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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Friday, February 10, 1928 ...................... 'j\You.:l\9 Colon.ia Na.:me ,~ a Priuil•ll• to *·~~* ? How the Useful in g Plants Came ~ .......................... l'ANGUITCH-fresent prospects for abundant crops next summer are no. promising, accnrd!ng to careful check of precipitation to .iate. Although the section receivud as much early snow as usual, many midwinter storms of other parts ·f the stat,] have been missed by Panguitch. Thfs fact, link· ed with the reality that thfs section has had light bnowfa!l f.,r three win· ters past, makes tne adequacy of next summer's water supply doubtful. A pr<'mfs!ng featura o! thfl outlook Is that heavy fall ral.rs left the ground well saturated, and has Insured good spring working conditions. Early range Js also very promising, due to the heavy fall rains and the snowfall to date. s Few lnhal..JtRnt!ll: of Colonial America f:O wirlt!ly or con~1l1Uously as d d t;torge \Vashington and it I~ nr-t too much to SUPI•o~e that Lrnveled the country this ac ;ualn•ance w th h's nath·e J:utd had a 1iecitltd btaring UilOn that IJrc,:ul potrioti . ...- w 1 ('h was his distingutshl!tg mar:tc fn1m the moment he took Ccmma,d of the Continental armies. In this, the ftr.t twriod of hi• life, ht! trsvele,l from \VIlllam!-burg \·a, tn Lake I·:rlc, from ,.tount \·-crnon to the Shel ~udoah. Ptonnsylvanta an,d E·'ort Pitt, fr0111 Winchestfr, up the tihenrn· d· nh valley to the :-;orth ('ur0llna line, from ~fount Vernon to Ohio and lower \\'est I rginla beyond the Alleg,ny m'lunlalns, from Williamsburg Into the tirt:"lt Dismal E.Wamp ann from Mount \·€'rnon to Baltintore. Phllad~lphia, r\ew 'fork and Bo51ton, not to me:':ltlon -··. Washington's False Teeth t:r:• I t:Jil yrars ngo dPntl;;trs rom· 1•ri. e<l lit lie mor~ !hun <'ium'y meth· n<ls of pxtra<'tinn a11tl was largrly the n•·Jrnt:on of harhers an<! tl c trnde of trn,elln:; utc o•h puller~." l'auJ HeYere. 1 .ltrif•t atHl s!. rh"uith. pral'!i<·Nl den· ti8\t)'. -,Jolm C:rc·Pnwuod, a Cmttinenl'll trooper, ;;aired Sllf'h n sldll that he <l!ppllet'l < ,rn··ral 1\'J~hington with a full set of •eel~ eoned f"oru a hippo· pvtam~s tnsk. The most notPd of the a voyage to the \\~~H Jndie~. frequent tritJS to Annapolis, Maryland, anti the many thnps he traveled up ond down the 4 'Xortht'rn ~('c:k'' to attend the scs· slon of the house of tJUrgesfeS at old Williamsburg. In the~e last mentioned journeys he ortf'n cros:sed into !\Iaryland, to recro~~ again Into VIrginia and vice vPrsa, to avoid the mud and hea\'y going of the o\11 Potomac path clown the we~t hRnk of thn t river. The journe,y:-:~ to \\'iillamshurg, from ~r,,unt \yernon, hy way of Fredericl:.:Bburg or Port Tobacco, .\Iaryland, 'vere made ~o many time& that it i• regrettable that none of the old inns, or "ordinaries," at whJch \\~ashing~on was wont to stay, hav,• survived. The state of Yirglnl:\ is now eatnN;tly ut ""·or}{ upon a !-iY~tem of markers, or tablet5, for tts hif:torfc spots a11d the locations of the more lmJJOrtant, nt Least, of the~e hostelries win. doubtles!:', be flxed ns a rf'>sult, l.IUt ns the LUJhlings themselv(;>s di~ap .. penred long t1eforp photography was Tl:Cognized ae n \'aluaLJe art1 there l:<i 1)mall lil<diho,•ll that authentic pictures of many of them will ever b~ rou n'l. Pr1or to Wa,hington's marriage IIIJd while he was in command on the fron- tier, he tra\'t•lf'd, almost entirely, on horst-back and there nre ln<llc~ttions that the excess! :e and h:u·rl riding of those frontier days wa~ largely respon~ib!e for one of the ~c\·ere 111 nes.