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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH 5 News Notes Bell-an-s It's a Prtvtlegs FOR INDIGESTION to Livs in Utah Local cheese factory, PANGUITCH latest business venture sponsored by the Commercial club, is fast nearing completion, due to liberal subscription, due to liberal subscription- - to stock and good management of the club. 'According to President W. J. Henderson, the factory should be ready for operation about November I No More Distress Gas, Sourness, Heartburn Sick Headache, Dizziness after eating or drinking Sold Everywhere 9, Scientist Will Spend Three Months on Floe , fall-sow- fur-line- d reading matter and a phonograph. Where his frigid domain will drift to, Simpsop has no Idea ; however, he says he has. a collapsible rubber boat which would keep him. afloat In an ' emergency. $277,353. . . Headaches from SUgkt Colds SALT LAKE Utah produced' 726 carloads of eggs at a' value of $2,541,-00during 1926, hs compared with 605 carloads in 1925, valued at. $2,117,500PAYSQN Twenty carloads of cattle including approximately 700 head, November were shipped 5, over the ,D. & R. G. W.. The herd of cattle was driven fronl Delta .and was headed for Pay.son when decision wTas reach'ed.to ship it from Goshen. Because loading facilities were inad equate. Agent H. E. Jones, the help of a. section crew, constructed an improvised loading platform. . PANGUITCH State fish hatchery-No!- ' 8, located two miles west of Hatch is now feeding 250,000 rainbow trout. According to.Jams Sargent, Jr.,' director of the hatchery, these aby trout will be kept at the hatchery until next spring, when they will average five to six Inches in length, and then will be. placed in the various lakes and streams of this section. Mr- Sargent reports that the silver salmon placed in Navajo and Panguitch lakes last season are thriving; that fishing' In this section generally has been the best in a number of years. VERNAL7 Federal meat inspection for Vernal was unanimously endorsed at a meeting of the Ashley Valley' Sheepgrowers association, . called by President John Rennion, at which Dr "F. E. Murray and inspector W. T. Hoffman of Salt Lake City of the United ' States : bureau of animal industry strongly recommended that every step ' be ta'ken td secure th'is service. . Notice of intention ROOSEVELT to pave an additional seventeen blocks of sidewalks in Roosevelt has b.een announced by the city council. These improvements, will, for the most part, .act as. additional approaches to churches .and schools. In addition to the construction, notice is .also posted of intention to improve and . recon struct certain of the' present sidewalks The total cost. Is estimated at $8499.60 LOGAN Farmers of Cache county harvested approximately 85 per cent of the sugar beet crop and 80 per. cent, of their potatoes during the month of October, according to a statement issued 'recently-bthe local farm bureau. Exceptionally favorable weather prevailed throughout the entire month permitting the harvesting of crops to advance at an unusually fast rate.SALT LAKE Freeh fruits and veg etables unloaded at Salt Lake during October show, a considerable increase over the amount unloaded during the same month last year, according to Edgar M. Ledyard, chairman of the agricultural committee. OGDEN Change in the course of the state highway and a straightening out of the Central railroad tracks at the Utah hot springs, nine miles north of Ogden, are being Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets relieve the Headarhe by curing the Cold. Look for Bignatftre of E. W. Grove on the box. 30c. Adv. 0 - Conditions A7m& QAEIfZY JiffiTVSSBBAZZ Thus'does Courtney Ryley Cooper end his book Annie Onkley Woman at Arms,' n biography of New York, published by Duffleld and company ua this year, a book which will recall to many of the when our of youth period thnt glamorous nn visit of Buffalo Bills Wild West show was annual event to be looked forward to almost ns much as the Fourth of July, Christmas or the Inst In that day of school. Circus day Is not Included reason obvious a for very list of red letter days, there was more than one circus. But there was Bill show. only one Buffalo Bill and one Buffalo And there never was and never will be again but one Annie Oakley Little Miss Sure Shot, In history. undoubtedly the greatest mnrkswoman a that father In many Is having right Cooper sweetnight say to his son, She was my first heart. For long before the screen placed the face of Mary Tickford before the eye's of millions of Americans, this girl, born August 13, 18l, who was christened Phoebe Anne Oakley Mozee and who was destined to make the shortened form of her name, Annie Oakley," known throughout the world, had won the right to the title of the first Americas Sweetheart. There Is more than one reason why Annie AlOakley has nn enduring claim to that title. though not all of these reasons were generally known at the height of her popularity, her biography shows that Young America