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Show CACHE AMERICAN. I.OGAN. ITAII McrcolizpdWax Keeps Skin Young vt4a FW -- Briefly Told for Busy Readers ml MT4 4t mm iHiifc Kl)! H I'LtNMD. l mm Aad Utl'i Tb! but would I hate a gits one llula Uunnm-l- , Hamburg, t'hhirufurm, "And klr fr 7' n. ARMIN' IS M M'bCI I M:MI'M)H) TO WORK. K VTIV E. I.U M II CO-OIIllli IOl l.THY HI MNL' MmL At Sally Scz "Hh Hews Intermountein HEROES Y Elmo Scott Watson Forty Bushel of Wheat oo it 1IFKAUE hath Ha victories, And RIGl UI. IT. A fire, said to of Incendiary origin, cunplelely destroyed the Jumbo plunr and here a few rement plant b.aU-days ngu. touring a I" of IJ.VI,. le Mothers Experience A Colo child at uat IS hrn little Ruby arrived n. I m my 41th )rar. The Joc-to- c anil nurx--t mere very udim.v al-me," mod Mre Viol Lren. Clay reek Store, Star 1 Jimjr, M y youngt-i- t p leas renowned than war. his lls beruri ho do brats fur from ll sound of bugla or drum. Com up to the tiptop of N. IL Indian Util in Hulilt-roe.- , and there In a grate? sunn? nook look upon simple granite monument width bears this Intcripllon: 1771 Reuben Whitten 1817 Son of Retoiutlonary soldier, ploueer of this town. Gold season of 1810 huh mixed 40 bushels of wheat kept Ms family and tits nelghl'uri front starvation. Idle u bard for the early settlers In the foothills of the White Mountains away back In IhlOwhen Iteul-eWhitten moved his family from the Utile village of Plymouth end began a pioneer's life oo a little farm near Lake Asquam. In the summer time they raised little grain and t few vegetables but for the most part they depended upon fish and game for food. Bo when the summer of lSlOcame and It rained week after week they did not worry, even when their grain and vegetable rotted In the ground. The woods still were full of game and the taka was still full of fish that could be taken through the Ice. Reuben Whitten was more fortunate than the rest. LHs corn nd vegetables had been a failure, but be bad raised 40 bushel of wheat. There was no autumn that year. Winter came In on an Icy blast in October and for two week It snowed and rained and balled. Tb whole country aide was deep In snow. Most of the cattle perished, as did much of tbo wild game. And then the specter of starvation began to stalk through the settlement. Then came the word from Reuben Whitten that ao tong ss bis little store of wheat lasted, all the others In the settlement should share In It It was litt'e more than enough to carry bis own family safely through the winter and whatever lay beyond, but he would portion It out, a little each week, to other families. The winter Increased In severity. In other parts of New Hampshire and Vermont whole families were wiped out; others were ao weakened by privation that they fell prey to disease; fathers and mothers went without food to keep the spark But In of life In their children. the Indian Mill settlement Reuben Whitten's wheat with what little fish and game could be secured kept the families alive till spring. LAKE HALT T in a Cl TV. IT.-- Th state rood cuiiiililon announce. bate bon completed to cbo the gap In the Iwo-mll- i Route Sith, "livt I had taken Dr. I'lrrie t t avoiite lrecrijtion lor tev. eral montht, alto a few Lot tin U the Golden Mrj.ral I iiroverv, limb it a gntit Ionic and mnlirine and fine for liter trouble itb hub I had been bothered lelure. and I pit my health bark qua ker than I ever did ith my other children even mhen I mat much vouneer. Ruby it a bright, healthy child. All drugguta tell tlui Dr. Pierces Medicines Arilds of all kinds keep beauty la workaday world ; and uiiike the work more worth while. paved highway from plea a tit Grore fa lrota, known a the low-e- r rad. This paid wae rcvnlly placed on the atate highway system y set .f the bg l.ln til re. The coat of 111 ill the iielghtiorhood b I'..'.imo a mile, U Is estimated, and III le shared equally by the state pied fund snd the county's stale rad tas. u Iu outlining the PRICE, 1932 program of the Irrigation and agricultural committee of the 1rlee rhamlier of commerce. It U report III le made to ed that an attempt take up the surtdus labor from the coal mines thla aumtm-- r and ilace tha workers on small plota of ground. The objective of this plan la to make the Jobless at least A sursupporting. partially vey of available ground shows that cared for ,1a ISO families can I Ibis way. It la auggested that the farmers and t!e rbamtwr cooper-aton a lun to bonri tlie consumption of products. TOOELE. lT. Public money deposited In banka without compliance with legal requirements become trust funds according to a atate supreme court ruling banded down In the Tooele county board of educations suit against W. IL Ilndlmk. stale hank commissioner County a receiver for the Tos-lState bank. SALT LAKE CITY, I T. A com pany has lion organized In this city to carry on a cooierat!ve comfor the benefit ol munity liuslm-sthe memtiers along line of the old cooperative associations of Eng land. Under the articles of lucor the