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Show FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, THE SUGAR HOUSE BULLETIN 1940 THE SUGAR HOUSE BULLETIN East Plant at Business Office and A WEXKLT PUBLICATION Cbverlflf the Southeast, Section of Pxt Lake City SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Year Six Months, la advance Three Mentha, in advance PubUahtr. PUBLISHED FRIDAY Mail Delivery of Rural Routes One PONY EXPRESS TO AIR EXPRESS At A Saving By W. J. MORGAN. 41.50 . 75o - AOt Now it is an established fact and the pilots who are trained to fly these planes and drop the mail will be an added defense for this nation if ever an enemy should try to invade these shores. Its a long way from the clip to monsters of the air, but the the per ships same courage is evident in the operators, they meet dangers just as the early pioneers did, So that the with voung American fortitude. traditions of the Pony Express might be pre Land marks served for future generations. in Utah route its western were recently along dedicated bv ceremonies participated in bv members of the Utah Pioneer Trails and Land with marks Association who have the Grazing Service to restore this trail be tween lookout Pass and the Nevada line. A mong those present were Dr. Howard L Dip.gs. president of the American Trails As sociation. Hon. Geo. A. Smith, president of the I tah Pioneer Trails and Landmarks Associa tion. and Miss Lucille T. Weston, granddaugh of the ter of Alexander Majors, Express. Pony vice. In 1849, and before that date, mail sent from the vast coast to the western, and had a three months passage in a clipper ship around the horn ; then came the riders of the pony express, these men who brave! the dangers of the western plains with hostile storms and what not, Indians, they carried the mail so that the time from coast to coast was cut seven days; then came the stagecoach and finally in 1869 came the union of the hands of steel at T'romonitory Toint in Utah. When this feat was accomplished the iron steed carried the mails swiftly Now the aeroph.ne for a good many years. carries letters from coast to coast in the space of a day. On top of this comes Richard DuPont with a pickup service which gives localities not equipped for the landing of planes air mail service. Mail is dropped and picked up while the planes are negotiating the ether at 100 miles per hour. The government became interested and contracts were let for this ser vice-vers- a, s, Sugar House Upholstering 21it South Sugar House, Utah 1. M. CONNIKF, horse-thieve- 1119 er BALKANS TENSE AS GERMAN TROOPS MOVE Gives Good Service SOVIET RUSSIA Whether your house is furnished in Queen Ann style or the more luxurious Louis XIV period, the Sugar House Upholstering; Co. guarantees to supply your demands. This firm has gained a wide reputation because of its fine service to the community. All work guaranteed. This work consists of upholstering, slip covering, reflnishing, and repairing. Mr. R. D. Bowen, manager, deserves the respect and praise of the local people for the splendid work he does together with his employees. This firm has been in business here for several years, and has built up a very desirable and reliable reputation Because this firm is such an asset to the community, this paper feels secure in recommending it to all of its renders. We feel confident that Mr. Bowen and his associates are well qualified in their work und will do their utmost to see that the public is well satisfied. The address is 2027 McClelland Street, Phone Ploesti wi : Location 2157 Hyland Drive South Across from the East Furniture Co. Dial Phone 91 and Murray 165 With the ever increasing toll of killed and injured on our streets and highways, no thinking person should be without the adequate protection of a good insurance policy. One should show just as mucn care in selecting insurance for their car as they do in life insurance. In this respect we know of no firm who stands higher with the public of this section than Farmer's Automobile This is a coExchange. operative insurance firm and not a profit making institution. Eighty per cent of the premium income is used to build up surplus ana pay claims; twenty per cent goes to operating expenses. As claims decrease premiums decrease policy holders .are returned the savings in the' form of reduced premiums. They place all forms of automobile insurance. The hundreds of clients who make this their automobile insurance home,' have found courtesy, accomodation and efficiency their guiding principles. 21 Inter-Insuran-ce VOTE DEMOCRATIC served by those President Franklin D. Roosevelt can be who agree fully with his reat humanitarian policies. ELECT ABE MURDOCK, U. S. Senator. J. WILL ROBINSON, Congressman. HERBERT B. MAW, Governor; and in Salt Lake County ROSCOE BODEN, Commissioner (4 years). GWYNNE PAGE, Commissioner (2 years). HAROLD E. WALLACE, County Attorney. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Visitors to the country's national parks and monuments came to the entrance gates this year by plane, train, bus. motorcycle, boat horseback, on foot, and in their own automobiles, with this conveyance way out ahead in popularity, the National Park Service today reported to Secretary of the Interior. According to final travel figures now being compiled by the Service for the travel year ending September 30, private cars, ranging from jalopies to limousines, accounted for something over 90 percent of the total travel to the 26 national parks. Two parks report no auto travel in 1940. They are Isle Royale, completely surrounded by the waters of Lake Superior and a boat ride from the nearest shore, and Mount McKinley National Park in far-o-ff Alaska. Automobiles are not allowed on Isle Royale and no roads are to be constructed on this unusual island wilderness park. On the other hand, autos are perfectly all right in Mount McKinley if they can get there. One did in 1938, but