did not guess and sweetheart" wrong In mnktng her his offering to her such a full measure of admiration and devotion. The life story of Annie Oakley Is a combination Cinderella fairy story, frontier melodrama albeit a clean melodrama and a yarn. sort of female Horatio Alger-ris- e The Cinderella part of It begins with the settlement pioneer home nenr a small cross-road- s In Darke county, Ohio, where In a little log cabin lived Jake Mozee and his wife, whom, as a twelve-year-olchild he had rescued from a brutal stepfather In Pennsylvania. He had given her a home with his sister and. after marrying her when she was fifteen, set out with her to make a new home In the Ohio country. In this new home Mozee and his wife fought a constant battle with privation and poverty. Then Mozee, returning from the mill, was frozen to death In a blizzard and upon the mother fell the whole task of providing for her seven children. At the age of six Annie began helping fill the family larder by trapping quail and a few years later she had made the flrt start on the rifle career that was to make her famous. One of the few possessions which Jake Mozee had brought with him from Pennsylvania was a cap and hall Kentucky rifle which hung over the fireplace, but which hud never been used because Mozee was a Quaker with the Quaker prejudice against firearms. The tomboy Annie, however, did not share thnt prejudice. he saw In the weapon an Instrument for getting more food for her brothers and sisters, and finally gained her mother's reluctant consent. But the beginning of her career ns a marks-womawas soon Interrupted. She went to the county Infirmary to get the chance to attend school and while there a stranger appeared and offered to take one of the girls at the infirmary to work for her hoard and keep." Annie was the girl selected and In the home of this man began her Cinderella existence. The man was a brute and Ids wife a virago. Annie was held as a virtual slave subjected to all sorts of cruel treat-i.t- . Once when she fell asleep over a basket of mending the woman tlnevv her out Into a snow After two years of this exist Storm ence she finally escaped and returned home. There she continued her former role of pro ( e d h vidor for the family with the rifle aud thus laid the foundation for the marvelous skill which was to make her world, famous. News of her skill spread throughout Darke county and even to Cincinnati where hotel keepers had been buying the game which she killed. When Annie was fifteen there came to Cincinnati the team of Butler and company, performing deeds of daring and dexterity with firearms, seldom As a exhibited before the eyes of an audience. publicity stunt, Frank E. Butler was accustomed to Issue a challenge to nil comers to a shooting match. The challenge was tnken up by one of Annies hotelkeeping patrons who prevailed upon her to shoot against the professional. The girl not only won the match, but also won the heart of Frank Ilutlcr and a year or so later they were married. She began taking part In her husbands act and for some time they were billed as Butler and Oakley. Then Butler, who was a skillful showman, began giving his wife more and more ofNthe limelight and pushing himself more and more Into the background, Within a short time she was a noted figure In the eastern d theaters. At one time while they were playing In St Taul a delegation of Sioux Indians, who were on their way to Washington for a conference with the "Great White Father," attended the theater where Butler and Oakley were presenting their act. One of the delegation was the famous Sitting. Bull, who gave evidence of his approval of the with many a "Waste! girl's marksmanship t (Good). Finnlly as she performed her most a end from the of that shooting feat, clgnrette held between the teeth of her husband Sitting Bull arose In great excitement shouting Watnnya Clcilia ! (Little Sure Shot). Little Sure Shot was the name of one of his daughters who had died, and so greatly was he Impressed witf Annie Oakleys prowess that he sent nn inter preter to her after the show and asked permission to adopt her as Ids daughter. She consented and the ceremony took place at the hotel. After thnt managers were more eager than ever to book the act of Sitting Bull's adopted daughter. In the menntlme Col. W. F. Cody, Buffalo Bill, had organized his Wild West show, hut the first year had been almost a failure. While It was playing in New Orleans Frank Butler and Annie Oakley, who were then traveling with a circus, visited the show and decided that they would prefer being a part of this outfit than of the circus. Cody could not afford to pay the salary that Butler asked so nothing came of It at the time. But the next year their trails crossed again at Louisville, Ky., and Nate Salsbury, Buffalo Bills partner, who happened to he passing by while Annie and her were rehearsing their act, was so Impressed by It and Its possibilities ns a part of his show that he hired them on the spot. So In the year IS,85 Annie Oakley joined the