OCR Text |
Show ! ! LEHI SIOH ? ! tou Capital B, CARTER sJit ft but b xi knot e r r,.ir FIELOJ' t 3! w! '0. 1 St have Joined in L goe and cry. Scarcely a state In C Union but what has some hospital, fyy of them more, which have sent " a - td hIb MinatApa An9 mtn- Li of the house protesting against sanitation, a laz on netum, lix-oI ayed t Even ty' for makin is used oil u has oeen aiscoverea Dy tne legislators. I n dvestuff people are up In arms. i to ii the textile industry. Most Labers of the house did not dream Lf would be interested. The tan- irs ase cod liver oil, which is includ-f- c in the ame tax. They say It would oresse their costs enormously, and would have to be passed j increase the shoe manufacturers. o they In the letter writing ire rotten cs, fcnonal I delegation sending battle, too. f M that Is only the beginning. Man ficturers or wrappers ror fhich to pack the soap, soap, boxes lithographs ,r Trapping and advertising all have wd in the protest They say the l on soap is only 15 per cent, and 4t the house rate of five cents this i.iia inane me tu uu cucoauui oil .,wt three times the tariff duty. Mce, they say, foreign makers of l&p soap would run away with the nrican market because they would je able to buy their cocoanut oil at five tats-- or whatever the final tax shall j uick- THE :e--the known jtheaper a pound. las Curious Angles part of this' fight is that i l growth from the Philippine ln- tpendenee movement Several years p, when most people thought the troversy, a of Philippine independence had But all ed with William Jennings Bryan, dustrialists was effected an fere fbe curious ELMO SCOTT r- - union leaders and all In who have studied the situation know that the American Feder ation of Labor did make a substan tial gain In what may be a long battle for control of the labor In the automo bile Industry In the recent settlement So everybody on both sides of every I f 1 , ml 'i iV k .s ..,:.!, E ilk, ."vo- 1 I PftM Bwnaw. ' ir i about It, have you caught the IntmlroHnn .... . u 11J1J tnr liri Inin law I course you have, or will have, before the season is far advanced. It Just Isn't possible to tread the highways and byways in fasblonland and remain immune to the lure of lace, j In the couturier showings for spring and summer, 1934, comes before our enraptured eyes a continuous procession of frothy, frilly, filmy dance and HOW tf L sports clothes. Especially attractive and eminently practical for daytime is the suit of beige lace with blouse of navy georgette or the jacket ensemble of green net with blouse of beige alencon lace. Lace for bathing suits, too, which makes real news, and for hats, for handbags, for ravishing neckwear and for entire dresses, ensembles and blouses, for gloves, too. If you please, and we must not forget the "darling" d slippers that will dance to sweet strains of music under starlit ' k , - y . 1 J r f ;S. 1 . ro .- o A .... y . tr lL Z ; ki. , ei. : 1 rHE:J Gen. Anthony Wayne start- ed his campaign against the hostile tribes of the Old Northwest tn 1703, be resolved not to be taken by surprise by the enemy as his predeces-sor- , Gen. Arthur St Clair, had been two years before. Therefore, be "employed a number of the best woodsmeu the frontier afforded, to act as rangers." He gave command of this force of some 40 men to Capt Ephraim Klb-ba native of New Jersey who bad been one of the first settlers near Cincinnati after the Revolution, a hunter for the garrison at Fort Washington and a scout for St Clair. Skilled as were Klbby and his rangers in woodcraft and valuable as they were to Wayne as scouts, the elite of the company was a "division of spies' composed of less than a dozen men. Capt William Wells, a Kentncklan, commanded them, and the others were Robert McLelland, Henry Miller, and four others identified only by their last names May. Uickman. Mahaffy and Thorp. "Captain Wells and his companions were confidential and privileged gentlemen In camp, who were only called upon to do duty upon very particular and interesting occasions," says one of the historians of that period. "They were permitted a carte blanche among the horses of the dragoons, and when upon duty, went well mounted ; whilst the rangers commanded by Captain Klbby went on foot" One reason for this favoritism was that three of them, Wells, Miller and May, had been "white Indians" returned captives who could assume the dress and speak the tongue of the red men so well as to deceive any Indian they met thus increasing their value as spies. Miller bad a younger brother, Christopher, who was still held by the Indians and by a remarkable coincidence, one of his first spying expeditions, when