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Show THE TACK TWO. The HERALD-JOURNA- 01 IIETIALD-JOURNA- LOGAN, UTAH, L, cents a copy. By mail, in Cache Valley, year; outside Cache Valley, $5 00 a year. By carrier, 40 cen,s a month, $3 50 a year. Member United Press, NEA Service, Western Proclaim Features and The Scripps League of Newspapers. Liberty thru Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffica alt the The at Logan, Utah, under the Act of Congress, March Land. liberty Bell, 3, 1879. 4, 1 93 G. Genealogical and Temple News L Published every week-da- y afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co, at 75 West Center Street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price APRIL SATURDAY, Edited By President W. M. Everton 5 $2.50 a The power to tax is the power to destroy. Those who are governed least are governed best. Thomas Jefferson. Contributions to this department should be sent to President W. M. Everton, Logan, Utah, not later than Thursday to make this department one of outstanding interest and value. Howdy, folks An astronomer ha discovered a new planet. But what's the use? It wont solve the parking problem. Restaurants have signs up cautioning diners to watch their hats and coats. The trouble is that while you are watching your hat and coat somebody is liable to steal your lamb chop. LATE NEWS FLASH MID HOLLOW CAPITALISM HAS NEED FOR POPULAR RULE f ROM tour memory is long enough to go hack three or four years, you doubtless can recall that there was a time when well-feAmericans were fond of saying that what record. this country needed was a Mussolini. BEAUTIFUL HANDS It was more or less natural that some people should (Sent in by J. L. M.) say this. When a large and steadily increasing part of the Last, night I held a little hand. So dainty and so neat; populace has no work and sees no earthly chance of getting work, and when an equally large and steadily increasing I thought my heart woulr surely burst part of industry has no dividends and sees no chance of getSo wildly did K beat. ting them, the institution of private property itself is in No other hand into my souul d Death and Burial List Logan Temple Retold Is Ayers-Ree- d . the whole house burned to ground . . . "April 13th. At the mouth Logan canyon helping Brother Crookston to make a road to quarry . . the Allen Allen (d. of Kempton, R. the . "15th and 16th engaged with canal work and getting a road to Crookston's quarry . . . Could greater gladness bring. danger. "20th and 21st with my sons no tight last held I Than that A strong man who could step in and take hold, start s helping Crookston to bridge night. the wheels turning, disregard all the red tape of law and into the river at the mouth Four aces and a king. of Logan canyon for bridge to tradition, and bash in the head of anyone who objected will the quarry, the water rising very fast what you Say against such a to look man was bound well, more or less to warm owing gay 90s, but a horse could go in the river abutt-ment- farther without oats than a car can without gas. of today, however, the picture is different. Signor ASMussolini right now seems bent on making all the Americans who talked that way wish they had said something else. By scrapping the last vestige of democracy in Italy, and disH)ssessing the owners of private industry, he has shown all of us, in an unforgettable way, just what you let yourself in for when you turn to a dictator for help. For dictatorship in the modem manner does not exist for the preservation of private property. It is as heedless of that as it is of democracy. It serves its own ends and follows its own course, and it is is hostile to individualism in the realm of trade as in the realm of politics. And that brings us to a point that defenders of the existing order of things in America too often overlook; that private capitalism and democracy go hand in hand. They are Siamese twins. If one dies, the other cannot long DEFINITIONS Success: want. Happiness: Ret. what Getting you Wanting what