association la emporatlon powered to operate a system foi the sale or exchunge of commodities, goods, services, wares for money or for other goods. SALT LAKE CITY, FT. Utah's poultry Industry brought returns of $10,040,000 during 1931, or approximately the same ns 1D30. Of almost $8,000,000 this amount worth of the products were sold outside the state, which means the wealth of the state was Increased by that sum. While the monetary returns were about the same as In 1930, production Increased almost 60 per cent during the past year. During the past year 1930 carloads of eggs were shipped compared with 1300 cars the previous year, UT. June SPANISH FORK, Moore, 5, who was seriously burned at the family home at Genola Just before Thanksgiving day, Is making a gallant fight for her life In the Payson hospital, where skin necessary, grafting has become Her father, Harvey Moore, is skin for the grafting furnishing By ELMO SCOTT WATSON process which Is going forward N FEBRUARY 22 America will beInches two about only very slowly, celebration hongin a nation-widof skin being transferred daily. oring the memory of the greatest LOGAN, UT. Announcement Is American. For February 22 Is the made of the awarding of 14 Union 200th anniversary of the birth of Pacific scholarships to outstandGeorge Washington and, as a reclub boys and girls In Utsult of plans which have been In ing ah. Each winner will he given $100 preparation for several years, the toward pursuing an agricultural or observance of this bicentennial home economics course at the Utah will be the most extensive ever State Agricultural college. But the ceremonies on held In this country. IDAHO FALLS, IDA The de- February 22 are only the beginning of a series pression, game wardens here ob- of patriotic pilgrimages pageants, programs, serve, lias Iieen a blessing to Idaho dedication of memorials and other forms of big game. Because the purse of the celebration which will be held until Thanksaverage hunter has been thinner giving day, all having as their purpose a rethan usual since 1939, fewer hunt- awakening In the hearts of all Americans of ers have been able to go into the an appreciation for the character and the life field. Consequently the mutual big of Americas greatest citizen. In addition to these celebrations, the name of game kill is considerably under normal. This fail and the bene- George Washington will be kept daily before ficial results of mihl winters In his countrymen In other ways. Every time they 1929 30 and 1930 31 have Increased mall a letter or a parcel they will see his face, the big game population. for a series of 12 commemorative postage f SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Fifty stamps, ranging in denomination from men will be furnished work soon cent to ten cents have been Issued, each one when an Iron foundry that has 'bearing a likeness of Washington. In their been closed, reopens. silver coin pockets will jingle a new IDAHO FALLS, IDA. The Id-- which will bear the face of Washington on the aho Slate Grange held its session obverse. This new quarter Is not a special is- sue merely to mark the Washington bicentennial but it will replace the piece now in VT.-- f e bouie-grow- easy to get rid of Gray Now Keep Hair Naturally Dark Now without using dangerous dye you can darken gray hair naturally, quickly restore ita original shade by the world's finest, safe way which is now keeping millions of heads young looking. Benefits the hair as it dark ens it to the shade you want. As simple as brushing. Try it. Pavdrupgi.t 75c for a large bottle of VYYE'I H'S SAGE & SULPHUR and just follow easy directions. learning nit limit thought is ell right if one is to be a walking i STOP YOUR COLD IN 6 HOURS WITH 'breaks a cold in 6 hours.'' Drvet if away in 12 hours. Relieves Heedache Neuralgia Pains The strongest principle of growth lies In human choice. George Eliot. Watch Mothers Childrens colds head colds often settle and chest where they may become dangerous. Dont take chance at the first sniffle rub on Childrens Mustcrole once every hour COMMON a five hours. jorChildrens have Musterole is just good old known so long, in Musterole, you jnilder form. This famous blend of oil of mustard, camphor, menthol and other ingredients brings relief naturally. Musterole gets action becauseit is a scientificcounrer irritant not just a salve it penetrates and stimulates blood circulation, helps to draw out infection and pain. Keep full strength Musterole on hand, for adults and the milder Childrins Musterole for little tots. All druggists, CHILDRENS n balf-doze- n . Three Hundred to One fewest Hotel - r SSI. HOTEL i . J L TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 1.50 voOtawoeo UMoeqwoeo e ERNEST Ce ROSSITER, Mgr. which soon turned to enthusiasm. Washington accomplished, by the legend which so Immediately surrounded him, more than anyone else had done. By his personality he prepared the extremists and the traditionalists to accept democratic ideas. There was nothing of the revolutionary about So it