reports for the last year and this are both zero. The Alaska Railroad and planes are the popular travel means at McKinley. Wendell Grover Ed. H. Watson Geo, A. Christensen Charles W. S pence Your Legislative Representative is the Voice of Your Locality in making the State's Laws. He can serve best if he is in harmony with the State Administration. Elect Your Friends and Neighbors: Dist 10. Jos. Nichols Dist 11. Parnell Hinckley Dist. 9. J. Henry McGean VOTE DEMOCRATIC (Paid Political Adv.) DAVE WOLF SAYS: Dial "If you think clothes don't make a difference, try walking down the street without any 13 last-nam- ed ing the new patrons and teachers inof the Forest School district was Russia is reported to have held at Forest School, with Mrs stalled long range guns facing A. R. Ure president of the Rumania, in the Bessarabia region, Association presiding. to counteract German troop moveThere was a short open house for patrons and teachers to get ments that started embarking at with loaded fith military supplies were observed passing through Mari-b(2), Half a dozen of the troopships were seen moving past Belgrade (3). The German radio at the same time carried a reacquainted. Followed bv a meet. Regensburg (1), Nazi forces tag introducing the P.-A. offi stocks of equipment have made port that Bulgaria was strengthcers ror the year. down the Danube to ening her forces on the Greek A social hour followed the meet- their way two freight trains and Turkish frontiers (4). ing with Mrs. Angus Gibson and Rumania and Mrs. N. Hubbard presiding at the tea table. or - rs T. BRIGHT LIGHT JEWELRY Phones: Visitors to the 30 national military parks, battlefield sites, forts and other historic areas primarily of a military character, connected with French and Indian wars, the American Revolution, the War of 1812, and the War Between the States, totalled approximately 3,290,000 in 1940 as against in 1939, an increase of 9 percent. honor- Parent-Teache- New J. REX HAMILTON State Street they get home. A. NOTES FOREST SCHOOL tea PAINT POT SERVICE at 496S South (Continued on from Page 1) showing much more than usual interests in fortifications, tactics, and strategy, according to reports received from Park Service historians in the field. The sightseers uk more questions, spend more time on the battlefields and In the forts, and swell the mail with queries thought up after P.-- T. d" Cross the Street for Distinctive For State Senate: Jjt 'IwlA'a - A According to the A. P. I., the daily average output was S.4S9,000 barrels, or 311,000 barrels below the level of the preceding week. Dally average crude runs to stills amounted to 3,555,000, barrels, or 45,000 barrels below the average for the week ending September 28, Imports of crude oil, which had shown a material decline during the preceding week, rose to 140,000 barrels daily from an average of 96,000 barrels for the preceding week. Car Insurance WATCHES - 20-mi- SILVERWARE GIFTS FOR EVERY OCCASION Expert Watch Repairing SUGAR HOUSE JEWELRY & GIFT SHOP Would you drive 4 miles to save $8 to $12 on your Fall Suit or Topcoat? How can the savings be made? I operate from my home and have no overhead. Every garment made to your individual measure and guaranteed, We make Ladies Suits and Top Coats marvelously tailored. DAVE WOLF 549 Stringham Avenue Dial 13 le ATTENTION CLASS! Sale Prices StiU Prevail Phone: Dial 2120 South 11th East 54 Thanksgiving Special ON PERMANENT WAVES Very newest waves, (oils) machine or machineless Hair Styling free with every permanent. Mitchell s Beauty Salon Mr. Mitchell has returned after a three months absence. 975 Phone Dial East 21st South SUSIE c MAMA THINKS A QAt) frllti. t (MlJ fk - fii -i fir Vt::.V 03 With this new lantern, believed to be the brightest portable lantern in the world, pretty Ida Sher man lights a night target ror Fred Marx. The new lantern, in vented by Jackson Burgess, Chi cago, is 180 times as powerful as the best two cell flashlight It is possible to read a newspaper by its light a half mile away. Many defence uses are foreseen for the lantern, especially as an emergency light for airplanes. ays i m jhe IN THl COOKY ft it eoitcvetc JA t hi Arcm im yjiaa mu CRUDE OIL STOCK REPORT Stocks of domestic and foreign crude petroleum at the close of the week ending October 5 totaled 263,551,000 barrels, according to data reported to Secretary of the Interior, Harold L. Ickes, by the Bureau of Mines. Compared with the revised total of the preceding week, this represents a decrease of 58,000 barrels, comprising an increase of 175,000 barrels in stocks of domestic crude but a decrease of 233.000 barrels in stocks of foreign crude. stocks in CaliHeavy crude-o- il fornia, not included in the "refin-abt- e crude stocks, totaled 12,564-00- 0 barrels, a decrease of 201,000 barrels from the amount on hand September 28. Current reports of the industry for the week ending October 5 indicate chiefly a material decline in production and a much smaller decrease in crude runs to stills. ALL I DONT MYIN9- - TV Stt MUCH 0 &OOB -- t OICAUJE rAft.Aft M THEREI r regularly. It's a lot more satisfying than letters and inexpensive, too. Ask the operator to tell you the rate to any town. Giant Exploding Star Discovered in West AMD THAT WA WHIN SHE WAS UTTkfJ AS AM ONLY OCCH ONC CMIkO IH THE Another college year is under way and here is a reminder to help you bridge the gap between home and school. Enjoy a telephone visit "At PttCT WHOtS 3B ' ,, ...WVA.. 1J .1 !. jV-v- - PASADENA, CALIF. A giant exploding star between the North Star and the Dipper has been discovered by Dr. Joseph J. Johnson, California Institute of Technology astrophysicist. Dr. Johnson said that the newest supernova gives off as much light as several hundred suns rolled into a single ball. He said that his discovery was made from Palomnr mountain, site of Cal-tcch telescope, which, since 1936, has enabled the scientist to locate 16 exploding stars. 200-inc- |