you e DURING the last half decade or so, we have had plenty of to learn that both private capitalism and democracy, as practiced in America, have grave defects. Capitalism often is selfish and blind; democracy often is inefficient and stupid. But if we remember that the two go together, we may be able to muster the patience to make the reforms which both need. The ardent liberal who wants political freedom made broader and more secure should be a stalwart defender of capitalism; and similarly the capitalist, moved by a human desire to protect his own, should be one of the most vehement upholders of democracy. It i3 some years since the Russians showed us that, when you set out to abolish capitalism, you have to abolish democracy as well. Now Mussolini is demonstrating that, when you abolish democracy, you wind up by doing away with capitalism. Our job, as a capitalistic democracy, is to retain both and to make, in each, the reforms and the necessary improvements if they are to work as they should. left-win- g IN WASHINGTON BY RODNEY BUTCHER. ence out of surplus funds saved from past profits. JIB Rrrrlff Stuff That means that the 700,009 part & TELEPHONE AMERICAN A. T AT. receive TELEGRAPH, the vast hold- owners of the every three months. ing company now being investi- $43,000,000 More than half of them are women. gated by the Federal CommunicaSun Life Insurance Co. of Canada tions Commission, is unique. $ It is a monopoly, and admits it. and Harvard College are among the Of every 100 telephones in the largest owners. country, more than 80 are directly T. Is a holdii. company. controlled by A. T. A T. PresiVT.It owns almost 90 per cent of dent Walter S. Gifford gets $206.-00- 0 a year salary, pays $103,000 the stock of 24 companies which of it in income tax. He cheerfully actually operate the telephones in various parts of the country, such admits the monopoly part. But he atgnss that a national as the New York Telephone Co or telephone systeip must be a mo- the Mountain States Telephone and nopoly, that a lot of small, com- Telegraph Co. It also owns the Western Elecpeting lines would be a nuisance, lie denies that A. T. & T. has tric Company, of which Edgar S. In giant ever taken advantage of its mo-- 1 Bloom is president. nopoly position, but has used it to! plants in Chicago and Kearney, develop the best telephone service N'. J , this company makes teletor the benefit of the most people. phone equipment, such as phones The FCC is spending $750,000 and switchboards. It sells 99 per to gee whether this is true or cent of its product to the A T A T whether the company has used its or other companies of the Bell SysIt also buvs materia! for position to keep rates up, exacted tem. unjust profits from its affiliates, them all. and holds priceless patand competed unfairly with rivals ent in other fields than the telephone' The A T A T itself built and business. own lines connectThe A. T. A T. is the largest ing the various regional systems, company in the world on ned by and private individuals, it has total telephone service, teletype systems. assets of more than $3.00o,o00.ooo. 1009 leased wnes for special purBut no one holder owns as much poses. (hain radio program hookas 1 per cent of its stock. ups, talkie apparatus, and pictuie transmission by w ire epilE company controls tl.e operating companies tpHE A T A T provides patent which actually run the 14,000.000 - lights, special knowledge, standtelephones that make up the Bell ardized equipment, capital and exSystem. But this Bell System also pert help to the regional operating connects with the phones of 6600 companies it owns. Those relasmaller telephone companies and tionships aie very complex, and 23,600 rural lines, so that practical- are one point the commission ly any of the 17,350,000 telephones whes to understand better j in the country can he connected For instance, the large Grayharj with any other one. Elei trie Co., a ''competing" maker For every share of its stock. of eloctrii al equipment, was sold by A. T. A T. nays out eaih year $3 A. T. A T in 1928. but long and in profits. For the last four years involved testimony leaves still it has not made that much profit, some doubt whether it Is really but it hesitated to pay less to stockcompeting. holder, so it giade up the differ- - (Copyright, 133$, NEA Service. Inc.) lorrpondt trans-Atlanti- Bedford, Mass., who ), m. as his had Joanne ). 