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Show , I SATURDAY SEPTEMBER EVENING NEWS DESERET VI - .!0 SECTION 1919. . ,Mary Ada. infant daughter of lietirY tit. and Mary C. Phil Ina. At W ow te.n i,ittb l .C.Hitdorra :,:14.leAtri oislie,. , LIFE IN UTAH FIFTY YEARS AGO toirdthis seityEtion A.. IS tioq of Luther P. and Llano It daughter Leon. In the Thirteenth wardLiet.ii Want so of Thames and Maryitho- - , .. de' (Compiled From the Files of The Deseret News of 1869). well. At Kaysville-errati- itifni k. ban of Chruptopher and Carolina Loyion. The city editor calla attention to tto lode-lio- n I ball ti bil the on wrist; the ball Is the construeths first aotual work Jac Met there woofs inany dcluopietits Hi bones. Biddle between been the done of rho line that had log then, to th peon of the g rend jury. so that this city. John W. Toting. Esq., as- - clenched Potion and throw hint down. i the busineas of the courts wee being M orand was out his fr. inwod elated Sheets eyes nearly hold up. An inipresadve reminder or gouged by Bishop I track layers and one of his hands badly. li also bee'l the citizen's duty to respond to tile ionising a party of with a club. ?edam is under, eau tor Airy service la made Riad thy intended to begin as soon es possible as arrest. though not able to !nova about , hop to expreased St Orden and to work Olio way that there would be Itiddito 'Sorted for holt Lak City last tso mora aatioquenta. fast as prectitablo Chief Engineer J. . srxtrocted." ball on to havelhs line and the W. Vox wee busy night Captain Thomas ii. hates had corn. acthis week In lost with been the had midi department rangemente mewled two suits age.nat the Union enlon Pacific for tho early delivery count was given of the deoaning in I earitio Radrot.d. ono eft. tor ga.- of rail. and other materials to the the Jordan river of John Goddard. son tea.20for tins furnished during the Vtah Central. Meanwhile. grading of Elder Aleorge Goddard of this city. winter of 111611. and the other for III.. was progreseing through Davis county. The body was found after six days. 'MSS for money disbursed w nil he 0 N4 effort was to be soared in rushing nett miles down the river from the rea timPloYed as a dhision engineer ?hit line to completion and (hi paper point where the fatality occurrod Pufor the company. l'he p apiiiii w ets before. many weeke natal 'services ware held in the Thir- served on Oliver Ames. preeidient of that predicted ' ,006". . have ptiseed the whistle of the loco- - (sloth ward asecnibly room. At the ihe company. upon his arrival in the same Derek.' was also the body of toty during the week. motive would be htiard in Rs it Lake. young Goddard's infant brother. whose s Judge Wilson. In the Third dletrict Major poser!' Here. death had oreurred the day before. court. r. I gate his deciaion in the 110011) W. chief of Elders Powell. J. the John and Major Taylor Joeoph F. what wow? known ceee beteeen - Ittillih and . acornColorado E. wore st expedition. Eilyhop exploring i Woolley Judges Hoes s.4 Hawley. Mr Hos' paniod by hla Ilother. Captain W. H. the funeral end Elder Taylor deliver. was appointed a U. IL judge duriiiit t - -- - - ,- --t painell. eifter eompleting and sympathetic die- - the lab e administration and had held thir has- d an intoreesive . f , - ertious exploration of the rivers in couree. to the, Opinion that the president to--ta; ( - t - of' amithern Utah and northern Ailerons. Ordmil for Militia Rueter. the United Statee had no powr - had arrived in thls clty. Major Powell Utah TerFrom t he adjutant immure 'itif- - cording to the organic act of Thee NeWill an extended Interview gave in the Teir to judges displace ifire ritory had been