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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL. MIDVALE .. UTAH BLASTED ARE~ IS GlfY IN OH 10 .STORM- TOAN1 LIKE WAR fRONT A RS E NAL GROUNDS DISCLOSE A SMOULDERING INFERNO OF WRECKAGE - ORGANIZATIONS SUBW.AY STRIKE NEARS CRISIS AND MOTHERS BAREE, Son of Kazan DAYTON VISITI!:D BY HURRICAN~ AND CLOUDBURST; STREETS ARE DAMAGED BOTit AGREE. POWER HOUSE EMPLOYES MAY JOIN MOTORMEN IN URBAN TRAFFIC TIEUP By JAMES OLIVER CURWO OD Health of School Girla Important (@,Doubleday, Pwe A: Co. ) Damage Done By Blast Put At $100, Trees Were Uprooted In Many See> tlons and Hundreds of Cellars 000,000 By U. S. Experts; Cas· Flooded; Damage May ualty List Shows Ten Are Reach $100,000 Dead ..lCCOCOQOQOQCIOO"'~~..o:'".,,OQCC'r~~J'"J"~COCOIIP WNU Senlce Chapter V /-Continued bitterly before he surrendered himself to the smothering embrace of the Fac· tor's blanl{et. On this night Fate had played a strange hand for them both, and only that Fate, and perhaps the stars above. held knowledge of what Its outcome was to be. Half an hour later Bush McTag· gart's fire was burning brightly !l!'aln. In the glow of It Baree lay trussed up like an Indian papoose, tied into a balloon-shaped ball with bnbiche thong, his head alone showing where his captor bad cut a hole for it in the blanket. He was hopelessly caughtso closely imprisoned In the blanket that he could scarcely move a muscle of his body. A few ft>et away from him McTaggart was bathing a bleeding hand in a basin of water. There was also a red streak down the side of McTaggart's bullish neck. "You little de1•il !" he snarled at Baree. "You little devil!" He reached over suddenly and gave Baree's head a vicious blow with his heavy hand. "I ought to beat your brains out, and-I believe I will !" Baree watched him as he picked up a stick close at his side--a bit of fire· wood. Pierrot had chased him, but this was the first time he had been near enough to the man-monster to see the red glow in his eyes. They were not like the eyes of the wonderful creature who had almost caught him In the web of her hair, and who had crawled after him under the rock. They were beast-eyea. They -11lt was a splendid night that fol· Dayton, Ohio.-A heavy wind and lowe<'!. Perhaps Baree would have Dover, N. J.-Seven bodies were d iscovered Sunday In the area devas· rain storm which swept Dayton Tues· 1lept through it in his nest on the t ated by the explosion of the naval day afternoon caused damage that top or the dam if the bacon smell had a mmunition depot at Lake Denmark. may reach $100,000, blocked traffic, not stirred the new hunger In him. T he bodies were not brought out ol uprooted telephone and telegraph Since his adventure In the canyon, held a dread for t he guarded area due to the continuing \\·ires and reduced the temverature for· the deeper forest had But this night. at especially d anger from bursting shells. In addi· ty-nine degrees in thirty-five minutes him, day: it golden t!on to the seven bodies three other In a little over halt an hour one and night was \Ike a pale, the stars shone persons are known to be dead and fifteen hundredths inches of rain fell, was moonless; but distant lamps, flooding bUl!on a like 1926. for record a npward of twenty are missing. Trees were uvrooted In many sec· the world in a soft. and billo~y sea of D.:!.mage to the naval arsenal and A gentle whtsper of wmd made a djoining Picatinny arsenal on the tions and hundreds of cellars :flooded. light. sounds in the treetops. Be· pleasant Wood paving in many sections of army reservation was estimated by yond that it was very quiet, for it was a rmy and naval officers at approxi· the city buckled under the heavy Puskowepesim- the Moulting Moonmately $100,000,000. Stores of muni· downpour. The rainfall assumed vro· and the wolves were not hunting, the Uons at the naval depot were valtied portions of cloudburst. It came out owls had lost their voice, the foxes at $87,000,000 and Secretary of War of skies that had been darkened until slunk with the silence of shadows. and Davis, after an inspection of the army lights became necessary in down town even the beavers had begun to cease reservation, said that a conservative offices. Several thousand telephone their labors. The horns of the moo~e. ~s tlmate of the damage there waa lines in various sections of the c;:ity the deer and the catibou were in tenvelvet, and they moved but little der the and commission of were put out $5,000,000. fought not at all. It was late and greatRefugees from villages surrounding damage was estimated as the the arsenals are gathered in towns E:St in years to telephone company July, Moulting Moon of the Cree, out1!ide the area of destruction, where property. Dayton was entirely !so· Moon of Silence for the Chippewayan. In this silence Baree began to hunt. t hey are being cared for by the Red lated for hours from televhone com· stirred up a family of half-grown He cities. other with re· municat!on other and Cross, Salvation Army 1 partridges, but they ~.