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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYFON, UTAH BLACK AND WHITE MILLINERY; News Not es PRINTED CHIFFON FOR SPRING ;; It'e a Privilege to Live in 4 Utah UTAH Considering b.x major farm products, estimated prices to Utah growers in February weie C.8 per tent higher than for Febnuiy, lb-- 8. RICHFIELD Dirt Is beginning to fly on the installation of the new municipal water system, to tost $2.7 OoO, for which bonds weie vottd last fall. Garfield EPHRIAM l'attmghe and ct Fiank T. Co, x, reprutii-alive- s M., Bond and Sens of A'buiUerqac , were in Lphiidm th ut i f the week and aga'n contra: tid for 1300 lar.s from the Ephian Ra...buu.l et issu'd uion. OGDEN tYchor county farm' is will t.y oat two litv. tu.po this year, it v.as an .oanted y Cuun.y A" nt A. L. nft Chri.dinaiwn. Ore Landed aufs of dry lea is w.H ho panted in 1 a-- d h the jta i maa-iof led closer seed v.nl be pian'ei! in a similar puipose. RICHFIELD To si rialuie p'od.ic-- t i a i ? sin.il hi ( ts in S uinty in 1',-- ", the (.unn oa Sue. r compani' is contain ing v ih thj Sugar fleet m Ins t i.nn, r.d tie 1 i h Aerie u'Ui. ..1 c 'l. ye is a uivr but P''ulu.un critr t ti lu known an elfin t to is'-aL- . v !.e ac.is and .ri Fa'ii,:. 'I'vniv ion a: The i II. f t i .,iT if T- - . r:!o s lev. iv, av viork lie thee vetc I.cv By ELMO SCOTT WATSON From Nevada's hoary ridges, from stormy const. of Maine, From Lava Reds and Yellow Slone the Story never waned. Whenever duty called, they went, their steps were never hlow; With Alma Mater" on their li and "Benny Havens, Oh." tr.j ill. .ruin-'. tr n d u i.i ud.c; to i c of tc 2 2,500 dairy ca.,. T hlack-nn- d Sugar l"h. LCCAN tu the pendulum svvin white. Bight in tlie midst of the mad rush for color and inure color ami Ihen some stylists have seen fit to introdme a program of black-am- l white. The vogue for black and white cxtinds from hats to shoes, N l.j i o for ci i L. ..i iy. g CaJ.e c .. i s v.as in iia'ge of and i'ehrl . Ua'.tc i.i delicts veth (a hQ eouiuy t ia..,y Avi- - f gloves ove.nm'V.t (or - Gl and was Finest IL.nger S. Illmor, r a trip to the Mammoth n.ea of the for station umg parpo'e the snow. lie rep ats G'i liuiies of siiuw, with a wmer loiucit ol lo inches which is app.'oxiniu.cly 3 "..'hes gu liter Gum the average wa.cr intent at this time of the year at that station. Ranger Ander.-cleport, two feet of Flow in Lovtr Joes vali'v. KYRUM T,!ons club and firm aie making elioits to iai-- e the bean acicage fiom 20 to at least 123 acres bi fore the planting season be-- j. ins. It is feared that, if the neo , toe acicage is r.ot local bean car, ,c.y will not operate this year, w'ic-- would n e:n Lie 1 .ss of a payrol- to fanners ami employees of about 530,21)0. M nit this life's troubled sea Is o'er and our last battle's through, If God permits us mortals there his blest domain to view, When ANTI le la-'g-- States army from the mer- Denny Ifaven JTontun eszfiri Njhland Union Ckrnetery they talked in magnitude the up In number. The forbidden locality of Benny Havens possessed stronger attractions Ilian the study and demonstration of a problem in Buclid. If you go to West Point today jou can find in au old .sheepskin hound volume t He record of Custer's skin sheet, bearing the list of offenses for w bit It Cadet Custer was reported. In ail there are 4A1 separate skins" with a total of 812 demerits and many of them are for partaking of Benny's hospitality. Since a cadet Is allowed 885 demerits before he Is dismissed, Custer laid only 28 more to So he go when he was graduated. came very nearly being denied Ids clmttce for fame and Ametiea came very nearly losing one of Iter most brilliant cavalry officers. But If Benny Havens had a part lu tlds, it was by no means a unique ease. Many an other oflicer who later became famous could testify to a number of "skins because they simply could not resist vvh.it est "slmve tail up to a general with four stars on bis shoulders has not heard that verse and for a brief moment been carried back to Alma Mater, the United States Military Academy nt West Ioiut, N. Y.? For one of the most picturesque and beloved traditions of that famous military school where tradi- tion is so strong, centers around the name of I!enny Havens. Who was Benny