1st w, Abraham Doolittle Address: Mrs. Edgar J. Baker, Mt. Sterling, O. Allen Want ancestry Henry Allen (b. Va Sept. 2, 1773), m. Elizabeth, dau. John Summers; re moved to Christian Co., Ky., 5 settled on land transferred by bro. (1625-1661- Index EVENING in alphabetic order, the names found in recent Issues of the genealogical section of the Boston Transcript Those who are interested should consult the Transcript in our public library. Below we give THOUGHTS 18-1- in-la- - BY C. V. HANSEN RECORDS MUST "Pardon me. I have to run along now, says Lil Gee Gee Some friends of mine got married this morning and I want to go over and see them before they start suing for divorce." BALLAD OF SPRING Another sign of spring is this: When doing nothing is sheer bliss. ' The brightest men are those who have graduated from the school of experience. Joe Bungstarter says he can never get accustomed to wearing spats, because every time he looks at them he thinks his underwear is coming down over his shoes. v.-- e BE KEPT Elder John A. Widtsoe, made the following statement: "I am surprised at times when I talk with some of the pioneer iamilies of Utah, and learn that they have forgotten their own ancestry and who find it difficult to establish the connecting links. It may not be a general fault, but there are some families among us that have been very careless about record keeping even of these last two or three generations, in the full glow of the gospel light." In the hook, "The Way to Perfection by Elder Joseph Fielding Smith, we read the following: "Ask almost any member of the church when he was born and without hesitation he can tell you. Yet all he knows about it is what he has been told by his father and his mother. Perhaps it was recorded at the time in the old family Bible, for was it not a most important event? To each of us birth is most important for it is our beginning in this probation, . so we remember the date as it is told us, and we have to depend on witnesses for the date. If we discover someone who does not know the day he was born, we pity him; he becomes an object of curiosity among men. Birth, however, is not the only important event in life. Is it not just as important to be born into the kingdom of God? But who pays much attention to this date which we are each old enough to remember? Every few days someone writes into the historians office asking if we can furnish their date of baptism; or when they were ordained. They need this information and do not have it. Surely that information should be on the records of the church. It is the duty of the church to see that it is recorded; but should not each member also have this knowledge at his command? The time will come in the life of each baptized person, if he goes on m faithfulness seeking the fulness of the kingdom, when he will have to know when he was baptized. He may need that information many times. Let us begin now, without any further delay, and write down Genealogies are now being com- dates and events in our own lives, piled on the following families and that a record may be kept; not their collateral branches. Corres- only for our own benefit, but pondence is invited by the compilalso for the and benefit ers whose names and addresses of those who pleasure come after. are given. Correspondents should enclose a stamped, envelope for response. Alabama Early settler of Cal- NAME INDEX houn Co. Address: Mrs. Walter W. Robinson, Anniston, Ala. Beighley Descs of Conrad Address: William B. Roden-baug152 Sherman Av., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Belote Offers blue print of famFollowing is an index to names ily (Western NY.) for 40c. found