>scaped him. He At Morristown llef organizations. pursued a rabbit that was swifter than CONGRESS IN FULL ACCORD fourteen persons stu! are In hospitals he. For an hour he had no luck. Then and between four hundred and five hundred refugees are being sheltered. President Finds Reason to be Pleased he heard n sound that made every drop of blood in him thrill. He was With Program In General Another large contingent of those driv· to McTaggart's camp, and what clerse en from their homes by the explosiona heard was a rabbit In one of had he Washington.-P resldent Coolidge is is at New Fou:odland. snares. He came out McTaggart's Most of the injured marines were apparently well vleased with the legis· open and there he starlit little a into r emoved to the Brooklyn naval hos· laUve record made by congress with through a most going rabbit the saw pltal, amonr: them Captain 0. C the session ending last Saturday. In It amazed him pantomime. marvelous Dowling, commanding of!lcer of the an outline of his views, given out stopped In his he and for a moment, n aval depot. Captain Dowling wa! Tuesday at the white house it was said tracks. blinded while tlghtlng the !ire fol· he felt a great deal of constructive Wapoos, the rabbit, had run hi~ . lowing the first explosion. An opera· '1\'ork had been accomplished. The tion was performed in an effort tQ president not only did not find It furry head Into the snare, and hi~ necessary to veto any blll of general first frightened jump had "shot" thP eave his sight. imvortance passed during the session sapling to which the copper wire was ; attached so that he was now hung half • Regular G. 0. P. Not Disturbed but he feels that congress took favor· in midair, with only his hind feet j able action on all of the main legis· touching the ground. And there he I Washington, D. C.-Information col· lat!ve proposals advocated by him. was dancing madly while the noose lected from the west by Wat~hington The reduction in taxes he places well about his neck slowly choked him to on the one phase of volitics that is uv on the list of accomplishment s, and death. Baree gaye a sort of gasp. He .could m ost acute, is to the effect that th~ he also is gratified over the ratificaa dministration and the regular Repub· tion of war debt settlements, by ad· 1 understand nothing of the part that lican party has no occasion for grave herence to the world court, and by the wire and the sapling were playing a pprehension. These revorts say that vassage of the railway labor act, the In this curious game. All he could see t he backers of the Haugen farm relief cooverative market '1g bill, the public was that Wapoos was hopping and bill are, as a whole, in a state of in· buildings bill and aviation legislation. dancing about on his hind legs In a d ecision about what to do now; and The president would have liked to most puzzling and unrabbit-like fash· t hat as to some of the most imvortant have seen action on coal legislation, Ion. It may be that he thought tt individuals in the group, they are in railroad consolidation, radio control some sort of play. In this instance, a state of outright dissent from all measures and the Lusanne treaty with howeYer, he did not regard Wapcos a~ he had looked on Umisk the beaver. suggestions for continuing the fight. Turkey. He knew that Wapoos made mi!!hty Meantime, the other farm leaders, fine eating, and after another moment Showers Send Mercury Down have always favored the perfec· of cooperative marketing as the Kansas City, Mo.-Cooling showers or two of hesitation he darted upon form of farm relief, are taking sent the bercury down below 75 de· his prey. Wapoos, half gone already, made Kl· on '""''AT c steps to strengthen existing grees and broke the heat wave which no struggle, and in the glow of most ssociatlons, organize new ones, and has tortured Kansas City for several Baree ftnlshed him, and for stars the bring all into unity. This work Is days. The break is only temporary afterward he feasted. hour an half stimulated from Washington, however, according to P. Connor, local McTaggart had heard no sound, for a new division of cooperative government forcaster. The showers the snare into which Wapoos had run m~..-... .,~,u~; has been set up In the de· were sufficient to give Kansas City his head was the one set farthest from of agriculture. In a wider a good night's sleep Tuesday, he said, his camp. Beside the smoldering se, the crystalized policy of the but the heat wave will return. AI· coals of his fire he sat with his back ministration is to assume that all though the thermometer did not touch to a tree, smoking his black pipe and debate about other forms of farm 90 degrees here at any time Tuesday, dreaming CO\'etously of Nepeese, when excessive humidity made the temver· Baree continued his night-wandering. Is over and done. ature very disagreeable. Mr. Connor Baree no longer had the desire· to reported this morning that the humid· . hunt. He was too full. But he nosed Vets Parade In Protest To U. S. lty was 30 per cent above normal. 