he. Wells and McLelland were sent out by Wayne to bring In a prisoner for questioning, resulted ln the capture of an Indian who turned out to be his brother Christopher later became one of Wells' spies, whose services were so valuable ln the success of Wayne's campaign which culminated at the victory at Fallen Timbers in 1704. After that the Millers, Hickman, Mahaffy and Thorp drop out of history, but two of the others were marked for future fame McLelland as a fur trader on the Missouri and an employee of the American Fur company whose deeds are Immortalized in Washington Irvlng's "Astoria"; and Wells as Indian agent at Fort Wayne and hero of the Fort Dearborn massacre in 1812 when bis devotion to his niece, Rebekah Ileald, led hlra to the death which he knew awaited him on the shores of Lake Michigan. y, ' - i ?M dinner frocks created of tulle and lace by such artists as Lelong, Malnbocher, Dilkusha and a host of other designers of high degree. A very new, very loveskies. ly and very chic Idea Is to animate slim, frions Because a dress Is fashioned of lace figure-fittin- g soft lace gowns with my- does not mean that it may not be riads of crisp tulle ruffles at shoulders wearable and conservative. smartly and hemlines. One such Is fashioned The fbnda afternoon dress of green wool other Industry, save those thoroughly of shell-pinlace with crisp, sheer 'sj raised. lace on the seated figure in the picIs set for trouble until ruffles posed at the arms with unionized now, billowy The bitter fight between Americans ture is Just such one of the outstand the battle- - In their industry has been fullness about the hemline achieved io had big Interests in Cuba and models of the house of Dilkusha. the fought, or been settled, by Presidential ing frou-froof many ruffllngs. through a is a princess model and is finished faestic and Hawaiian sugar interIt edict' lace gown with crisp The s was turned Into a truce while both with a collar held by qne of black tulle ruffles or fine pleatings the new draped IT wood clips. fught vigorously to do something polished Pleases Labor Leaders, Is a particular favorite. tout the Philippines, which In 1929 i . A delicate web of black chantllly In contrast to the airy-fairPrediction that every labor dispute tut half a million tons of suear into types of lace for the bodice top enhances the. be on lace will now is and tulle the of from which gown fluttery develops United States, and this year sent feminine allure of the dinner .and the laid right on the President's doorstep classic lines fashioned of .handsome ater million tons. gown centered In the group. Exmade as the conditions of soft mat lace, j a lace, by the way. The sugar interests Ivere thin cobwebby laces of this Joined by was freely quisitely In mode. Is the which In sort have outstanding le dairy 'interests of the Northwest the settlement of the automobile labor captured the heart of the ll three the Illustration we are showing an ex were studied here fashionable world this season, either pons; td eUminate the cheap Phil- disputeof observers those Inby mat white lace dress of sympathy quisite evening types in black, in white or pale beige, and fpine oU which was makine oleo a made especially by Molyneaux for one In the manufac parp competitor of butter. It la these with or connected with every imaginable pastel tone. The f the major social events of Paris. It contrast turers. thosein sympathy with or con- fterests which are between this lace and the responsible more first a took the prize at ball soft mat velvet of the dress illustrated It would be a mistake, however, to serves to emphasize the high neckline MM nut toirethPr uclc"uu"u m! fnr rhi far that the thought that the new laces which Is held with a events where out and comes carry the public ue last 18 months two bills for crystal bar. The to the languid, glamorous limited are are leading. close wrist sleeves display the deliUippine Independence have been social life. As a patter of fact, the the latter one apparently sat- cately traced lace patterning to perGenerally hailed at first as a defeat most exciting doings of lace are taksurefection. actory to the Filipinos, who reject- - for labor, there is not so much in the realm of tallleurs and C by Waters Newspaper Union. me first ness about this with subsequent study. ing place the old distresses that noint f)n But the interests are not wllllne to Individualists" is that, it puts SHADES OF VIOLET t the period of years before the "rugged ORGANDIE CAPE a wan is erected asrainst the Phil- - the government In as the deciding fac GAYLY BLOSSOMING By HEKIE .NICHOLAS As the labor dlsDUte,' everv in tor pines