OCR Text |
Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH B!r It a a !rivilga to Livt In festf CDosfepoe i News Notes UTAH OCOEN Monday will mark tbs ad dittos of tbs Oedea airport to the Odds equipped for algbt Umlln. Tb 2.500.Ao0 candle besroa lfcL according to Harold II. Tripp, managi-- i of tbs field Is expected to bs ready pur Ibca and placed In operation. FARMINGTON Sweeping without warning upon auuib Farmington About I p. m. fc'undty, a rasing flood of wain from iifivir crick, following the than A 1 1)1 idiwi,1 dl of tho disastrous debuts burs a A DOZENr different tilings mar few year ago, caused ronalderalua a headache, but there a out tb caujc and d.ia.ago properly juxt one thintr you peed ever do to tali highway, Jgvy rainstorm cast get relief, flayer Afpirin U an of brr Futnluy about 7:30 wera tbs absolute antidoie for such pain. flood. causa of the probable Keep it at the office. Hive it handy LOGAN According to Hurry C. in the home. Those subject to freInCache county agricultural 1atker, quent or ludden headaches thouJ spector, potato and grain flvldt In thia n. carry llaycr Axpirin in the pocket-titcu&iy on which certified crept art Until you have uicd it for hcaJ-achbeing grown all pasted Inspection of cold, neuralgia, etc., youve tho Hals department of acriculiuts no idea bow Bayer Aspirin can help. during tba past week. Tbs Inspection It mean quick, complete reliefwhto was nuido by 0. if. Barrett, who stated Bullion of men and women that tba local fielda wer cleaner and use it every year. And it doc not freer of disease than lart year. the heart deprt Mors than '0.000 TREMONTON ducks bats been raireJ in th Bear r.ver Migratory Bird during tho lust year, many of which bov WMMrfwtw trwts a ft frelietlMeeU been to to distant parts. It Awit a 4 td was reportrd by David H. Madsen, d sum rlntcud nt of the refuge. Madsen relumed to bit o Billy Wouldn't Stand for Leaving Out Nur recently after having epia several days at ths refug. Ho nporl thoul E hnd lo go to a for Mrs, sands of young ducks now In the stags treatment and whlic there Imr kiddle a general sui vey was made, were In the eharg of some one who MYTON 1 he total precipitation, ne- ,,n more limn tho usual j.ni,ll(.j cording to the rovernuicat rcglstra- - , f,ri The new experience thin. In Myton, from July 1, 192S, to brought a new vocuhutury lo th July 1. 1929, was 811 Inches, while youngsters. the average covering the previous ten When mot her returned 0 told (he years was 7.2S inches. During the pm t children of Ih wonderful nurse whr 1 year 2.50 Inches fell during the period so kindly cured for her. and suhl : to growing want you always lo Include Miss Blank when It wits crops. The temperaturo during the (the nurse) when you suy your evegrowing season of about four months ning prayers." Is from S3 to 100 degrees mar.lnium, This they did religiously. One night mother hnd a prominent clergyIhe 60 30 to minimum is from while the .v. man for a gue- -t of the home and h degrees. mifUi'A wns asked lo conduct the family worPLEASANT GROVE Some 330 hoys . used in picking ship. For It Is the log cabin In which Nancy llonks end girls are On rising from their knees, llitle lived when girl and In which she was married the string bean crop In this section. Blll.v. noticing a serious to Thomas Lincoln by Rev. Jesse Head of liar- - It Is an Interesting sight to see, each ! In the service, rushed ovei otnNsioti In this a Methodist rider. circuit at rodshurg. 6:20, four largo trucks morning cabin, whleh stood originally on the Lincoln farm j loaded to capacity with boys and girls, to the minister and using his newly a 'quired words, said: "You! You did in Washington county but whleh was pmved to ranging from 12 to 18, depart for the the Harrodshurg park several years ago, Thomas j bean fields. Their chatter and song not pray for the nurse. Lincoln and Ids bride lived for two or threu i awaken residents fro.n Leht to Provo, Spoil of Victory year before moving to the farm nenr llodgcn The canning company furnishes transsix. und Bob age seven, Willie, vllle where on February 12, I soft, this pioneer age portation, and rays tho plrkers 1 received a new suit each mother gave birth to the son who was destined rents brothers, a pound. Some of the best pick-- j from their who offered to become one of the great men of all time grandfather, ers can and do make $3.50 a day. to give a bright new