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Show THE MILFORD NEWS, MILFORD, UTAH, 'THURSDAY, Early Printing In Utah ‘A Gift--Not a Bribe! (Continued from preceding page) Until further notice, with each $10 spent here, we will give ABSOLUTELY FREE children. It was printed. on small wroughtiron. Ramage hand presswhich had been bought in Philadelpnia in the winter of 1846-47 and thenbrought across the plains and mountains by the pioneer Mormon company together with a small supply of type and ink. In a small adobe building in the new little town: of Salt Lake City, the first type of the DESERET NEWS was set by Horace K. Whitney, who had learned typesetting in Nauvoo, while the Mormons were seeking a foothold in Illinois. Thomas Bullock read proof, and Brigham H. Young worked the One of Harry’s Famous Wash or Grease Jobs Call and get one of our : $10 Tickets and full particulars of s our offer. ;It will Surprise you how soon the amount neces- ~ sary to entitle you to one of these Free Jobs will be punched out on your INN GARAGE ae Te LIVES ~ press. By, out surplus production even James Dunn and Sally Eilers have climbed aboard another hit with their when of the smallest in the past latest forty yeans, not because of acreage reduction but because nature failed to supply the normal growing conditions. We are in the midst of the greatest economic experiments in all modern time. Theorists who have been our greatest scholars of economics are working out intricate bacterins and serums, Every are should United and a notable States of the fun assisted by comic, supporting Moran, navy, who, Will cast Stanton, that and The Cohen, in- and a Frank Jory, Esther Muir, Curley Wright, Littlefield, Frank charming They practically includes Lucien Phelps in the yarn. that Sammy Victor Mandy, Jerry Buster Atkinson. Maurice ~ is back once more with his pouting Chevalier lip, his witty banter, mel lodious songs, and the gayest. collection of alluring sweethearts that Hollywood was. able to furnish. The picture is Paramount’s “A Bedtime Story,” and it opens Sunday at the Victory, continuing Monday and Tuesday, with a featured cast including Helen Twelve- trees, Edward Everett Horton, Adrienne Ames and Baby Leroy. Norman Taurog directed. Little Baby Leroy—‘Monsieur Bab-ee” to you-—who, you will remember, was selected from thousands of competing infants deal pre- now the imitable yet we the but in, <3 To ‘‘work out’’ was no easy task for the first few years. The pace-of a weekly was too fast’at*the outset: after about had standing : precaution Fox suddenly and greatly to his surprise, finds himself in love with one girl. Raoul Walsh, the director, has taken this unusual situation and moulded a piece of entertainment that is carried along on the wings of hilarity. Dunn and Miss Eilers give performances that reveal a complete under- eontinue to have such losses largely because many stockmen, in an effort to economize, attempt to get by in periods of low prices. Yet even at present unsatisfactory values of liveventatives. for was fourth in of et. He conéluded that the NEWS Film, “Sailor’s Luck,” which shows at the Victory Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week. It is their effort as a team, editor working far too cheap, to have subscription ‘support the paper,” added philosophically, “we are and calculated to work out.’’ began or policies stock, death losses cost a great more than the money spent for picture addition to their list of past successes. It is the story of a carefree sail- calculated to regulate production in line with probable consumption. But before these economists have a chance to put their thepries into practice, nature comes along with drouth and hot winds and;proves that man has little chance to actually regulate production. 13% What is true with crops appears to be true, to some extent, with livestock. We hear increasing ‘reports of ravages of cholera in swine-herds, losses from anthrax, blacklez and other diseases in cattle. Man knows how to effectually combat and prevent such diseases through the use of proven co-starring and after he had had a few-months experience with its’-publication, in a statement setting=forth the. enormous differences in the costs of printing between. “the states’? and Deser- Nn. VICTORY THEATRE man insists on greater crop acreage in the face of distressed markets and below-cost selling prices. Our wheat erop this season promises to be one publisher vance.” To charges that this price was too high, Richards ably replied, Qotincts > Los Angeles, July 5, 198383—Nature is the final dictator of crop production. Nature has a way of wiping The the NEWS, from its inception until his death in 1854,. was Dr. Willard Richards, an