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Show Statesmen of Past Canada Pit Keeps Gold Mining Lead Appeal by Madison, Jackson, Adams Recalled. Porcupine CamplleadsAll In Production. WINNIPEG. er shortage, poor transportation adverse weather condition! and lack ox capital, the central Can- ada mining Industry fought its way to new standard levels during the e past 12 months and reached an high in production. Canada's yield of gold, copper, sine and lead showed steady increase last year, and while prices fur base metals were considerably lower throughout the year than for 1837, the gross returns were not far short of those for the previous year. In the case of gold, prices were considerably higher. After 27 years of production, the Porcupine camp still leads the western world In the production of gold, followed closely by Canada's second largest gold producing area, the Kirkland field. Both are in Ontario. The Ontario gold output fur the first time in history surpassed the all-tim- $100,000,000 ILL. The youth ol America were urged to hear an appeal for temperance made more than a century ago by James Madison, Andrew Jackson, and John Quincy Adams. Speaking before several hundred people gathered here under the auspices of the temperance and health education committee of the Illinois Church council Dr. R. E. Maupin, cf the medical staff of the Keeley institute, quoted the appeal by the DWIGHT, pow- MAN.-Des- pite (Continued from page Urged Temperance mark. However, Manitoba, too, has many gold prospects. San Antonio, God's Lake, Gunnnr. Gold and Beresford lake mines tup the list as gold pro ducers, while many others are steadily extending operations. "Joined as a link in the chain of Canadian provinces that have endowed the rock formations or age, Manitoba is Justified in anticipating a long and successful mineral history," J. S. McDlar-miminister of mines of the province, said in a statement. At northern Manitoba's leading mining tuwn. Flin Flon, the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting company Is preparing to sink a new shaft to a depth of approximately 4,500 feet. An estimated 200,000 tons of rock will be moved In the operation. The hoist which will service this shaft will be the biggest yet installed in Canada, and possibly in. the world. three great American statesmer made in 1825, as follows: "Being satisfied from obscrvatioi and experience as well as fron medical testimony that arden spirits as a drink are not on!y need less, but hurtful and that the entir disuse of it would tend to prumoi the health, the virtue and the hat piness of the country and we bereb; express our conviction that shouk the citizens of the United States am especially the young men discon tlnue the use of it, they would no only promote their own persona benefit but the good of our countrj and of the world" (Signed) James Madison, Andrew Quincy Adams. Jackson, John President John Adams was ai unremitting foe of liquor and would be considered a fanatic if he werr living today. Dr. Maupin pointed out Prime Minster William E. Glad stone of England, he said, charac terized drink as "more destructive than war, pestilence and famine combined." Since the repeal of prohibition the ease with which liquor is now ob tainable. Dr. Maupin declared, makes Its use purely an Individual problem to the average person. "Each person must decide the question of drink for himself," thi Keeley physician said, "and since the responsibility rests entirely with him he is entitled to know what al coholism does to him." Citing facts based on studies by leading scientists showing the destructive effects of alcohol on the Typical Physical Model brain, the heart, the nervous' sys Is Declared Nonexistent tern and the digestive tract. Dr. CLEVELAND. Willard W. Beat- - Maupin declared that the iden thn: alcohol has any benefits as a msdi ty, director of educatiun for the cine is entirely out of date. United States office of Indian affairs, said here that health charts have been discredited by doctors because Lawyer Admitted to Bar there Is no "normal" pattern that After Practice can be used on age and height. SALT LAKE CITY. -- After 24 "People are as tlie Lord made them," he said, "and no amount of years of practicing law. State Sen. stuffing or starving Is going to Silas E. Tanner believed It was change them if they're built that about time for him to take the state bar examination. way." For almost a quarter of a century The changing world, he said, has made It dangerous to say one thing Tanner has acted as Wayne county Is good and another bad. He