dollar bill t Abraham Lincoln. MYTON A recent surrey of dairy- Hurrodsburg gets Its right to the title of The Ing under the Uintah Irrigation project the one who kept Ids clothes elean the longest. Mother Town' from the fact that on June IH Indicates that the j dairy Industry in The hoys, alone, were playing near 1771, a party of settlers led by Col. James llarrod the Uintah basin Is increasing quite an old well one Sunday, when Bob has already been found accidentally slipped Into It. Willie site und proceeded to lay off n there They rapidly. It In the financial probeneficial solving ran to Ihe house, gleefully exclnlm-Ing- : on t:ih side ot the assigned one acre blems of the farmers here. The sur- street running enst and west and ten acre out . shows Oh. grandpa. I get the dollar f ? the,;e are,Sa15 d,3,7 lots to each of the Inhabitants. They then pro- cows on the Uintah Irrigation project. Bob has ruined his new sulL ceeded to build four or five cabin on lliclr Ilowr and drew lots for cnldim scatteicd over a wide S3 compared with 2SI5 in 1923 and 1927. It Is found that on proWhy. he fell Into the well. territory which were called "lottery cabins. Soon 2175 In Grandfather, by working frantically, after their arrivul they were Joined by Isaac ject land owned by whites there nre was able to rescue the almost drowned Hite, a surveyor, and another party of men. 2006 dairy cows; on leased land, 3C5; owned by Indians, 144, and so on. boy by pulling him out by the hair While they were busy planning the town, Daniel Boone and Michael Stoner, messengers from Lord SPANISH FORK This section was of the head. Dunmore, who had come 800 milec lu 112 days to visited by the heaviest rainstorm of warn the venturesome pioneers In Kentucky that the season late Saturday afternoon. Military Landowner the Indians were on the warpath, arrived. While i The downpour was accompanied by a Judging by the signs vou see at there Boone became interested In llnir plans and high wind which did considerable attractive camping places all through was given a lot In the new town, adjoining that damage to ripened grain by blowing the country, this fellow Private Keep-ou- t nwna enough land for a general. of Evan Hinton. A double log cabin was huilt to it down and making It difficult to serve both Boone and Hinton and stood there cut. The second crop of lucerne hay Terre Haute Tribune. until It was burned by the Indians In 1777 Tims which was being cut was also damit will be seen Boone had a hand in settling Conciliation aged. Beets, potatoes and many other Harrodshurg before be did the town which Imre crops, however, were greatly bene"Whats the gent beefing about? his name. The settlers nt Harrodshurg remained fited Hair tn the soup. by the storm. Wind put the there until July. then, as a result of the warning "Send out a pretty waitress. ByBtem out of commission for llghtlng brought by Boone nnd Stnr.er. r turned to take a short time, hut it was soon repaired. part In the Dunmore war and fouglil In tluit hisWool shorn from Utah PROVO toric engagement, the battle of 1oint Pleasant. sheep this season amounted to 19,764,-- : On March 15, 1775, llarrod and his settlers reCOO pounds, compared with 22,072,000 turned to make their ppriunnem settlement at a year ago, tho Utah wool report IsHarrodshurg (since Boone began his fori at sued recently by Frank Andrews, 1. 1775. a has Booneshorough, Apiil llnrrodsharg federal agricultural statistician, de-- , Boones-bnrougtwo more over than weeks priority of The dares. lighter clip resulted from us a permanent settlement) By Sep poorer condition of sheep that were tember 8 the wives nnd families ot the Harrods burg settlers had arrived and. finding the original effected by a dry fall and long winter, fort inadequate and scarcely sate as a defense the report explains. Average weight from the Indian nttacks which weie sure to come, a fleece In 1929 is 8.1 pounds, com-- : A New Exterminator that a second and larger one was bt.il! on old Fort pared with 8.9 in 192S. Number of Kilt Livestock, Poultry, Wont Hill. sheep shorn this year was 2,440,000, or even Baby Chicks Cats, Dogs, Within Its narrow confines that stockaded against 2,4S0,000 list year. can be used about the horae.bam or poultry all the elements that have Davis county has yard withabsolutesafety os it contains notfaatfly FARMINGTON stronghold contained poison by U. S.is made cfof Squill, as