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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL. MIDVALE, UTAH 1 JERICHO WOOL ··N;;~·N~t;;·j. It'• a P-:-ivilege to Live in : CLIP IS SOLO GOVERNMEGNTANDTHE UNIONS STILL FAR APART ON TERMS AMERICAN NAVAL PILOT MAKES CIRCUIT TRIP FROM KING'S BAY IN 16 HOURS UTAH'S BIG HOLDINGS CHANGE OWNERSHIP AT 34!12 CENTS A POUND For Effective Move Of Peace Coolidge and Secretary of Army and Navy Send Congratulations to Explorer; Byrd Accompanied By Floyd Benn~t Rumor Of Storage To Wait For High· er Prices Proves Without Basis. 1926 Clip Still Delow The 1925 Production When Parliament Go" Into Rece.. ; No Major Outbreaks. British government tradea unlon congress are &part. Neither has shown of giving away in the general entering upon its fourth has caused the greatest ln· uPheaval the British Isles eyer experienced. New York.-Lieutenant Commander Richard E. Byrd, United States navy aviat r flew o r the N 0 rth Pole 0 ve York Times and the• i' Sunday,' the New St. Louls Post-Dispatch ennounced. i Commander Byrd, first to accomplish 1 1 this feat, made Observing their annual custom, hundreds of Boy • the flight in fifteen :· hours and thirty minutes, leaving his · Scouts visit Arlington National cemetery and there liei!Dl•~r Balldwin still Insists that base at King's Bay, Spitzbergen, at : place a tiny American flag at the grave of each ltlltel'lal strike orders must be with· 12:50 o'clock Sunday morning (Green- ' soldier who gave his life for his country. before he will enter into new wich time) and returning safely at I T~~M~~~re~14:20Moodaya~r=oo. an emphatic "No" to such a con· but declare themselves ready hlto conference with the govern· with a free hand. of parliament Friday . ,.. d ... on ay removes another possi· ~1nrt1e of appeals for peace. The minister has the backing of the on the measures undertaken to the strike situation. A labor ~mE1nt seeking to modiry a clause government's bill for the proof property was defeated by majority. ltellllplat'Y conduct on the part of i8 again called for by the leaders, and they are ·obeying •th .... a ra er unexpected way, for at two places in Scotland have 1ri<IU8 disorders occurred. Three !numerable clashes, the of windows, the overturning minor attacks on lke-br·eakers. and similar incidents, ill an amazing manner, hte two or mUlfon men involved direcUy in ltrlke are keeping the peace. Musaelburgh, near Edinburgh, lleJro~ts passengers were injured in • tta.cll: on a t ra 1n. F lve po1Icemen many clvllans were hurt suf· to make hospital treatment blf'lil8ary. At Glascow, always a in time of strikes, the police roughly handled, and some' of rioters were arrested. Salt Lake City.-ln view of the fact that lambs are moving to the market later this spring from several sections, indications are that lambs from Utah and other states of the intermountair. region. w!ll meet with considerable competition when shipped out, George A. Scott, federal livestock statistician for the seven western states announ· ced recently. Salt Lake Clty.-Memebers of the state road commission expect to arrive at some final decision Monday 1... regarding what they shall do toward ~"" teducing the grade on the Roc,f.ille ' hill section or the highway lea8tng ··' . Harris Wool company for 3472 cents, it was announced by Marcus Harris, from Zion Park to the Grand canyon, · vice president o! the purchasl'ng com· it was announced by Henry H. Blood, pany, who negotiated the deal with chairman of the road commission. At the committee representing the Faun· present there is a 22 per cent maxi1 tain Green sheepmen. This sale was mum grade on the hill and the rqllrd is unu~c~d.furjutafuwdaysagol considered extremely dangerous, esdoing the unexpected. As. after the werd was pa~seu around in Salt Lake pecially In wet weather. battle of Cold Harbor, when Lee was wool circles that Jericho was ulanning \Vashington.-This year's winter expecting him to cross the_ Chlckn- to ship to Salt Lake and store, antic!· wheat crop will be a bout 150,000,000 hominy, Grnnt executed one of tho> I pating a market above that exist.iug bushels arger than lnst year's, it-w.as most brilliant flank mo\·ements ever At . .t .d J . ho estimated by the agricultural depart· now. one time I was sar enc recorclecl of any army, wht'n, with t!H' . . ment, but with the exception of last Army of the Potomac, 11:1,000 strong.j was contemplatmg holdmg for 40 Rumrner's harvest, it is expected by he crossed the .James river nt Wilcox cents. the department to be the smallest Landing, entirely eluding Lee's ob· 1 The 1926 Jericho clip is expected to since 1917. servatlon and constructing for the t amount to approximately 800,000 lbs. Ca~<tle Dale.