In the genealogical section Donald B. Macdonald, 101 E. of the Hartford Times. Files of Walnut St.. Kingston. Pa. be seen at the this Chalk-AskeWants data on public paper may library. these families of N. C. Address: The Hartford Mrs. Harry Hyman. .Hyman, Tex. Feb 29, 1936. Daily Times, Cheatwood-Chetwoo- d (Va.. N.C. ). Arnold, Andrews, Abell, Bowen. Address: Dr. Blanche M. Haines, Bradley. Beckwith, Barker, Boug-bThree Rivers, Mich. Capiey, Callan, Chillson, Couch, Descs. Walter (Va.) Chiles David L. Ringo, 1558 Carter, Church, Coveil, Cock, DovAddress: er, Darby. Doyle, Deming. Follett, Madison Av. Covington, Ky. Fay, Ferris, Gammon, Gates, Grit-maClare Descs. George (Va.) AddHodges, Harrison, Hubbard, ress: Mrs. George P. Taubman, Jr., 274 Park Av., Long Beach, Hungerford.Hall. Hill. Hooper, Hale, Inman, Calif. Jones, Kidder, Knight, Address: Dr. Warren Jenks, Drake Lewis, Lockwood, Martin, MontV. Sprague, Chauncey, O. Descs. of Col John; gomery, Mygate, Mead, Phelps, Evans includes Address Perkins, Russell, Reed, Rowley, Dent data. Tarrey, Thomas Ray Dille, 235 High St., Rose, Spencer, Smith, Tourneur. Treadway. Verity. WilMorgantown. West Va. son, Waiden, Wolcott, Watson, Address: Oren A Ferguson Seaton, 930 Locust St., Kansas Waterman, Williams. City. Mo. Descs. of Richard Haines Saturday, March 7, 1936 Arnod. Allen, Bailey. Beach. Benand Margaret Haines, Quakers. Burlington Co., N. J 1682. Add- nett, Brooks, Barber, Buckminster. ress: Earl S. Haines, Norris Bidg., Bounce, Cowles, Cooliegh, Capped, Dewev. Driggs, David, Doty, Dur-keAtlanta, Ga. Haudt-Hou- t Family of Eglestone, Eustas, Frost, Ferns. Gaylor, (now West) Va. Griffin, Gleason, Miss Helen A. Simpson, 517 Gott, Hitchcock. Hall, Jones. S. 41st St. Phila , Pa. Lewis, Markham, Moniross. Address: Miss Sylpha Montross. Osgood, Parker, Peet, Hibbs Hibbs Snook, 3945 12th St., Des Scott. Sackett, Sutton, Skelton, Moine. Ia. Turner, Travis, White, Throop. Descs of Matthias, Webster. Loy George. Adam, of Berks Co., Pa Address Mrs. Ella Nash Loy, 727 The Hartford Daily Times. S. Grant, Casper, VVyo. Saturday. March 14. 1936. Descs. of Lt. McArthur Ball, Balwin, Baker, Brown, of Crosby Charles McArthur Cook. Curtis, Cadwell, Nobletown, N. Y., and Fairhaven, Clark, Champlin, Das Ram, Eaton, Vt. Address: Dr. S. W. McArthur, Everett Fairchild. Gardiner, Gray, 122 S. Michigan Av., Chicago, 111. Gibbs. Hall. Herrington, Hancock, Includes descs of Hawkins. McIntyre Kirbv. Lisn, Loesch, Philip (Mass.), Micum (Me) Wil- Land. Langlev, Morton, Marshall, liam (Mass.. Me ). Address: Robert Markham. Montgomery, Noole, M. Mclntire. 441 E. Mt. Carmel Priest. Peet, Perry, Randall. ReyAv Glenside, Pa. nolds. Ktmman. Smith, Tavior, Maine Penobscot Bay FamilUfford Van Horn. Whitbeck, Waries. Address- B, Lake Noyes, M. D. ren Extrm ts from the Brewster Me. Bulletin Stonuigton. Boys-Boyc- Boys-Boy- (1720-1799- (1794-1863- (1797-1876- You can tell more about a man's character by buying a used car from him than you can by hearing him talk in prayer meeting. Ivory Ida is so dumb that she thinks a banister is a man who conducts a band. YE DIARY ... 0, Thys evening we do have for dessert a noble apple pie, which Dame Brew did bake with her own fair hands, and there be one and as such arranged sliee of the pastie left over and (To Be Continued) Little Homer and I do play a game of chess, to see whieh of us shall . devour it, alheit Dame Brew doth say we be naught but gluttons, but Lord! I be no glutTHE WEEK AT ton, for Little Homer doth win the chess game, and devour the pie triumphantly whieh doth make LOGAN TEMPLE me mighty chopfallen, you may be bed. to And so sure! NEW ... ARE COMPILED Haircut and shave. V April 6 and Tuesday, temple will be closed on account of general conference in Salt Lake City. Six sesWednesday, April 8 Excursion sions for endowments. from Logan stake. Thursday. April 9 Six sessions Excursion from for endowments. Benson stake and from Logan Ninth. Tenth and North Logan wards. Friday, April 19 Excursion from. Bear River stake