1 In and out of the starlit spaces, en· joying immensely the stillness and the P aris.- War veterans propelling golden glow of the night. He was folthemselTes In invalid chairs, the blind Hail Causes Half Million Crop Loaa Cape Girardeau, Mo.-Loss from a lowing a rabbit-run when he came to h ands on the slloulders of their and rain stocm which swept Sikes. a place where two !allen logs left \ a hail and euidance, for and children Mo., and a small area In that vic· trail no wider than his body. He ton, •nn.. r• with the wounds of battle showthirty-five mlles south or here, squeezed through; something tightln!ty, plainly, led the protest varade ot ,000 men Sunday against the Wash· late Thursday was estimated at $500,. ened about his neck; there was a debt settlement. The proces· 000, with most of the damage to the sudden snap-a swish as the sapling moved up the Champs Elysees, growing corn and cotton crops, which was released from Its "trigger"-anrl so sud· ,,.,,nn•ll the Arc de Triomphe and down were virtually ruined. Six inches of Baree was jerked off his feet no time to conjecATenue Diena. A. wreath was de· water fell and streets and highways denly that be had Basements in the the ture as to what was happening. >uollL<:u tlt the Alan Seegar mounment were tlood~d. The yelp in his throat died In a gurin the Place des Etats Unls, town were tilled with water, windows I and the next moment he was gle, another at the equestrian statue of business houses were blown in. Cot· through the pantomimic action~ going George Washington, Inscriber, "To ton and corn plants were stripped by who was ha1·ing his ven· Wapoos, of with hope." Here, a.lso, the hail and the loss from the farm geance ins!cle him. For the life of him placed a stone plaque expressing crops, while confined to a small area, Baree could not kPep from dancing wish that the Franco-Ameriro n Is expected to be heavy. about, while the 11 ire grew tighter a nil settlement be revised. Thous· tighter about his neck. I<'uriousl~· he Borah Completes Speaking Plans stood bareheaded along the line struggled. It wns a miracle that the Washington.-S enator Borah, Re· march and the procession moving fine wire helfl ll!111. In a few moments the rate of 200 a minute took ex· publican, Idaho, implacable foe of more It must have broken-but :ucan hour to pass the Washington America.n entry into the world court, Taggart had heard him! The Fac10r vlans to sveak in every state in the caught up his blanket and n hetFY tue, after which 1t disbanded. Union before congress convenes in stick, as he hurried toward the snare. November. His first swing will be It was not a n!bhit makin>: those c~-- ~ ~-~ To Portray Battle of Spokane through the south and west, this trip sounds-he knew that. Perhaps a Washington.-T he war department during the summer months fisher-cat-a lynx. a fox. u young made be to apvroved a request from William and later he will be heard in the east. wolfLewis of Svokane for vartlcipat1on It was the wolf he tnought ot first troops and army bands in the exer· After his successful tight to vrevent to be held in Spokane July 29 senate apvroval of the world court, when he saw Ba:-ee at tlH• end of the of wire. He dropped the blanket and Idaho senator who is chairman morat1on of the battle of the . I . . th f com me an· raised the club. If then• had been com~nttee, at1ons re ore1gn e of The commanding general overhead, or th ' stars had been clouds ~he to Issue Ninth corps area, San Francisco, l nounced he would take the Baree would have !lie<I brilliant, less been Instructed to "take such ac· country at every available opvortumty. • had died. With Wapoos as as may be practicable" in ar· He has not yet completed an itinerary I as surely the army's representation in and the trend of his activities, coming the club raised over his head ~Ic· in the midst of the congressional cam· Taggart saw in time the white star, commemoration . the whlte-tlrrped ear and the jet vaign, black of llaree's coat. P robe Of Recent Mergers Sought With a swift movement he exMeat War Raging In London Washington.-A request by twenty· changed thl' club for the blanket. London.