outstanding personality in early history i nUtah. ; The subscription price of the DESERET NEWS at-its beginning: was $2.50 a half year “invarably in ad- four months publication “every the NEWS other Sat- be trend. There is an old school of market students who have a firm belief in the theory that the workings of supply and demand, coupled with the elements, will eventually solve problems of production and marketing. Probably the rank and file of stockmen and packers are in that class. But we tried that system and look what it got us into! Now we're going to é¢xperiment on a system of planned production and if nature doesn’t interfere too much, it may work. The country has had such a troublesome period under the old method of each individual for himself that all of us are more or less willing to enroll in the new school and see how the new system works out. cause to suspend for. three of lack of paper. months When be- it re- sumed publication in November of that. year, it had taken on -the aspect of a typical-weekly newspaper of its period, with’’a six-column..page of 18 by 21 inches, but it was still limited to bi-weekly issues. Even at that its appearance was still somewhat irregular, as failures of ‘the paper supply sometimes compelled makeshift issues or postponements. The struggle to procure paper for the barest needs of the early Utah press is a’story itself. Various unsuccessful ‘efforts: were. made to establish paper’ making as a Mormon industry, but not until 1869, . with the Building of the Union Pacific Railroad into Utah, were the dangers of paper famine removed. In the intervening years, according to a statement in the DESERET NEWS in February, 1861, not onefourth the printing was done in Utah that would have been done if paper had not been almost an article of luxury. The out: put of the first twenty years of the Utah press is definitély marked by the fact that scarcity: of - paper limited‘ printing to what-was deemed by the authorities to be indispensibly necessary. | : Upon the death of William Richards in. 1854,. Albert . Carrington took the reins of editoral direction of the DESERET NEWS: Carringe=} ton was succeeded in 1856 by Elias Smith, and Smith in turn by Carring-' ton again in 1863. In 1867 George Q.. Cannon. became editor.: On:. Nov- this film questions also is one which Make services, and much services By things—it If is worth Making it offers, If you you use it, and convenience will realize sixty Babbitt had -come.to Salt Lake City A It Offers. GAS AND Cheap Gas, per gallon STATE U. S. POSTAL BANK SAVINGS ‘ was Spring Lake Villa, a small vil-| lage some fifty or sixty miles South of Salt Lake Ctiy, between Payson and Santaquin. Its few inhabitants abandoned the place later in the sixties because -of trouble with Indians. The Oracle lasted about two years and during its short lifetime suffered from _ insufficient ppl and inferior quality of paper. After the Oracle; the next inde-’ pendent undertaking of the press in Utah was the Union Vidette, beginning November 20, 1863, as a four-page four-column weekly UNEXCELLED QUALITY Licensed added to the NEWS, plant:. With the coming of :the federal: forces under General: Johnston, however, there began to appear, on November . 6, 1858, a weekly paper called the Val- ley tan, published by Kirk Anderson. It has been said that this paper had its beginning in the camp of the army, but the first issue of it was dated. at Great Salt Lake City. ’ The pecular. name of this paper was derived from an early Utah colloquialism. Leather made locally was known as “valley-tan’’ to distinguish it from the product imported from ‘‘the states.’”’ The term then came to. be used by the people in the general sense of “indigenous to. Utah,’”’ and Anderson by thus naming his paper doubtless intended. to: advertise his paper as a local product, GEORGE HALES MADE FOREMAN George’ Hales, a Mormon, who had twice been-the public printer of the territory, was foreman of the Valley Tan ‘printing office from the beginning; notwithstanding the fact that the paper was. avowedly . non-Mormon..and was not regarded altogether with favor: by the Mormon authorities. Anderson conducted it until May 24, 1859, when he turned it over to John Hartnett because of ‘‘considerations.of a personal and private ~ A family deaves on a vacation trip. We'll call you up,” they tell relatives and friends. They know that the telephone will put them in touch Utah, who, on Aug. 18, 1928, made stock-raising homestead entry No. 046115, for E 1-2 SE 1-4 Sec. 3, N 1-2 NE 1-4, SW 1-4 NE 1-4, S$ 1-2 NW 1-4 Sec. 10, E1-2 E1-2 Sec. 9, E1-2 SE 1-4, Lots 14, 15, 16, Section 4, Township 21 South, Rance 14 West, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final proof, to establish claim to the land above, described, before Mayhew H. Dalley,| Notary Public, at Cedar City, Utah, , on the 26th day of August, 1983.) Claimant names as witnesses: John | S. Woodbury, Thurman Higbee,; Thomas Bryant and H. Webster Leigh, all of Cedar City, Utah.