Is all the more remarkable that this him. Virgiula gentleman, this aristocrat, should engage In a struggle in behalf of the common people in which he had everything to lose and but little to gain. If he could have foreseen that he would have to carry on that and then after It struggle almost was won that he would be reviled by those whom he had served so well and for whom he had suffered so much, one wonders If he would have engaged In it. For, like all great men even more so than most he was a lonely man a lonely man, both in private life and In public office. Throughout his life he carried on his heart the burden of an unrequited love, his love for Sally Cary, who married his best friend and neighbor, George Fairfax. Even when lie married the Widow Custis he was still a lonely man. While he was busy building up the estate at Mount Vernon, according to 51. Fay, He noted in his diary sometimes during a whole week that he had remained at home alone although 51artha Washington was living under the same roof and In the same house. But this was as nothing to the loneliness that was to come to him during the dark hours of the Kevolutlon when he was trying to keep together the wretched little army which congress had given him for winning the independence of the new nation and then gave him nothing more, certainly not enough supplies or even moral support for carrying on his almost insuperable task. Even when he had been successful, when the new nation had rewarded him with the highest honor in Its power by making him its first President, he was also the first to discover what every President since then has learned that the Presidency is a lonely Job, wherein the occupant of that position never knows whom to trust. For no sooner was he made President than he found himself traveling a lonely path between two opposing political Ideals the monarchist tendencies of the Federalists and the democratic theories of the Republicans. So he followed his lonely course to the end. land-holdin- 1 Portrait painted by W. Williams In Philadelphia In 1794 for the Masonic lodge at Alexandria, Va. This portrait will bs on the new t stamp. 2 Portrait by Charles Wilson Peals which will be on the new three-cen- t stamp. 3 Miniature portrait by Charles Wilson Peale which was presented by Washington to his niece, Harriet This portrait will be on the new cent stamp. 4 Another portrait by Charles Wilson Peale made in 1795. It will be reproduced on the new stamp. 5 Photographic reproduction of the famous Houdon bust of Washington which has been emulation. chosen as the official portrait for the WashingCALDWELL, IDA. A gift 0f'general certain to bring forth also new ton bicentennial. ie year $5000 has been made to the College of Idaho for the purchase of books books about W ashlngton In which new attempts 6 The Washington bicentennial medal. for its library by the Carnegie Cor- will be made to interpret Washington in his S various roles as a soldier, as a business leader, poration. as a statesman, as a President and as a man. admirable essay which forms the introduction IDA. Thirty-fivperBoise, sons died by violence last month In view of this fact, it Is pertinent to raise to 51. Fays book the question, Considering the amount that hus Those who believe in the hand of God In the according to the state bureau of vital statistics. Thirty were men, already been written about Washington, is there affairs of man will Indorse the idea set forth anything new that can be said about him? Off- in this Introduction that George Washington and five were women. hand, the answer would probably be No! Yet came on the stage of history at the precise IDA and the fact remains that something new -s been moment he was most needed. It was the EightBOISE, Principals and county superintendents of Ida- said about him and that in a recently pub- eenth century when all looked forward with It is George Washington, joy to the arrival of an enlightened despot. ho schools held a session here re- lished biography. cently. Economy In school opera- Republican Aristocrat, written by Bernard Fay He was a gentleman. He was rich. He was tion and the maintaining of school and published by the Houghton Mifflin company, a soldier. There was nothing of the revolutionstandards were the principal sub- and this book is Important, not only because of ary about him. And, for the first time, in more the Interpretation of Washington as a Repub- than fifteen centuries, lie exemplified the type jects of discussion. BOISE, IDA. Oneida counfy Is lican aristocrat but because his interpreter Is of hero who declined supreme power and but a foreigner, a wished to command only to serve. The world the only Idaho county that has not not a Frenchman, therefore a man whose Judgments did not expect this; and it surprised the upper remitted its taxes to the state. TWIN FALLS, IDA. The Ida- are less likely to be obscured by partisanship classes more than any other attitude would have du-ho Republican stale central com- one way or the other. And throughout the entire world