by their Independence. Hence, the representative excise tax on cocoanut oil In the representative and of the employers may always be cerPurples and violet shades are bios ent bill In advance, it Is, quite somlng gayly In fashion for spring, placed tainly Strong for every phW-o- f this tax nhrinit thnt psch decision win De ifl34 Last season some purple was parently are- - only the rfenderers of made after the umpire speaks. And Seen In boucles and knitted frocks, and ana oils. These products are not the- uinpire will be the man put there tjhis year it Is out in cottons and lin "we. lbe dairy and creiimerv Inter- ... ; ens. For a long time It was felt that tS WOlllfl by the government. ha r, violet shades orchid and heliotrope, This sort of thing Is highly satisfac ere applied r were impossible in wash fabrics, as only to nonedible to t he labor leaders. It is a comI'S. Bllt tha nniK , ! tory (, What they came out In dull, muddy shades nl do not want the tar t- nil ThPV plete labor victory, In .a way. . that and did not hold their colors. These is first at different would be a terrihlv nnfalr btir- - made it look " f ,UK objections have been overcome, and a setback for the imme n f on a fairly large American indus- - It was quite the new violet range In handkerchief the of group present diate aspirations offi linens, French linens, ginghams, or of American Federation of Labor was this pressure that succeeded gandies and shirtings are among the cials. . They did not win the power, smartest of the season's offerings. reducing the tax from flw to thrw when for and the dues, they had hoped In Tt the was Cotton frocks In these colors are somefW senate' rnmmlttiw their big gesture for a strike Juuld not be times combined with little Jackets of . the surprising if pressure wool or velveteen. f ong enough to force a further re-- f planned. purple were But as a matter of fact, they This new trend Is as Important ror "ion, despite the clamor of the do- not very hopeful.of winning everything children as for grown-ups- . f nc renc erera in one skirmish. They wantea io gam done It Under ground. They have rbop Disputes Ahead . Spring Hats Are Planned set-u- p the strong probabil-the present will union Threat nt , to Show Plenty of Hair thnt the nationwide ! "i ouii turn Birute- is jusi will union the of and shop the many labor disputes in the gain ground Dutch bonnets, Breton sailors' hats L and the Jaunty turned up brims worn "s, many of which, and the coal lose ground. If this does not happen, ln Particular, will become scare tha inhoV leaders will keep up a con ; by the musketeers of D'Artagnan's day auline news bfiforA against the employers, Inspire the first spring hats now shown Af tinual barrage tho nooaniro inn.f" b them every- whipstitch with In modistes' salons. eeks. Each time there will be i mu-ncrisis," and the President will have blocking the unionization of the work Eight out Of ten roll right back from the face, making clear skins and smart wervene. TejrtllM lnnnromon ers In the union im-I . a ' tL uiumoic n. coiffures of prime Importance. nrnnD who tninKs uie ,.uMn(, shipbuilding are, among .those on 9 to obtain ; The rest tilt forward over one eye calendar." i federation , the nf h h SOft COftl automobile workers in a line as rakish as fashion has tV.a filtlloHnn la nn power over the In defor all time simply shown. But all are as feminine handsmashed L. .u ui mu uie a as effect perfumed Actually, methods. and 3 had .labor sign tnlron m AHtt1. f.. .. does not know union kerchief. Capes ma a e of sheer organdies, nets The fight has only begun. ,time NRA-- was organized. lTow. much hair as possible," and moussellnes similar to the mode! as "Show Is Ieader are anxious to tough get back But the Immediate problem ms to be the decree. Many models j, are pictured are writing a charming chapL ,ey ,ost in the period following manufacturers In that they worn well back of the hair line. ter Into the history of Summer wraps'. are their to famous , tn .neat in politics up Jacksonville agreement well to one sme (gen tilted The thme of these darn ty little shouV F13 more, nthpra t m. neck's, "it will be necessary for them the right) to show the other ded wraps Is being made much of by lon for the whnia erally they nri..cf.n to put every ounce of pressure n,. .iv nvi, u'ai iiiuuai.vi Bide of the head. designers. At Paris social gatherings gov- "at happeped. after the Jackson-"- e can cn the government to havew you see them created of the most fas greempnt via oinw Prniuental sympathy for weir cinating colorful sheers fancy can pic Will Spring Woollen to Pay the scale of wuges I .... . tha vnrlous disputes