recommade Kentucky famous courage and kindliness harvested practically 85 per cent of a mended Agriculture, undet Dept, which distinguished such leaders as Boone and splendid crop of apricots: The fruit, the Connable process which insures maximum Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansat strength. Harrod and Logan ; religion as practiced by Rev. this year, according to H. P. Mathews, State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. John Lythe and Squire Boone, who came with district agricultural Inspector, has Sold on a Money-Bac- k Guarantee. the original Squill exterBible In one hand an ax In the oilier; culture upon been of excellent quality and has Insist minator. All druggists, 75c. Large size (four timet In John Todd; brought an exceptionally good price. aa much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot supply and statesmanship its exemplified Co. Springfield, O. superb generalship, for there George Rogers Clark Some of the fruit was inclined to run you planned his conquest of the Northwest Terri- j small, but of a splendid color which So read8 a descriptive pamphlet of tory. offset the size. The size of this fruit the fort. was due to the fact that the trees were Situated on the Wilderness Road, It was conloaded to capacity and in most cases a refuge for were thinned. veniently reached and provided The growers were Men Needed In Oil Fields of South America other forters when Indians were on the warpath. good pay. free transportation: send stamped har-- 1 envelope for information. FOREIGN 8ERV. Brave pioneers placed their wives and children pleased with such a yield after ICE BUREAU, Carlton Hotel, Denver, Colo. there for safety when unable to protect them vesting not more than a half crop cherries. at their own forts. People traveling over this Wilderness Road stopped there and found corPRICE Steady and heavy rains, dial welcome, except perhaps Gen. Henry Hamwhich began early Saturday efternoon Headaches, Toothaches, neuralgia and lumbago ilton, called the hair buyer,' who rested there and continued without appreciable inpains, cramps of menstruation are quickly, aimost miraculously stopped by a single dcoe when sent tn chains to Williamsburg, the captive of KALMINE, the world famous French Pain until 6 p. m. Sunday, have terruption killer. Safe and of George Rogers Clark. forming. Send 60c rendered roads in this section of Utah for trial package and FREK PAMPHLET. Black Fish attacked It. Capt. John Haggin, almost and a serious trafNATIONAL REMEDY CO.0, impassable Cnpt. John Hinksnn, Capt. John McClelland. Col fic tieup is threatened. Highways Robert Iatterson, General l.ogary, John Maxwell covered with several inches of mud and scores of others whose names adorn the pages weakened and of our pioneer history occupied Hnrrod's fort nt and debris and bridges Choose a Profitable Vocation have caused floods washed by away those eventful years. . To some time during Learn the Beauty Culture Course given by a 4 isto commission road state Utah the man that has taught students bow to them all we must accord the lonor due for they earn BaG MONEY. Catalog sent on request. believed is to tourists. It sue warning came us the Revolution begun,1 held their ground, ITT AH HIGH SCHOOL defended irginias back door and saved an em that mail and other traffic out of OF BEAUTY CULTUISB T Price may ha held up for at least s 831 Clift Dldg. Salt Lake City pire to the nation. Jay. I h-- cr, zrnrtrTfA?rr-cXT- i trxcr. ji&iLAtairour By ELMO SCOTT WATSON rt Imasln parallelogram mad. f r cl-I- n t nd la and, tblr common oui.id. wall be lug lb wall of Ih fort, and loopholod. At tb four eorntra of tb parallelogram tba cabin juM.d out, with port In lb anal In ordr to l a flanking fr In can Ih savag ra hd tb paliaad. And but o pal with wstrhtow.r tba lhr on ilbr aid, ab.r s.ntrir. a.l dap and nlabl a scanning tb fort ll ns. Within lb fori bla common dolled a lib for.. I wb.r aurb calll a bad been raved brnweed on Ih acanlr Ther bad been but lb on arruwnjr bore free. befor our arrival. And tb aetllerat llow aha II I d.arrlo them aa they crowded around u In.ld Hi Bale? Horn alared at U with aallow face and yea brlKblenrd br tb fever, pet other bad lb red glow of health, blanv of Ih men wore rouab beard, unksmpt, and trealh.rn-wor- n pellote, hunting ehirta. tfi.n tallied with blood. Tb barefool.d women wore unbonnet, and Inoa bnmeepun