Buffalo Bill Wild West show and there began that series of amazing triumph': which this former Oldo waif was to share with one of the greatest figures the show world has ever known. It s through her influence that another feature was added to the show which greatly enhanced its popularity. For some time Buffalo Bill hud been trying to Induce Sitting Bull to join his company. But the old Sioux leader steadfastly refused. After Annie joined the show Cody tried again. He sent an Interpreter to Sitting Bull with the word thnt Watanja Clcilia was with his show and wanted Sitting Bull to join also. There was no further argument. Sitting Bull came forthwith! And the crowds which turned out to see the reputed leader of the Indians at the Custer battle, the great buffalo hunter and ttie great murkswoinan Increased at every city in whiili the show appeared. After a successful Mason of ISsG on Staten Island and lu Madison Square garden, N. Y., dlffl-cul- d mz, ah?, jbxzf&pizz zdttazo TMZ&f1885 ' Barry Buffalo Bill begun looking around for new worlils to conquer. He found it first la England, where his show on the ision of Queen Victoiia's jubilee in London. It was during this engage; ment that Annie won her famous shooting match with the Grand Duke Michael of Russia, a match which had been arranged by the prince of Wales ' (later Edward VII). Two years later Buffalo Bill's Wild West was showing in Paris. Cody had met with financial . Changed When Burrows first came 'here he was very sociable, but now he seemat to .want to keep everybody yt a dis- from-Goshe- non!1' half-nake- - - eagle-plume- , centlyleft England with the intention of 1,466,880 pounds, productionvalued- - at $274,054 compared with that of 1925, wrhen. 1,155,700 pounds 'brought As winter's chill draws nearer,' would you jnip your comfortable home for a dwelling on' an Iceberg? That is what John B. Simpson, British scientist, ha'a just done, according to "t dog. Popular Science Monthly. With re- -' he for a company. and phonograph of making hist home .for three months nn nn jee floe. . . My purpose, Simpson said.- Is. 'to gather material for a book on the Ice I expect-tbe very comforta-- . fields. hie on, some drifting leebprg. j' shall erect a tent, and warm It with ari oil' stove. I have plenty of catle exhibited at the seventeenth annual Pacific International Livestock exposition at Portland, Ore., arrived .here in the care of Gilbert Thatcher. The state herd won third place in the competition of western states and every animal of the eleven was in the prize money class. DRAPER Poultry industry In Utah Is. steadily growing, as shown In the was gone. And In many a home n. ,nterrof had father halted In his reading. The In Its place, a great amphitheater faded. of flying stretched In a vastncss of distance, d tiers of forms, of scenery, of throng-puckenodded seats. At one side there waved and headdresses of tne repred the Cosentatives of the Stout, the Kiowa, the manche and the Cheyenne. Yonder a stalwart man In flowing hair and straight brushed over goatee, hts buckskin coat fitting snug upon his massive shoulders, rode like a god old Dead-woo- d the prancing horse. Farther away, the dally stagecoach awaited the cue for of mounencounter with the "deadly aborigine tain and plain" And right out there ess than a Fcore of feet away, shooting against the Johnny Baker for the "champeenshlp of Wild West a "Who was Annie Oakley? asked many sweet-Pea- rt first was She my that father night. ' 25c and 75c Package During the week endmoderate temperature prevailed over Utah, according t the weekly report on weather, range and crop conditions, Issued fr.om, the office of J. Cecil Alter, government The weather Weatlier observer. proved very favorable for livestock grazing on fall pastures and the winder ranges, says the report, and for n the germination and grow'th of grains Fall seeding has been .about completed. Early sown grain Is making splendid growth and late seed-ing- s are coming up nicely. OGDEN Utahs herd of Holstein and other romantic things caused more than one boy to read carefully death. that notice of Annie Oakley' would It caused a question which never have been thought of thirty years ago. But today: r "Bop who was Annie Oakley came the query In many a home when the short dispatch made known the fact that Little Missy mWGESTWn $108,000. SALT LAKE ing November WATSON By ELMO SCOTT and Buffalo Bill rifles of HE mention g&sssse ACUTE 15- Mr. Ray Stringham,' an experienced creamery man, is In charge of he important details of completing; the factory, and .the club is taking every possible precaution to make this now enterprise a success. t PROVO Turkeys marketed by Utah growers in 1926 amounted to 320,-00- 0 pounds at $150,000. This was an increase from 240,000 pounds for 1925, 'valued at BElfcWlS indigestion tance.. Thats .' natural creditor body is his enough; now. every- Troubles, like babies, grow larger by nursing I.ndv Holland. . - reverses and he hoped to recotip his losses in the French capital. But on the grand