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Show Bilious Newo Notes Ut imw. wniaf TkR Datvsi s Mnaef-iia- M wikL mt, bull Yw'll l M i PrieiUge to Livo in Utah IwiewrM- ooooooooooooooooooooooooo f iWaOvead - .iMii I ib rvl. is MG! if w O toID MOaaovv At avMMa HI OH 4 LAKE Soros of tbs finest building Stuns n th world la ffuab rltwl in Utah. Grsnltf, snl Mon and farted shade of Biarble, a Do onyi and Iramtina, art found la ahuud-ta- I ALT Fer Sale al AH DreggUte mi H (IMV IMMX4 II hk iw eate gob l lull i.lwttl . . ggWKtkluH. OHKIMK. IX -- V r. With clouds still hangRICHFIELD ing low, Richfield b received about 10 lathe of snow recently which Stakes a Jubilant feeling among th farmers and tha people In genera! as up to data ths wPter has beta very dry, MONROE This vicinity is In thu grip of lha heaviest snow storm of tha aeaion, tha roads that hitherto fcavs been dry and dusty art blocked with anow so that It la with difficulty cars art operated. About 10 Incite baa fallen In th valley. FR0V0 Utah county ha refunded 152.000 In bonds, dated May 1, 1920. Honda bearing 4 Intorest were ol fared In lieu of th higher Interest bearing bands. This transaction will, according to Com n. Da loner J. W. aav the county several tbuuaand dollars. tmwmjiEUtttftKut MffT Mue AhasriSn nbl!.lahMiii etrainMt aril riklUlul. bat tmiunaw ln bniiA4 allfSM. 1JI M utH Dm Mh Haw erwhile wrii4 awvbir. Uon tnaud. At dnisawia at I: JO rvuf u Hli MiaRun hath bimxiatt OrafaM io Mebj iu ( 4-- to r writ n wil Ins IAS ammi 9M. fweoit bMaW4 4 I ' AiKt4etoiy IN MHT rAB&o&m-NB- t ps Mnbmggipaaaii3ffffiaia3 Immente Electric Feraece rlulms lo bav the largest electric furnace In the world It can aecoinm'Hlnte a standard box ear, and l mid m be three limes aa large It Um- as any prevlniialy built. 1.41X1, (M kilowatt hour of electricity a nmiiili. and will boat 4xi,(NM) pound LOGAN Logan and Cache valley of metal at a time to a maximum citizens were endeav ring to dig tonier.iture of 1.G70 degree themaelvei out of a heavy snow, which fell recently. School busses through out the aouthern part of the county Worth Knowing When were orde ed not to attempt to get the Wilder Cold Cornell children to school, an-- l the read out r Did yon ever bear ot n of Cache valley was blocked In bar coldst There I one, tnd remedy dips canyon. It really doc tiring you out of It MILFORD Report received by INcn If U'a grippe, this meththe weather bureau recently Indicate od work, only take longer. I'aiw'a that a record breaking anow storm Cold Compound I In Inhlet form. covered the west desert for two da; !'hnant tnstlng. hut It surely has the Modena reported total precipitation of authority I" Adv. 1.14 Inches, Indicating over a foot of Truthful Trill fresh snow, and at Milford unofftcel t Teacher (preyihing on hunerty ) ail reports said there was a Now. Frilz. If you found of snow. shilling. Would you keep 111 MANTI At the business meeting of a troop of cavalry to advance and having found Frilz No, Mr. the Apex Hatchery official recently Irntb officer killed he voluntarily assumed comGood. Whut would you dot Teacher In dethe Mantl was bans It building, mand end under henvy fire from the Indian Frit Siid It. cided to double the present capacity advanced the troop to Its proper position. 0 of the poultry farm which Is now Not eu Demand Happily for posterity which would know the to 70,000 hens. The chick bens, true cowboy a he was, and not as the Tie A Hliny fer your riiouulit. of the hatchery Is sso.ooe. capacity rnovlee and fiction writer have misrepresented She What do you think I am a Illata and The batching season begins the er.u Mm, diaries Slrlngo had written tot machine? of this month. Spurs before death summoned him on October ESCALANTE The snnwMorm 19. For In that book he told the story of the which Inundated this seccompletely In born Texas 7. took to 18.75, who boy, February tion left a snow blanket estimated at GOULD stirrup and saddle when he wn eleven years old