sown, aome of linen mad from neitlea wbll lb children warmed her and ther and everywhere In any Co. I urn that ehanr bad given them All aeem In tip talked at once, they piled ua wllb question ttl- after queellon of Ih Irar. lb Watauga Portrait of Hamilton and Clark from Qualft'a menla, lb new a In tb Carolina, and bow lb Tha Capture of Old Vincennes (eourteay of . . war went. . Bobb-MrriOf couree. tb love of Ih frontier waa la the Co.). Photographs of tho fort and Lincoln cabin by tha author. grain of thee men. Hut what did they come bark to? tray after day would Ih run ns over tb foreei and beat down upon lb little Inf. which w were penned. Tb row of cabin leanround whose broad month there Is always the ing again! lb alorkad marked Ih bnundnrlr truce of a smile und In whic-- blue eyts there of our diminutive world. Beyond them. Invisible, lurked a relenlleea foe. Within, the greater glints always a l lndly hut determined look. And alon were calm, and a man' worth waa eel down II of them listen, for Hits man Is lHtnU-Boone. to a balra breadth. Som were alwaye lo be But not all of the Imaginary Inhabitants of found aqualtlna on their dooratepa curbing lb hour which hnd even them depart for Ibla land; llurrod's Fort which you might see are fighting aome wrest 1.4 and fought on Ih common, for a men and geucrala and empire builders. From flat fight with a fair field and no favor wa a favor-I- t one of the cabins comes the hum of young . . amuaement of lb bark wood amen. voices and as you peep through the window you Co Ih rummer wore away, wbll we lived from band to mouth on aurh aranty far a the two of see the homespun-claform of Mrs, William them ahol and whnt w could venture lo gather Connies, around whom nre gathered a group of In tb unkempt field near the gal. A winter of youngsters learning their letters from paddles, famine lurked ahead and men wer gonded nenr s to madreca al Ih thought of clearing made and crude reprr duet Ions of the old English corn planted In Ih nprlng within reach of their For this Is of Queen Elizabeth's time. hand, aa II were, and they might not harveet it But the first school west of the Alleghanles. before some stupid or mischievous child learns Is the picture of an Amerlcuu Keene that these paddles have another use at the hands years ago which Winston Churchill of Mistress Connies, let ns Investigate the steady In his book, "The Crasslng." For hum which mines from stint her cabin. For there remember thnt great novel of a sits Anne McGInty at the spinning wheel which quarter of a century ngo, you will recull she has brought with her over Hie long mountain that ChurchIU was writing of those American trail and she Is busy spinning the thread of comIn the words of Arthur Gulternmn, the poet, who, bination hufTuI wool nnd lint from wild nettles. . ; Built their lonely station and tha logs Burk of her stands tne loom which she has rewer rut and hewn fiy the breed of Simon Kenton nnd the blood of signed for weaving the conrse but warm cloth Daniel Boone. which so many of the pioneers nf llurrod's StaIn stood behind their the loophole rugged They tion are wearing. pallaades Anne also experimented with nuts and harks Through hot and weary sieges, attacks and ambuscade. for dyeing her goods, for. having an artistic eye, mad aallle till their the Shawnees They shot and she was not satisfied with the drab tones of the broke and fled. natural colors, one of the charming women of While the women charged the rifle and the women shaped tha lead. who act as guides through the fort, Hurrodsburg, The women nursed the wounded and the women will tell The Inner hark of white walnut you. watched by night, Tb women brought tb water through the peril produced Jull yellows; hlnek walnut, dark of the fight browns; Indigo, blues; inudder. dlnry reds; oak. The mothers never faltered; and the aona that then purple; cedar berries, dove or leiid color. With wer small these pretty colors the women made bright Grew as Hunters of Kentucky and were strong dresses of the nnd the roman who and brave and tall. And this could originate the most beautiful combination great parallelogram mnde of log cabins set end to end was he cradle of Kenof colors or deaig's, the most perfect broken tucky, the first English settlement west of the plaids, was a woman of note. Anne was rarely skillful and full of energy nnd so soon as the Alleghanles. the place wtilch has been