and from Genealogical committees of Logan 3rti and 4th wards. Monday, April 7-- Tne HILL BILLY From the Hills Perhaps half a dozen times a year a fellow will read a book that he not only regards as fundamental. but a book that he wishes to keep for ready refer- ence because it covers some subject so thoroly that the rest of such writing can be forgiven. Such a rare work deserves mention. I speak today of Rats, Lice and History, by Hans Zinsser, a strange title for a serious book. But the book itself is a bit odd. Dr. Zinsser has spent a life studying men and disease, especially epidemics and more particularly bubonic plague and typhus. Also he is an economist, knows the philosophy of history and has none too high regard for various medical prophets. The book points out that plague has done more than armies to change human history and that the great military leaders of history, who have been supposed to have fought critical battles which changed the course of civilization, were usually just lucky fellows who stood about and let plagues work on the enemy. To me, the most amazing fact in this amazing book is the truth of man's present insecurity against being wiped out by a plague like typhus. The doctor argues, with abundant evidence, that sanitation might easily aid the spread of a plague like typhus and discover civilized nations ripe for ruin. Nature build? up. in the course of centuries, resistance to general diseases: thus the white man resists smallpox, tuberculosis and measles, but when he carries these new diseases to cither the dwellers at the North Pole or the negroid tribes in Africa, entire peoples are wiped out before resistance is built up by survival of the fittest. Now since typhus is carried by I SCIENCE NEWS Keeping Up-io-Dat- ej Another British expedition will attempt to climb Mt. Everest this summer. This towering peak of the Himalayas is situated in Tibet and there have been five major attempts at climbing it. Swept by winds, covered with ire and snow, more than a dozen men have already died in an attempt to stand on the crest of this dangerous mountain. It is. by the way the only known mountain which has never been successfully scaled. Yet. by way of comparison, on a smooth globe, the size of a Mt Everest would be represented hv a particle of dust than .1)02 of an inch in diameter. sub-zer- o !e-,- s LOOT FILLS TRUCK 5 TIMES A WOODBURN. Ore.. fP' small truck had to make five trips a to the home of kleptomaniac to remove all articles the man had collected in four years. FROM (1737-1824- HARTFORD TIMES Ad-re- - e, n, s: (1742-181- bee. since lice are always with us, and since typhus, follows war as do munition millionaires, also since war is today more likely to he a civilized pastime than ever before, it follows that a plaeue would be moie fatal to humanity today than ever before, once it got started in the trenches, because the majority of us folks do really t.ie a bath once a week. ). Iowa, July May 18, 1925. Buried at Mendon, Utah. Baker, Richard. Father Joseph Baker, Mother Mary Morgan, b Dec. 24, 1880 at Mendon. Utah, d Oct. 1924. Buried at Mendon, Utah. Ballantyne, Isaac S. Father R, A. Ballantyne, b at Ogden, Utah. Ballantyne, Mary Ann. Father Boston Transcript SATURDAY (1620-1690- Simon Summers. Address W. P. Drake, P.O. Box 159, San Tex Benito, weather . . . Was William Agler (m. Agler "June 17th. Go with a load to Polly-- , of N.J., Pa.) a son of Franklin and take Mary and her Christian Aigler (N.Y.)? Address: little ones to her mother's and Mrs. Norville F. Young, 1968 Den-un- e take things to the camp house and Av.. Columbus, O. tools to quarry and return to Barrett Want ancestry of Franklin. Stay at Mother Jolley's. Ninnian Barrett (m. bef. 1789, Father on the railroad at work. Mary James), Franklin Co., Ga. 18th. Return and get more Address: Mrs. B. S. Burton, 104 . . . block things from the temple Georgia Av., Valdosta, Ga. "20th. Load up a wagon and Benam Want ancestry of ), Franklin m. RobDicie the start off for Benam quarries sons Susannah ert J., Llewellyn; all their ch. b. in taking wife, Joseph G. and Edward G., and Mo. Address: Mr. C. B. Wilson, boy Schiffman, also John Dowdle. 