~e~ of his life. I·~xcepting the western plain!';men of later <J:1ys, tht•rt> ar•· rew Americ-ans who have tllJ<'llt so much of their lin·~ In the ~addle' a~ rlirl George \VnshJngton fl.nll fflw parallel:s c~n he found In AmerlC'an 11 story for tht" riding performed hy him in hi~ RerYicE'P to his ~tate and to the natt:-•n Nearly all of the ri<ling, during the perio<l co\·ered by thiP volumE>, \\"t fl through region~ wild, or !':parE=ely !-lot~ tied, minus the ud,·antages of hi)Od ronlls anr1 frequently upon nothln~ h~t lt!r than an Indi:tJl trnil or hunthu~ path, expo~ed many times to th~ arrow or hu"le-t of the ~avnge. Althou~h the hnnl; i' fn ef'fel'l r. ''<f~l_\"·hY·day'' Hf>I"OU111 of • flf the :tdirftj(';o; 1\'asllin~tMI owr this pPrin<l nf )·t·:u·~. tomplt•te onl~· ~o far a~ >lf' (·p,:;;ihiP •'o•·nmrnts m·ke It "'"'il·lr to (·ompile ;;uf'h a rpeor<l. nntl thHe fpre lnc·ldn~ ll!P nnrrati\·p :tPitPH' ot t~l: pr hn(lks Jn \Ya::-:llin:,:ton which lun·e npJ1l'UrPc1 in incre-a::>in.~ nmnlwr~ thrr·e i:'\ n w.wld dnrinr~ I'P("l'llt ,\'Par:--. of humnn lntert>;;t in ~ome f'f thP~~ <lncl.lllPnt;;. 'l'twre f~. for exnmple. \Ya;;hington's :wcount of Rrntl.l<wk·s pioneers mul t ~Je folltlfler of dentistry h1 this com,t•r wns .r J~rph I.e ~In in•, friend of Lafu~·f'ttP, who londrtl in .\'ewport lu 1780. .James GnrdPt'e nn1l .Josiah I''r"" two of his pupils, he· rome IP:nkn; in the proft·ssion. I· leg;: wns the IJr,t to usc gold 11ili11~,;. The First Inauguration Gporge \\'wshin)1ton wos ina,t;..mr·ntrd I'I'P.Sitlent lilt' H <I ti 1e tn :'>\pw YOI'k on Apt·il :m. liSfl. '!'he oath of ofllc!' was llllmin\.tered hy llnhert Lh·ing,ton, chancellor of the state or 'lS • T he Bea n ditTering vurletles, I Nan1THEIH lentils are widely It has bern cou~ldered tmprnrtlcal to mul;e pupcr from \Jamboo because it wns ',{>xpen~i\-e to ri'duce and seemed un t1le1chnhll.'. It Is stated that tbese har.d.cnpq haYe been overcome ontl th at a plar.t In IG·lla Is to prodnce bnmboo ru·p in cornmerdai quantities at ... ren~onuble price. Giue Good fo r Evil rt is n .. excuse for killing time to as rl,at tl~:,e wil l en'ntunlly do that Tolerant in Religion 11ell;:ious toieran<'e was dc~r tn t11e heart of George Washington, ju< ~ing frnn• n letter which he wrote to the third general com·entlon of t 1c I·~rtsc(•i•·ll church fn Plliladelp!Jfa In Au:::ust, li n. The letter was in nnswer to one congrutulnting him on his el~\'ntion to the Presidency, The letter said in part: "On this occasion It will Ill become me to conceal the joy I hayc felt In beans disper~;ed O\ er the fare of the earth. both the Oltl world and the New, and there are pwb11bly 20 species that are nn· lives of tropical Amerl<'u. The bean whil'h most (,)eople mPan, however, wlwn tltey use the word, the commo11 wl1ite benn. Is said by botanists to be ns old as the earliest migrations of the Arran race Into Europe from Its ancient home somewhere In south· western Asiu. For all we know, the bean is as old ns any cuftiyateil plant nnw known to mnu. llomer·s "Iliad mentlt•ns tile heuu us a culth·ated plant und the scien· tlst, \'irchow, found beans In o tomb at Troy. It was widely used \n Rome. E\·en in \'ery ancient Roman times people followed the rite of plncing brans In the snerifices to some of their deities. Ancient Inhuhitunts of Switzerland nnd Italy, In the ugc of hr·onze, cui· tiYated a small \·af'iety of the common bean, some of which haYe been found in the kitehen dumps of the very ancient Swiss lnke dwellings. Beans were cuitivate•l by the !