-A meat war is raging in In that hour, could McTaggart have senators for a federal trade com· investigation of the import· London, says the Dally Mall. Argen- looked ahead to the dayii that were to corporation mergers of the past tine beef has has been selling this j come, he would have used the club. years was made public by hte week at Smithfield, London's central Could he have foreseen · the great Reconstruction league. The meat market, at less than It costs to tragedy in which Baree was to play a asked that the investigation imvort it. The Dally Mail, which Is vital part, ~·ecking his hopes and cle· undertaken at the earliest possible investigating the cricumstnaces, tra· 10troying his world, he would have The letter ooid that the Walsh ces the low price to a war among rival beaten him to a pulp there nndf'r the directing the commission meat packing firms. The newspaper light of the stars. And Baree, could make such an Investigation had declares the war is being waged with, lle have foreseen what was to happen of enactment 1n the press of relentless fury, notwithstanding t.h.t : between this brute with a white skin and the most beautiful thing In the tlon at the close ot congress. 1 forests. l'l·ould bave fou~rht pven more eTeryone denies ita existence. I l I I I sew, the outlaw owl. The vengeful animosity of the wolf was burning in him now, along with the savage cour· age of the dog. Baree did not take his eyes from McTaggart as he smoked. He watched the man when the latter stretched himself out on the bare ground and went to sleep. He listened, still later, to the man-monster's heinous snoring. Again and again during the long night He he struggl.ed to free himself. would never forget that night. It was terrible. In the thick, hot folds of the blanket his llmhs and body were suffo<"ated until the blood almost stood still In his veins. Yet he did not . whine. They began to journey before the sun was up, for if Baree's blood was almost dead within him, Bush McTag. gart's was scorching his body with the heat of Its anticipation. He made his last plans as he walked swiftly through the forest with Baree under his arm. He would send Pierret at on<"e for Father Grotln at his Mission seventy miles to the west. He would marry J\' epeese--yes, marry her! That would tickle Plerrot. And he would be alone with l\'epeese while Plerrot was gone for the missioner. This thought flamed McTaggart's blood like strong whisky. There wa~ no thought in his hot and unreasoning brain of what Nepeese might say-of what she might think. He was not after the soul of her. His hand clenched, and he laughed harshly as there flashed on him for an instant the thought that perhaps Plerrot would not want to give her up. Pier· rot! Bah! It would not be the first time he had k11led a man-or the second. McTaggart laughed" again, and he walked still faster. There was no chance of his losing-no chance for Nepeese to get away from him. He-Bush McTaggart-was lord of thle wilderness, master of its people, arb!· ter of their destinies. He was power -and the law. The sun was well up when Pierrot, standing in front of his cabin with Nepeese, pointed to a rise in the trail three or four hundred yards away, over which McTaggart had just ap· peared. "He Is coming." 'Vith a face which had aged ~!nee last night he looked at J\'epeese. Again he saw the dark glow In her eyes and the deepening red of her p~rted lips, and his heart was sick again with dread. \\'as it pos~lhle-She turned on him, her eyes shining. her voice trembling. "Remember, J\'ootawe--you must send him to rue for his answer," she cried quickly, and she darted into the cabin. With a cold, gray face, Pier· rot faced Bush McTaggart. . made him shrink and try to draw his head back Into the blanket as the stick was raised. At the same time he snarled. His white fangs gleamed In the firelight. His ears were fiat. He wanted to sink his teeth in the red throat, where he had already drawn blood. The stick fell. It fell again, and when McTaggart was done Baree lay half-stunned, his eyes partly closed by the blows and his mouth bleeding. "That's the way we take the devil out of a wild dog." snarled McTaggart. "I guess you won't try the biting g~~.me A thousand again, eh, youngster? devils-but you went almost to the bone of this hand!" He ht>gan washing the wound ag-nln. llnree's teeth had sunk deep, and there was a troubled look in the l•'uctor's fa<·e. It was .Tuly-u had month for bites. From his kit hl' got a small flask of whisl;y and tumed tt bit of the raw liquor on the wound, cursing Baree as It burned Into his fle~h. Buree's half·:;lmt eyes IYPre fixed on him stPadily. He kne:" that at la~t he had met the d<?a(l!Ie~t of all his em•mies. And ~-et hl' WJIS not afraid. The club In Bush ~IcTng!