pointed attorney. His office permitted him to the once prevalent belief that good to practice, but not privately, as an teeth were dependent upon regular attorney. "I didn't think I could pass the brushing and said the Eskimos, who have excellent teeth, will lose them examination," he said. He took it If they eat the white man's candy. recently, however, and passed with no matter how much they brush honors. The Utah Supremt court installed him as a practicing lawyer them. Beatty, speaking before 500 mem and the state senate adjourned to bers of the Child Health association, attend the ceremonies. During the World war, Tanner urged educators and doctors to rec ognlM the wide range of what la acted as appeal attorney for the normal. government. He served in the Utah house of representatives in 1919 and in the senate in 1937. an d, V nOUSE BULLETIN TITC SUGAR FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1939. 1.) BUS SCHEDULE Airway Motor Coach Lines, Inc. of the University. An alumni ball will be held the evening of June G. WRITER TO LECTURE AT UNIVERSITY i Charles Hanson Towne, famous lecturer, editor and popular nove list, will appear at the University of Utah June .1 as the last num ber on the Master Minds and artists aeries. He will lecture at 8:15 p. m. in Kingsbury Hall. This replaces the scheduled lec ture of Paul Dangler, who was kept in Europe by political events there. LEAVE 10:15 a. m. 12:15 P. m. 2:15 3:55 ; i WATERBURY. CONN.-Indiu- tri-al accidents during 1038 cost Ameri-- i can business men, employees and their families, $4,000 a minute per working day, according to Charles E. Hodges Jr., liability insurance company president. Lost wages, medical expenses and overhead cost of insurance contributed to this total. "While this presents a most noteworthy achievement in the field of accident'prevention when It is compared with the $5,000 a minute cost of 1937," Hodges said, "the cost of industrial accidents amounting to more than 9SO0.000.0OO in 1938 is still unnecessarily high and every effort should be made to eilect further reductions In 1939." President H. W. Reherd, of the Westminster College tendered bis resignation on April 10th to be effective August 31st He tend- erea us resignation to oecome effective on his seventieth birthday. Th-- ! board accepted his resignation with' great regret ana voted him to become president emeritus' as of September 1st, 1939. Reverend1 Robert. D. Steele was elected president as he has been active in the affairs of the college for the past four years as and associate president. This college is doing a great work and will continue doing bo with Mr. Steele at the helm. THE BULLETIN ADS I H A For the extra fun that comes of buying more and better and buying wisely . . . shop The Bulletin The merchant! who advertise in The Bulletin are the dependable merchants in Sugar House the merchants who offer the best values, the best prices, the best quality, the best service. Their aim is to serve you better and The Bulletin ads are their way of telling you about it I buying- - ad-wa- y. SJ-- 69 1119 EAST 31 SO. IIY SC4 FA letter. mailed in a bottle and thrown over board frum a ship at sea. reached its destination here, 10 days after it was tossed Into the water. The bottle, containing the letter. was thrown from a ship off the count of Florida, by Claude Gray, former resident of Hot Springs. It was de livered to his mother, Mrs. 8. E, Gray, 10 days later. 1:30 3:30 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 1:00 p. m. 3:00 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 1:15 p. m. 3:15 4:15 4:45 5:15 5:45 6:15 6:45 7:15 , address. A post office employee here sent a card instructing him to send six cents to the postmaster, if he wanted the newspaper forwarded. The six cents didn't arrive and tne paper eventually was thrown away. the letter containing the Recently ' stamps and the card was found lodged In a mail chute in the Henne building in Los Angeles by workmen who were wrecking the building. The letter was sent to the postmaster here. It has not been determined if the old Los Angeles address still will reach Warden. Giant TWAr-- L 1 other Nationally known tire, of compa A I . wm delivery by B en , Mir inexact awn - - iw- . 1 OB Foot AutoTcnt $g95 DJ $6.95 inaii wa expenses . . Wefitem Giants VTJU. . ..r DnlCES fob ASK B r to. 49c Glare Shield Re (CSM) Ml e . a Die p t? aH W iM with d White walL 31oot rinkas end 7x7 Gam? Gridi III lUi IIRMMtsl. 4IBlW n incuon. Rig. true 13ZZ1 $2.95 to $12.45 i Ask for Low Price on your sue . .. ni ..TDlfnid iX:. --- -- waterproa.