| F. THOMAS, 20—last exclusively to the * Ask “Long Distance” for any rates you would like to know. The six-column S GARAGE W. R. MAR_ TIN PHONE 5 Plain _.... $275 SUITS, Cleaned_........ “a SUITS, Sponged Pressed 50 LADIES WE ALSO and _...... COATS._....75¢-$1 SWEATERS _____..... 50c Up is... 50 TIES, .50 Six fe Ue CLEAN DRAPERIES AND FANCY SPREADS OF ALL KINDS 75¢e and BED UP See SS pra ME the Cooking Sabostes see Prigidarre Ee ser- se inleatl meee new Frigidaire gal uses no: more electric current than’one on oxel} loans esac lnekiaia Even =. i , » COSTS ONLY 96. plus freight ‘INSTALLATION FEDERAL TAX 2ic Co. Register} Aug. 17, 1933 DRESSES, four-page OIL PRICES States & Telegraph DRESSES, Fancy -.... 1.00 its first appearance $4.75 Mountain Telephone Milford Laundry Dry & Cleaners vice-of the Mormon church and state during the first twelve years of its operations. ; The second Mormon newspaper was: the: MOUNTAINEER, possibly cdlléd into existance by the provoCation of the Valley Tan. It-was @ made immediately. It isn’t expensive to keep in touch with members of your family or relatives in other cities. Telephoning is like being there in person. July 14, 1983. Notice is hereby given that Francis W. Leigh of Cedar City, THOMAS Utah You Up“ character.’’ Hartnett let it:;be known at-onee that-the editorial task was devoted Milford, ”We'll Call NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.—Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Salt; Lake City, Utah. First pub. July Directors Embalmers 84 with! a page 10% by 15 inches, published jacient to Salt Lake City, ‘‘by officers and enlisted men, for the California and Nevada Territorial Volunteers.” The George Hales above reffered to was the brother of Mrs. J. F. Tolton and the late Willard Hales, and was for many years editor of the Beaver Utonian one of the Ancestors of the Beaver Press. the were SERVICE PRICE Funere! and Phone been to oe $B,00 Good Cheap Oil, per quart FOR Territory for: some Rees 13 Heavy Plate, guaranteed 15 Heavy Plate, guaranteed 114 years Batteries For All Cars For Rent Your Bank Good DEPOSITORY at with: the equipment for a printing plant, intending to begin a paper in competition with ‘the © DESERET 13-Plate Special of the Services MILFORD of Utah manuscript BATTERY PRICES how to you. This Bank Use just you do not use it and its the s ecurity it really is worth Make for a time FIRST NON-MORMON PRESS The “invasion”? of Utah by the United States Army had as an accompaniment tthe. establishment of the ‘first ‘“‘gentile,’’-or non-Mormon, press to appear in the territory. As early.as 1852, it is true, Almon W. folio him away with flags flying. His wife large weekly and It! it is of no use to you. experience of the it. issued *has divorced him and is preparing to on August 27, 1859, published by marry another’.man. His daughter Seth M. Blair, James Ferguson, and knows. him. only as_a man. His Hosea Stout. It seems to have been friends have only memories of him, intended as secular organ of the no hands.to help in trying readjust- Mormons, matters of purely religious ment. There are decisions to be made interest and official pronouncements of the church being left to the DESthat rend the heart. What these dethe of birth The ERET NEWS. cisions are you must see for yourself, MOUNTAINEER took place during and in so doing see one of the great-. the period of military occupation of est contributions to the vocal screen Utah,.and the defensive attitude of|the. federal the population toward to -date. ; : ee what you make islative assembly remained years. raises was you carry out of the theatre ‘shell-shocked English veteran returns to his home after a long siege in the ‘hospital. He finds there is little place for him in-the world that ‘had ‘sent Just What You is like other was urday,”. and contititied, in its little NEWS. But this intruder had magazine-like format, until August, persuaded to sell his material church authorities, amd they 1851. In the fall ef 1851 the NEWS to think and talk about at home. bank NEWS distasteful to him and he was succeeded by Thomas Adams on June 22. Adams lasted as editor until September 28 and was followed by H. N. MeQuiré who “although young”’ was in California to play this role in the ember21, 1868, there appeared the not alltogether unaccustomed to the first issue of the daily DESERET picture, is background for the title, EVENING NEWS, and the paper has _pen.”