OCR Text |
Show THE IIER PAGE SIX MERRY-G- Human Interest Stories of the West By DR. G. W. STATES Preston, Idaho K No. ;1 August 26 th We camp all day sitting The hunting party which tires. set out yesterday returned to camp with a plentiful supply of fresh Sister Henderson is very meat. low but the infant is quite strong and well. Sister Henderson died at noon today, the 27th and we buried her at nine this evening She left seven children We crossed the Platt river again the today. Captain Brown passed close word for all wagons to keep viin the as there were Indians saw cinity. In looking forward aI mile a little army of them about in the distance coming down the Our men side of a mountain loaded their guns, but on our opened approaching the Indians their ranks and we passed along without trouble. The governmert agent was with them in a buggy and sitting between his knees was the daughter of the chief, a pretty little creature of about three years, who seemed to be quite pleaseu at our The agent told us appearance. that these were some of the Shoshones, that there were 3,000 camped on the banks of'the Sweetwater. twenty miles from us Those we encountered were 90 of their principal warriors with their families going a great council of various tribes m an endeavor to settle their differences and bury the tomahawk. They made a good appearance, all on horseback and very gaily dressed, some with lances, others with bows and arrows or guns. They had many ponies carrying their luggage and tents. The men passed on one side and the women All of and children the other. Their them were well mounted. clothing was beautiful and trimmed with small beads. Altogether it was a very imposing procession This is August 29th and we are among the Rocky mountains. The valley country Is desert, except here and there a patch of grass I have along the small streams. "This is in Jjhe flavor last$ Schilling' STAMPS i; f By I. S. Klein some talk that he might have to But Harold Wolff be dropped. saved the day So last week Wolff trekked down to the White House, with his wife and even the secretary of his tutoring bureau WHITE HOUSE MUSIC While music seldom emanates from the second floor of the White House, there is a phonograph in the hallway, a baby grand piano in the sitting room adjoining the president's study, and an upright phonograph in the sur room The sun room machine stands snent under the weight of two Chinese cloisonne vases and an allthe glass picture frame bearing The 4 BTHANGK superstition among letters "FDR.." engraved the Bushmen of South Afrua is the president in photograph d savoii many a swift footed animal business suit, white shirt and It was the befri m dextrin lion No radio is visible, which might lief of llie-- e eavaces that the food indicate that the President does a hunter had ju-- eaten influent ed If he not listen to A1 Smith the game he was pursuing SHADOW BOXING took of the meat of a pai U. S. Court On the docket of the annual. Ills qnariy would be e suits, of Claims are and speedy, and he would be aleit unthe most constituting about it down But let hint usual legal action seen in the unable toa tun slow fooled animal, and of eat are five for years. They capital an outgrowth of the Adm.nistra-tion- s Ins quarrv would become slow and dollar devaluation policy and easy to kill For this reason, the swift springare scheduled for argument next month. bok of South Africa was held in e seek claimants The lal esteem by the Bushmen Not $8,000,000 damages from the govonly would they avoid eating anv on that the ground they ernment, part of this graieful garelle, hut lost this amount by the governwould not dare toui h it, lest ment's gold policy forbidding them they wbuli thev to cash their gold notes for gold the less agile geinsbok. assert were hunting, would acquire Mia Government attorneys that even if the claimants should speed ot the smallert lieanimal The springbok win a verdict in the Court in-of savages believed never slept at night, and if they at Claims, they could not collect barred of it. the hunted gemsbok would lie asmuch as Congress has the door to appropriations for pay- awake also. from The head of the ing damage claims arising such suits. springbok giaietnl e Real motiv behind the appeals on stamps suits is to maneuver a new t of S o ti h Africa, review of the dollar devaluation one of which is act by the Supreme Court. The shown here, for Supreme Court had denied claims f this country is the to damages by the plaintiffs ta sole habitat of tha the ground that they had, not provanimal. ed any losses. The pending suits are attempts to substantiate such claims. If successful the way will then be open to bring the whole issue again before the Supreme Court. Several foreign firms are among e claimants. One of LONDON. Feb 24 U P) Counthe the the suits revolves around a $10 