Havens? One of America's famous generals, a graduate of whom West Point Is proud? A beloved teacher at the academy? Well, hardly Sometime prior to 1S82 Benny Havens came to West Point and y a cottage a short distance west of where the old cadet hos jdtal, now the nurses' quarters, stands What his ancestry was or where he came from no one seems to know. But after all those things are relatively unimportant, for the beginnings of a tradition are frequently wrapped In a mist of obscurity, but a tradition Is none tlie less dear on tbut account In the early days of Bennys residence at the post he sold to the cadets ale, cukes and cider, and In the winter, buckwheat cakes and eider flip. Later on the elder flip became ale flip and etiil later something a hit stronger was added to his bill of fare. It was this something which led to Bennys undoing, for he was expelled from the reservation. By this time Benny had become so attached to the corps of cadets and the cadets had become so attached to Benny that neither could think of allowing tids expulsion to mean his retirement to the ohsiurity from which he had come. So he set up his little shop just off the post In what later became known ns "The House by the Itiver, a Mecca to which so many of West Point's famous sons made fre quent, even If forbidden, pilgrimages For slipping out or bounds to the hos pitable fireside of Benny Havens where food and drink could be Illegal iy obtained, contrary to the rules and regulations which have always characterized the dignity and order of this severe academy, was one of t he of fenses for which a cadet could be It "skinned (today they call "squilled, I. e. reported for one of the many breaches of regulations). For instance, take the case of Cadet Armstrong Custer of Ohio along about the year 1SC1. Custer himself has recorded my offenses against law and order were not great In enormity but 1 d one-stor- made t. the celebrated Louis Pusteur, French biological chemist and intbolo gist, was born at Dole. Jura, Docent ber 27. 1822. Devoting himself to the study of chemistry, be was gradti ated from Ecole Normale. Purls. In 1S47 ; became professor of physics at Dijon, 1848; In the following year profes.sr of chemistry at Strassburg Later he can led on bis researches at the Institute Pusteur, Paris. One of for- i i all-ye- ar the elmrui tnlity. Benny Havens character was many sided, Kind to children. Invariably courteous to women," so rends a sketch In Bugle Notes, the handbook of the United States Corps of Cadets, or "the plebes' Bible," ns it Is called at West Point. He was possessed of a terrible and ungovernable temper. There was an inilefinibie something about l:is personality, that bound his friends to him by Inseparable ties Virtues and qualities were bis which bellied to shape the lives of and give guidance to, as they rose to life's pinnacles, many whose names are now engimed on t he pages of history." For instance there was a certain cadet named Kdgnr Allan Poe. I)ur log the short stay of that.eirutic in dividual nt the academy, (be was dis missed a ftei being tlieie about six hxt-her- State. Havena, Oht To our kind old Alma Mater, our rock- Highland Home. We II cast nianv a fond rearet as o'er tlfe'a sea we roam Until on our last battle field the light of heaven shall alow. Well never fail to dilnk to her and Bennv Havens Oh! CHORUS May the Army be augmented may pro- motion be less slow May our country In the hour of need be readT for the foe; Mav we find a soldier's resting place beneath a soldier's hlow With loom enough beside our graves for Bennv Havens Oh' SALT LAKE Present poultry pects ill Utah indicate a baby chick production of l early 3,000,000 for 1929, double the 1928 bguie. C. C. E !mund, manager of the Utah Poultry Pio- duceis Ccopeiative association, declared in a leport recently. Tlie expectation is borre oat by the fact that already commcr 'ial egg production for about 15 per ccr-- t 1929 has inciea-c- d over the same period in 1928 and may be expected to increase moie a lun3 mature. BINGHAM Net Income of for 1228, as compared to in 1927, is shown by the annual report of the Bingham Mines company, opernt'ng in the B'nghatn and Tintic d.stiict. Do. pile the fut that lower earnings wt"e lepoiled, James P. Graves, pre'hhnt, declare that toe