- -- r aBHk 1 nd.tak...Awr---- : material, car max ' unholstery -- impiuvej rr - - contents hot or cold long period fiamo" StOVC -- I NEW STYLE Instant Light Wind Breaks floor. $3,45 mjJ 5 (C444) y Gallon JUg Reg 95c r Milla I seams and Window la back, j-Heavy u w 2 Burner A AS csw & (C485) 55c sst BkMe si $19.95 i si i - (C4B7) LARGE SIZE XL" battery lor i wi..Ail in. 14x12 Wasco, "WA" of Y - Huavv-. -- guUses ordinary nmnactW. Instant i i.u priming. eliminates - . -Ugnw- o- . Cooks we your CTi't to QTHEH -- STOvm OTHEHIUW m triT KB? " COVBIB. Ask for Low Prices V... BW BSk m w ME strong frame, durable A w" seat TT m in n DEB OTHER CHAIRS- L roias. FuU size, Sic to Tliree. Fcnn Supreme 100 Our si wnrws jw Steering S3.95 Pest Contool nr 1 GOggleS aWI Q J pa.es ala ... Doable DUhUed, V" and 1:1 Ama and carbon 7XIulu Spaaauy . , ionrung wp"""" 'gwj SSL Gallon lit If""' . , . KC Dependable PennsTWoala rvthai will aiv. wi-- Gal. iS3 pikKT WESTERN OIL ...in Tf e--j J bamboo Strong spUt handle with double nnd Deq iasie"'- $2.68 horn mm ice g?lvied VinHs about o Sliyhtly highar is Ma iocaliliM bcu el iraighb Until SatulY Nih,V i ( ,oeni. iw' - Foocy rase Ornamem BEG. & (S433) r Sticks out red tongue, eyes -Qosh red ana nom bw In. high. 6 button. vou push Fastens to license bracket $9& . 1A.FETY ' yonrouB r.MPTY CANS LOANED CV SMALL DEPOSIT , ouenu. The latest Novelty q ETce. Gnenameled. Rgvoaue. R!9h ,We Reserve the to Limit QuoeWies. j OTHER HOBWS ReErigerator WelledlSmov- able n m Basket lSxHVixlNi Inches Wear-we- ll .1v1!quS 7 d voriauons. 17c to S2.95 Re.98c Lunch V lona ., aisiansnnt i & eflerted OTHER GOGGU-- S 7c Gallon through -r- blIJ m vM Button: CASE WITH LEATHER Vertical light only . Musical Horn JK. (C245) - Genuine Polaroid " Stool Reg.39cCamP jooi 1UI who Inspected A 11:15 11:30 11:00 CHILDRESS, TEXAS. It took a crew of workmen demolishing a building a couple of thousand miles away to find it, but if J. D. Warden still wants the letter containing the six cents in stamps he mailed' in 1920 it's here for him now. The story in this: In November, 1926, a newspaper addressed to Warden arrived at the Childress post office. Warden had moved to Los Angeles, and had left a forwarding Comi-ore- d (C264) the arsenal recently, were assured our army holds an enviable position in regard to chemical warfare. ARK. 7:45 a. m. 8:15 8:45 9:15 Lost 6 Cents Revealed With Building's Razing PAUL FREDRICKSON SEES NEW YORK WORLD FAIR Paul Fredrickson, associated with the Ben Franklin Stores of Sugar House, was In New York this week taking in the sights of the World Fair. Mr. Fredrickson made the trip with fifty members of the Orpheus club and their friends who arranged a special tour of the eastern cities as well the New York Fair. Folding Cot Germans first used mustard gas against the British in April 1917. but that blistering weapon remain? the "king" of chemical warfare, army chemical experts said today. It Is In the field of devising defenses against that scourge that the army's chemical warfare service has been most effective since the World war. However, the nation does not lag in making and method of using toxic Members of the American gases. HOT SPRINGS. 8:00 a. m. 8:30 9:00 9:30 Daily, except Sundays and Holidays i at trial EDGEWOOD. MD.- -A generation of researchers have passed since the Delivered With Dispatch LEAVE SUGAR HOUSE ( vice-preside- nt Mustard Gas Is Still 'King' of War Chemicals BcUle Note in Ocean Is 2:30 4:05 LV. 1ND SO. ft MAIN STREET To Holladay and Cottonwood! , x society, m. m. - LONDON. The British government may offer bounties to parents who produce larger and better families, the Sunday Chronicle's politi Chemical 7:30 a. m. 8:00 8:30 9:00 7:15 a. m. 7:45 8:15 8:45 10:45 12:45 Pi m. 2:45 3:45 4:15 4:45 5:15 5:45 6:15 6:45 Change At Westminster College, Britain Plans Bounties To Increase Birth Rate cal correspondent reports. The writer said that the govern ment first would undertake a nation wide propaganda drive and then of fer financial inducements. He add; that the bounty scheme being con sidered is on these lines: Family allowances under which married couples will be paid a boun ty of 5 shillings ($1.25) a week for the first child and S shillings (75 cents) a week for subsequent chilrebates dren; increased income-tawhere family includes children; increased allowances for the children of unemployed men. 10:30 12:30 LEAVE SUGAR HOUSE LV. EAST MILL CREEK LEAVE HOLLADAY COTTONWOOD IHNUDIOM'I con. ) 24-Ye- ar Industrial Accident Cost Is Placed at $600,000,000 OUTBOUND INBOUND lee HY. 3062 1045 emnc E. 21st Sou SC S |