aptly historic called the Hnmestown of the West Indians had scalped a husband, she selected at will from the waiting list before her. Ilorrodsburg. Although the stirring events which took place within and around Its walls are now Little wonder that the citizens of the Harrods-bura century and a half In the pnxt. that historic of today have taken pains to recreate the atpast still lives. Go to Harrodshurg today and mosphere of the past and to take prldt In the For you will rub your eyes in astonishment. history of their city. For they have undisputed there you will see these logs nud cabins, broiling claim to the following historic firsts. The first In the midsummer sun, much as Churchill has white settlement of Kentucky. 1771. The first described them, and as you walk through the white child horn in Kentucky. The first summer resort In Kentucky. Tl e first court for Kentucky huge log gates." which stand Invitingly open, It Is easy to forget that you arc living In the county. The first school in Kentucky. The first sermon preached In Kentucky. Twentieth century America of radios and automoThe first Presbybiles and airplanes and It Is easy to believe thnt terian church organized in Kentucky. The first some magic has carried you hack to that far-of- f representative from Kentucky in the Continental time when the nation was In the making. congress. The first election in Kentucky, sending For on the edge of the modern city of Harrods-burg- , George Rogers Clark nnd GnhrM Jones to the The first Sunday school Ky., Is a park which has been presented Virginia legislature. to the state by the citizens of Harrodshurg as a organized in Kentucky. The firs spinning wheel for making Ifnsp.v. The first grist mill driven by memorial to her pioneers, and dominating all of water (near Harrodshurg). The first race course the other reminders of the past Is a In Kentucky. The first manufacturing of pottery, enclosure, a replica of Harrods fort. As you stroll across the grassy common inside fabrics, plows, etc. At the intersection of two of the principal street Its walls. It Is not difficult ta people those cabins In Harrodshurg stands a granite boulder with a around with you with the pioneers who once lived and loved, labored and fought and (some of bronze tablet hearing this inscription. "Erected by the Woman's Cluh of Harrodshurg honoring the them) died there. Over In that doorway stands James Harrod, Mother Town of Kentucky, founded June 1(1. 1774. and remembering the fiist mothers of the west to !tall, massive, strong, active, dignified, one of enter the wilderness: Mrs. Daniel P.oone, Mrs. the handsomest ren of his time. Look through Richard Hogan, Mrs. Hugh McGary, Mrs. Thomas the doorway of that cabin and there you might A tribute from the womanhood Denton. of the gee a young man, tall, square-built- , present to the womanhood of the past. June 10, sandy of hair, his piercing blue eyes scanning 1020. Although that simple Inscription suggests Intently the papers which litter the hand-hewthe glory of Ilurrodsburg's historic past. It is not table before which he sits. It is George Rogers until one visits the pioneer memorial state park, Clark planning his conquest of the British forts From another cabin In the Illinois country. previously referred to. that the past ean be visualized. For besides the replica of the fort, comes the sound of voices in loud dispute. There there one finds a monument erected by the same ; Is an angry uote In the deep, coarse voice of a man. For Hugh McGary is a Womans club to that Washington of the West Bhort thick-se- t man, a brave man but a rash and hasty George Rogers Clark. Nearly, too. Is the man as the story of the disastrous battle of Rlue pioneer cemetery. Old Fort Hill cemetery it Is Licks testifies. Equally brave are Joseph Bowcalled, In which lie buried more than 500 of the In front of the fort pioneers of that region. man, John Floyd. John Todd and Benjamin stands another remindei df the past, a log cabin, Logan, hut they cannot persuade Hugh McGary. which has a compelling interest for all visitors. And then speaks up the quiet voice of another, rr tr, mfj&nxiarGimr d horn-hook- SUCH linsey-woolse- heavily-stockade- , i n ' ' d SPIRIN lU-fu- g Super-Intende- hur-plLi- vile-gre- 3oan b.-ln- four-year-o- ld ! ! 4 I j I , t '? j ' ' Kill Eats 1 Without Poison i I j KILLS-RATS-ON- LY j I DONT SUFFER non-hab- . t J mm4444mM444 |