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Show UTAH BRIEFS Club Grain Nepbl The Central Growers' Inc. axperi la market T million bushels cf wheat from t'tab MiiJ soiiibraMirq Idaho. lb lnialla-Ho- n Fprlngxilh Uhls cf an auxiliary plant, pljia and 11 neeesry eterirle equip, 1 1 mouth cf Kprlng Crack meal recelw-ed- . las'll bat Ili)cn n I(b bfbbl Arrangements have mad fog lb o'i,ltig of the Rick' I be summer field Relic ball during fr per MARY" GRAHAM , T (MKal S SKY CHATTER 1 month. Proto "My season," Saturn lobl Ilirrjr, "ora llk yours In ihelr degrees f warmth, mild weather, and no forth eimwa last tfc.ly axery one of uiy year," aexeii t on Work will b new Junior lilgli mhool lailhilng on July I. Plans for another similar bnlbRt'jt bate been pprtrd. Knirle are bring received for the flrt annual dog how cf tha t'g'Vn Kennel Club, Ogden UallrmiU employ 3.3i't pcroti4 w:lt n payroll cf f5,fiu.257 making Ibis Industry lie largest payroll builder In tbU city, Provo The cradtniitig dna of Ibe Brigham Young itiilverliy bits added IT.rjet to the endow metil fund cf lbs IhhiI. Mnry.tule A celebration, with from aurroitmlitig towns preent was held In honor cf tbs new train service beginning June 1. Provo Prorrty owners of Third 4iat Street urged the city rmanda-shu- t o Improve and pave this embracing rigid bbs k. bn to Kuyst llle -- 4 II Girls' club Ism organized here. agrlcti-turn- ! Guunl-o- n Tl e vocational over last Intproxeiii'iil prcjict year shows a decided gain. M.ip!eloti Put rlii so of a r'gbt of way for a new read nl Mapletoti from tb Utah Malm Sugar company baa been nude. Lehl The l:dlnn War Veterans' reM rat l.m will I held here August 12 to 1.1 Amerb-uAmeriean Fork The Ini prove-Fork canyon road Is lild wMenisI ill ll lUlliilier of places. Mean The Western Farm las none IV association will hold t annual and Halt laike convention In City June 10 to 14. Plea and Grove Only 12S reactor wen found In a toial of 17.4S is In Utah nil tie for county. Coalville A letup irr.-igate lias d for the storage of surIsvti water from the Film plus run-of- f dam. It I ox!eted to amount to Id.tsst acre fe. t. Ogden n ttls-reiih- "Ii f winyou mean sex on year ter and sexen years of spring and seven years of summer and so on? kked ilsrry. JuM what I mean," snld Fntura. "Clud you get Ilia Idea at ones." "! you find anyone grumbling over having a season lust so lnc? Now If we hnx loo long a winter or (on long a spring people grumble." "I never hear complaints. Harry bud Imped from tbs way In which ha had put his question that Saturn would give himself sway and answer Chat having no opl cm hit planet liters could s no complaints. But Saturn's syes twinkled as Its answered. for Its knew what was In liar-ry'- a mind. However, llarry was Juat about certain that there waa no Ilf here. I'rorn the look of what he could see he could tell that It was very lint and that It was not like his earth where s many creatures lived. It was the strangest thing but at this moment Cosmo arrived nil It the plitiie. Ilow well they were going to guard their secret I llarry subl good-bto Saturn hurriedly for Cosmo said they mustn't be late. "Itoti't forget to look at my rings through a telescope next time you get a chance," Saturn called out. "Sorry I couldn't have shown them to you here, but on account of going around y me" Harry did md hear the end of the They were (lying once more. He made himself quite at home In the plane now. He looked at some of the charts ns lie ate sandwiches. We'll Just wblx hy Uranus," aald Cosmo. He's next to the most distant planet and you can't see him without aentciH-e- . e l nworj) 52 W2&u&&ojrQir.j;z: I shall salsr no neomlum upon UnMirhuMtli; Thors shs Is. IlrhoM her. and Judra for jroursolvoa, Tharr Is hrr history; tha world knows It by heart. Tha past, at hast. Is sacurs, Thara Is Boston and Concord and Ui ln tngton and Bunkar Hill; and thrra thay will foravar. ah '25CZJT non. nsods IT By ELMO SCOTT WATSON WAS Just a century ago that one of the greatest statesmen an probably greatest American orator ottered the words given a hove. The scene was the senate chamber In the Oipltnl at Washington; the orator was Daniel Webster and the occasion whs the debate on resolution of Inquiry respecting the sales and surveys of western lands, Introduced hy Senator Finite of Connecticut In December, 1S29. On January 19, 1830, Senator llayne of South Carolina, speaking on the resolution, made an attack upon the New England states, who, he declared, wished to check the growth of the West In the Interests of the protective policy. Webster felt that this attack could not be left unanswered and the next day he replied to It But it was not until a week later, January 20. 