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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH SCRUB BULL BRIGHAM YOUNGS MONUMENT IS HALED TO COURT YOUTfi The following poem was clipped from the Salt Lake Tribune: What is this absurd story That I hear on every tongue: They want to move the monument Of our beloved leader, Brigham r HORSE BOLTS WITH BOY AND THE HIT BY MOVING NEW LEADERSHIP Ail accident occurCOKEVILLE red on the highway south of town at the Parley Bennion ranch last Tliurs-day evening which terminated rather lucky for Billy, tlie twelve year old son of Ralph Snowball, notliwithstand-inthe fact that he received a bad flesh wound on his hip. Clint Holland was coming to town in his Ford from his ranch and as lie passed the Bennion ranch, Billy had just crossed the road between the house and pasture on an old horse to get the cows. The horse a fractions one, turned and Kilted back across tlie road as the boy prepared to mount it, ft or opening the gate prenaratory to cuing into tlie pasture after opening the gate. In doing so the horse ran directly in front of Clints car with (he boy still clinging to the saddle. Mr. Holland had no time to stor hut threw the car to the. far side of the road and put ou liis brakes. The horse struck the car and was knocked down and the shock threw- the hoy loose from the horse. It is thought the bov struck the road bed with such force that a had cut of several inches was torn in his hip, which necessitated several stitelies and he was taken to Kemmer-e- r for treatment. ITe is doing nicely The horse had a leg broken and had to be killed. No blame is attached to Mr. Holland for the accident. CRAIG B. HAZLEWOOD g k, ? Indicted for robbery, larceny, and a few other such charges. Scrub Bull went on trial for his life at Laurel, Mississippi, recently. It seems that for some time people had suspicions that Mr.' Bull was hindering the right and lawful development of the dairy industry; thereby maliciously and wilfully lowering production and profits in the dairy business, says the Bulletin of the American Bankers Association Agricultural Commission in commenting on the case. This, it says, was the first trial of its kind ever held in that section and was attended by several hundred people. The jury, representing every vocation within the boundaries of the Laurel trade territory, rendered a The unanimous verdict of guilty. death sentence was pronounced, but during the night, before the sentence could be carried out, friends of the convict secretly spirited him away and he has not been seen since. The arraignment came during the Milk Products Show sponsored by the banks of Laurel. People attending the show had the opportunity of also attending the bulls trial and went away firmly convinced of the seriousmethods in ness of lax and the pursuit of dairying. The purposes of both the Milk Products Show and the trial were threefold, namely: to develop public sentiment for more and better Jerseys; to foster a more cooperative spirit for dairying and livestock growing, and to promote tick eradication. The banks of Laurel entered into a cooperative arrangement in their efforts for fostering agricultural development and successful farming in the community, offering $2,165 as premiums to the outstanding farm workers throughout the territory during. 1929. An instructive booklet has been issued, showing the agricultural activity of the banks, together with announcements of contests for farmers, exhibits in the bank lobbies and prizes offered. out-of-da- Gem by the Mile It is reported that over 100,000 miles of sticks of chewing gum are sold every year X Renaissance Art The portrait of Dante by Giotto the earliest likeness of the Renal sance period ts e Removal of the Brigham Young monument from its present site at Main and South Temple .streets can only be accomplished with the consent of the people of the state, it is ruled in an opinion of Attorney General Geo. P. Parker, issued Monday. The opinion was written at the request of the Daughters of Utah pioneers, who asked first, Who owns the Brigham Young monument' and second, has anyone the right to remove it? The attorney general said Monday that he had not gone into tlie ways and means of removal thoroughly, but presumed that it would he necessary to either an act of the legislature or presentment of the question to the people for voting at a general election before the question could be definitely settled. PINE HENS BECOMING EXTINCT Mountain pine chickens are becoming extinct on the Cache forest according to Forester W. 8. AverLl. He states that he has seen very few of them on. the forest this yei--- while other jears they have been more numerous. A closed season is urged by many sportsmen and sou a 'im will te taken v the local game clubs to present; trese birds. Paris Post. , Jl. BOYS DRIVING CAR MEET WITH INJURIES IN ACCIDENT For Lumber Pushrake Teeth and Derrick Timber Leave your orders with WILFORD NORRIS Flowers for Every Occasion Wedding Bouquets . Corsages Table Decorations Funeral Designs Evanston Floral and Music Co. "At your service Evanston Wyoming . A serious ear accident occured on the highway a short distance south of the Oregon trail filling station about six oclock Wednesday evening, which resulted in the severe injury of Lawrence Stoffers, son of John Stoffers, and Earl Branson. The two boys who are about 13 and 12 years of age, with little Melvin Stoffers, were in an old Ford coming to town when the Frame lmy came up behind and signaled to pass. The Stoffers boy turned out and in doing so ran too close to the edge of the road. In turning back, bis front wheel struck the rear of the Frame ear, causing the Stoffers boy to lose control of his car. It rolled over twice, throwing little Melvin clear across the road, with the result of only a few scratches. Lawrence Stoffers is thought fo have an. arm broken and possibly inr ternal injuries and was taken to for an examination. The Branson boys right hand was badly mangled