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Show An Independent Newspaper Devoted To The Interests Ot The People Ot Rich County and Lower Bear River Valley Volume 12 Number 28 $1.50 Per Year In Advance Randolph. Utah. Friday July 28, 1939 Woodruff Laketown News Mr. and Mrs. William Holbrook and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Curtis, of Bountiful, Mr. and Mrs. Hinton of Nephl, Utah called on Mr. and Mrs. W v Cheney Utah, visited last Sunday Friday evening. Mrs. Cheney accompanied tneim to Logan and back Sat' ' ' urday. Mrs. Stephen Gheien ar.d Mr. ana Mrs. Jesse Earley motored to Logman on business Thursday returning Fri' ' day. Veil Walker and Orval Moffat jf Murray, Utah spent last week end visiting with .Roy Moffat and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Ardh Webb and family of Salt Lake City and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McKinnon and family of Randolph spent a few hours at the home of Leslie Webb on Sunday. Other Sunday visitors included Mrs. John T. Sal'terthwaite and daughter Georgia, Seabury, Mrs. Geo. La inborn, Mrs. Gudgell and son, Wallace, Gordon Gatherum and Gleed Nebeker of Salt Lake City. WUD'ce Gudgdl and Gordon. Gatherum rendered two very fine trumpet duets in Sunday School. Mrs. Gudgell accompanying cn the piano. M'isi. Ralph Spiers made a hurried trip to Montpelier, Idaho Friday to - Charleston, Utah, were here Sunday to attend the Olend reunion. The Lean reunion has been postponed until August and will be held in Logan Canyon.' Delaus Dean and Robert Ismghurst had tlieir tonsils removed Saturday. Miss Fern Simmons returned to her home at pay son, Utah, Saturday. Rena. No la and Barbara Madsen, and ix)va Briggs returned to their homes in Idaho July 254 li. Miss Evelyn Ilufi arrived here re- eently to sj,end a short vacation. Miss Rufi is employed as a beautician in a beauty parlor at Idaho. Ira Moss returned home recently from Summer school. Tlicris Cornia, who lias been ill with typhoid, has been removed from the hospital but must remain at Ogden for several more weeks under medical care is a guest at SPss the Stuart home this week. Mr. and Mrs. Osro Cornia, and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Cornia attended Pioneer Day celebration at Ogden July We-sl'e- - the dentist. Judge' Hiarringlton and Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Harrington of Salt Lake City ar.d Mr. and Mbs. Gavrett and daughter, Martha were Sunday visitors at the homes of Pres. H. Robinson and Vernon Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. J. Ctis Cheney cf Salt Lhke-Citand Mr. and Mrs. Ruth Adams of Ins Angeles, Calif., paid a brief visit to the J. A. Cheney home over the 24:h. The Johnson family spent the 24th in Logon Canyon and witnessing the ball game at Logan which Kennetn Prit3 was pitching. Sidney Irvin took Gerald Hulme, son of Arnos Hulme, to a Salt Lake hospital last Wednesday. Continued on Cost Page) 24th OF JULY CELEBRATION IS GRAND SUCCESS The 24th of July celebration went over in fine shape. The high school hand played a big part iipthe celebration. They started playing early in the morning, playing several selections which put the spirit of celebration into everyone. They continued their playing in the program, rendering several more selections. The Flight," the main number of the program, the direction of Mrs. Alice C. Reay was very good; and enjoyed by the large crowd. The afternoon was spent at the church and fair grounds, where all kinds of races, including horse races and bicycle races, were held. A lodeo performance followed. The celebration closed with a grand ball, with an Ogden orchestra furnishing the music. The M. I. A. were in charge' of the celebration' and deserve much : praise for their efforts. un-.d- Review by E. Heiand fer Sons) There is both tragedy and comedy to be found in tihe various strikes of WPA workers which followed Congress passage of a bill' providing that these relief beneficiaries' should work full time for their' money, rather than a day or two a week. In general, the strikers demand higher wages, inasmuch as working hours were to be increased. And this dhows the amazing attitude of a segment of relief workers toward their jobs. They hove come to regard relief as a permanent profession not as a temporary and unfortunate necessity. They believe the taxpayers owe them g a living, whether or not they produce anything useful. They, regard themselves as a class aprt, signed up indefinitely on the pub! kf pay roll . Those WPA officials who announced that striking workers would he discharged' after 'five days, simply did their duty. And they did more than that they illustrated