1830, following another attack by llayne, that he made the Immortal speech, known as Webster's Iteply to Hayne," In which he not only demolished the principle of nullification but he set forth with very attribute of eloquence the nature of the Union as It has developed under the Constitution, and took the vague popular conception and gave It life and form and character. In the course of the speech he uttered his tribute to the Old Bay state In the words which have become almost as famous as the more Important part of his oration, even though popular conception has erroneously preserved It In the form of Massachusetts, there she stands! In 1830 Daniel Webster pointed to the 200 years of her history" which the , world knows by heart." And now In 1930 the people of that commonwealth are pointing to her 300 years of history and Inviting the world to Join with them In celebrating her three hundredth birthday. For this Is the year of the Massachusetts Bay tercentenary which Is being celebrated In one form or another throughout the state. Parades, pageants, exhibits, dedications, memorials, meetings, receptions, sports on land and water and even In the air, organized tours, official ceremonies In varied form, in addition to important business, trade and Industrial features, are some of those forms. Already some of them have been held In one place or another as a part of the general program but the principal events will take place durlDg the five months from June to October. One of the high spots of those five months will be June 12 when a replica of an ancient ship named the Arbella will sail Into Salem harbor. Tor It was on June 12, 1030. that the original Arbella, which had sailed from Southampton. England, on March 22, 1030, with 300 passengers on board, dropped her anchor In Salem harbor. Those passengers were the settlers of the Massachusetts Bay colony, chartered by King Charles I of England. led by John WInthrop, governor, and Thomas Dudley, lieutenant governor. If the precious charter which John WInthrop was bringing with him had been other than what it was. the Massachusetts Bay tercentenary this year would be of Interest mainly to the citizens of the Bay state. But since It was what It was. that celebration has national significance. For this charter, primarily a business document similar In form to many of Its day, proved to he such a workable guide to action and government that it served as the direct basis for Jhe constitution of the state of Massachusetts, and this document In turn was model for many of die later state constitutions and for that of the whole nation. More than that, upon this charter was bullded the form of civil government which guarantees to all Americans life, liberty and pursuit of happiness ns witness the first article in the - A- orjunjpzri3i6i ' stretched a trenchant shadow over lakes and rivers and plains and Rockies and Sierras to the Pacific. Massachusetts was a rolony, thumbing Its nose (In a strictly constitutional manner) at the royal government In England, while New York and New Jersey and Pennsylvania and the Carolina were still all back settlement. Hence. Massachusetts was able to raise a crop of American statesmen before the Mvlngstona and the Penn and the Pinckneys and the Rutledges had liegun to bloom. Wliut a rich mouthful Is the list of Massachusetts men who have become part of the national history of the United States! Bold John Smith and winning William Bradford, and peppery, but efficient. Myles Stnndlsh; John WInthrop and John Kndlcott and Gov. emnr Dudley, Parson Cotton and President Cotton Increase Mather, and the Mather, Anne Hutchinson (the first womun In America to start a woman's club) she needed no man to tell her mind ; Ann Brudstreet. the poetess; Jonathan Edwards, whose sermons were thought by his parishioners to be a Hell of a preaching; Sir William Phlps, and Acres Surringe, the the treasure-finder- ; treasure found ; governors und counsellors, and ensigns and military commanders all these stud the history of the future United States In the period. The American Revolution really begun In the struggles of the gentlemen of the general court with the royal governors all the way along from the charter of 1093 and the string? of royal governors from Gov. Sir William Phlps to Governor General Gage. Other colonial legislatures expressed their minds to and at their royal governors, especially In Virginia ; but the cyclone of the Revolution first blew with violence In Massachusetts, and never stopped blowing until .Massachusetts was a state of the Old Thirteen. In Massachusetts asserts no that great movement which began the political transformation of mankind bat In the councils of the Continental congress, side by side with Jefferson of Virginia Hnd Franklin of Pennsylvania, and Pinckney of South Carolina, and Livingston of New York, glitter the names of the Immortal second-cousitwins, John Adams and Samuel