-The farms and even purpose one of the greatel't military This is but an estimate, for about the waste lands are looking better this bridges that the wnt·ld hns seen since senm days' shearing remain before the days of Xerxes, lenvlng Lee for the men at the Jericho corral. Opin- spring than they haYe for years In n<:'arly n week In absolute ignorance ions of wool specialists is that the this valley. The storms haye greatly of his whereabouts. Here Is what a Jericho clip this year is one ot tho benefited crops. From the mountains distinguished foreign Il}illtary critic best ever assembled by the Fountain east of here, to the mountains west the bas written of that campaign: "There 1 Green sheepmen. It is in good con· green grass and alfalfa are growing were so~diers more accomplished, as ~- dt'tt'on, of fi'ne texture and of the extremely fast. The hillsides fur.qJsh . excelltn pasture for the herds. was McClellan: more brilliant, as was 1 choices star'e. Rosecrans ; and more exact, as was o Buell, but it would be difficult to At 800,000 pounds the 19~G Jericho Price.-Otto Herres, assistant gen· prove that these generals, or Indeed is_ somewhat below that of the 1925 manager of the United States Fuel any others in the services, could have clip, Last year the Jencho p?ol re- Company, and judge Charles W accornp11shed the task which Grant jected all contract offers pnor to Morse, company attorney met with. the brought to complete success in that shearing and elected to store in Salt Price city council in a special session campaign." Lake. At the time of sale, which was Saturday evening for the purpose ol HI E d T I late in the season, the clip amounted perfecting an agreement between the 11 n rag c. to approximately 1,000,000 pounds. city of Price and the fuel company for And then the tragic close of that Each year woolmen of the range states the least of the fuel company's water great career that was like the climax and the trade at Boston watch with of a Greek tragedy, still too fresh In interest developments at the Jericho storage rights at Kyune. If the agree· the memory for Its poignant passages corral, for that clip is one of th·J "key" ment is consummated, Price city will to be recaUed-the struggle with sor· aggregations of choice wools that work be assured an adequate water supply did political environments, the wreck toward establishing a domest!c marlret in years to come. of fortune, the last sad days at Mount figure. VernaL-According to the report of McGregor, with the nation's heart In Principal Robert L. Pixton, the Uintah Salt of the Jericho means that apits throat. Out of It comes forth in hi~b school will graduate this spring clear and resonant utterance his "Let proximately 50 per cent of this year's the largest class in the history of U<;~ have peace," and his primal vislou Utah clip has passed from the hands Vernal. Fifty students up to the preof the coming of a day when "the na· of the producer. For· the most part, s.:,nt time will have completed the tlons of the earth will agree upou the pl'ice has been around 35 cents. prescribed course of study by the end some sort of congress, which will take The Vernal and Uintah basin wools of ~je, present school year. cognizance of International questions, were the first to go, bringing 34% whose decisions will be as binding as cents for the bulk and 35 cents for Ogden.-The Weber county commisthe decisions of our Supreme court the finer grade. The transactions in sioners, state road commissioners a d are upon us"-a vision that paved the the Uintah uasin opened the spring B. J. Finch, district engineer of t e way for The Hague tribunal, the first buying activity and svotted buying United States bureau of public roads, step toward a parllament of the followed in all sections of the state. came to an agreement upon the course world. The man of war passed from to be pursued in the building of the the stage in a dream of peace-his Weber Canyon Road Discussed highway south of Ogden into Weber last message to the people a praye Salt Lake City.-Inspection of the canyon. possible location of the Ogden-Devil's Salt Lake City.