-(art's lum<l had not killed his ~plrit. It hnd killed his fE'ar. It had rou se<! In him a ha· tred such as he had never known-not eYen whf'n he was fightin~ Oohooml· From the window, her face screened by the fol~s of the curtain which she had made for It, the Willow saw what happened outside. She was not smil· lng now. She was breathing quickly. and her body was tense. She heard McTaggart's coarse voice, his bolster· ons J::TPeting-. and then she saw blm showing Plerrot what he carried under his arm. There carne to her distinctly hiR t>xplanation of how he had caught his captive In a rabbit-snare. He un· wrapped the blanket. Nepeese gave a cry of amazement. In an instant she was out beside them. She did not look at McTaggart's rPd race, blazing In Its jo~· and exultation. ''It Is Baree !" l'he cried. She took the bundle from McTag· gart and turned t<r Plerrot. "Tell hlm that Baree belongs to me," she said. She hurril'd Into the enhln. ~IcTa~r· gart looked after her, stunned and amnzed. Then he looked at Pierrot. A man half hllnd could huve seen that Pierrot was as amazed as he. J\'e. peP~P ho(l not ~poken to him-the !!'actor of Lac Bain! She had not looked ut him! Anfl she h>Hl tuken 1 the dog from him with as little concern as though he had heen a woorlen man. The red in his face deepened as he stared from Plerrot to the door through which she had gone, and which she ha<l closed bE>hlnd her. <TO BE co~TINUED.) Great Voices Called Accidents of Nature Great voices are rare and undoubt· I edly owe their wonderful purity of tone to an accidental combination of those physical characteristics which lead to the production of song. The human musical instrument, though built of living tissues, resembles in structure the reed organ pipe fitted with a vox humana stop. In both cases the note depends on the vibrations of a column of air produced In the organ by a reed and in the volce by the vocal cords. The human air chamber corresponding to the organ pipe is composed of the larynx and the bronchial system beneath lt. The throat. mouth and nasal cavities form the resonators which, by alternation in shape and size, are able to pick out and emphasize cer· tain component parts of the !unda- New York.-The forward truck of the fourth car of a ten-car south· bound Interborough Rapid Transit train lett the rails between Bowlin@ Green and South Ferry stations early Thursday, throw-ing the car into the concrete wall of the tube. The fifteen or twenty passengers aboard the train v;ere assisted to emergency exits without confusion. No on-e was injured and only slight damage to the tracks resulted . Dense Clouds of smoke from torn insulation of the third ran caused erroneous reports of fire In the tube. New York.-The chief develop· ments of the third day of the strike were claims by strike leaders that all Interborough power house em· ployes would join the strike, and an ultimatum by subway officials that striklers falling to return to their jobs by Monday w!ll be flermanently replaced by new men. Edward P. Lavin, one of the strike leaders, announced that there would be "something of a startlln.g nature in the next forty-eight hours." Asked if this promised develovment had to do with a possible settlement he revl!ed, "perhaps." "In any event," he added, "If we lose we will be good losers and if we win we will be modest winners." So far the strike has been confined to motormen and switchmen on the lnterborough subways, the city's main underground arteries. The strikers broke away from the union recognized by tlJ,e comvany and formed their own organization in an eHort to enforce demands for higher wages. Varying numbers of recruits have been claimed from the Interborough elevated lines, but company officials have said what small defections there have been have not affected service. Subway service was estimated by the company to be 77 per cent normal and some of the Brooklyn area in which service stopped when the strike was called was reopened. I Chapter VII "You Little Devil!" The Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls ..a.rr_e:-:t;w-;of;n~ati;ljo:n;e.~l\lorganizatlons, working side by side tn 1: thecauseofhealt hy, happy, intell1gentl womanhood; trainIng the minds ot e a g e r g 1 r 1 s for g r e a t e r service. train!ngtheirbod ies for the destiny that. shall be theirs. All honor to them! Wise mothers like Mrs. Allee Louthan ==~,. urge their daughearly teens to take Lydia. ters in E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compounlt Mrs. Louthan says-"! gave my fifteen-year old girl Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it did her & wonderful lot of good. She was out ot scho<>l for four months. I read the advertisements of the Vegetable Compound, and since she has taken It sho has improved and has gone back t<> school. I recommend the Vegetablo Compound to other mothers with girls who are not as strong as they should be."-1\Ins, ALICE LoUTHAN, Route 2. Charleston, Illinois. Some girls In the fourth generation are now relying on Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable CompQund. Service Estimated By Officials At 77 Per Cent; Ultimatum Issued; Tranr.lt Train Leaves Rails and Crashes In Tube mental tones produced In the larynx. !he lungs form tLe bellows which produce the upward blast of air, and upon their quality depends the loud· ness of the voice.