Adams, of Hancock and Warren, of fiery old Putt, and Manley, first commander of a national ship of war. The new Dictionary of American Biography could not do business without that couple of hundred notable number of Massachusetts names in the galaxy of the Revolution ; not men only Abigail Adams and Mercy Warren and other lovely and distinguished Massachusetts women. Abigail Adams had decided views as to the capacity of the female mind to comprehend politics, and as to the dra matical question whether all men are created free and equal. Included the female part of mankind. From some of those strong-mindeladies were descended the Intrepid leaders of the woman suffrage movement, especially Elizabeth Ondy Stanton. Some of the original states, prominent In the Revolutionary period, ran out of timber after the Constitutional period, but statesmen and other national leaders continued to blossom and fruit on the Massachusetts tree. Three Presidents, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Calvin Cooltdge, Is a good allowance for a state of limited area on the edge of the continent. Likewise, various speakers of the house. It Is no boast to say that from 1701 to the present day Massachusetts has had a share In national public affairs far beyond the proportion of her population to the whole country. Row-leLognn Mr. Olufltie a Gold r'i.-imother, bn notified that she will sail mi the S. 8, Washington July 23 to visit the grave of her son. Colton ISM have lieen os-nofor the 10.4 mill of graveling project from Colton to Rol.app. Echo A rclchra! Ion Is being plan nod In the near future In honor of the completion of Echo dun. With the romplotloti Hprlngvllle of n new brlek warehouee nnd spur r full-grow- cotie of one hundred laws, called The Body of Liberties" adopted by the Colony of Mussachu-sett- s In IC4I. That article reads as follows: No mans life shall be taken away, no mans honour or good name almll be ata.tned. no mans entoii shall be arestetl, restruyned, banished, dlsmenihred, nor any wayes punished, no man aliall he deprived of his wife or children, no mans goods or estaite shall be taken away from him, nor any way Indummaged under colour of law or Countenance of Authorise, unloose It be by vertue or equltle of general! Court and sufficiently published, or In ruse of the defect of a law In any particular case by the word of god. And In Capl-tul- l cases or in cases concerning dlsinembrlng or banishment, according to that word to be Judged by the (ienerall Court. In July of 1030 the Arbella was Joined by six other ships bringing some 700 more colonists and In August It was decided to move the colony from Salem to Charlestown and the next month, having found the water supply there poor they moved to the peninsulu which lay to the south and west of Charlestown. There the city of Boston was founded, so another high spot In the tercentenary celebration will be Boston Week. September 14 to 20 of this year, the seventeenth being the date for the principal celebration since It was on that dute that the General Court of colony took the action that officially organized Boston. Incidentally one part of the celebration will be the dedication of a memorial on Boston Common to WInthrop and to William Blax-ton- , the first white settler of that historic spot. It would be Impossible In the limits of this article to list all of the events In Massachusetts history which will be recalled during the many celebrations which make up the observance of her tercentenary this year, nor to name all of her great men who had a part In that history. If It could be done at all briefly. It is doubtful If It could be accomplished better than It has been done In the words of a distinguished historian, now a citizen of Massachusetts Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart of Harvard university. Writing an article for a Massachusetts paper, the Cambridge Tribune. eHrly this year under the title of Why Massachusetts?", Professor Hart summarized well the glory of the Old liny state's record In our national annals and the interest which the tercentenary has for all Americans. A part of his article follows: At the start, If a person or a community has lasted to a birthday the presumption Is that something must have been done In the Interval. Hence, the proposed tercentennial does not mo.tn nn attempt to revive the experiences of 1030. nor to content Itself with a movie of what Massachusetts is today. We are proud of our state for ail the heroic deeds and grand conceptions and magnificent results which have studded the history of the commonwealth during three centuries. We are entitled to he proud of the physical I love thy substratum of Massachusetts. rocks and rills. Thy woods and templed hills. The children of the soil have long been acquainted with the many beautiful scenes of seashore and river and plain and mountain: and of late our neighbors. In states less fortunate, are rediscovering the same thing. The indented coast, with its two capes, Is the delight of the yachtsman, the fisherman and the bathing person. Our hill villages are being rapidly gobbled up because of their picturesqueness of site and view, besides which Massachusetts Is a lesson In geography, since our reputed bounds once Win-throp- 'a three-hundredt- scen-lcall- bailing from the Salt Lake and Utah trucks, the canning factory is ready for the early crop of peas. d have lcs-t- i Bingham Plan for the three huiidlug to the new compri.