and one ear badly cut and torn. Cokeville Register. Kem-mere- Coal Tar Derivative Bakelite is produced from coal tai ' by a process invented by Dr L. H Boekeland. It consists of the cor idea sation products of plienols ami formal leh.vile converted hy heat and pres fn-tire into m -- t t P VJ o : : WOOL NOT SOLD call but the for Suppose you were a sheep man and a woolbuyer tried to you from Evanston to make you a good offer for your wool could not get you and you lost the sale. Suppose you afterwards found out your neighbor pulled line down with his derrick. You would not like it of course. Who is the loser? The Telephone Co. has lost about 35c the call, but maybe you have lost many dollars through a lost pale. Who is to blame for the loss? We leave that to you to say. We ask all to be considerate with there derricks as a call is more important to ypu than to the Telephone Company. If unable to fix the line after you have pulled it down at least , notify us so it can be fixed. With it, one pictures Hannibal fighting his way through the passes the of Alps Napoleon in his cam p a 1 g n s or Washington holding together his army by the sheer magof his netism character at Valley Forge. But I visualize something that holds a more astounding spectacle in many r e s p e c ts than any of these. It is the onrush of our business life. Our economic progress plunges ahead at a rate unheard of in the history of the nations of the world and every industrial and financial leader is daily brought face to face with new and perplexing problems requiring the highest courage and intelligence for their solution. Ninety billions a year, they tell us, this country is now producing in new wealth. The rate of increase is even more staggering than the amount. It is difficult to say where it may lead us in even ten or fifteen years. We are moving exceptionally fast. Our economic and industrial structure is placing before us problems of greater and greater magnitude. Few men can see far ahead. Few are in complete control, for this is a changing world, as even the most inexperienced business man will readily testify. Our methods of adjusting ourselves rapidly to economic changes and of cooperating are far from perfect. What an opportunity the leadership of five, ten or fifteen years from now presents! What an adventure it will be! What responsibilities it will lay upon the broadest shoulders that may be found! This is the challenge . to leadership as I see it. In the hands of the young men must rest the responsibility for this leadership. Boys Who Reached the Pinnacles Business is" full of the romance of youngsters whose chief characteristic was working hard and keeping at it. there was a green farmer boy who decided he would rather stand behind a counter than follow a plow. He seemed so obviously lacking in sales ability that for a time no merchant would hire him. He failed in his first position, and in his second his salary was reduced. He even agreed that he was a misfit but he stuck. Out of his first five stores, 1 believe, three failed. But he persisted and worked hard. And that boy, Frank W. became the greatest retail merchant in the world with a store in every city of eight thousand or more population in this country. There was another lad who clerked in a grocery store sixteen hours a day and studied mathematics in his odd moments. He became interested in the doings of the steel plant whose employees traded at this store. He began to study steel and sought a position in the plant. He carried a surveyors chain and drove stakes. At night he studied mathematics and engineering. He did not despair. He could not be diverted. He kept the pressure on for seven years. And that boy, Charles Schwab, mastered the iron industry and became one of the countrys great industrial leaders. There was a lad who sold papers on a train. When he grew up, several million men and a score of billions of dollars of capital were given profitable employment through his Inventions. Even in middle life, Thomas Edison continued to work twenty hours a day, if necessary to achieve his purpose. ' Leadership is not play. Leadership offers countless positions of varying opportunity, of which the highest pinnacles will mean almost unbearable responsibility in the new era. There will be men with the fire and iron to qualify even for these places. Such men must have had the very finest preparation and the most grueling tests. Their reward will be the attainment of these highest pinnacles of achievement, and the rendering of an Immeasurable service to their times. half-froze- 1 n - BOX THEFTS AID CHECK FORGERS American Bankers Association in Nationwide Warning Exposes Methods and Gives Rules to Combat Them. NEW YORK. Active operations In many cities of mail box thieves, who open bank communications to customers, containing details of their accounts and cancelled checks showing their banking signatures, and use thi ; material in perpetrating check fo: geries, have led the American Banker.; Association to issue a nation-widwarning to its members with instructions for combating this form of crime. The warning as sent out by James E. Eaum in charge of the associations Protective Department says: Heavy losses are being sustained through cancelled vouchers and statements stolen from the mall boxes of e bank depositors in apartment and office buildings, thus divulging the depositors balances and supplying models for forged checks. As a step to put customers on guard against BANKERS DEVELOP these methods, banks are urged to inevery depositor to whom they NOVEL INSTITUTE struct mail statements of deposit accounts on the last business day of each month to The Georgia Bankers Association in notify them promptly if such statecooperation with the State College of ment are not received by the close ot Agriculture has sponsored a series of the next day. farmers institutes in various parts of Also banks should educate deposithe State of an entirely new charac- tors to safeguard blank checks and