-Anticipating that i Gate road south of the paved section the number of motor vehicles in the 1 of Washington avenue at Ogden to the state will aggregate this year 100,000, the motor vehicle department of the 1 mouth of Weber canyon and along the ! north side of the canyon was made secretary of state last Thursday plac! recently by Henry H. Blood, chairman ed an order for 10,000 additional li· ' of the state ro:;d commi~ >ion; W. J. cense plates. The numbers will range Parker, member of the commission; from 90,001 to 100,000. The total H. S. Kerr, aatiistant engineer, and K. number of plates issued up to ThursC. \\'right, district engineer of the day is 77,673. commission; B. J. Finch, federal dis· Ricbfield.-The Sevier county farm trict engineer, and J. H. Young, enbureau held a meting at the CQIJ.rt· gineer of the bureau of public roads, bouse last Thursday evening and plan· , and engineers of the Union Pacific ned a vigorous campaign for the de' railroad and Utah Power & Light comstruction of weeds within Sevier coun; pany. The location of the road on the particularly white top, which is ty, north side of the canyon to Devil's rapidly becoming a menace. Ha.;den Gate is being considered, and it this state commissioner of agriis dmtP-, it is announced the road will R. D. Wadleigh. member of I be an all-winter highway to Echo can· board of agriculture; J. C. ' yon and Evanston, ·wyoming. 'n'-''"'"'uu, extension agronomist of the : It is estimated that the ro:v1 wili Agricultural college; the county , cost in excess or ~~00.000, and efforts cc;W[tlilrlissi<mE~rs and members or the 1 are being made by the road officials bureau were in attendance. and engineers to arrive at sor.1e con; elusion regarding Rome !nte~media Lake City.-Swollen waters in : type of road bet ween that which coste of Davis county, caused $10,000 per mile and that whirh w rains threatened to wash of thnnkfulness that peace hntl comP, I cost $~0,000 per mile. A p the crib darns put in by lhe state as he lwpPd, to PPrmanently remain. maeadam is being eonsideretl . pre\·ent gravel from flooding the "If It Is withlu God's providence," hP I means that after the gravel highway, it was announced by wrote, wlleu hi~ tong.~e was uo l(ln;:cr is prepared with 5 ~ or G inches C. Knowlton, engineer in charge aule to ~tter_ ~~ ~r.ch thnt' ~ shnnltl ..:c: , gravel, about 2% inches of stone ag. 1 or maintenance for the state road comnow, I um lc.t. ~ to ohe) Ills cal, i gregate bound tog-ethc>r"with an as- ' mission. wltho_ ut a llllltlllur. I a1u. thankful Ij Ph a It'IC prepara t·1011 WI-11 b e pu t on WI'th . for the proYi!lt'ntlal extenswn of m1· a c.uppe d stone sm·_ace. r Salt Lake 1 . rol 1eu1 m. An· _., City.-Joseph Decker, tlnle to Colltl!llle rny wor k , an d IJl' . . . president !r.'"othe Decker-Patrick com· en•thlnll rue t f 1 other preparation bemg considered is · Cllll ·"e· It IJ•ts '' • ' o see or ' h . · · . . pany of Salt Lake, was named presimyself the happy hanuony whic-h h>t~ 1 a l 1g t. P1an~·mtxed lntnmm01., mater· so suudenly 511 run~ 111, hetween th . ·jial wh1ch w1ll be placed on ahout twco den_t of the Utah S~1ippers' Traffic as· "' os• i h tl · k soc1ation at a mPetmg at the ch:ailtbetr t'nKaged but a few ~hort .years au.,o ·111 nc es uc · of commerce of the ·new board deadly contllct."-Kansas City !::itar· r s. L. & Utah- Ry. To Build Spur rectors of the aRsoclatlon. I\Ir. Salt Lake City.--Utah's famous wool clip the Jerico, said to be the largest pool or hJ"gh·gJ·ade v.·ools in the United States was sold Monday to the B. I I I !================================================= G t' G • S ld• Adm• , d 1er b y War Stu dent s Utah i .......................... The entire population of Kings Bay 1 which were of the very essence of turned out to welcome the American's ran S eDIUS aS common S<'nse. Like Foch, Grant return. Captain Amundsen, Lincoln was the first man to put his finger Ellsworth and the crew of their air· 0 Ire upon the weak spot of the federal ship Norge, on which they plan to military organization In the early f tl I I f make a similar fli~ht. greeted Com· years o te war-t te ack o cenmander Byrd upon his descent. trallzed control nnd of co-operation Byrd was accompanied on his flight amc.ng the different armies. Ills first by Floyd Bennett, chief petty officer But Always in His Heart In the naval air service. Commander Was a washington-Congratulations an his air dash over the North Pole went Man of Peace. forth to Lieutenant Commander Richard E. Byrd from President Coolidge, Ulysses Simpson Grant- chance Secretary Davis of the War depart· gave him the "Simpson" for a middle ment and Secretary Wilbur. name-was born In a little two-room Mr. Coolidge, on a cruise down the cottage, near