the forgotten fact that relief should be regarded as something to leave at the (Industrial-New- s . a life-lon- , ; hundreds of fascinating exhibits. And they find that the best things at the Fair are free. During the first 24th. month of the exposition ithe average per capita exMrs Edna Blackwell and daughter, penditure within the fair was $1.17 and this included .J I.Lo. Ell. i Bryson are here visitrestaurant meals for most of the visitors. ing their brother, Marsh Eastman. Norma Jane Anderson of Provo, is NEW YORK (Special) Picnickers are made to feel at home at the New York Worlds Fair. Pictured here is a happy group enjoying box lunches beneath brilwhich shade the picnic areas liantly at the Fair grounds. They find luncheon al fresco a pleasant interlude of rest during their tour of the rr'vT-1la- s NINETY MILES OF THREAD SPUN FROM GLASS MARBLE NEW YORK The spinning and weaving cf glass fabrics has proven cne(,pf..h6moat Lmonstrations Worlds Fair. populGd at the industrial New York -- f Efeily thousands of persons crowd into the Glass Center to watcih the tiaostformation of a glass m'arble a half inch in diameter into miles of filament finer nineity-cdi- d than human hair. Hundreds of those congregated the giJass cases which enclose the spinning and weaving complicated machinery take home a sample o.f the glass fabric which is softer than silk and more durable than any other fabric known to man The gh'ss exhibit has a dynamic nudity. It is full of machines ana gadgets1 which permit the visiftor to hake an active past in the show, and Wo i lids Flair visitors love that. ' For example there is a garget to demonstrate the strength of a certain type of gloss and its ability to resist shock. It consists of a sheet of glass upon which rest dozens of steel bearings. All the visitor has to do, is to push a bot'ton and look through, a glass' window. He sees an slsdtromagnet reach down, pick up the bearings, hoist them into the air release them to crash down upon the glass sheet. And the glass doesn't break. At another exhibit the visitor can Of special interest to our readers .work a hydraulic pump which subjects a glass cube to a pressure of some 16,000 pounds to the square inch. The effect of the pressure on the glass is seen by its polarization of a beam, of white light into a rainbow of color. But does the glass crack ? It does not. , three-quar-ter-inc- h- , . Gold and Silver in Mexico Approximately 33 per cent of the worlds silver and 2 per cent of it? ijold is producer) m lYexico.' Patti Made Opera Debut at 16 The singer Patti made her operatic debut at 16 in Lucia di Lam . mermonr here spending her vacation with her ENGINEER TELLS LARGE mother. Mrs. James Stuart. BUILDINGS WEIGHT A dance will he given August 5th to select a girl to compete as queen of Approximately six thousand tons Rich County Fair and Rodeo. Tickets, July 14, 1939 (is the weight of the new University 10c and 10c. Each ticket will receive 1515 So. Jackson of Utah field bouse nearing comple- one vote. Extra votes will be 10c. I San Angelo, Texas tion on tbe U campus in Salt" Lake Good music. Rich Oounty Reaper, City. The huge brick concrete and Randolph, Utah. steel shell contain material in the PARIS IDAHO PUT OVER Dear Bro. Marshall and Family: COLORFUL CELEBRATION following amounts, according to R. K. Greetings from Texas and first of Palmer,, U. S. government inspecting aid let me express my gratitude and A successful Homecoming Pioneer engineer for the project: thanks for your sending me the paper. 1450 cubic yards of concrete weigh- celebration wlas held at Paris. Idaho, Since coming to San Angelo Ive ing about 3625 tons, 420 tons of steel, according to the Paris Post which has missed cut on several copies and Ive 750,000 bricks weighing about 3,000,-00- 0 an account of the celebration. Over six mlissed them so mulch. To receive the pounds or 1500 tons, 100 tons of thousand people attended. paper means to keep up on the Coun- mortar, 40 carloads of timber weighYe editor and family attended the ty news and of course thats very well ing about 400 tons, about 15 tons of large parade at 10 a. m. which conand good, but to realize that on plumbing fixtures, 10 tens1 of sacihas sisted of floats representing induscf our neighbors makes. this possible and windows, and about 50,000 square tries and civic and! church organiza-ion- s out of the kindness of his heart makes feet of from throughout the country. copper roofing weighing four it mean even more. The parade which was three blocks and one half tons. Since coming to Texas fifteen 12,000 cubic yards of structural long was very impressive and equal to months ago I have labored in four excavation