ret figure quoted is after a dduct'on of $133, C!0 was made for piu,"ctu g and development woik, rnd that Both the Yictona nun, locu'ed in the Tint'c di tint, and the Dalton anc Laik mine, in the Bingham ds'r.t, showed inii.iove'i ts outing the pait of the yeai. pros-boun- d t i ; j ( $U19,-258.5- $309,-4G0.2- Famous French Scientist not -e months) Poe frequently visited Ben of business while It was sti'l on the reservation and became de voted to him. The future poet often FILLMOP.E 1'oret Sureivi or C. remarked that Benny was the sole A. Mattson and Assistant Supervisor congenial soul in the entire God for C. J. Olson of the Iih Lake forest snken place. leserve returned lecently fmn a trip, Benny lived to the ripe old age of lasting a vek, to Fhlmo'e and Holden. Vh'lo at Fillmore they held eighty eight )cars. Taps were sound ed for him on May 28, 187, and now a conference with Rangeis L. A. Robhe sleeps in the Highland Union ceme-tarins and E. L. Jensen regarding forest on t he banks of the river lie districts plans for Scioio, Kaioh and loved so well. But West Point is ricli Elfiuoie ranger Thn plans If outlined in detail all recurrent work in memories of Benny Havens. you go there today they will show you to be done each year and the amount the pitcher from which he served Ills of nonrecurient woik that should be famous cider flip. But most of all his pero d. completed in the next five-yefame is preserved in the song which OGDEN Acreage of tomatoes in lots been carried literally around the Utah will be increased about 800 acres world by West Pointers. That song this year, it was announced rccenty was composed early In bis career. It a'sLtant svcreaiy was written about 183S when Lucius by George Shoiten, Canners assodatmn. The O'Brien of Maryland, a lieutenant in of the Utah will le general over the state, the Eighth Infantry was visiting a increase 100 acres increase in Weber about with friend, Itlley A. Arnold, then a first Estimated plant'ng for the county. classman. Together they spent many 6000 acie. vvdl about run state whole a congenial evening at Bennys place will have about 2300 Weber county Ids and OBrien so the goes, nnd, story acres. a about friends composed poem DRAPER The Diaper Conslim tion Benny and set It to the tune of The been awarded the generhas It Immediate company Wearing of the Green. al contract for the bu.ldi 'g of the Point ly became popular at West and for the next quarter of a century growers lvaiket, according to the one of the first things a plebe did was architects, Ashton & E.'an.s. The first to learn to sing Benny Havens, Oh unit will consist of a market for During the summer days of 1805 when trading and a. so two new adday after day the steamers bearing ministration kuildi gs, which v. ill cost home the veterans of the Civil war about $00, 300. 5ne bcJaiue of $210,- passed Bennys little eottnge on the 000 will Lc Fucnf for a varehou-- c a batiks of the Hudson the bands would block long w.tii two etonea and a strike up one tune aud Benny would bear hundreds of voices joining in the of Tonela TOOELE ITnitrymen singing of: county, led by Ilvgh HurA, Tcce'e county tgi icullural fgent, Come nil your glasses, fellows, and thiee Li hatcheries of Salt Lake counRtand up in a row To alnglnn sentimentally we're (coin ty recently, according to V. L. Mnrtin-eau- ,i for to so: Sait Lake cou lty ancu .ur.d In the army there'a eohrtety oromo-tlon'- s agent. Most of Um:r time v, a- - spttil very alow of at the Commu ,ity hatchery, Draper, So we'll sins our reminiscences Benny Havens Oh! wheie about IoG.003 chickens aie beCHORUS' ing hatchcj. This is Ly far the largOh! Benny Havens. est hatcher in Utah an ranks in s.re Havens. Oh! of the United with any y We'll sina our remlnlsoenses of Benny nys place handbag, co-t..- sal.