-London Dally Mail. Lamps Hurry Crop• Four crops of wheat can be raised on a single piece of ground in o year with the aid of electric light. This remarkable fact has been established after exhaustive experiments fn the application of light to plant growth In England.' Easter lilies and dafl'odlls oYer which 1,000-watt lamps were suspended grew from bud t<> bloom in four days. Ordinarily this growth takes four weeks. Six hours, from midnight on, are the most effective of the twenty-four for plant st1mulat1ou by electric light. Wanted-Garage, oH station or other bu•... that $6.000 wlll handle. Give price. detallo. Rm. 1220. 626 Mkt. St .. San Franclsco.-Adv. A shiftle~s husha:Hl has developed many a female financier. "BAYER ASPIRIN' PROVED SAFE • Big French Liner Crippled At Sea New York.-The French liner De Grasse, which sailed from New York Thursday with 1000 passengers, is re· 1 turning to New York on account of ; engine trouble, said a wireless mes· sage to the line. The port engine had : broken down, u{e message said. The De Grasse was about 350 miles out ll'hcn the trouble develoved and Cap· I tain Marius Aubert, the commander, decided to bring his vessel back. She is exvected to reach here Friday night, Take without Fear as Told In "Bayer" Package Men On S-51 Died At Posts New York.-The dead members of the crew of the submarine S-51 died at their posts, Lieutenant Commander Ellsberg said. As the rusty, torn hulk of the submarine lay in dry dock at 1 the Brooklyn navy yard. Lieutenant 1 Commander Elsberg, for the first time t 0 ld what the divers working under him saw in the vessel as It lay on the ocean bed off Block island, where s_he sank, after being rammed by the C1ty of Rome, last fall. "While the S-51 1 was at the bottom divers entered through the hatches and exvlored her," he said. "Every man seen was at his station. Some of them had their r hands on valves. "We saw J. M. Schoe· field, radio overator, at his post, his body rig1.d in a chair, his head and shoulders bobbing up and down in the green water over the keys of his 1 instrument." I I l I • • Unless yfju see the "Bayer Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-five years for , Colds Neuritis Toothache Neuralgia Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Pain, Pain Each unbroken "Bayer" package contains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 anrl 100. -·""-lBanish Pimples By Using Cuticu ra New York Will Be Cotton Port Soap to Cleanse New York.-Plans to make New ' Ointment to Hel!ll York one of the greatest cotton ports Tr7 our new Shaving Stlek. 1 defln· In the United States will take !te shape Thursday when members ot Question the New York Cotton Exchange will be asked to authorize the board of "1\Iamma, was Adam the first man?" "Y PS, dear." managers to negotiate an expansion a terminal, •<Did he ever get a >'llankin~. then?'' contract with the bayway large warehouse development at Elizabeth, N. J., on Staten Island Sad Connoisseur Sound involYing expenditure of about "This Is n YPry rarP book.'' $5,ooo,'ooo by the terminal company. "Yes, too bad It I~ so old, isn't it?" Under the proposed contract, the Bay· 1 way terminal agrees to vrovide by 1 'fllPre !:,; nothing- llkl' the kuife of October 1, 1927, dock space of 1200 candO!' for S<'Vl'rlng th<> lumd,; of feet to accommodate vessels of 10,000 fri !'II dshl]l. tons and berth space for eighteen lighters at one time, with facilities I for handling daily 150 freight cars and L·VDUST loading or unloading 7500 bales of cot· ton in three eight-hour shifts. A higb density compress wm be Installed at nm.a.e of especla.lly woYen ta.brtc Crepett.eu tor only 10 Cllnt.s o.nd. the warehouse, where cotton will be compressed as ordered by owners or slnpvers. 2 • C CLOTH 11 1 Milk Product. Old Butter was known for at least 2,000 years before the Christian era. It wall not used as food, however, but m.tstly as a medicine and ointment, and in some parts was employed ",s an lllumlThe outter was nant for lamps. skin bags or In crudely churned very inferior a was and pouches, known since been has article. Cheese the earliest times, the oldest mention of it occurring in 1400 B. 0. lt wu used as an article of food before bU. ter [ Shipment Of Lambs Heavy Hill City.-For more than a month the lamp·shiptJing season has 'been on at Hill City, the chief shitJPing point of east Camas prarie. May 20, the Wood Cree Sheep company shivved, twelve cars of lambs, 300 lambs to the car; May 25, Bennett brothers shlpved I seven cars and L. Bailey one car; May 27, North S. Lee shipped seven cars, May 29, Dixle Sheep company shippell; eight care, and J. E. Burgy sh!wed , two cars; May 31, J. W. Jones ship. ped seven cars and J. Farmer nine I I I • |