES 20 BY VOLUME DRY ALCOHOL ataii at WINES lioYVOLUMf Served with Wild Cam. Red Meats or Lusnb CODE NO. CODS NO. Fifth 818 GaL 818 Paradise Burgundy (Red Dry) Filth 827 GaL 828 Paradise Zindandel (Bed Dry) or Finn. Fowl Eke Served with Fifth 815 Paradise Riesling (White Dry) 828 Paradise-SauUra- e (Whito Dry) Fifth 825 GaL Served fur All Oncauoni 832 Paradise Port (Red Sweet) Quart GaL 840 Paradise Port (Red Sweet) 1016 Paradise Tokay Quart 1057 Paradise Angelica (Amber Sweet) Quart GaL 1058 Paradise Angelica (Amber Sweet) Served a Cocktail or with Soup or Any Time of Day 1035 Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry) Quart GaL 1043 Paradise Sherry (Amber Dry)' . 813 867 872 825 891 1037 FAMOUS BEAULIEU VINEYARDS WHJZS Kulherford. Nupa County, California Beaulieu Haute Sauterne (MoL W.) Beaulieu Burgundy (Red Dry) Beaulieu Chablis (Sacramental) Beaulieu XXX Port Beaulieu Muscatel (Sacramental W.) Beaulieu Sherry XXX (Champagne Type) 915 Baauliau Soarklina Moselle Fiith 817 Beauiieu (Pink) Sparkling Burgundy Filth GaL Filth GaL Trn'h Fiith writer and many men of and praiwd the virtue or and relaxing, a great Kilt to coritnbulion to joy in living. Porta, kinpt. wientints. drtuimtiiiU. rtniui vorywhera have win. They found wine mankind, a Hiprem 016 Fifth recntmixed j ' III Bxa v mm t .m |