t thick on tne crest of Esand drove rattle north over the otd Chisholm calante For a short time, mountain. In 1S70. tn who life knew the the roaring trail row towns of Kansas In the heyday of the Texas and until the road scrapers got busy, t pass which leads over cattle trailing days, who knew such famous out- the Escalante mountain from Junction and Bum who Pass and Hilly the KM. laws as later bunted other outlaws Hutch Cassidy. Kid Curry Wldstoe Into this valley was Olockea Helped Ey Lydia EL Pink-haend members of the Wild Hunch In Montana, with heavy enow drifts, Vegetable Compound PROVO An appropriation of JaOO Wyoming and Utah as a Pinkerton detective, who was an Okluhoma boomer and of whom, as was made by the Utah county comI am taking Falrhaven, Mass. a peace officer. It was said. "Wherever crooked missioners recently, to be used for the Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound during the trails led, from Texas to Alaska, he followed Utah county livestock show, which wT.i Change of Life and them skillfully and patiently, usually to bring be held at Spanish Fork, April 2S, fob I think It Is a wonhack with him a man or two who bad up until lowing a request for such an appropriderful tonic. When that time outridden the law. Wherever there was ation from a committee of Spanish 1 feel nervous and trouble, there was Charlie Slrlngo." Fork citizens, composed of James my husme band Creer a botand Edward gets Banks, lor enIt Is not asking The great race passes but yes, tle It away. right in on show. the help putting tirely gone yet. Hilly Garnett and Yellowstone" la a great help to PROVO Hundreds of members of Kelly, two really great scouts, are dead, but In me aud I thlr.k Columbus, Neb., still lives one other. He Is Capt. the Utah Poultry Producers associathat If other people tion heard acon recently Luther II. North, brother of MaJ. Frank North, would only take it reports when they feel all organizer of the famous Pawnee Scouts. Captain complishments of 1928, which had and ta e North served against the Indians In the wars of brought their total of business to more It as the directions say, they would 1S07-Cand of 1S7C-7and one of the highest than fS, 000, 000, or an Increase ot 00 find It a great benefit. My worst sympauthorities on frontier history, a man who knew per cent over the totals of 1926. And tom were nervousness nnd tired feemost of the famous scouts of that period, says. they set their aim at a similar perling. I could not sleep night and I Lute North was the greatest of them all. centage of Increase in 1929, which did not care about my work. 1 was eo nervous I would cry If anyone Taps have long since sounded for most of the means a total for this year ot looked at me. Mas. Ada Busse, 108 army officers who won their spurs against the Washington Street, Falrhaven, Mass. VERNAL The local headquarters wild tribes of the West tn the sixties and seventies. Rut In New Jersey still lives Gen. Edward S. cf the Ashley national forest has the following enow measureGodfrey, the only surviving officer of Custers Seventh cavalry on the dny It rode to Its ments from rangers In that forest: death on the Little Rig Horn (he was a Mrutenant Ashley creek drainage, north of Vernthen) and the best authority on the much discussed al, elevation 9000 feet, 32 Inches; ParaCuster battle. And Milwaukee. Wis.. honors as dise park, twenty miles north ot t, one of her greatest citizens a man who. despite elevation 10,000 feet, 25 Inches; his eighty five years, still has the soldiery hear-In- Dry gulch ranger station, fourteen I;; and rides his horse with the same easy cavalh335!. miles north of Altonah, elevation , rymans grace as he did when he was ndlutaat feet, 15 Inches. of the old Fighting Fifth In the days when OGDEN Aa addition to the Ogden Merritt and Cnrr led that regiment to fame plant of the Sperry Flour mill Is beagainst the Sioux, Apaches and Ufcs lie Is Gen. ing installed with machinery to indiaries