the conmittee will meet at Boise on FebIt Is doubtful If there has yet been written servative clnsses, the middle classes, the enlightruary 12. Plans will be made for such an adequate and understanding summary ened nobility, and the people who, even though the state platform convention. of the greatness of George Washington with- most cautious, were desirous of change, beheld out Indulging In extravagant language as the the serene, great man with an astonishment nine-cen- one-ha- lf 1 five-ce- fc- n w. Just opposite Mormon Tabenutclo The hermit on the mtuntaia aide. Is one ho' dead but hasn't died. mak ft, For life's exactly hil Smca w hava it, leta not faka it. Though one thinks himself, hiaovra. He rannot liva thia life alone. Help othera to help you by Patronizing Home Industry. T daka YOUR WOOL cam hr rtrwAvi.ro ro n.v MKKCHANDlttK DOOLfcN WRITS Original Utah Wootai MITIARFCITY 31 ilia THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY When catalogs fill our homo town They take away tha proceeds froas our ground To some far distant or foreign place Where were thought of ns a ailly race; And true wo are when thia la foand That ws dont bay in our homo town Where goods are shown by merchants shoutin And brands reveal theyre Inter-mounta- in. A. B. POST. St. Anthony, Idaho. Bad for rttri! Contains CAKDFN BOOK 100 maoo tullr UluatromL ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. Trowes Artificial Limbo Arch Supports Crutches Horn Elastic err Extetuioa Bhom E'tmbllahed la Balt Lake la 108 Ph. W as. 12.4 BatJof wtioit Goaranteed 1)1 W. Third So. i Balt Loka Citr. Ut. L Brin. PLAN SPRING PLOWING ... with use of Caterpillar Tractor oldest and leading track-typ- o tractor. Prominent farmers ow success to these machines. Write for descriptive catalogs. Calerpm ar old-tim- e e I'iGi,,;1' Oklahoma stands s DOWN of oatlva stone which commemorates one of the most remarkable stories of desperate valor In ail frontier history. It marks the spot where Pat Hennessy bravely faced odds of 300 to 1 and true to the frontier code, sold his life dearly. Fort Sill Pat was an freighter, and In the spring of 1870 was on bis way from Caldwell, Kan, to the fort with a wagon train. Be was accompanied by three other men. When Jumped by a crowd of some 300 Cheyenne warriors, his companions became confused and tried to escape north along the trail Immediately they were surrounded and cut down. In the meantime Hennessy had sought shelter among some rocks a little natural fortress, from which bis rifle menaced the savages as they approached. Confident in their overwhelming numbers, the Cheyennes swept forward to within 20 yards of Pats stronghold. Resting his rifle on the rock In front of him and not taking the trouble to aim, he cocked it with one band and pulled the lever and trigger with the other. A continuous hail of bullets poured Into the mass of savages. They broke and retreated. But they came back again this time In front and at both sides. Failing In this they tried another frontal attack and surged up to within ten feet of the white man, who fired his revolver into their faces until he had emptied It. Picking up his rifle And again, he continued to fire. then the gun jammed I The rifle had become so hot and dirty from constant firing that a cartridge stuck fast and his desperate efforts to extricate It were useIn another moment the Inless. dians would have been retreating. But when the firing stopped, they believed his ammunition was exhausted and pressed forward. Hennessy met them with clubbed rifle, but the surging mass overpowered him. Infuriated by the toll be bad extracted, for 30 Cheyennes lay dead on the ground, they scalped him, tied him to the wheel of one of his wagons, emptied sacks of oats around him, and set them on fire. For a few minutes there was a writhiDg figure surounded by flames and then the spirit of Pat Hennessy passed on to that Valhalla reserved for warriors who know how to die but not how to surrender. (& 19S1, Western Newspaoer Union.) In one-hal- Salt Lake Citys also It URI. ' By Imutm FORGOTTEN single-hande- d by Western Newspaper Union.) point-blan- k Landea Tractor & Equipment Salt Lk Co. M Trtnontoii. Utah City In a Nutshell Dont rest upon your make a poor mattress. SPERETENT 271 & AWNING Co. SO. WEST TEMPLE Everything in Canvas Goods Ask Tour Draubt For APEX ASPIRIN PRODUCT AN INTERMOUNTAIN Summing It Up A chip on the shoulder spoili many a promising career. GASOLINE Packed With Power Desirable Qualities A man should endeavor to be pliant as a reed, yet as hard cedarwood. Talmud. CLAUDE NEGN LIGHTS Electric!. Products Corporation 1046 Salt Lake City So. Main High Arabic Title The word admiral came from the Arabic Emil el Bagh, or lord of the sea. Per 00 paid for Jotu on wcek will be QtZ V the best Why you should use Intermountain made Goods Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column, P. O. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column yon will receive check for article Qg Ajj VeevU W. N. U.- -S. L. Week No. 3203 |