the river front, at Point p t PI t Ohl t 11 lllage o omac on the Mayflower, caused casan , o, a s ragg ng v this statement to be issued at the perched on a bend of the Ohio river White House: about twenty-nve miles southeast of "The President sends his happiest Cincinnati, Aprll 27, Hl22. congratulations to Commander Byrd He was graduated from West Point on the report that he has flown to the In 1843, No. 21 in a roll of 89, with a North Pole. It is a matter of great rank of second lieutenant, and was satisfaction that this record has been stationed at 1e1l'erson barracks, near made by an American. The fact that St. Louis. Before the Mexican war the flight seems to have been accom· broke out he had courted and won pUshed without mishap demonstrates the heart of Julln Dent, the daughter the high development of the art of of a big planter, but did not marry her Until August 22 1848 six montha flying In this country." • after the war had come to• an end. He'' New York.-Commander Richard 1 had none of the war rever-It was Evelyn Byrd in flying to the North not a war that made any apx;eal to Pole from Kings bay and back in fif· his patriotism and Grant was never GRANT..S Bli'CTI-IP1ACE,PotNT PLEASANT teen hous and thirty minutes, demon· a militarist in principle. Hut Grant ~~e. ClfltoR!vE:R..-> strated that wings could do in less was a soldier and took orders. He than a day what Admiral Peary, dis· went Into the battle of Palo Alto a great stroke was one that showed his coverer of the North pole, consumed second lieutenant, in May, 1846, and exceptional genius for the strategy of eight months In negotiating by dog entered t11e City of Mexico 1G month!l Wllr. MEANS WEALTH TO UTAH sled. • ( later, with the same rank, although Not only did he grasp the imporHis giant three-motored· airplane ' he was frequently mentioned In re- tance of the capture of VIcksburg, carried him safely over wastes which ports for gallant conduct and was but his execution of the campaign Amundsen last year pronounced un- afterwards brevetted flrst lieutenant that ended In Its downfall was charsafe for airplane flight,- and the dis· and later captain for dlstlngnlsbed acterlzed by the first real evidence of military genius that had developed In Lake City.-A general rain over tance traveled, roughly 1600 miles, gallantry In the field. was equal to more than a month's After the close of the war, Grant the war up to that time. He was the of Utah is worth iD, the neigh· of $6,000,000 an inch. Wed- mushing in the Arctic under the most continued In army service untll 18M, first of the American generals to per· ideal condlti'>ns for dog teams. when, despairing of making a llvell- celve that In a comparatively fertile ~ut,.,.. ., ram which was fairly general hood for his famlly out of his meager country It was not necessary to ln.· _........ to .85 of an Inch, and was I salary and having no ambition for a cumber his movements with commlsill'ellore not merely a "million dollar Government Installs Grading Outfit military life, he resigned his commls- sary Impedimenta, but that the thing but a "five m1llion dollar rain." Salt Lake Clty.-Woolgrowers may slon and went back to the plow. Then to do was to let his army lh·e on the eoaclusion is reached by Salt have samples of wools graded and weather man, J. CecU Alter, scoured, free of charge, by filing an followed years of biting poverty and country and to make Its necessities s uaea the following line of reason· application w1th the bureau of agri· of suceeSBive falhires as a farmer and spur to quick and decisive action. It In business-wasted years, dreamy was a Napoleonic Idea. All Of Grant's Last year the value of all of culture economics of the federal deIndolent years, hopeless and neglect- plans for the VIcksburg campaign 's agricultural crops, Including partment of agriculture, where a wool ed years. But failures nevPr daunt8!1 were novel and startlingly bold-new and livestock, amounted to scouring laboratory is now available him-he never cursed his luck. If methods of warfare entirely to the $10,000,000. This was produced for conducting such tests as facilities I one thing failed, be tried another and men and the officers under him-yet total of sixteen inches of precipi- will permit. The applicant w111 be nenr despaired- neither, perhaps, he had the faculty of Impressing them maldng it a simple matter of sent_ a parcel post mailing sack and in· did he hope for much. Then on April with their feasibility. Vlcli:~<burg Jt]l:metlc to determine the money 