108 8th St., Hot Springs, Ark. Want parentage Took three of our cows and a Blankenship heifer, pigs, chickens; etc., and of James Blankenship (b. abt. get several things for camp at 1760, m. abt 1790, Mary Stringer), were to get them of Charlotte Co., Va., later of Ky. Smithfield as several pieces of quite a bill of Address: Mrs. George T. Tunnel!, 76 Caryl Av., Yonkers, N. Y. stone for their meeting house. e Want ancestry of "21st. Replaced glass that had been broken out of the windows, and data on Nathan built a bedstead, brought the (m. Holy Trinity Ch., Wilmington, Susan Hiland or Highwater to the house, and fixed Del., 1790, was John Boys (the father sowyards, chicken house, and pig land); of Nathan Hiland Boys), a son? pens. "22nd. Go to work in the quarry Address: Mrs. R. S. Hurtt, 73 11th Midland, Pa. and found several stones that StBranch Want data on Frances were prepared last fall and near m. 1776, Lodowick Tanner the hill edge rolled down and Branch, ). Address: Mrs. T. F. broken at the foot of the mounBush, 1421 Austin Av., Waco, Tex. . . . over to make again tain, Want ancestry of Copeland "Steadily at work until July $ ), of Copeland at noon when I with my boys Nancq Mass.; m. 1811, Hezekiah and old John started for Logan Quincy, Address: Adams of Milton, Mass. and on our way home heard of Mrs. F. F. Paul, P.O. Box 122, the attempted assassination of Newberg, Ore. President Garfield; also one of our Want ancestry of Lewis Cox brethern working on the canal Cox ), of Wolcott, N. Y.; falling some forty feet and rolling m. 1817, Effie Smith. Address: Mrs. alside down the mountain E. P. Warren, 605 S. 7th St., most killed. Lafayette, Ind. busito what attended 4th Want ancestry of Mary ."July Craig ness I could and returned to Craig (m. abt. 1835-4Maurice Frnklin Qarries, getting there Thomas), of Pine Creek, LycomRichard by midnight. ing Co., Pa. Address: 14th at 4:30 p. m. received a Strailey, 920 Penn. St., Williamstelegram from C. O. Card to come port, Pa. Dean Want ancestry of Jacob to Logan to have consultation about the rock on the block and Dean (d. Saratoga Springs, N.Y., the best disposition to make of 1830), m. Elizabeth. Mosher; had it, as they were In need of some Moses, Jacob, Mary. and could not wait until it could be got and shipped, and had stone GENEALOGIES at the block if cut into two pieces each they could be going along, . BEHIND THE SCENES Want data on James blacksmith of 1636), (1816-1902- d Some husbands are so that they even jump nervously when the goldfish growls at them. . Oi Logan City (Editorial) When boys wish to learn to play ball they need balls and bats. Girls who learn to cook need kettles and pans. They can read about these things but they learn much more about them if they can do the things they read about. Anyone who wishes to become a genealogist will be greatly aided in his efforts if he has a library of genealogical To aid genealogists the folbooks where he may engage in the actual work of seeking lowing record of deaths and No. 137, Franklin Quarry, 188L are Genealogists burials in Logan city is reeverywhere for his genealogy. (Continued) invited to submit their genecorded by city officials, is pubWe are indeed fortunate in having such a library here. for alogical publicaproblems The record begins in lished. More quotations from the diary tion in this column. In every Yet we fear it is not being used as it should be. Some 1865 and closes March 1933, of Ralph Smith, master quarry-maease the name and address of teachers take their classes to the library occasionally for Unless otherwise indicated at the Franklin Quarry durthe should be as sender given the persons named here were ll) ing the construction of the Logan no answers Will be printed. laboratory work, to give their students practical experience. K ouried in Logan city cemetery, not classes temple. are teachers in the Want other genealogical ancestry Many . About 7 "March 31st, 1881 . on Matson Ayers m. Carroll Co., to take advantage their best work because they fail of O., 1812, Elizabeth p. m. the railroad roundhouse also data doing Baker, Rachel Richards. Father this station (Logan) took fire on her parentage. Reed); Address: Mrs. of the help which the library can give them. John Richards. Mother Agnes Hill with five locomotives in it and Catherine P. Auld, Shelbyville, 111. b. 27. 