~gYP' tfuns of olden times. Because beans !IJ'e so abundant a crop In f'hin:t, ~ome ha~e ad\·anced the theory that b~ans actually origl· uated there. One scientist has offerecl e\·irlenre that of the tlve plants which the Emperor Chin -nong commanded 4,()0{) years ngo to he sown earh spring with solemn ceremonial, was the ber.n. It has been ~hown, howe\·er, thnt this was not the plant we mean when we say bean, but was the soya or soy bean Soy beans are still one of the prinriJI:tl ct·nps of north Chinn and MnndluJ·in and ha\'e heen lntrnducecl profitably into F:urope and Amerl<'a In 1·ery recent years. Beans pt·obably are nowhere found wild tnrlay, The best evidence goes to show that they originated In two spots, one south of the l'a~pinn sea, when<'e went the first Aryan , fmml· grants Into Asia ~linor and F:orope, a11d the other, in the northern part of Aft·i<'a, lands such as E~ypt, the hlntel'land Lf Cartlmge, and the rich coastal districts now held by the Moors and Berbers. The nath·e area ot the bean as a natural tJiant probably has been grow· lng less nnd less 0\"er a tremendously long periorl of time until today Its extinction as a wild forrn is complete. So the bean joins the honot·ed circle of things that ha>e been here "al· wn,rs," or nt least as long as history and legend record, and even longer still than that. Though there mny he but two places where ft Is a nutlre snn, it is at least an early and pioneer ~!'ttler wherever mankind now lives, under civilization. and <'Onditions fa· vm·ablc to Its cultivation. "Luckies never cut my wind"says Billy Burch, Captain of N.Y. Americans' Hockey Team "I can't afford to take any chances with my physical condition. That's why I stick to Luckies. In addition to the pleasure I get from their fine flavor, they have never cut my wind to any no.. ticeable degree.F ina f... ly, I never suffer with sudden coughing tvhich might be very dangerous for me when there's a scram.. ble on the ice." ,, The Watermelon 0 '\E becomes con\'inced that there Is nothing new in the world when he learns that the watermelon comes f1Tm Africn an<l grows wild by thou· ~rnds in the nath·e l10me of the race wl!icll fancies It most. It I~ one of relnti\'ely fpw widel.v lli~per>ed food plants that ennw in the first instanre frum the Dark contineut. 1\':~shin~ton: Eren as re~ent 8 holanh·t as the As 1 have heard, since my arrl\·at stations establ~shed at Vernal, Bonita, grPnt Rwetlt>, Linnneus, helie\·ed the at this place,' a circumsluuti•II ~eeou .t Altonah, Mt. Emm~ns, Roosevelt and w:JtennPion to have come fmm south· of my death nnd dying sve<·cl1, I take I Myton. Several of the farmers are em !tal~·. where he had seen it gmw· this \·arty opportunity of <·ontra•licting Increasing their herd~ of milch cows, lng In ubuntlutlce. The ptnnt had 'he first and of a••urlng Y<1u thai 1 I while others are beginnina to engage have- not as: Y<'t t."ompo~tll lhe Iotter :... ~preafl <lut·ing the dnys of ancient rlv· \\'flat a chnnce was ln~t there to In dairying. ilizntions, nnd !It the oppning of the :tntidpatP hy mnre than 8 C!'IJ(Ury MOAB-Approvai of a continuation <'llri~tiau era wa~ grown In Eg:.