taltued - -lee whioh he told of the work his IL..,-- 4 general orders mar, !Or melte-seancparty No. 2 and these aro all ozptof offlea. reproduced In this their four years. n aceompliehed. of the narrow es- -- week's issue. term ' , !eaes , The orders var. incluir from death they had xperiene- lous ' and consequently thi atteJualey changes In command. owin g, to expired: deaths and resignations. Major Geri., ilitwley. having been 4.,... ;' eddi:oeltaf; t:t tthhe reeum.reeckn sinir ibinedd ileoftntheolfr to succeed t ion t, toi ,... Groot .... ,,,:;7,7. attoot,,44 ,?reeident "rtell-b- n term of Ala fun .'. the IT:ah 6 , military dititrict. had rati;trit had no their boat in the turbulent stream. to his seat o theilbP:tich e d and fee the time right s... being BrigadierI and last but not leant. 1 of th kind re- - General Wm. had been argued at great pore warn &outlined to The c saebefore Wilson. who . ception and hoopital.ty they had found 'bat position. R. JUdge length -Wm. Colonel had , among the Mormon" settlers after been detailed until further Hyde , . his ruling In favor of . Judge vave 77:14:11111.4 ord to , Lite work of OkiPlOratA0111 .., bad ,-- been ,i - ..., . the command of the Cache mlittery s4Awill ' 1 0,,lit '.., Can-lea- st CmOoMnpulnenteol;,),Axmiaoroir district: and owing to the 'beim' on Shooting. plhoolnil ewap,e4,141310iY. a mission of Brig. Gen. Lot Sniith. Townsend of the Tewh"1 James soPh Amyl'. Blahop Leithead. Andrew CnIonel Goose Chita ashad been o'' House. on West Temple street. told a : (ubtions and Henry Nebekor. Major planed to command of th mut- , . '.; - ,, Davi? in reporter that a bullet fired from the lecture the 1. . itary district. A. general muster of the direction of East Temple street had ' t ward .seaornbly-r000n- e and milltiathroughout the Territory w as struck and lodged In the front door ir r the close attention of hie audi- - ordered. for a i held 'it PrIPO, as he related le numerous ex- - later than theperiod of three days not- the hotel. The city editor again calla . ,. . first week in Novemto the danger of the careless periences bee. MO Gen: Robert T. Burton was attention of firearms in the city and Richard Conner, ' resident of the In charge of the Salt Lake minter", discharging ' to holy put an end all citizens urgea Eleventh weird had disappeared after dietrict. The orders are signed by to the practice. creating a serious disturbanee at his Lieut. Gen. Daniel H. Wells. Crini- president Young. accompanied by home while he was intoxicated. He mending the Nai.oo and H. Prealdents Smith and Wells. Elders ' IP took a chum to his home land insisted k Clawoon, adjutant Legion. w. woodruff.. George Q. Cannon. ,Jo general,- that Mrs. Connery prepare supper for was reeeived from Brigham loph Young and others left for a trip them. When she refueled to comblv CityWord the Coalville and by police authorities to arrest to Heber City. Wanship. the husband atruelt her. The ries . At in that potion. settlements other and Nat McAnany Philip Hodson, mother. who lived PIMPO by. came to wanted on a charge of Coalville. they were to dedicate a new the hone,. ant, weir herself severely who woremules. The two men were meeting house. I a by the drunken man. Thomas stealing accused of being members of a gang The pupils and teachers of the Tenth Howlett. the girrit father. 