tess, Von Haugwitz-Reventlogold note: John M. Perry, the former Barbara Hutton, Wool-wort- h the claims a government birth to heiress, gave boy plaintiff, owes him $1,912.50 m interest ac- today. crued since the date the treasury The cmld, oorn at 7:30 a. m, refused to redeem his note in gold. weighed seven and one The test case is expected to be the one brought by Robert A. Taft, son of the late Chief Justice. It is No. 1 on the docket, as it covers men in the Supreme Court will be all the points involved. replaced as soon as new chairs MAIL BAG which have been ordered, arrive. G. O. N., New Orleans Mrs. They will not be uniform, as two will be swival chairs, and seven Long does not occupy the same offices as Huey formerly held. He upright . . . B. L., New York The W. most conspicuous New Dealers inwas on the ground floor . . . The to- terested in promoting art through VV. M, Tahlequah, Okla. Constitutional federal projects are Mrs. Rooseof tal number Mrs. amqpdments proposed in Congress velt, Secretary Morgenthau. in the countrys entire history is Morgenthau, and Rex Tugwell. Art x a has twenty-sithese Of critics only say, Tugwell good 3,725. e eye." . . . V. J. F., Detroit. Mrs. passed both Houses, and twenty-onreceived necessary ratification Roosevelt's statement that she by states . . . F. N., Coronado, would make any campaign speechCalfi. Salary of Liberty League's es was volunteered at her press She was not asked director of publicity, Wm. C. Mur- conference. phy, Jr., is $14,000 a year. . . . any question about it. 111. nine The C. N. O., Rockford, (Copyright, 1936, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) old chairs used by the nine old old-ti- walked under overhanging rocks which seejned only to netd the pressure of a tou h of the hand to send them down upon us Many of them resf mble the luin of an old lastle and it needs but a little stutih of the imagination to fancy yourself in the deserted h dl of some palace or temple. There seems to be mm h metal among the rocks I puked up some spec imene of rock which I am told contain iron and silver, also some lumps of coal which burned brightly In places our road is so steep it seems like going down a staircase We killed a mountain sheep today which makes a nice change in our tood Today on August 30 we camped We saw hunon the Sweetwater dreds of hare and rabbits and some b1 rfalo but had no time to shoot any This is Sunday the 31st and Elder G D Pratt gave a sermon on the New Birth Mrs Richards, ar English woman who with her husband and five children are ir our company gave me a fine fat hare this morning which made us a delicious supper CCC ENTRANT WINS ASHTON DOG DERBY ASHTON, Idaho. Feb 24 d falling short of breaking a record, Lloyd Van Sickle, Porcupine COC camp entrant, was hailed as a hero in this snowbound town today after winning the 2(th Annual American Dog Derby. team Van Sickle sent his around the circular track, a total of 24 miles, in two hours. 14 minutes and four seconds Van Sickle started fast, making the first lap in 39 minutes 49 seconds, the fastest time of the derby here late Saturday He maintained his lead throughout. The favorite, Don Cordingley of Ashton, three times champion and the record holder, finished second. His time was two hours 17 minutes and 12 5 seconds. His record, established last year, was one hour 55 minutes and 41 seconds. Young Van Sickle raced m the derfcy lor the first time. Celey Baum. Ashton, was third, with a time of two hours 21 minBob Van utes and 22.5 seconds. Sickle, older brother of the winner, was fourth in 2:39:59 Prizes for the first four places were 3400, $200, $100 and $50. In addition Van Sickle received a $50 prize contributed by members of the Porcupine COC camp. .t swill-foote- fifty-thre- es-p- fifty-thre- fifty-thre- Barbara Hutton Gives Birth to Son fifty-thre- half-pound- A FARMER WRITES AM AD about HERE'S MORE ABOUT Footed 6. a I from Page One) DOUBLE -- mellow OLD GOLDS FEBRUARY MONDAY, UTAH, I' STORIES IN O- (Continued iw LOGAN, ALD-JOURNA- Iron 1 9 3 Roosevelt page one ) passed last session forcing the York City, Gentlemen: likes. A I am hill unchanged Extension service, $5,851,046, $13,330,672, 18th 16, 1935. unchanged Weather bureau $99,100. Bureau of animal industry, down $413,261. Bureau of plant industry, down $4,000. Forest service down $13,889,333, $3,268,000 Bureau of chemistry and soils, $1,388,272, down $100,000 Bureau of entomology and plant quaranting, $4,353,465, up $469,580. Bureau of biological survey, $1 -- 841,595, down $823,405 Bureau of public roads $60,000,-00- unchanged. Bureau of agricultural economics $5,925,396, down Eastern Support $72,500 Food and drug administration, $1,975,217, down $604,620 Soil conservation service, down $5,030,735. Roads Under Estimate The total for road funds including forest roads and trials was $67,082,600 