·pt, ~lark Twain's tt>lt>hratl'rl Pl>i~1·um of the three-year contract on the price Palestine, Gre!'ce, tile Homnn empire. nhout tile ttews of IIi" tiPnth hdng to be paid for augar beets dt ring 192S und prol>a!Jiy in lmlin. "~rt>atly ex"~~<'I'Htell"! nut It rtlnltl was made Wednesday a' a meeting ot Tl1at its o1·igiu sl,oulu have been not he expe('ted that 1\'asllin~tnn, the special comnittee of the Utah Su· silroudr<l in ruy:;te,·y Is nut strange \I ilh the .<t·enP" of tl1at l'Hl'llintl of gar Beet Coo~eratlve association and 11 IH•n oue remetuhe1·s thut Afl'ica wus hl<•od ;;till fresh in hi" min•l. wuul<l representatives of six of the largest iittiP expiOl'etl unlit tile middle of the he inclined to r·wnment upnn 'ilf·h a beet sugar concerns operating in this .\'illeteenth century. In fact Living· rP(HII'I w rh am· dP;rl'l'<' •f whilllsit·al territory at a session held in Farm stoll!', the fumnu>· missionary, may humor. Tnste•11l his thun;rht' nn the Bureau headquarters in the Dooley han I>Pen the Ht·st to establish it as lllllltPr \\l't·~ 1:11 tliO'PI'<'nt in tone, building. A friean. lu his tran:>lti he found it ( anti thpy sn;:~:rst ti<P P""ihilit.v nt BRIGHAM City - 'With a flow or , gt'tlwiug wild in abu11danee nnd estnlJ· hi< hHill~ som<• sll'llll;!l'ly ru·ophPtir more than 2000 gallons per minute, the lhll\•fl ltt•yontl n rlouht thnt It was in· \'isinn nf tile 1lrstiny that awnilt•l test well recently sunk by the ~'irst liigf'll"lls to thut lanfl. him ~~'4'"" he contilllll'<l his IP!Ier wit! • National bank of this city on the form· Tile wuterllldon I~ u11e of the fooll . I I . I hrse "'"''"': 1 er J. C. Knm!sen farm south of this plall(S ~ IHI\\'U tn ( I'U\\'lllgS on HUCleUt 13y the all powerful nlspens,,tlons 01 city has proven more successful than t·:~;)· pli an lllflllllllll'lll s, pro \'in;; tllu t Pro\'id.f..'lll'e-. I ha YP" h,..en protert, d he· thl'.v \\·ere fawiliar with it. Tills ynnd human proh:<t>ilily And ~xpecta· was expecteil by the company, and tlon: tor I had four hullet• thr~>llgh will probably be the means of solving llml,es it lil:el,l' that It was known also my roat :11111 1wo horses "I'"' nncter the problem of increa~ed irrigation to the auci<'nl Isra('iites. who cuJTied mf", vet - ~cnpf'd unhurt. ~\though w t f th d 1t i d d on torumerce with l~g~rpt und were d<nth """" leveti~g my cnmp,.ni<H10 on a. er or . e ry o s n an aroun nery •ide Jf mo Brtgham City. t·nJTiell into cnpti\ity In lh~t country. And tht)rP nr~ tho~e who H~t·<}e a~ SAN JUAX -Construciton of ~ high· ~pauish und Berher naml'~ with 1o the 11 fli~pPn:-:atlon of l'rodiiPnee:• way between Big Wash ami Peters' .mt i•1ue cllumett>J'islks go Jn ~lww 1hat whn lwliP\·e that If tlw hnllt>l wl:i<-11 hill, in San Juan county, will not be 1< was also grown nt the weqeru Plltl kiliPd Edward Ilnllltlo('k, the Briti~h undertaken at the present time be· nt the ~l{'rlilerranran in day~ \·ery l:l'IINal. hUll 'll'U(·k f[OWII in~tl'all a cause of lack or funds, It was 'l.D· long ug(.