King, wearer of the Congressional Medal crease the capacity of the plant 1,000 of Honor for gallantry In battle with the Apaches barrels SjfrJJS the daily outdaily, bringing more than half a century ago. historian and author to 2,250 barrels. It is announced put of a number of charming romances of arttiv life by Manager H. P. Iverson, ihe mill In the Old West. Is now the largest In the Intermountaln Charlie Siringo Is dead not with Ids hoots on. region. Additional wheat storaga HOTEL as died so many of the peace officers of the tanks have also been added to the frontier and so many cowboys who rode north warehouse. A large force of workmen Hut out in Colorado "trailing Texas cattie. are employed. Ml lives Andy Adams, who also Springs. Colo.. UTAH The demand for Utah pouSALT LAKE CITY, UTAH rode north over the old Chisholm trail and who ltry products on the eastern markets Ona ot Salt Luka Cilya flnex-to the world that long ago gave epic of the cattle still greatly surpasses the supply and hotels, h here truest hurt every trnde The Log of a Cowboy." And down In the Indications - with a viarm hospital. cumfort are tnat the poultry Arizona still lives Col. William Rrenkenridge, ty Curaire in connecUon. Cafr can continue to increase unand cafeteria Industry Hilly" Breakenridge they called him In the da.vs til it is one of the most Important 430 Rooms, tACB WIIH BATH when Tombstone was running wide open and agricultural divisions in Utah, Benwild" and he was a deputy sheriff. 33.90 to $4.00 jamin Brown of New York, former Ont In Berkeley. Calif., lives Dr V T .McGillyhead of the Utah Poultry Producers cuddy, who had no such spectacular career ns CoopreaMve association, announced resome of these others, hut who was nevertheless Mr. Brown came to Utah to lSenl.li (j'h'.rjl cently. one of the real heroes of flip old Wild West Wttend the annual meeting of the as-He is hailed by all historians as flip greatest and sociation to be held at the B. Y. ij. moM fearless of all Indian agents In the days AtI Winter Lanrj Provo soon. at when it took courage of the highest order to Marvrloua Cllmatn Good Ilolria Tvurtr VERNAL The first 1929 wool sale Campa Splandul control several thousand turbulent savages fresh M mi n I ;i Views. The uronderfut desert,ojresort of the If contracts reported from northwestern from the warpath Tlio story of what Ir. t. Writ 9 Crca A ChtCfoy did with Red Cloud's Sioux on the Iine Colorado are a clip of 3100fleeces sold in Craig at 35 cents per pound to a Ridge reseivation is an epic of heroic achievement. and bad he been in charge there when the representative of a Boston buyer and er IMmi opetn (I. there would have been no a clip of fleeces sold la the Meeker Wonnd-- d Knee tragedy nor n Gleet Dance district for 37 cents per pound. From war. wiih it useless waste of valuable lives both ied Grand Junction, Colo., a contract stile and white. K of 30,000 fleeces of 1VJ9 wool is re4sr$ er! 6 5 Cf ,f an t 7 tie great race 37 of cents ported but. average per for a piloses fortqieitPly later g neit!on of Americans, there st ll remains pourd, vulli 35 tents rs low anti 59 Wrt a for It T d n ni ' yqs soldi n, eii as these, pm it'Mvwr 1n. though they are in the cents as hJrh. The m.ij :rity ot v in the Craig ,('$fr, smi'.et of their lives, to remit. d us of their pan district hava V in icnhing our nation and of our debt to flusi, a t'lih.uy to hi id clns for higher ui!ileriie-breakers and pioneers. And mi h.r'g qalr. .u.s : j to id ceius a pc and. VhV. ' i. one of t! em lives, Unis annot lie v ritfi r tv f wi t t bin glamorous in srcj American h'ct.. j 'hgpter instiji Milwaukee 3-- 4 GUI-Bur- five-hou- tr cmn-pletel- y. two-too- G'XTr.gJ. G'GDlZXr C2&UHEJJL, xZiiuirvo By ELMO SCOTT WATCON (f 1921 wilneisvd tiny fI.OSa the uc of liMn the short passing. sixty (In)', of ill men whom- - lives plianilxctl the whole splendid pageant of the frontier. It ntny le thnt nt-l- l of these men were hlMorlrully lmnrtunL Bet the