Which ture. ,The gown Is of white tranRpar- to fall woven nre wools ,a tgreed cr tUHlo-fThis year's the men the number of a;',;; and which will be moussellne with large navy polka "eht the figure1 in soft heavy rolds, cloitkihg i agreed upon at Jacksonville, for dots of every size from pin are of the President's seiuenrein them dots, Most lines. In graceful r,on mine owners found themselves board of three. v and larger are the rage this to coin, with tone" on irregular -- nBn "tone seawon. There's nothing Smarter than compete with the nopunlon same color mail-!JcThat is where the laoor ieuu. the of in bars or - -stripes white with navy for evening wear.' ..llu sprang into activity. ,. have really scored. their design. ' wha'i market for soft coal for iCopyrliht.) WNW alliance between American interests, which from Philippine Chief among these was affecting 15 states where raised and two states and Louisiana where cane OF LIFE IN CHINA" More than 24,000 dead bodies of Infants were picked up on the streets of Shanghai last year and the newspapers took alight notice of the fact WATSON Mad Anthony's Spies V V:: I . So, They Cut Prices So, with the demand for soft coal falling off, the only way some mine owners saw to get business c t xiabn prices again and again, and In this competition the union mine owners were barred. So the Kentucky and West Virginia fields did most of the sort coal business that was done with nonunion miners. Then, with the com ing of Ml A, and the insistence nnon collective bargaining, came the hope or union leaders that they would asain be able to regain their foothold, despite the fact that the soft coal busi ness Is at a far lower ebb today than 11 ever lias been. In fact, it Is regard ed as not having touched bottom, and being destined to slide down toward It tor some time to come. . n:i Tt. ,me wui jmia impossibility of a union mine attempting to compete with a nonunion disappeared, the moment the code for wages and hours was adopted. The collective bargaining provision, moreover, assured some sort of organization. So the United Mine Workers saw the same opportunity that the American Federation of La bor officials saw In the automobile In dustry. me same opportunity, put with a very different situation, applies In the steel Industry. Ilence the prompt ac tion of the steel companies In increas ing wages. They were anxious that the dispute, when It should reach front page proportions, and Presidential in terference, should be confined solely to the question of union recognition and recognition of a particular union. They wanted the whole question of hours and wages taken out of the con "lA Fifty Famous Frontiersmen By ZStXf the hospitals Cocoanut NICHOLAS ; f tut PRESS. LEIIL UTAH Bj CHER IE would Bcarc'y must of commodity as co-ul-d I wch turesputupinthelasttenyerrsLe Interest so many peo-lcoa,lburaiDS f congress bat found out that it Meanwhile, new the proposed even u, advance of jj puttingoil five cents a Jj pound and steamboats had OCOaiUt been turning to bU1 and three centa ite souse sen-f the by draft approved that the coal burning vessel has been f is the congress pro-Vf- fi considered obsolete. mxt committee In the navv inter-I-s where greater i reaction from business cruising range and sirn-j, ill on the country that has speed were so vital, this has been true - since and senators the repthe World war. jibbergasted iiEjron--n- ntEE MoulB1Mrjr" Comes New Enthusiasm for Lace fhS wound the Rational U htyZTT J !" "W heard SeEN"' f Industrial purpose, 'or years. It La. h since. mn by electricity general power. More J- . because It was considered too commonplace to have news value. It happens every year lo this great Chinese city, and although the exact number of little victims has varied it has always been In the tens of thousands. A similar Infant mortality has been found throughout most of China, according to the People's Tribune of Shanghai, which claimed children .that deaths of new-borhave been estimated to run into the millions annually. The great bulk of these babies, according to this organ of the Kuomintang or Nationalist party, representing the Chinese National government were exposed to die by parents nnable to provide for them. Birth control has been opposed by certain "scholarly" elements In China, the People's Tribune noted at the same time as it declared that Chinese women of education feel differently and resent the attitude of male scholar that the women exist merely to bear children and perform domestic service. What Is more, women physicians and nurses know, said this Shanghai review. Just as Intelligent men know, that the 24,000 dead babies found ln