•. young coloninl named (}pon~e \\'ash· nounced by the high i\ot uutli the Tenth ('('!i!Ur} A. D. way commi~sion. in.::tnn. tltt> history of th!' Unite<l The proposed read is seventeen miles was this ruelou intrmhH·etl into L'ltlna Statl.'s would h•n·e !wen \·ostly differ· long. The estimated cost of the work where i1 goes uudcr tile ll:lllle, ''~i· ('11 t. kua," hili the Snnsl;rit n:11ue, "cha.ru Is $81,000. pula" illtlirate~ its oncienf cult i\'at iou HEBER-'fhe financial report or 1n ln•Jia. :\ew York. Sal!lllf'l Otis, sP(Tf'lary of Wasatch county fer the year ending 1\'ii<l wuterllwlons are fn•qu;,uti} tl1e fir't seu~te untkr the ('o11slitu· December 31, as published by AlfrPd tJiltN. u character that ha~ heeu bred Lion. held the Billie nn !I !'URhion Sharp, county clerk, show~ the coun· ouJ of the Iil'me~ticuted ,·arietie ·. The whil<' oath w.l' nrhnitlisl!•l·l'!l. AI tht> ty and the various funrls In a healthy rmtire negroes hur8~ the lllPious with dose nf the cr-l'PJJJon~· til£ fir~t PI'PSi condition \\'lth no l·onded indebted. a cluh a1111 tuste tl1e juice, s:n·it1g the tlent bowed down an•l I. •sed the ness. The report follows: 'Fixed as· I ~weer , 1 es nnd lea,·ing the bitter nue~ llihle. sets. $24,300; to cred!t of various where t l!ey lie. funds, $68,056.64; dun county from I' uri her proOl ot Its Ati'i!'lln urigin Common Sense state. $150: half s:~.laries and other ties in Jhe fnct tllut sdNJtbts huv;, sources. $712; total resources, $9~,218. TI!P right of (II'I•JWrt.l b11 t llnly. 11111 fnile<l In lind tile watermeiuu growing ib ]11~1 rnnmt"n Rl'll~e. Till' ""'" whn 84; total liahilitiAs, !15,747 95. The wfld in uny Otllei part of the world. total receipts for the Jllar were $395,, It is n member of the citron family, is lndllstrious t>nougt1 ro uii:Jiu ptup 1 998.20 and the total disbunementt, . dent ifically knl'wn as citrulius vul· erty nu;.: 1 to hnn> "Jtnre ri.~ht~ thnn $327,941.56. the Tonfer.-Atchisnn C:lnhe Alexnnder tl:e Great was a lett !Lauded swordsman. .j Drinking Flower• Dangerous Incubator' "By doiug away with the under· world p!'fllroom," sa~·s o I'l'funner, "we'll desii'<>:V the hreediug tllace of gangsters und ;.:unmen." High to I Let's ldll the goose tilat Jays the hurd· boiled e;:;;s.- Fa nn un cl Fi re~l<le. Machine Causes Sleep nun by clockwork, a newly designed machine emits for 40 minutes a cl'D· stunt humming noise which is said to he useful In causing sleep in cases of Insomnia. Foul-or Veal Customer--<:hicken croquets, Waiter-Fowl ball! ple:~se. Ceremonies may differ, but true politeness is ever the same. If You Need a Tonic, Get the Best! Yakima, Wash.-"I wleh to certl· fy that after using only four bottles of Dr. Pierce's <ffllden Medical Dla· covery I have been relieved of an all rundown feeling and loss of weight. After using the four bot· ties I gained 13 pounds. That was over a year ago and I have not !oat a pound since. My blood was very thin and I was cold all the time. After using this medicine I feel tine aud am not bothered with either the coldness or the rundown feellng."Mrs. VIolet M. Palmer, 602 Broad· way. When run·down you can quickly pick up and regain vim, vigor, vitality by obtaining thla Medical Dlscov· ery of Dr. Pierce's at your neighbor· hood .. etore, In tablets or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce, Pres. Invalids' Ho· tel, Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice. Midget Photograph The ,;nJallesl phot11graph In the world, so tluy us to he invisihle to the nal,ed e.