'came upon of ZiV411 oldp711firrjellah.. organixed 'They ward Sunday school and day school Fif !the and his brr oil ntruek 1111 II arrested hire and were turned had enjoyed a pleasant picnic outing him over the head with a pier.. of were over to Deputy Sheriff Crenney of on the ' ' grounds of Mark Lindsay on SDIVAILD ASIITOS. wagon tir e. inflicting a severe scalp Cacho county. some of the deft. the Twentieth ward bench. with a , wound about four inches long. Con-on- e redations had where I occurred. Meanwhile; dance in the ward school room in the A native of North Wales. whets, he of the bulwarks of the ward in nery then fled. Judge Wilson isiraed a writ of habeal evening. Watt born in 1121. this veteran Caine which he mendedfaithful, industrious Serious to at i Beaver. have them appear before corpus Affray An item states that It was Charliti Ctah in Capt. Dan Jones's company and reliable In every capacity, among ;to The following tele- - him. They were released under heavy Atwood . not Howard Atwood. who in 1112. marrying two years later other dutla fulfilling thou. of chotr-- I ball to appear before the Third dis- - had lost part of his fool.by its being Jane Trhern who crooned tho sea leader for 2 0 years. For several years gram wan received in thie city from trict court during Its present session. crushed in the cogs of a horse-powand the plains in the same company. he was gardener for George Q. Can- - Beaver under date of Rept. 20: I Deaths Reported. machine. account of which was giv- Bs mad his home In the Fifteenth non. meanwhile 'doing aino ahoe-re- "Yesterday morning. Mr. Isaac ' ward. and his house is still standing. pairing; and when the railroad c&me,l Riddle, a citizen Of this place, wee a re- - en last week. numbor of deaths are Quite on Sixth Went, between First -- and ha entered its emploY. and worked in attacked on hisown premises by an ported thil week, among them being Eider John Taylor had returned Second Soeth streets. with the familiar, the Utah Central from 13Ittn where he had been in for 25 outsider named torgati Peden. who the following: In the 110th ward y &doh granary in the rear. yeam He was an unassuming but tsjo the employ of C. W. Dalton. The Ueorge D.. son of George and Vilate the interests of the people Of Utah 'built in compliance with the early-dastalwart and generoutt manthe real (impute arose about. Dalton's mules homney. age 33 months. In this city who had money owing to them by the counaol that every family endeavor to, "salt of the earth." He died in 1904, being every night in Riddle's garden. Susannah B. Wiggle. wife of Eli I railroads for work on the construction two- - or Oros years' store of leaving & 'sturdy and honorable tam- - Air. Riddle had the mules tied up and Wiggle. age 56 years. keep-In the Thir- of the line. foodstuffs on hand. Ur. Ashton was lly to perpetuate his name and virtues. was going to keep them until he could tenth watd.Ann-Thapeople ofGoshen had named Bowden, wife-o- f see Dalton.- - Peden came to Riddle's Henry Bowden. age 47 years. In the I the now settlement to which most of ATERTAL tor thts department week in this city was the breaking of house and swore he would have' the Thirteenth wardChart.. S.. infant I them had removed "Newton." BIZ Company Oosning. this week le taken front the ground for the Utah Central r&iiroad. millet' or die. Riddle remonstrated son of George and Nary it Goddard. Work on this proposed line had been with him. when Peden drew a Der- - In OgdenRachel. infant daughter of miA is reproduced of 443 list weekly Woe. of The Deeeret under and shot Riddle. aiming at his Joseph and Elizabeth Y. Sanford. In way for some time in and near from sailed Liverpool had who grants Newatfor fleptember 113. 11111: Ogden, but when ground was broken ringer Meright breast. Riddle, being clone to the Twentieth wardMargaret the ship "Minnesota on their way In this city on One of the Important events of the in the Sixteenth ward this' week it was Peden. threw up his arM and rectiv- - Murrin, &ger 75 years. to Utah: Among the Elders returnEning were the following: Marius sign, Edward A. Noble, James Sharp. . 