or $8,940,744 more than appropriated for this year, but and drastic federal infringement of their state and personal right, foreign to the spirit of the federal union and resulting m a sectional tyranny that the people of my state will not brook His bid for the presidential nomination was based on a program of states rights and prohibition renation-wid- e peal. He made a His support speaking campaign. at the convention was largely from the conservative east In 1934 he sought a fifth term as governor of Maryland, but was defeated by Gov. Harry B Nice, a ReDubhcan. Although he had supported President Roosevelt for election, he soon turned against the New Deal. He assailed the large federal spending program and the .expansion of federal functions and asserted they threatened local self government and menaced the bed- rock principles of the nation. Governor Since 1920 Ritchie was born m Richmond, $917,400 under budget estimates. Some of the major increases or Va , Aug. 29, 3876. He was gradJohns Hopkins univerdecreases in recommended appro- uated from in 1896 and from the Univerpriations compared with the pres- sity sity of Maryland law school m ent year: 1898 took up the practice of Additional endowment for ex- law in He Baltimore immediately aftperiment stations, up $1,200,000; er graduation. special research fund, agriculture From 1903 to 1910 he was assistdepartment, up $800,000; general of Balitmore city solicitor administrative expenses extension ant from 1910 to 1913, he was assistant service, up $112,578; farmers co- counsel for the Maryland public operative demonstrations, down service commission. $192,578; general weather service He was leceted attorney general and reserch, up $128,220; aerology, He was elected attorney general up $229,860; indemnities in tuber- until 1920, when he was elected culosis of cattle, down $J,103,116; governor His tenure of that ofenforcement of packers and stock-yar- d fice was the longest of any in the act, up $50,000; dairy in- history of the state. vestigations, up $26,580; national forest administration, up $1,915,-98industrial utilization of farm products and up Japanese beetle control, up $50,000; Chinch bug control (eliminated); migratory bird conservation fund appropriation of $125,-00- 0 (not carried this year); tobacco inspection act $250,000 (first appropriation). The reduced amount reported for shelter belt study "will permit," the committee said, "continuance of the investigation to determine the influence of forest and related cover upon streamflow, floods, erosion and water conservation. The elimination of last year's Chinch bug control appropriation was defended by the committee on grounds that the bug which destroyed crops in the middle west last year due to weather conditions was virtually eradicated $101,-48- 6; PLANNING BOARD APPOINTS HYER Saul E. Hyer of Lewiston was elected chairman of the irrigation section of the Cache county planning committee at a meeting of the group, Friday. T. N. Judah was named secretary Several problems concerning irrigation in Cache county were discussed at the meeting. The next session of the group was slated for Saturday, February courthouse. 29, at the Planning committee sections on crops and dry farming met Saturday for the purpose of consider- - an old man who knows what he farmer is a stubborn cuss, and i that other cigarette brand. GOLDS I've bought ever since, and every pack has been the same. I know, because I'm blind, and we without learn to taste and feel better than you whoeyes see. Double-Mello- w OLD j quality in when he takes to cigarettes when hes well gone by 60 years, he has good reasons for wanting those cigarettes. And for some time now I quick-burnin- I t P.S. My 16 year old niece, Betty, has typed this for me. Just as I told it to her. The snapshot was taken by Betty's father. r GATE COAL that Snapshot of Jerry Hurley taken last Fall by his brother John. Jerry farm is located on a mountainside, 8 miles from Wellsville, N.Y. (Post Office, Scio ) BHBili as made to smokers since Oct 6, 1935 a (porting chance on a pack of Old Gold.. Smoke ten of the cigarette. If you dont any they're the fineat you've ever tasted, mad the package wrapper and the remaining ten cigarettes to us, any time before May 1st, 1936, and we'll send you double the price you paid for the full package, pint pottage. TAKE contributes to ing proposals for a program in these departments. The committee meeting on dairying was called but was postponed unil a later date. flwtl..a. L F-2- 6 Your druggist you to visit his store this week to set better acquainted with invites ALKA. SELTZER li You'll find your druggist, friendly, helpful and eager to serve you. He knows that there is nothing quite like Wfy ALKA-SELTZE- SEE YOUR DRUCCIST to give R prompt and pleasant relief from common aches and pains. YOUR HOME CAN