work Was done for the the floats you have seen in the Coverpllaces, I might also add in four dis- structure, which is 335 feet long, 140 ed Wawon Days celebration at Salt tricts'. Lake City or the Pioneer Day celefeet wide, and 52 feet high. San Antonio, the first place I workThe building will be completed thi bration at Ogden. Ye editor did not ed is truly a historical center. We held fall, ready to hrauro the universitys witness the celebration in the aftercur street meetings' directly across atheistic events. Plans for a joint noon but according to the Post it was from the Akwno and I can assure you to he held next as good as the morning parade. dedicatory program hat upon my first venture at speak9 8 with made and are being January ing at saidl meeting I could of enjoyed the U. S. A. C., where a similar struc- WARNING OF FIRE the same refuge that those brave ture is HAZARD IS ISSUED being built. men did in 1836, had it been possible for my shaking knees to of carried me e Because of the accumulative BIRTHS across the street. wateron the of precipitation When I was transferred to Uaco A. G. Xord, Supervisor of the to sheds, and was A horn Mayor baby girl December first I felt sure I would Cache National Forest has issued a never be happy again, but to my Mrs. K. E. Muir Tuesday at the Dee that a serious fire hazard is amazement' I found the members there hospital. Mayor Muir is mighty proud warning developing and urges all persons in had that same quality of sincerity over the new arrival. or entering the national forest or the that I had enjoyed before, and that the A baby boy was born to Mr. and state fire districts to use every presuccess of our tracking and meetings caution against the occurrence of fire. rs- Oscar Kennedy at the Dee hospi-thawlas still predicated on the same rule, condiWednesday. Oscar and Mrs. Rich- As a result of this hazardous of prayerful s'tudiy and humility, now have fire It .Was the sarnie in Houston as it is ard Jackson went down to Ogden tion, specialto the guards Ogden, added been Logan, Wednesday night now in Angelo. and Malad ranger disPreston, extends The congratulations Reaper I can say along with the rest that, tricts. to the two happy families. my mission experiences are the hapThe greatest risk at this time is piest of my life. Im so thankful for smokers with lighted tobacco from Pure Dye Silks my parents, family and friends who and from Pure-dy- e silks originally meant traveling in unsafe places, have made this possible. from the Also fires. unattended camp The calendar tells me Ill be home that the silk had been dyed pure, ownland of fires is by without private that is, setting weighting (which in October, tho I dont know where often used to give body and appear- ers in the state fire districts during the time has gone. ance of quality to silks). Later the closed season, in violation of the Ive traveled about 1,200 miles in term was used to describe silk con- the state fire law. Texlas and1 havent seen any of it in taining varying amounts of weightthe proper cooperation from With comparison to the remaining area, hut ing, such as metallic, salts and subthe public it will be possible to get I have seen enough to know that next stances that wash- out. through the present critical period with to home, its Texas for me. I dont out damage to the watershedsor- to Tulane Universitys Campus even mind the hot weather so bad Tulane university, which is more other of the resources, he stated: tho its been up to 112 degrees a time occupies a or two and that is1 a bit too hot. Tt than 100 yearsin old, New Orleans. Secret Sorrows campus wont be long. till I'll be seeing you all Believe me, every man has his in the meantime may 'the Lords which the world secret sorrows, ' Canal Zone 552 Square Miles choicest blessings be yours. we call a and oftentimes knows not; inof Canal " ' the .The area Zone, 'is when cold he sad. man Sincerely only cluding' land and water, is 552.8 EiMMA STUART. ' Longfellow. sauare miles. Missionary Letter -d STRIKES at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Osro Co ruin. Mrs. Charles Frazier of Sautaquin, Utah, and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Frazier of Oakland, California, visited here last week with relatives. of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Neville, . THE WPA News . defi-eienc- i - j Lake-tow- , - earliest o opportunity, and not as a career. It is a salutary thing that many of the strikers returned to their relief jobs in a chastened mood. ' Relief is a' form of Charity that and' nothing more. It should) be provided' when absolutely necessary, but it should: not be classed as a ' - 93-ac- re ' - ' n, |