opening day, with the President of France and other high officials 'present, It soon became apparent thnt . the show was doomed to be a flop. The French simply couldnt get" the 'meaning 'of It all the bucking horses, the mimic warfare between the cowboys nnd the Indians, whom. Incidentally, they thought were fakes. But when Annie Oakley gave her exhibifion of then It was different. Here was marksmanship something they could understand, and she was given an ovation tha.t a queen might he thrilled over. For the French had 'never seen such shooting ns this. Here are a few of the stunts. tha she performed: In shooting elny' pigons, .she stood 20 feet hack of the traps, started with the pulling of the trap, ran (he 20 feet, picked up her . gun and broke the pigeon while kt vvit still in the air. Using three double-barreleshotguns she broke six glass balls thrown into the air at. once. .She shot a dime from between tier bus band's thumb and forefinger at 30 paces Perlmps tne most famous of her stunt was tliai of 'shoot Ing the ashes from a cigarette in the mouth of Kaiser Wilhelm, Mien the Crown Prince' of Oo'r many. Had her .aim been a little less-truthe World war might never have been fought! Annie Oakley ended her career with the Buf faid Bill show in 1001. Then tragedy came into hr life again.- - On the last journey of the. season the show train was wrecked In North Carolina. Annie Oakley' was desperately Injured. But the same courage that had always .carried 'her through every emergency carried her through five operations and years of agony. Although the doctors had said she could never handle a gun again; she staged a tcome-buik,and at I'inehurst, N. C., in April, 1022, she broke 100 clay targets : straight, shooting from. 10 yards. Annie Oakley had many other interests besides her shooting. Although at one lime she was mak ing $1,000 a vveik, her estate at her death last year was comparatively small. Perhaps the fact that she supported and educated an adopted famUtah-Idahily of 18 children as well as giving generously to many charities had something to do with that. When the news of her death was flashed from Dayton, Ohio, on November 4, 1020, to revive her urged by Orman W. Ewing and his asname and fame, it also started a discussion as to sociates, who recently purchased the why free passes to a circus or 'theater are now resort. The changes, acording to Mr. universally known as Annie Oakleys. In this Ewing, are incident to the plan he has in mind of building a resort there. book Mr Cooper gives the origin of the phrase as follows: MOAB Campaign to stamp out One of her feata was tc place a playing card, scabies among the sheep of this state the ace of hearts, as a target at a distance of 25 yards. Then, firing 25 shots in 27 second, she was carried on during September and would obliterate that ace of hearts in the center, October, it was reported to the state leaving only bullet holes in Us place. A card thus shot by Annie Oakley formed quite a souvenir in board of agriculture by Thomas Redmond, chief state sheep inspector. the eighties Thete came Into being a baseball magnate who During September about 70,000 sheep looked with some disfavor upon passes as all were inspected and found free from baseball managers look upon these avenues of free admission. It Is the custom, that the door lender scabies, and 10.396 sheep found free may know the ticket to be free, to punch a hole from scabies were dipped once tor or two tn the card, thus saving a miscount when eradication of ticks. There were thin- the proceeds of the day were checked One dty sheep found infected witA a card came to the gate which had been thorscabies that were dipped the third oughly perforated. The magnate remarked lacontime. ically: Huh! Looks like Anni Oakland shot at it!" -- d No mother In this enlightened age would give her baby something she did nol know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Caslorla will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little ill. Fretfulness and fever,' too ; it seems no time until exery thing Is serene. That's the beauty of.Castoria; its gentle influence seems Just what Is needed.' It does all that castor oil might .accomplish, without shock to the system. Without the evil taste. It's delicious! Being purely vegeta-ablyou can give it as often as theres a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, natural sleep. ' Just one warning: It is genuine Fletchers Castoria that physicians recommend. Other preparations may he just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writers is going to test them! Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Castoria Is worth Its weight in gold. e, - " o ty-eig- Children Cry for PARKERS j HAIR BALSAM A j I i Remove? Dandruff p!hAirHIng Restores Color ana and Faded Hail Beauty to Gray $1 tor. and fUeroy Oat ImnrifrtL Y ltio FLORESTON SHAMPOO Meal for tise In connection wuh Parker 8 Hair Pa pam. Makes Vi hair soft and Unify. 60 cents by mail or at drng-CisHiscox Chtmicii Works Takhogne, N. I. r s |