4H. John F. Hardy. Platte D. Lyman. JoJ. McCullough. M. F. Farnsworth. and George siah F. Gibbs. John W. Lee H. Dunford. a in special item Mention is made of the fact that among the emigrants( mid b in the company on its way here was 11141 Elder J. P. Meik, for many years the of the elders friend and fellow-labor--s - In Hindostan.-- - Elder Welk had, been 111111110111111 a mlnuber eof the Church for many able I --- s --I ii, t ,4i 7.; i lir 4 A ' I , tt.e--"- ,- I. 1 1 lis 5 --- plitlitil 111119 z. , , gat) VW 011 ;,,. ... I ,: : : '- ,li - - '"e III IP , :..; .. ' ,,t,,,,ii3.0 , I, - ) 91111 i I - - i I ,b, - Eitill- a i ' 3 , iihli . , 1 I .4 11 t,t,.4 i'll'I: '1 1) - ZN ..1 v.:(41:.:31;b: IT I I his-ha- ., . li 1:tti,t oz, 1 I ' ""4.41LVIIITAW74,5,,ft, ',1,i'l: ', il - 11,i'.!,ii:1111 ii I It U I ii,101'". -- - , , OUR GALLERY OF PIONEERS FOUR , -- - - . s II )4-- . cooNcszlzu r491'. - ' ei ,,, v. - 44 '. 1 I 4 - 0. 81 ... , a ' I .. 4 ,t4; - - I .0oollpt e.f111'1511' 't: CPe:!..,70 t - :Err fal' . IS ' , . , -- IV - Aaroit-Jonasion,41- - with the wonderful food vat-, ties possessed by pure butter. They tthould Fee to-i- t that their children eat plenty of butter at meals and between meals. , elves , -- public - - A Thee-tee- .:t i! - -- i , horse-thieve- Maid o' Clover , )--- i s. . yl r 4 butter."r When the day's churning has been approved by our expert butter makers, so that it can be labeled "Maid o' Clover Butter," it is so pure that the body can assim'ilate everr particle of it. The appetite craves itthe body uses it. t , p; L . IA . : 1-1- 7 ,, - Ask your groper for Maid. o' Clover gets it fresh every day. Creameni Compang M-uftia- l triftearlau thtehrodngntrotipbteofourteah.been It::,.. .i JI I ), - - :1' I - , . g t I. Irw Ibilll1 f ' ' 4ite , . ! 77--- , ' , - AtZ::: . - , , . . the . , .. .. --- It 1 in the . . . - ., ..,,0.' i , ,- - . . - ---- " -- Our-childre- - , . n.- ; , oot Say- 4 - '- - k. y anti-"Mo- ' ..r. j f r- nstpvity. 'eil - ... - , , proI - , - ...-5,-;-:-- -,. 4 -r.- : . -- . -- , ---- ,, , la0 - enger. i ' . "..- I A USTRALIA I - . - - -- , L , ' - - - A - , ly . ' , ' As-thin- ge re-po- - and :supers.It 'in more than 'Orem-so-the- - ptocliim it; itisschoed - -- Ht-i.o- The of chocolate - -- , Ghirardelli's GroundChoc- ' o in onlynever in bulk. and look Ghttardelh there lb. Protection. At your the measure -- for . --- , , -- DI-Fat- Nil! ,- , - nye naturallj - 101- 1- text-Readi- ng , - :- 4 . . SI. , idly" -- - - ; . ill. . 1 m . , : - -- , - e tha-1;yfio- . .... ir , ur, ' -- Textbooks . ,.. , . IMMEIM to her,grocer 1--, 1:1- . , T1 5 6 Butterhe er y c, - '''''' , e In a letter dated in this city an discusses anonymous correspondent benefits of at considerable length the No: . in the mercantile busi, ness. He gives a comparison of the , before the 14 .1421420,-prices on certain articles ,, system went ltno effect, ;ears-aro-dollin Utah communities, Und the prices of , 4,,,,--N----those - same articles under 4. (Roc: Stoves. he said, had dropped from from 860 to $42 or $45; sugarmuslin V 35 cents to 23 cents; bleached Al30. I . a from 20 and 32 to 16 and considother out he , points though -- ,t News . siaiob k, The It by Bruce.) Addtngton (For , system ration' than the the lower-, ente4ed-int' ' been ,had an.. ' ' i 4 ,,,,,.,i, ing of prices, .s... aithea.., SHOULD much like to see a na- disagreeable. . If they- cannot' 'flee" ' : in the reduction, he f'u'l, element the big least at I figuratively ; ecAppp 4 1 tonal board of censors appointed to,I physically. they IP "4'' N,1 . maintains. N flight by putting the disagree- ! from ,Tonele, L. Gee