?” But McGuire’s caréer as a the story and its most delightful ro- continued to be an evening daily Utah Editor lasted only-three weeks, He does things) down tothe present day. and on October 19, Stephen De Wolfe mance and comedy. ‘Various printers were identified took up the difficulties of conductthat no year-old infant has ever done on the screen before, and you'll ap- ‘with the work of. the Utah press in ing a newspaper in opposition to the authorities. On February Brigham H. Young Mormon plaud him as the screen’s latest star. its early years. has already beén mentioned in con- 29% 1860, with “its sixty-eighth issue, Chevalier, too, is charming in his usThe death nection with the beginnings in. 1849 the Valley Tan. expired. ual “naughty” manner, singing and 1850. Only some ten pamphlets resulted, aecording to its valedictory, four song hits that the radio has are .known to have beén printed in. from want of paper in spite of the played for months but which you the next two-years or -’so,. and’ all. fact that. its older rival, the DESERreally haven’t heard until you listen those that are still extant are’ with- ‘ET NEWS, had most. obligingly supout any imprint. The name of. Brig- plied it with a temporary supply of ‘ta Chevalier sing them. that’ most necésSary commodity. Every once in a while there are ham H. Young appears. again as. prinFrom*the press’of thé Valley Tan ter of the journals and. the. acts of movies that make you think—and en- the first session of the legislative as- in*the course of its brief life there ‘joy it! Such a film is “A Bill of sembly of the territory. of Utah, in was issued in 1859 the only strictDivoreemeny,” the RKO-Radio pic- 1852. George Hales was the offical ly secular work that. has been recordture starring John Barrymore which printer for the secgqnd sesSion-of the ed among known Utah imprints up This legislature in 1852-53; and.« again ‘to the end of the year 1860. will be shown at the Victory on family for-the fifth session-in 1856. Arieh was a rather crudely printed pamphnight, Wednesday, July 26. PrimariC. Bower printed for the thrid ses- let of sixteen pages, A vocabulary of | ly superb entertainment with bril- sion 1853-54, Dialect, by Joseph Cain for the the. Snake or Shoshone liant performances, by Barrymore, fourth sesion, 1854-55, Janmes Mac- Joseph A. Gebow, an Indian interpreter. With this sole exception—and aside from, newspapers—the work Billie Burke and Katharine Hepburn, of the Utah press, so far as is known taken to prevent losses in livestock by disease in vew of the general belief that prices are on the upward A ET Fillmore, but the exact location of the’ “trebellious’” news organ was concealed» Under these circumstances there was no opportunity for any other: printing; even official, and the journals and acts of the seventh leg- government was only championed in its pages. Six months after the deLocation notices for sale at this ofmise of the Valley Tan, the Moun- fice, taineer also passed out of existence, the issue of August 11, 1860, being the last known. With the ending of the . Mountaineer the DESERET NEMS once more remained alone as CLINE, WILSON & CLINE the only printing a publishing enterprize in Utah. General Law Practice Outside of Salt Lake City the first appearence of a regularly establishOffices at ed press in Utah was in 1863, when Joseph E. Johnson, A Mormon: who Beaver Fillmore had come to Utah in 1861 from Ne- | Milford braska, where he was concerned with |Several neswspaper enterprizes, established a semi-monthly agricultural periodical called the Farmer’s OrWARD FUNERAL HOME acle. The first issue was dated May For Those Who Care 22, 1863. The place of publication + MOTOR card. JULY 27, 1933 Knight for the sixth sesion, 1857, and again-for the eighth, 1859, and John S. Davis was the printre- for the ninth session, 1860. It will be noticed that no mention is made of printing for the seventh legislative session, in 1858:. That was the year of ‘trouble for Utah. -The determination of the Mormon leaders to conduct the government of their own land in their own way, even if they had given up their “State of Deseret,” was met by equal determination on the part of the federal government to make. them vield to.the authority,of Washington: For a time, the government of Utah -became. fugitive, moving from Dlace to place as the federal troops, sent’ by the President Buchanan, approached in search of its hiding place. The equipment of Utah’s one official: printing plant. was divided. Some of it went to Fillmore and some of it to Parowan. The DESER- AND PAID nce A new standard of economy—greater convenie — —distinctive style— genuine Frigidaire quality it. see one-fourth more food space. Come in and TELLURIDE POWER C0. 4.237las |