11, 1861, the shot that opened for stands unchallenged today as a rua::~ f i h t Alth h structions as to the proper method of , 1 outgh drawing a sample so that It will be~ htm the door of opportunity was Hretl ter stroke of strategy, with Grnnt in 9 an ntoc 0 didra n.t s rm no cover e state whUe the $90 000 000 d representative of any larg~ lot of raw at Sumter-and It found Grant walt- the role of the master strategist. Proof of Genius. • • ' oes wool in the grease. Expenments con- log at the door. On the 15th the .....ldeld Yalue accrued an augmenta·, ducted in the laboratory during the , news reached Galena that Lincoln had called for volunteers. on the Grant's strategy at Chattanooga of ~cC::%i~ip~~ ~:.erA~~~pl~~s. past year have yielded valuable lnfor·l 19th Grant was drilling a company was another evidence of his genius gti 'mt e mat!on on scouring loss or "shrinkage" and In a week he led his men to that biiOught acclnhn from the se,·erwas a me1y one, co ng . a large variety of domest1c raw Sprlngfleld the capital of Illinois, to est of his critics. The battle was • t •-......, when crops were b a dly i n of The results have prove<l of wools. tender his services to the nation. fought out upon Grant's plans nnd of molsture aftera d ryspe 11 of · · -ee'"- th it great interest to many woolgrowers Was Grant a l!reat m!lltary genius? under his immediate direction, and 1 1 .. a.a, us s vaue was rea. . sreater. and their practical application w1ll en· Bow often was that question asked In Grant's recognition of the •'psychoable any producer to obtain a reason· the days of storm and stress when, logical moment" for the final attack w1nter and spring wheat, al- ably accurate estimate of shrinkage silent and unexplalnlng himself he that won the buttlc would have degard1!1n crops, fruit trees and went smashing through the best lahi I lighted the heart of Napoleon-that crass-In fact all grow1ng Ca ttl e T ra II s Ma d e H't& t ory was an achle\'l~nwnt ufter· the great were t h e b ene fi claries of the \ 8 a It Lak e Cit y.-A somewh at co1ormaster's own teachings. And In those !Rtl!O'ur which lasted nearly twelve ful plcturizatlon ot the d s wh tremendous final campaigns that elld· Qlty water supplies were also ay en er at Appomattox, the stu<ll'nt or helped. At Mountain Dell 1.71 longhorn bee~ cattle ran over the strategy will fine! muth to lutcrest fenceless plams of the west, trailing were repor t e d an d a t th e mou th many m1les . !Jim, to clinch his faith In Grant's each spring and fall from 1 Btg Cottonwood canyon 1 Inc h . genius. Here we begin first t'l heur winter to summer ranges, is to be . r a1n t e11 on th e va 11 eys, snow of Grant's policy of "attrltlon"-the til hi h t ddt had m the April letter of the livestock terrible attrition of the Wildernes>~. 011 me i tg ertmtohun a 1ns, a tng bureau of the Armour Packing com· of Spott~ylvanla, M Cold Ihtrbur, of . o 11 ure o e summer s orreae"oirs pany. In th1s bulletin, Dr. E. N. Went battle after buttle, without rest or · wortlf, director of the bureau, tracea I ceasing, until Lee was wor·n down. the influence of these old pioneer cat· nibbled away to nothing by Gt·ant's America May Reap Benefit tle trails, now heard of only in extant Rut it was merciless momentum. cowboy songs and stories and legend not ull "attrition," not all h:nnm<'riu:r. M:ass.-The general strike of the open plains, in. livestock mark· There were remarkable flashes of his J!lnglan4 has thrown all wool clr- ed development. 1 strategic genius often evltl<'tlcN1-he tn America into a state of general 1 was the orie general who w·ts alw.tys Many gueses are made Commercial Ships Have Big Tonnage 1 =================~================ l'e•:a1"1illlltl!: Ui possible effect. Much deWashington.-More than one-halt : i Salt Lake City.-Acceptance by the upon its duration. Good judges the gross commercial ship tonnage I receivers of the Salt Lake &. Utah that Its import ls so terrific It under the American flag was private. "' 1 railroad of the franchise granted by WLD<It last long. If wool tops and ly owned on April 1, lt was disclosed j the city commi8sion to hnlld and mainshipments from England are in figures compiled by the shipping with mo!as~es, and piled them In pan~. 