\·e. was exhlhited rerenll~ at 1he Hnyal Photographic society In Lolldfln, l·:n,:l:Hlli Poor Shot llid yuu ~el rid uf uny mo:bs 1\ ith t hnse 11111!1! hnlls you hnugill? ~Irs. nun-Xn. 1 trier! for llve nollt's, 11111 1 couldn't hit u one.-Opeu ro:1d. ('!prJ; Her Fingers Crossed BOOKS (<lnrit'" the sp:tl)- But VOl! to nht>.\' at Ihe nltnr. Sl1e· Of <·oun•e. l dilln't want to tlitll~e n ~c·ene. Any book you want -by mail, C. 0. D. Deseret Book Co., 44 East So. Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah Bu;\· \\'nul Cmnfort Batts in 3 Lb. !"olu•t-Ul. ~utficient for 1 ('omrort. c·eau, Santtary rolort-d Wool, $2 25 c!""'l. na C:<'' po t l\'"oo~ \. 011 fort n t Co., Box 13Al. C':larlot• ~.C. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM lie promi~Pd r..emovM;:De.ndl""Uff ~topsHalrFt.lllD~ Reatotes Color and Beauty to Gray and faded Hai GOl'. and $1.00 llt Druul!'t& Hf~t~-:t Spurring Curiosity ' 4\\'h.r an~ yon (Hi .. ing 'p(lrsnnal' on tlt~t INfer to ~!r. lltl'" ml?'' "1 \\':ttl' his wtre to lllH'n lt." f'hf"m, Wkt\. PaU'hoc11~'. N'. Y• 'FLORESTON SHAMPOQ-Tdeal tor use In connection v.1th Parker·slll>ir Batsnm. :Mak('Stbe hair eoft and ftuf'ry. 60 r.ents by mailur at driJ~· ciJ;t& llli!cox <.:be mica! Works, Patchogue, N. k', WANTED- aro Won~enandGirlswho luv~rs ot color to, Important Point Sf'nd for t<'RMH 4.·color publtca.tion ('Diltlf'd •·cotAJR N~W8.' 1 IJ.OOOin Prlr.e COntt>st for Pil -"lf sou refuse I'll loye o'lothet gir'" M.tf'- 'Does that olso apply If thts cunnection-!\o BPlling .just J'NX)mmf'ndlng. It you fe"'l.yon C3n reoommPnd SC.t\SK'r ]JYJI'.S and DY'fiST. thf' new lOc 1'1nt. wt1te and we wlH Pnteryou In this Conte~t. Address 1D<-pt R l\orth Amerlea.n Dye (Jorpor-.ltiou, I cow~rn t ~, those wbo are "Yt'Jllng to .use a. little energy In Mt. Vel'Dun, N. Y Slllnel,ow ba<lne~s Is far mnre con· 1 ;agious tinm gooduess. W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 6--1928. , __ _ Don't T lk Why keep on being "sick '?Why drag along in mhery when relief is yours for the aski.'lg? Take the worl•l· fa m o u 1 remedy for kid n c y , , \ , '{!/ liver, blac!· 1 der am! !I acid "iUs." Known as ~ HAARLEM~ tbeNatinr· nl Remedy of Holland for more than 200 years-all druggists in 3 size•. Look for the name on every box and accept no substitute. In sealed boxes. Mfj ~'ic ~~w _g:Til~: )';. I A.bOUt Your Kidneys-- AC , ·'. . • Geraniums t!Jrh·e if you fred them 1 C'he( r up. L\ en If ~ ou re poor, yon • cold tea once in a while end hytlran·l may lw t•o worse of! tlmn n prince I gen~ seem to like weak coffe~:. Pour g<Jiug ubout with a h?le In his ~ock. onto tile roots only. I President Green of the American Federation of Labor was condemning Soviet Russia and labor's proposed af· filiation with It "I hate,'' he ended, "the Soviet spirit of em·y nntl destruction. Give me it~ direct opposite, the Americnn spirit, that say>: •· 'Hats off to the past, coats off to the future.'" Laxative RRO~!O QUININE Tablet• re· lleve the Headache by curing the Cold. Look tor signature ot E. W. Grove on the box. 30c.-Adv. The taw of natnrc is, that a c~rtufn quautlty of work fs neccs,ary to pro· 1 tltH·c u tPrtnin qunn'i'y of good of any kind whatenr. rt you want 1 •mow ledge, you must to!. for It: i( rood, you must toil for I•; anti It ' [ltcasure, you m•tst toil for lt.