ter. The principle feature is a large cancelled vouchers as they would and comprehensive exhibit trans- money. Such paper stolen by forgers ported in four large trucks and set up soon puts real money in their hands. at each stop. When set up it fills a If all blank checks and cancelled space 40 by 60 feet and consists of vouchers were securely kept in safes panels, charts, and models on practi- instead ot filing cabinets or desks, tha cally every phase of agriculture, in- check crooks would be denied their cluding agronomy, horticulture, agri- chief stock in trade, namely, genuine cultural engineering, poultry, animal dank checks and signatures. Warn-ng- s to depositors agsinst leaving husbandry, soils and fertilizers, home economics and marketing. A large olank or cancelled checks accessible to electrified farm model, showing the sneak thieves or burglars should be uses of electricity on the farm, model sent out at once. Estimates broadcast by surety comfarm buildings and the ideal layout and landscaping ot the farmstead, is panies indicate that individuals, merchants, hotels and others outside of Dne of the most elaborate and attracbanking are shouldering more than 99 tive exhibits. Local bankers in each locality per cent of the total amount of forvisited gave the money to cover ex- gery losses. The bulk of forgery loss those who penses for the transportation and in- on checks is sustained by stallation of the exhibit in their terri- are willing to risk accepting them without reliable proof of identity or tory and assisted in the preliminary title of the presenter. advertising and publicity. The ColYears ago the Protective Departexlege of Agriculture assembled the ment of the American Bankers Assohibit and conducted the tour through ciation adopted the slogan, Strangers its various extension specialists. are not always crooks, but crooks aro usually strangers. If those outside ot banking could be prevailed upon to 11 HORSES TRAPPED IN OLD think about it HOUSE; ALL DIE OF THIRST observe this rule and when considering accepting a check merchandise or services, for The Cokeville Register reports that for their are also asked to give a which they Wednesday last while Earl D. Hag- substantial sum in cash in change, one gerty Jr., was scouting around up on busito the aids of the forgery biggest to went to he the north, Bruner creek crooks. be would denied the ness the old deserted Lloyd cabin and on opening the door he was amazed to find ten dead horses lying over the left Monday for Artl-siaJ. H. floor and one still on its feet in a to look after business. He Idaho, famished condition which was just able to totter through the door, falling will also attend tlie Ram Sale at Filer a slioit distance away in a dying con- and continue to Stanley and Arco to look after the Stoner sheep which ar dition. Cokeville The horses had gone into the cabin feeding in that country. Register. some time before for shelter from th elements or insects and in thrashing around had shut the door, on themselves. There they were compelled to remain until death relieved them from LICENSED ABSTRACTOR thirst and hunger. Of Rich County, Utah The horses were some which had been turned on the range and carried A specialty of making Deeds and Titles various brands. . Wool-wort- Sto-ne- n, LEWIS LONGHURST The small daughter of Sheriff ley Wilson was badly injured first of the week and is now in a hospital in It is reported that she took Ogden. hold of a hay derrick on their ranch south of town, and held on until the derrick had been lifted to about fifteen feet. She then let go, falling to the ground, breaking one leg near the hip and driving the bone out through the flesh. So far the leg has not been put into a cast. Stan- I t Welcome Caller One knocker that everybody likes is tpportunity Indianapolis News. - Randolph, Utah When In Evanston Dont Forget the Central Barber Shop Childrens Hair Cuts, 25c R. J. Matthews, Prop. RANDOLPH GARAGE --t- I M. 1 By Placed on Trial for Hindering President American Bankers Associa Young? He stood upon the mountain top tion Development and Prosperity With his heart-sicweary band, is a picturesque word. EADERSIIIP I of Dairy Industry. and said, Gazed upon the prarie, This is the promised land. This valley full of sagebrush, Where none has turned tlie sod, Here we will build our temple; This is the land of God. He laid the plan, not for just then, But for a future not his own, With streets so wide they are our pride Through the world they are known. Have we so soon forgotten A man so great as he? For a leader who is greater-Thworld will never see. Now even his monument For the weary points the way To a brighter tomorrow At the dawn of a new day. Look not into the shadow, But to the rising sun. Ilis finger points to hope and cheer, Just as his life has done. The pioneer who sits upon The monuments right side Was one of his faithful followers, While tlie Indian was his guide. So lets leave the monument Where it has always stood; A symbol unto manhood of all That is honorable, pure and good. Lets forget this foolish notion And let it not be said That Utah has forgotten And honors not lier dead. MRS'. ADA PALMER. CAR There has been much said on education,' but the writer has found a new Eduction. definition of the word An education is that which enables one person to count up to twenty without removing his shoes and socks. The place to buy Kelly Tires and Tubes, Auto Accessories, Batteries, all kinds. Battery Cables, Weed Tire Chains, Gates Valeo Fan Belts. . The element of mystery which en- tered into the slaying of Joseph S. Harmison, 28, oh July 27, at his ranch near Wilson, Wyoming, in the Jack-so- n Ind. Tel. Co.' Utah-Wyomi- ng C. W. Walton, Manager Hole country, was removed Monday with the announcement by W. W. Nielsen, Teton county attorney, that of the Vernal Filley, brother-in-laslain man,. had confessed to the kill. w ing- . ; . Electrical supplies House wiring fixtures Light bulbs, all kinds The best of service E23 |