1 tain a spur traclr running into th() ~ade impossible, the continent may board for the tirst quarter of 1926 . j There is, or was, a couple of years As the hungry soldiers pas~ed her doo~; Cutler property on the wm!h si·le or to America for supplies to take Thirty-one additional ships passed into l ugo, a little old rusty Iron stove o: she gave t)tem bread, lt·respe<."tlve (,f i Ninth South street, between MHin and place of those lately bought in private h d d i th · ~~~~:~~ primitive pattern rarefully prest'n·ed an s ur ng e quarter, their i by the Davls family of Gettysburg, the color of the uniforms they wor<'. West .: rernple streets, was filed witil rl.o>nd-on. If English m!lls cannot fill tonnage being 131,512. These trans· I Later in the dar, b:;cll)' wounded or the City commission. The franchise ~n"n orders from American impOrters, fers brought the tonnage of the pri- pians of technical military men-how Pa., In memory of Josephine Davis, a dying men ~<tumbled to her door, and carries the co.ndltion that $50,00 shall mills may get additional vately owned merchant marine up to 1 often, too, In the after days when the brave girl who did what she could to were taken in and tendPrly cared fot be expended on building and improve I alleviate the sufferings of hath nrmles · 5,622,470. , experts and the memoir writers were the first day of the great battle. Jo;;e- hy this heroic glt·l. The tiny <1wc>!lfng ments on the property. 11§lng his campaigns. 1 1 Ul c phlne was only eighteen at the time, was !Hied to cnpacit~·. Its "·ails llllll n nta ounty Progreulng j' Light And Power At Idaho Falls Sold · Know War In All Ita Phases. but a notable bread baker and house- tloot·s Wl're hlood-stalne<l. nn<llt edwpcJ Idaho Growers Sell Much Wool 1 with groans. All the sheets, tahl~ Vernal, Utah.-A. G. Nord, supervi· Idaho, Falls, Ida.-conectlons for ! Grant was a pioneer In the business keeper. When the guns begun to rumFiler, Idaho.-A carload of wool was of the Ashley national forest wm electric light and water furnished by . of big driving and big pushing and u ble she arose and stoked up her little _cloths, towels and underwear in thP shipped from here to Philadelphia last season issue permits for the 'graz. the city during the fiscal year whclb : past master, as well, of the 'patient stove with wood. She was alone In house were torn up for bandage>. week which included the product oi of t 8 000 head of sheep and 9 800 ended April 30, were $151,258.39, E. R. : art of attrition that we heard so her little cottage, all her men folks Some of the less serlou!<ly hurt helped fifty local wool growers, the total of ~ttle and horses on the s~m- Underhlll, city clerk, reports. This il! ; much about In the late Wprld war. having gone with the Southern army, her to cure for the worst cases, after weight of the two shipments being a gain over the preceedlng year o\ Grant always knew what he wanted and the nelJihbors had fled. for the ~he had bound up their wounds. Sev- I ranges of the forest. No permits · $11,098.87. Water collections amount- ' to do-behind all his big driving and row of small houses of which hers enteen dead soldiers-both In blue and · 36,000 pounds from which the growers gray-were carried from JoRephlne's received a total return of $11,500, ac· graidng of swine will be issued., ed to $39,656.02 and· those from elec: : big pushing was Grant's clear and was one, was In the line of battle. cording to D: N. EnP,'lebright, agent number of permits for sheep, cat· , tric light and power were $11,602.37. I quick thinklng brain that saw far an<l She had only a half barrel of flour cottage after the battle was over, and for M. McNamara, Buhl dealer for the and horses ts approximately the · Light and power receipts for lasf , planned boldlf, according to the rules and some molasses ln the house, but double that number of wounded 1 Charles Webb concern, says the Filer aa JUt year. The supervisor month were $2,099.75. more than foJ ! of war that he had learned at West she baked up all the ftour Into great thanked and blessed her when the am· Jlecord. The growers received from 1 the raacea at preaent are iD the corresponding month a year ago Point, supplemented by some rules crusty loaves; these loaves £he sliced bulanee bore them away.-Kan!<as City ao to 32 cer,ts a pound for the wool, 1 ~- coatlUOL tbe report of the city clerk showed. tbat were pecullarlJ' h1a own and • m thick generous pieces, coyered them Times. ' according to grade. I I I 1 I l :-.e I ,j I I i I I Young Woman Heroine of Gattysburg II I I I I ' succeeds Frank B. Cook, who resigned. Salt Lake City.-Since water level of Twin La I 1\rary at Brighton has 111 1 the st~:rm two f•'et, ""'" "' for storage before the H. K. Burton. city waterworks, said tance telep!wne 1 works cabm at night. l ' I f |