re- supervise the publication of textbooks achieve well-inform- ed Writing 11.,.) -- ,,,,11,. ,, - --..) - l. out min& of able store there , onomical, , . , : ' -- ports that the fair tx I 4, Which is precisely the course only for our. schools- - And I should like sbusiness, theDun-yadone a 'Very had - -"Gear-eiirtken Pi' r chief of one its as 11, to children.. have school most , of store housewile,say of,our by the Oatboard competition-beinft(V.,kifra i ." , who recently had sold his entire purposes the preventing of the publiUnwillingly they apply themselves to your grocer. 10 It to the'hateful textbooks so long as to S. A. Cotter. .., ' stock cation of any textbook that is dull. 1 The - are at called . obliged to do so. But once I George W. Crocheion -- Consequently I would have all ped- they' The years since grand-exhibited some fine . , f 1freed from the compulsion of studying. and office i News S ' educaone sta.tua as one to ants, from whatever to for4get their , their ' they promptly proceed ' .. potatoes, averagingeach. which he had . -' mother ,first discovered the ' '''' board': censor contents. the from tors,- barred. and a half pounds ot,111., ward. ; raised on his lot in the Eighth exhibit-Not only this. but they unconsciousAnd I should certainly desire.totee 4,,,,,....0 ,, ,-Ghirar- worth 0 , of superior , was proudly Daniel Grenig ly transfer their hatred for the on represented i numerously wool '1 taken i- - itjour of ''''' : fine : to books in general. some specimens ing dell:': Ground Chocolate a ..44.) WOK I' of P goats. seven of - nalists. novelists, Isand playwrights and study have been made distastefrom e "Cashmere" -: say.,-men and -- -y distinetionthst wIrold both, to which-hhad id liiiplaes In the- Frt.,- women . ,. ., priduced alert to story values. It is $ime to face the tuation honteenth ward. - of cultural InlackWe the deplore , . no man:), imitations---- ut Expedition. ,, terests among the presses of the peop- estly. If we want minds to grow we must Is devoted le.-- Ws- - marvel, it the intelleclual editorial page the of Partdellthisgrow..---suhstautet truiyJ : ' I , to the titat word had apparent- - inertia displayed by myriads. act.1 we are positively cheeklitit men'' stand, folk .,. choedate. "Nearly allthese mentally lazy P MI growth through the miaernatio ly been received from the .., ,, ,r.,- -- zr..,,, , ,,,,,,,o, r,,.,..,,., lave laeen,..to,achool." .sve , r ?Wanes et s .111.14' are must , dull, naturally , U.1 , beÀhat they Franklin which left England in May. 1 acadetnists but Not research-chille- d I Athuld .nade else have us Terror. and ehips-Erebeducation their, fervent humanists. highly trained in 1 1845. in the , note said mind more active." ,,,,. .... The message was found in a hermeticthe art of writing.. should, engage in ..., we in kut mite art wrong a in vsually to have been contained , They could enauthorship. blame on their mental textbook : i , gage in no more socially serviceable ally sealed sealskin bag. Among other .. we hold should Rather onstitution. ic 01 . : :, ractivitc.-the- y ,, atrapre-,,eminent.. . fitted,. things igdeedtheht rd nontkeir heF eye- -' ; blameworthy our faulty schooling for It and every effort should' be made Sir John tern and not least the textbooks we to is GIERARDELIA-goodnes- s -15 men. The original tom draw them into it 1 and deers original our children. foist school upon 1919. by . The Asaociated ( Cop)right. -- included 105 men in all. It was 1 pany a the breakfast .in Countless - Newspapers.) -- subject cans quality. ate comes not known whether the note alleged L. ;srheire.is scarcely cannot made be that or - have-bee- n. 14)1Lad' wasfgenuirte toAsk- for the- Glurardelli; can handled.