-mboi- MAT officer of the United ami getting print siarfs ami f"r of the Latest in Hat. A Flock neckpieces. Of couiso when leading couturiers create stunning funks, cents and ensembles in swanky blnek-nra- l Printed i Idffons are nnswering a come early white tlie milliner, the bootmaker (ail f tie mode to ami accessory stylists in general are and stay late. Already with spring just naturally executed to fall in linp scarcely begun, sheer prints are makWhich is ju t known. and help carry on. ing their lovely presence this sc.isi n luis happened wiiat Then ii'trince into the style pietuie Whenever ami wherever the Idaek-iim- l is being accomplished for the most white d sphiv is staged, which is pi it via Hie ensemble route. mini almost eveiy where in fashion which Ims captured The at present, it Is carried out to a tushionss fancy for both daytime ana tiieetv down to the minutest detail evening wear Is the ensemble which An ensemble of black faille silk txp'oils lov v printed chiffon for tiui which adopts a white eiope stm for the lining of tlie fioik, l.krvv blouse, adding a cunning jniket of coat, which is usually of solid tone the faille, t In same hindered with a cnq.e, silk or transparent velvet. patterning of while porcelain heal, lu- -t sn h an ensemble type as calls for u chapeau repeating tlie is shown in tlie picdescribed above Likehim k and while of the costump. It is a charming model of the ture. wise a chic spin ts frock of Idink and suit of flowery cliiTon which is always while jersey suggests a bat nci mu Its color so liu'Nring to fair women. w onniment In black nnd bite, and the is richly enhanced by tlie scheme list might he continued rid 'finitely pimetice of a chartreuse crepe coat, of Id.ick-anThis width m cording to fashion's edict Is white in tlie im up has proven a gen lim'd with lie same print as that of nine Inspiration to l'aiis modi-tes- . width the frock is made. who aie winking tlie t omhit.ation in Tlie vogue for these lovely print-vvit- h such Intriguing ways n the ill list ra plain ensembles extends to daylion as presented herewith denotes of eveThe fust model uses a black bnkoti time t.ours as well as those Idea of tiie suggest Designers ning with for its foundation, straw skullcap a duo role for these eliarmlng coshuge llowerlike motifs made of shit red tumes by st ling the frock with detachtv h!te and black silk. At will the wearer able long sleeves. a smart To the right at tlie top thus transtlie can remove sleeves, white felt achieves a decorative em a modish afternoon frock Into forming and white clone black in broidery a stunn'ng evening gown. 'beiiiHe. Color sounds an especially triumwhite the favoiites fashions Among cosgardenia trimmed black felt is out-- I phant rote for these voguish Whatever the material of the tumes. standing. Tlie handsomely designed coat, its color Is selected to glorify felt toque to the left with its two white gardenias answer to tlie call of the picture. Usually some one tone the mode. One sees emiuing flexfide or tint in tlie print gives a clew as straw cloches or those of felt, with to what the coat color will be There the most important of the many re suits of Pasteurs Investigations Is tin will known treatment of hydrophobia which lie showed to be caused by tin presence of' specific baiterla In the blood, the spinal column of tlie in fected animal serving as a cult me medium PaMeur died near St. (loud September 28. 8:w. Reminder of Pledges cauls for husbands and wives to remind them of their mar Si vial . riage vows are being issued by the Mothers Jnion of England. They are of a size .convenient for canylng In the p( ket, and pi luted In silver on white. They record the date and place of tlie marriage nnd the name of the contracting parties, nnd they reproduce the essential portions of the marriage service which have refit eme to marital fidelity. It Is Intended that each married couple should have two cards, one for retention by the husband and on by the wife. 1 .. G Ensemble of plaiting across the lunk In the new fantail shape, at the top of which pia'ting reposes a row of white gardenias. The hlnckiallibuctl straw hat with a brim centoled to tlie right in tlie collection is Juun1sinnely trimmed with an appliqus of white felt leaves A rosette of bttb k velvet interworks white satin in its design as a.tilm-mii'for tlie tobe which umcludes Die group f I Printed Chiffon. arc such enchanting combination frock of navy and white polka dm chiffon, topped with a tliree-quartcoat of bright navy transparent a scnif of the dotted chiffon wind big its grflrpful way about tlie neck line of the wrap. Favorites in the list of these truly enchanting ensembles are those caru n) ried out in the capucine .117.1 BOTTOM IKY. Shades. a- ve1-ve- (na-ttirti- t T n.9 Uo-tPi- New im er Unit u 1 |