the streets of Shanghai ln 1933 did not represent the total of unwanted babies, but only the number that survived the "terrible attempts" which Chi-ne"Ignorant and poverty-strickemotherhood must resort to in lieu of other methods of family limitation." Literary Digest n n Homing Tern Five terns were taken from the bird rookery on the tip of the Florida peninsula and carried by a roundabout steamer route to a position off Cape Hatteras, where they were given their freedom. Five days from the date of capture three of them were back on the nesting grounds, according to Science, where they were identified by the metal bands with which their legs had been encircled before tbey were taken on their long voyage. The straight-lin- e distance from Cape Hatteras to Bird Key Is about 850 miles;' by coastline Sight the distance Is 1,081 miles. This latter is greater than the record flight for trained pigeons, 1,010 miles. 1 Ferry's Seeds are sold only in fresh dated packages. When you buy Ferry's Seeds you are sure of the finest quality available. (sometimes spelled Provost), who was a member of the famous Ashley-Henrexpedition of 1822 up the Missouri and later captain of a men who company of Ashley-Henrtrapped all through central Wyoming. The next year he quarreled with Ashu ley and Joined the rival company which later merged with the American Fur company; After that he became head of a group of free (rappers and Journeyed from Wyoming over Into Utah. Authentic records of this period are scarce but Provot may have seen the Great Salt lake before Jim Brldger did and he may have gone through South Pass before Thomas Fltzpat-rlcdid. A little more authentic Is the story of how the site of the city named for, him was baptized' In blood when a party of treacherous Snake Indians killed 17 trappers in his company. Bis long career of adventure came to an end with his death In 8t Louis ln 1850. The other was an Englishman, Peter Skene Ogden, the son of a New York Loyalist or Tory who removed to Canada after the Revolution; Young Ogden entered the service of the North' West Fur company and later was a brigade leader for Dr. John McLough-Iln- , chief factor of the Hudson's Bay company In the Pacific Northwest. As such he explored much o the present state of Idaho and parts of Nevada and Utah. He is said to have been the first white man to see Mount Shasta and the headwaters of the Sacramento river. He discovered ..the Humboldt river, which for many yearr " bore his name. i a marled Sallsh woman Ogden and won a great Influence over many of the tribes of the Northwest .Because of this be was able to rescoe'some of the captives held by the Indians after the Whitman massacre In 1847. ' Whether or not he and Provot vpr knew each other personally Is uncertain, but It Is likely that they met some time while both were ranging through Ltah or at some gathering of, trappers in that part of the coun try. And It would be easy o Imagine the Frenchman nhdf the( Englishman "Last Repde meeting again vctis" In that Valhalla where gather the: spirits of all the men who made hjf lory In the glain rous days of the fur trade and Ogden boasting "A city. a'TWef and a valley In Utah bear To. which Provot might re ply That's' three.' But I have four that bear my name a city, a river, a canyon and a county 1" S Weetera Npapr Unlo. Adv. Who Ha.n't? Klckapoo My wife Is always bor; rowing trouble. Naber Send hor over to our house. We have more than we want To keep clean and health? take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pelleta. They regulate liver, bowcla and stomach. Adr, ' was a Frenchman, Etlenne ONE ' " ' Two Names on Utah's Map se Aa Many Do - Teacher "What does silence mean, Johnny?" Johnny "It's ' what you dont hear when you listen, teacher." y y Pratte-Chou-tea- k if. at4e ' t Headaches Spliltinq sua wat . the learned flpw always tnnerable ana found out about NR Tablet (Nature'a Remedy). Now she gel nne mui every nouy, i nia vain, acpena-blimg laxative brought quick relict and quiet ncrvee because it cleared her system Of poisonous waste made bowel action easy and regular. Thousands take NR daily. c, It's such sure, pleasant corrective. Mild, No bad after effects. At TOUT druggist's 25c UlVl J T Quick telirf for ncidlmlirea-tion, heartburn. Only 10c the ltchings. f Wherever Whatever the Cause esmo it Relieves Quickly ROGEQV MiMJS f ih When you see the '.';: special-o- f our com- munity grocers announced in the columns of this paper you can . depend on them. They mean bargains in food products for Vou They! are offered by merchants who are not afraid to announce their prices or the quality of the merchandise they offer : |