- - Every if tables in countless.. for fascinating rightly merely, a hoax. for the matter of that. has an tj after-theat-re after-scho- ol Part or the editorial page is devoted subject, refreshments is label. the inherent for appeal to the Instinct of cur-1 your, ' ,,, also to Anna Dickinson, the lecturer I.soot. ;: : H onoiulti, Suva. Now Zealand T.han this Instinct none is mere serves as a supreme MOCI daily whohad recently visited In Salt Lake. N. grocer's--i- n . 9 , - , was she while stated The that article mental -to sential WILDILI 111311.1:111 NOTIL MAIL ME Keep growth. - lb:1-and- -3 ' ,'''' : 71 a 'million homes west. Miss Dickinson apparently ity aliver-an- d lb. scaled cans. In Ctah there wilt. be an Vass Palatial was favorably Impressed by the "Mor- greater acquisition o( knowledge. . It. Tlho.e., S. aNiomprae R. M. S. 4..Makereq) ' 11,500 Tons. Tons mons",and what she saw In Utah.- but -- - But what do we do? ' ' sheto Bail grom,Vanrouver, R. C . California: bad in her leettirNi , of have ..,f--- to Rill. tarts For and . been-mabusivoandhadmade -miling.entar thrutighlextbookWe intrust road "Gear-ar-delly- "' -- anad .., tnany 7111firepittbilentktIOni. , The edi- - the writing of these in tha main tol ia'n:A",;ftt"r;:ii,","'"kPoAll'Irsty"i:Ins-4140 the opinion that she Gradgrinds and '' tonal expresses Street. . Vancouv'or, B.C. -keyinour . ' ' ' an seem to . take --- ' pome been had abnormat, engaged by ' .' -Since 1852 Sart Francisco D, GIIIRARDELLI CO. ,- -7 mon" organization to deliver her lee- - .having our school textbooks as LUKE COLLECTSis to . tedious .and tt c .as ,,.. ter . criticises her possible -- ' Jure' and.it severely - I them, -her apparent duplicity. ' ' e the I As a reult we not -In was court district In the hearing i W. do worse.' r-LEW .9. "th s s progress on the ease ell. F. Nounnan We rouse to an ,. ltr ...t cwerfune-- ! unhealthy Uniotr the Pacfic c Railroad .. lin ,.. ... ktioninc .1.,,se , --4.4,, .0.....1. 46.401.41:.4.,..ziatiRalla. :, laan,LA 46440. 111 ; ' Ar : , ert,itinvsfinct. etheltnstitIce ' I. h...N.g. . -- ,-suing for S400.000 alleged- to be due D .e ciplein -t, e BIL ,4.0)1 in the- bandinget for contract work I , -- , ' ;tt.. , Iline- 1 1 .1 the 444,1 44! I I 4 - nr tt st- AvendalePa-,hed:teen ' 13. M. Rn'lltd" nt santunit, barpught iiipher "" surface. I reported all well In that settlement. N tiliY an was General.Fse eonitnissioned , I..,Z.:ve.1.,c:da... -i. with the people jubilant over boun- secretary E. . :ars',................., pro-terwar of Z aftaelkag kl:.;,,... teout 4.torn., 5"0"':e. ,r death of Jt.lvect-the .., 7' General News. Ebert Rhoades. treasurer of the v....b.- -, -1 of Nevada, died (rtiddenly in San Fran-co,, elorht of bodIss and hundied floe -' " , -kVA E CO LL ECTS LUK killed In a tnine,exploe.on cleco-.---411...........IIM:a..PIPPEIVIIII ",. tninerp , .... , . . . ,, , , , , , . . ,, . V , , , .. . . . ... , . . . , ' , , .. . , . . : .0 , 161 - I Yn randmother said ammin. Vr, , "Diets otherwise sufficient, fail to maintain growth and health unless they contain substances which in practice are best supplied by the feeding of milk and car-sho- two-stor- Am e" is the most readily and completely digested and assimilated of any fat, because butter melts with less heat than most fats, and the' butyric acid, peculiar to butter, mixes in all proportions with wat;r, insuring its complete absorption by the body. Butyric Heil gives butter its exquisitely delicate flavor. eon-in-la- - I 'BUTTER I . - P,Tarents should aequaintthems- - 0 ; - , , t ' 1 1 11 e . x - - - 11. 1 . - , -- ' - , ' to-th- . . . N- . - , , , ., . . al , . . . - . , . 1 . . 4 . . , . . . , , , - |