1846 Montrose, d n Ezra Pinchpenny, the towns stingiest citizen, has been shining his shoes for 30 year with the same box of blacking. This is believed to constitute a new world's IK -- USE OUR LIBRARY History Of We solicit your contributions of each week. Isaac M. Stewart, Mother Eliza- beth White, b Mar. 4, 1857 Draper, Utah, d Apr. 4, 1925. Richard Alando. Ballantyne, 1936 Monday, March 16, Father Richard Ballantyne Mother Beckwith, Hulda M. Clark b June 1, 1848 Armaduke, Alvin, Bliss, Buckbee, Bugby, Bartlett, at Elkhorn, Neb. d Sept. 28, 1926. Binekerhoff, Bassett, Brewster, William Stewart. Ballantyne. Cole, Cox, Camp, Dean, de Charle-toFather Robert G. Ballantyne, Eaton, Farrington, French, Mother Mary Stewart b Jan. 17, Gage, Gowing, Gibbs, Goldsmith, 1912 at Ogden, Utah, d Aug. 16, Heath, Halstead, Hull, Johnson, 1912. Lovell, Jennings, Lawrence, Ball, James. Father Chas Ball, Lamont, Learned, Linsley, Lo.nas, Mother b June 7, Mills, Moore, Morgan, Merry, Pat- 1869 at Mary Evans, Neakh, Wales. England, d ten, Streetur, Smith, Starr, SherWhite, Aug. 1, 1930. Tilden, Sutton, man, Ball, Mary G. Father Franklin Wrgiht, Wilkinson, Woodard, WilMother Mary Ann Mansfield, liams. Grine, b Dec. 22, 1845 at New Wednesday, March 18, 1936 d. Dec. 26, 1914. Andrews, Adams, Ball, Brown, Hampshire, Ball, Robert James. Father Arta Burnham, Bull, Bellinger, Ballinger Jessie Balls, Mother Leona McBrooks, Cromwell,, Clark, Curtis Dennett, Neil, b Oct. 3, 1925 at Logan, Dickson, Davenport, Utah, d Oct. 28. 1929. Emerson, Eddy, Greenwood, HathBallard. Charles James. Father away, Hadlock, Hubbard, Jordan, Mother Margrct Jackson, Kirby, Lamb, Martin, Henry Ballard, Mason, Metcalf, Maynard, Nutter, McNeil, b 1867 d Sept 28, 1869. Ballard, Hellen Phebe, Father Penniman, Russe, Smith, Sanford, Tidd, Henry Ballard, mother, Margaret Steele, Searle, Simmons, Turner, Temple, Woodward, Whit-ston- McNeil, b Sept. 9, 1885, Iogan, d, Wheeler, Whitten, Young. Dec. 1, 1399. Ballard, Elvira A. Father, Henry Thursday, March 19, 1936 Burnham, Burnett, Beckwith, W. Ballard, Mother Alvira DavisCarter, Curtis, Doherty, Donald- son, b Mar. 14, 1886 at Logan, H son, Davis, Gorges, Herwin, Heath, Utah, d Apr. 8, 1889. Ballard, Emily E. b Feb. 1870. King, Lawrence, Marriner, Morrell, Minor, Nash, Perraway, Purchase, d July 30, 1870. Platt, Pyncheon, Perkins, RichBallard, George Albert Father ardson, Rogers, Rice, Stoddard, Henry Ballard, b Mar. 1870, d, Van Cott, Woohertom Wright, July 7, 1874. Wake, Warren. Warrick. Ballard. Hannah, b Apr. 9, 1799. d Sept 19, 1884. Friday, March 20, 1936 Berry, Buswell, Barnard, Burrill, Ballard, Henry. Father William Bassett, Bates, Batchelder, Ben- Ballard, Mother Hannah Kastli, b nett, Connett, Conet, Carts, Cate Jan. 26, 1832 at Thateham, Beck, Cochrane, Cutler, Cheney, Curtis, England, d Feb. 26, 1908. Danforth, Divoll, Darling, French, Ballard, infant Father Thomas Franklin, Flitn, Gagere, Griffin, H. Ballard, Mother Margaret S. Heard, Hassell, Hall, Bain, b. Feb. 5, 1921, d Feb. Galbraith, 5, Johnson, Kendall, Kingsley, Kyle, 1921. Lacey, Little, Loring, Lamson, b Jennett Ballard, McNeil, May Magna, 1868. d Lamberton, Lawrence, Sept 18, 1869. Manning, Martin, McLallen, NichMelH. Kenneth Father Ballard, ols, Farkhurst, Peet, Page, Richvin J. Ballard, Mother Martha Sprague, ards, Roberts, Stenens Jones, b June 29, 1903 at Logan, Temple, Fristram, Thompson, Woodward, Whitcomb, West. Utah, d Feb. 12, 1908. Ballard, Margaret M. Father Thomas McNeil, Mother Janneth -- J Reid, b Apr. 14, 1846 at Scotland, I LENDING d July 21, 1918. J Ballard, Mary Hanna. Father,' ADDS GENEALOGIES Henry Ballard, b. Jan. 1863, d July n, e. Til-de- n, LIBRARY 1874. 