-Ruskin. A~ tP the rountry·~ tonsorial bnsl· ne,;s' $1 ,oOo,oOO,OOO annual returLS- · does tha ln•l ·de the t ps1 llere's some ~ood news and It's n pleasure to teLl lt. We've been ali wrong, u~ing the moth as a simile for a brainless fool; he's got a perfectly good nlibi aud we might bu~e known It tong ago, except that burnt moths hm·e so little to sas. The trouble is with their eyes. 'I'Ite Letli<loptera, which includes nil the moth~ RIHI butterflies, instead of ha'ring ~imple or single-shot eyes like out·s, hm·e compound or mnltlple eyes some of them with as many as 13,000 or lG,UOO separate subdivisions or facets. \\'e knew this nil along but kept (III hlamit1g the moth for tbe way he acted around a lighted can<lle. Mnylle we had better not inquire too closely who wns foolish.-Kansas Cits 'Star. Gnlon.) Work Alw8ys Vital So far it hnst.'t Lern n great yenr for I tc•niu•·,._ hu• then, we haven't m,u y 1: ·cat rc; I! PI's now. American Spirit Headaches from Slight Colda I prr<·eiring the frnternul nffP('Ifon whith npper.t·~ to incrense every day nrnong the friend' of genuine re· lfgion. It nf!ords e<lifJlng prospf'C'l~ fnd!·etl to ~ee C: rist:"ns of llif"Prl'l•l fiPilfllllinations dwell togL,IJer in m·He <'hnl'!ty, and con<lnet thet~sel\·pg In r·espect to each other with a m<•re Christian-like :;pirit titan Cl'er they hare done in uny fllrmer age, or Iu any former nation." Eyes of a Moth When Erel:;n E:dwards was a little gll'l, her Annt Florenf'e sent her to the ~tore one Saturday afterooon. to buy some lnee. After wrapping It up, the ciel'l' said: "Thel'e Is one and a half yards ot lace at HI cents a yurll; how mucb rloes that rome to?" ·ro wltil'h little E\·ei,ro pertly re· plied : "\\'(>11, I'm not gning to tell. I hnve to ~tlHl,v urlthtuetic nil the re~t of the week. nnd I'm not going to bother my It en rl w il h it on ::;,1 1lll'd:t y.'' I \\'nit< rs in L< '"!on are heir g eqnlpp< 1 will. red J~dt•ts whkh will dot ~how ~ot111 su rnud1. Irritation-~ ~gh.: Her Day Off I t~~e_wspaper t's toasted'" No Throat ••• (("\ l928. We!!tcrn Paper From Bamboo? Sen lee ()+O-Oo<r•-<>+o<>·.. <>o-..o-..o-•~~ . MYTON-Under the direction of F. W. J. Meyer, supervisor cf the 1\IId· view and Arcadia districts of Duchesne county, work Is In progress on the Lake Fork bridge. Mr. Meyer has a force of men making the necessary Improvements as rapidly as possible, The foundation on the east side o~ the bridge was washed out by the re· rent flood caused by the breaking of tile dam in the upper country a few weeks ago. The IJrldge will be raised and a cement foundation put ln. The road has been graded from the Upalco flour mill west for several miles and a bridge constructed over a bad draw. By E L MO SCOTT WATSON I'K\1\ of a "ritlin.;: l'resi· dent" nntl on!' nnturnlls think~ of the fnrlller ranchmnn, Hough Hitler, lo\·rr of the outtlt>ors untl exponent of t ile strt>nu· OUS life, WhO OCCU(Iied the White llou:;e fmm l!~Jl to WOH. ::lo it will he n surprise to many Arnerlrnns to learn that pet·hnps the greatest rider of tllem nil was not Theo<lot·e HnoseYelt, but GPOr!le 1\'ashin~;ton! '1'1;-t.; faet is t·evealed in a 111'\l book, "George 1\'ashin;:-ton, Colonial 'fra\·elcr," \Hillen by .Tolin <'. Fitz· patrfcl> atul pnl•llshell us Bl'bl.s-~h·r rill of lutlinn:q•olis. .IIr. Fitzpntrlek Is all·"atfy hnnwn as tl1e editor of !h~ Washington Dia1·ies and one of lhe leading nnthO!'iti('S on the life of 1\'nshington, and his oflit'iui t'H'sil ion as assistant <'hief nf the mannsrr•pt diYision of tile I.llinu·y of ('on;!l'!'S~. whkh enahlt•d !;im to search !'liT~ Important doc111rent in tile nntt"na! sturehouse of lli,torical treasu·e~ lias made it p.J,sihle for him to 1;1·e· SPill the Nrst o'tllllpiPIP tl<>elllllPnt;,n ~f'Ortl nf 1\"nshin~:ton's ('lll'eer fron ltis l!lrtl! In ti:l:! In that <Ia~· In IT7fl "hen his life a~ n r·olouinl gentl.'man ended und he hecarne <:omuwr.