BE WITH THE BEST LAUNDRY EQUIP! UP-TO-- Di Your ircome can easily provide it if you take advantage of our liberal offer for February. Buy now at this lowest point where quality and price meet the new 1936 DOUBLE CABINET WALL WASHER THE ONLY WASHER THAT HAS ALL OF THESE FEATURES Ever Silent With air space around bow! shaped enameled tab, keeps water hot 40 Drive Arc-cua- te Transmission-Ne- eds no oiling. "o Bolt Holes Vibration No Gear Shifting New Speed Queen (Established 1 Safety Roll Wringer Both rolls automatic- - Rustproof steel chassis, all riveted not a bolt used. Can never ally stop and pressure is released instantly get loose. Tangleproof agitator washes clean in from 3 to 7 minutes. when desired. Built to give you extra lycars of faithful, service. Low priced at MM' BUY YOUR make it FJRST in IN FEBRUARY AND YOU WILL RECEIVE ABSOLUTELY FREE sales volume. Utah Fuel Company fortablc Laundry Tubs with strong enameled table top cover, making an extra kitchen Salt Lake City table and clothes Twin and So. nw, Faay To Drain and Move 1760) Thirty Packages While King Granulated Soap 19 West 40th Street, New York City Carl W. Sanders Logans Exclusive Castle Gate Dealer PHONE PRIZE CROP.TOBACCOS F-2- 5 rected by Reed Stockdale The visiting authorities remained for the evening AHA session and LOST: Black pup, has spot of white on chest, wearing collar were the prim ipal speakers Muand harness. Return 467 East sic was furnished by the girls 6th North Reward of the First ward and was led by Yours truly, Jerry Hurley HERE extra large attendance at he sesAGENT IS sions in spite ot the bad road conditions It was spoken of as one W F. Olsen of Salt Lake City, of the largest atti nuances (or sevFederal field representative of the eral of such conteremcs His talk Administration will be in Housing Serthe following was taken from interLogan tms week to mon of the Mount. The theme of the visiting au- ested persons. cham-oe- r Mr Olsen wi-- : be at thorities in the morning session of commerce rooms daily from was dependability and purpose ot 1 to 4 12 noon and from the priesthood President Henry to mto He will be glad to explain p H Rawlings sei oud e.m.oior in to any one woo the stake presidency, spoke on t.,e housing plan m building, remodelinterested i ' 'Truth homes. Music for the two sessions was ing or refinancing furnished bv the Franklin ward, FOR SALE, MISC: consisting of the Singing Mothers, CHEAP, if taken from car, 3 inch choir the led ward by Eugene j lump coal on track 25 and 26. Lundquist, and a male quartet diCall 595-- J 2. GUARD AI.LEGED KILLERS lb MARTINEZ, Cal., Feb. 24 Authorities forewarned of lynch threats maintained close guard today iver three men held in jail for allegedly administering a fatal Allen F. beating to Knight, Feb. 14. Double Walls 293 804 North Main liaaKMwmM jc T FEDERALHOUSING per cent longer, and protects tub. much appreciated My brother's .son got me on cigarettes, but the ones he gave me seemed too g. One day our general storekeeper stood me one of those Double-Mello- w OLD GOLDS, made of prize crop tobaccos. And I had my first cigarette that burnt as slow and cool as my pipe, and that didn't leave a man's tongue stinging and biting like Stake Consistent UN- N.Y. OLD GOLDS. Amendment al- Our people. he said, in the $3,810,714. down main regard it as an unnecessary IFORMITY is a haven't touched any smoking but Franklin In The Tub P. Lorillard Company, Inc., 119 West 40th Street, New Critic Major appropriation items com- most broke up the conference. He said the people of pared with budget estimates: faOffice of experiment stations, vored local option. Maryland Hew York November Mrs Lorna B. Larson; a mixed (horus from Weston directed by HERE'S MORE ABOUT Dewey Olson; and a girls' trio from Fairvtew consisting of Nedra Cole, Wilma Gilbert, and Kdras Wnittle. It was directed by Mrs. M tnlda B Glioert. (fohUnurd fro.n t'Hjo oti ) The evenings feature was a very a unique Cl dramatization of the MIA to the high couni ll, filling vai "W e stand for spirituality that have exited for some slogan, in the home," writand happiness time: Rudgtr H Da'nts, seiond ten and directed by Mrs. Selma counselor iri the stake YMM1A, Handley of Whitney. Mrs. Clara and Warren Maurice Tmgey, bun-da- y Dean H Morrison, Mrs. Howard school superintendent of WesMuughan, Reed Larson, and Dorton ward othy Geddes took part. William H Wiser of Fan view, K F Campbell, stake superinpresident of the high priest quor- tendent of the YMMLA, was in H was released and Raymond charge um, Bingham, Bishop of Linrose warn, was sustained as his sunessor. Dependability Is Theme President L. V. Merrill In his talk expressed appreciation for the (fonhnurtf jrom payc one ) No Scio, 6. HERE'S MORE ABOUT APPROPRIATIONS (Continued 24, Lundstrom Furniture & Carpet Company IlOME OFSrKED QUEEN WASTTERS. , j. |