--high aebnol, to be erected at a cost of sub-mltle- e vast-minde- d n d la-i- Bln-glia- $3J.).:.:o. Ogden 23 delegates attended the annual conference of the six Congregational ehurehea of Utah held In Ogden. Payson baby chicks lmve In here up to this time. An exhibit of paintings by 173, "PO lien shlpiied Provo Provo City and Utah county artists league will be held in this city. Sunset Forty additional grain containing tanks, each with a capacity of 23, 000 bushels, will be const ruet-e- d by the Globe mills. Bountiful Iea growers of this vicinity will pool their surplus pea crop and market It through the Utah Hate Fruit and Vegetable association. Richmond The Cache Valley Poultry association met at Richmond fot the purpose of t'rganizing another unit of the association. Prh-Citizens have voted In favor of the county commissioners Issuing Itomls for $193,000 to finance road building this summer. Cedar City Representatives of the association Poultry of Beaver, Iron and Washington counties will visit the Draper and American Fork poultry districts. Kiwanls club Nephi The Neplii gave a banquet and program in honor of the 1930 boy graduates of Nephi high school. Tooele Paving and other improvements amounting to $08,502 will he made in this city. Pleasant Grove Two radio programs wil he features of the Utah Strawberry Day celebration here, Moroni The Second Annual Maple canyon day is scheduled for June 28 at the forks of Maple canyon. Provo The B. Y. U. Evergreen Class of 1897 and the Century Class of 1900 and twelve other classes will hoi da reunion at the university. e The two city Hpirngville teries have bten enlarged and cemeim- proved. An $18,000 decrease is Gunnison shown in the assessor's report of the valuation of acreage. Farmington The real estate assessment list of Davis county shows a . Murray City A new pipe line is to for the municipally owned electric light nnd power plant. Midvale Interest is teen in the addition to the city consisting of a cooperative poultry colony. be placed k'W t?-- M - -- " vJt X.A D They Flew by Uranus. Youre always asking a telescope. about life on the planets. Of course they wonder most about Mars and a little about Venus, but I will tell you that theres no life on Uranus nor on Neptune. Both are too hot. Stars art also too hot. Uranus xvus named after an anA brilliant man named cient god. William Ilerscbel discovered lilm but was too modest to have the planet named after himself so chose the name of an old god Instead. "If I ever did anything like discovering a planet I'm sure I would want It named after me," Harry said, I'm not strong for conceited people." They flew by Uranus, looking out at It from the windows of the plane. It seemed very large from their view of It so close at hand nnd then the pilot went In the direction of Neptune. "Neptune was discovered less than one hundred years ago by an Englishman nnmed John Couch Adams, but he nnmed this planet after Father Neptune. About the same time, too, a French astronomer nnmed Severrler discovered this planet." Have either of these planets a moon? Harry asked. Yes, Neptune has a moon to keep him company way off In the sky. And Uranus has four little ones." Better than none, I should say, Harry remarked. But now we must visit the stars. Oh, there Is so much to be seen. Your Solar system amounts to so little when we think how much else there Is such countless stars, and other sky families. Something to Males With the help of some silver and colored tinfoil you can make old Jam Jars and pickle bottles into really nice vases, and the work is such an Interesting pastime, too. Cut your tinfoil into scraps of varied shapes and then, with some strong glue, stick them all over your Jars. When this is done they must be left alone for a whole day, so that the glue will harden well. After this give the Jars a coat of clear varnish and stand them by to dry again. Then they will be ready for use and look very bright on the breakfast table, or in the playhouse. A Good Watch Dad, 'this watch you brought me from the store won't go ! e Won't go! Why, It's a well-mad- watch. Yes. nnd it isnt as though I hadnt put all the wheels back in the same place." |