13, Ballard, The following books have, been added to the lending library in Chicago. These genealogical books may be borrowed by the patrons of our local public library. The only charge for this service is payment of the postage to and from Chicago. Campbell. Chart of descs. of Alexander Campbell of New Castle, Pa., by Ross T, Campbell, 1930 (C87a). Caldwell family, from History of Huntingdon and Blair cos., Pa. 11 pp., ms (C27). Campbell; Descs. of Alexander (b. 1767) by B. B. Burns; 3 pp. ms. (S87). Canada: History of Freeport, N. includes some famS., ily data; baptismal records. By Rev. Walter R. Greenwood, 1934; 46 pp., map (C129). Carman: Thomas C. and Phebe (Pruden) Carman, a family history with notes on Machet, Pruden, Kitchel, and some related families. By Albert P. Carman, 1935; 62 pp., index (C188). Carrall (s) of Mercer Co., Pa. By Emerson T. Carroll; 17 pp., ms. (C233). Carruthers: Records of the family (Scotch), by A. Stanley Carruthers and R. C. Reid, 1934; 197 pp., index (C240c. Cessno: The House of Cessna, second series. By Howard Cessna, 1935; 199 pp., illus., c. s. (C361). Charlemagne: Correction of des-sefrom Charlemagne thru the Kinsey family. By John I. Kin4 pp. ms. (C468a). sey: Charles: Chart of the family tree of Henry Charles (d. 1760) By Milton H. Diffenbaugh, 1935 (C 468z). Chase family record, descent through Daniel of Newton, N. H A. Bertram By Lenfest; 4 pp. ms. (C469). Chauncey family, nine generations By Stanton W. Todd, Jr. 1934; 51 pp. (C511). Chism notes, descs. of David, By Emily J. Chism; 19 pp., ms. 1784-193- 4; Car-ruthe- 1590-193- Phoebe, J. S. Father E. W. Smith, Mother Anna John, b Aug. 15, 1869 at Portridge, Utah, d Oct. 31, 1909. Ballard, Sterling William. Father Tbos. M. Ballard, Mother Phoebe J. Smith, b Sept 14, 1899 at Newton, Utah, d Aug. 22, 1924. Ballard, Willard Russel. Father l, Henry Ballard, Mother Emily b Nov. 26, 1872 at Logan, Utah, d Apr. 13, 1929. Ballard, William, b 1879, d May Me-Nie- 19, 1885. Balds, Fred. Father Fred Balds, at Pocatello, Ida. Bailiff, Father Alexandrine, Serge Bailiff, b Feb. 6, 1875 at Logan, Utah, d Sept. 3, 1875. Bailiff, Eliza M., b 1825, d Mar. b. Dec. 26, 1909 3, 1872. Bailiff, Eva Amila. Father Serge Bailiff, d Sept. 22, 1839. Bailiff, Herrietta Janette. Father John F. Vuffay, Mother Susan Marie Porchet. b May 7, 1834 at Switzerland, d Oct. 16, 1924. Bailiff, Henry. Father Serge L. Bailiff, Mother Harriet, b July 25, 1878 at Logan, Utah, d. July 25, 1878. Ballif, Serge L. Father John A. Ballif, Mother Bergve, b Apr. 17, 1821 at Perroy, Switzerland, d Apr. 25. 1901. Bailiff, Zelorna Angell. Father Turman O. Angqll. Mother Susan Savage, b July 21, 1859 at Salt f( Lake, Utah, d Apr. 11, 1924. Balling. Peter C. Father Chris-ra- n b Mother Maren, Balling, Mar. 20, 1840 at Denmark, d Sept. 1, 1914. Balling. Simonine. Father Simon Christeansen, b Mar. 30, 1851 at Vibory. Denmark, d Sept. 4. 1904. Balls, Deman S. Father Wilford Balls, Mother Marda Seamons, b Mar. 25, 1911. Hyde Park, d Nov. 25, 1921. Buried at Hyde aPrk. Balls, Geo. Melvin. Father Geo. David Balls. Mother Julia Wilber, b Aug. 4. 1902 at Hyde Park, Utah, d Nov. 28, 1925. Buried at Hyde Park. Conn., to 8th generation; includes Treat data. By Elvira H. and L. Clark, and others; 50 Choteau family; descs. of Rene Auguste and sollateral branches pp., ms.; index C701. : Descs. of Thomas Clarke-Clar- k of Clark, Cerre. and Soulard, By others. By Mrs. Voluntme C. Tur- Clarke of Plymouth, 1623-9ner, 1934; 143 pp , c. a.; index Rev. William W. Johnson, 1884; 183 pp., illus.; index (C720). ( C603 Ancestral chart of Clement: Churchill; ancestors and descs. of Charles b, 1814). By Bertram John B. Clement, 1907 (C735). A. Lenfest; 3 pp. ms. tC625). Cody: Descs. of Philip and MarClark: Some recent finds re tha Cody of Beverly Mass. By pp. garding the amestry of Gen. Luther M. Cody, 1927 ; 32 George Rogrs Clark of Milford, (C893). (C579). ) . Ed-wa- 4 k i |