<!er·in ~hier of the l'<mtinental army. In Ids pl·efau,ry n!lle, ~lr. Fitzpnt· rid! mal,PS this st.rteuw11t: ! + ~EWARD w~u • ¢ I to Mankind . , T. E. COALVILLE-The annu\! Jlnancial statement of John E. Wright, county clerk of Summit county, has been tiled with the <'.ounty commissioners. The report shows a balance un hand in the the county treasurer's bands on De· cember 31, 192'1, ol $295,000, with the net resources c~t the county amounting to $190,000~ During the past year dis· bursements '\\ere made from the var· ious funds as follows; General, $35,000 road, $20,000; wldnwed mothers' fund, $6000: voor fund, $6500; and fair fund, $500. In addition to the abon disbursements $50,000 was expended from state road funds, 1Jrlnclpally n federal aid work and at the firet of the year a oal· ance of $-14.000 ·.vas left in this account. OGDEN-Weber county dairy farm· ers are planning to take 11 trip to Cache county early this month, under the direction of the Weber County Farm bureau. Equipment and ar. rangement of Cache county dairy barns will be studied, and In addition the matter of feed for dairy cows as carried out by Cache dairymen will l.oe looked Into. The Weber county bu· reau also has decided to organize cow testing associations to test herds over definite periods to increase butterfat production. A suryey of all cows In the county also Is to be made. BRIGHAM CITY - '1oose Creek mountains, in the north west part of Boxelder county, boast a lake that Isn't a lake. The summit of the range defeat, the story of whfdt ha~ ~ll!'d Is covered lu summer for miles with man~· a page of history in the 173 sky-blue lilies. The wind, blowing )'(':Irs shtt·e it occurred. From the them, gives the Illusion of a huge lake. Bradtlo('k Onlerly Hook is taken Washington's laconic rE'pl'rt on that Ogden-Value ot Utah livestock lndi>aster as follows; creased during 1927 about $6.000,000, July 9, Wednesday. Monongahela, or 11 per cent, over the preceding year, near Fort Duquesne: according to the annual livestock re· On the 9th, I attended him (Brad- port Issued Tuesda. by George A. dock> on horse-back, though very Scott, statistician fer the United States weak and low. On this da) he was attucked. and .:efeated by a party or department of agrlcalture. The rise 1-'rench and Indians, adjudged not to In values Is due largely to a sharp In· exceed 300. When all hope of rally- crease In the per head value of cattle, ing the dismayed troops and recover .. ins the ground was explrerl (our pro· the report says. vi•ions and stores being given up) I MYTON-One of the Industries th1t was orered to Dunbar's camtJ. Is rapii,Jiy Increasing In the Ulntah ba· A few da.\·g later he lnites fi'Om sin Is the cream and dairy business. Fort l'muherl:wu to .John ,\n~ustinP One creamery company has receiving The Cream of the Tobacco .C rop <>-..O.•-o-.-<>-..o<.>· ..O<>-...o-o-<r•-<>9 N-ews Notes It'• Liu• Utah * 1 Page Seven |