type which they represented were liuporttint to the history of the United Slates, end If modern rne of Americans have any legtird for the virtue of manhood timge. endurance. Inynlty and tlie'llke then It run he mild that they were trrii I men. These tli men of the Old Frontier who have reeently pone over the Great I vide need no praise to add to their stature. The fart of their live apeak for themselves and need only to he set down In stark simplicity to Justify the statement that their deuths marker) another step In the passing of a great nice. (crimp the best known of the six was Ezra Sleeker, the pioneer of the Oregon trail, whose life wua devoted to awakening public sentiment and stimulating legislative action In properly marking that historic highway and preserving the memory of those who traveled over It. He made bla first trip over the trail, accompanied by his young wife and their baby. In 1S.72. In 1900 Ezra Meeker at the age of seventy-simade the last trip ever made over the trull In a covered The cities through which he passed were filled with those who were passing Into ho Industrial age and who marveled at the strange sight of the months on Its trip, wagon which took twenty-twlie proceeded alone over the route to Its terminus at the Slissonrl river and thence to New Tork and Washington an I then East, lie was met at the capital by President Roosevelt. Later he mode the trip across the country several times by train, twice by automobile and In 1924, as a ell innx to bla trail blazing, ho journeyed from Seattle to Washington In an airplane In 24 hours. From covered wagon to airplane this mans life had spanned the whole history of the Great West I Those who saw William Garnett In Ills declining years on the Pine Ridge reservation In South Dakota .had little Idea of the romance thnt lay hack of this mail. For In Rill.v Garnetts veins flowed proud blood that of the F F. V and that of those "first-clas- s fightln men. the Oglaln Sioux. He was the son of Uni. Richard Garnett, a classmate of General Sheridan at Wesi point and In the fifties commandant at Fort Laramie where a Sioux woman of Red Clouds band became his common law wife. When Colonel Garnett returned to Virginia to cost his lot with the Confederacy at the opening of the Civil war, the hoy and his mother stayed with her people and P.illv grew up as an Indian. During the great Sioux war of 1876 77 he served as a scout and interpreter for the army of Gen. George Crook and when pr V. T. McGillycuddy. formerly s surgeon with th Second and Third cavalry, was appointed agent for the Ogialns on the Pine Ridge reservation, lie made Rilly his chief Interpreter For seven years Garnett served In that rapacity Several years ago when he applied for a pension, his claims were supported hy his old chief. who paid him this high tribute: 1 d seven-weeks-o- ld x o During that seven years of servhe It was lar-e- lv through Garnetts help and Influence that I wi able with the assistance of hut ten white men in holding the Indians In check with no tmop within seventy mites but the original mounted Indian which we organized police foree of In the winter of IR'tO-9as a member of the of was ordered to Pine staff Dnkota. governors FUdve to took after the Interims of 'the settlers In the pending Messiah or Chest Dance outbreak which terminated in the dMntrnu battle of Wounded Knee, and thee Garnett usual, was to the front, serving between his people and th-hites It was through his nf'uenee and work In the field as a scout lurgiiv it at the great north-eichief, Crazy Horse, the t dr of the hostile In the Custer maseacie of 1SJ6, w.is induced to surrender at Fort ifoiinison in the spiint; of IS77 sod tfeak .up Pitting Bull s power in ihe north Mnriv a time dunrn trv Incumbency is agent, J3,ilv etood by mv aide In hostile enun i1, on the ado oi the Great Wn.te Fallicr, when our flftv-hloo- 1 1 W en-r- n Oltr t!;r rraf Difci&f Wllilaa Garnett, scant aad Indian hrtarpretar Octsbar Cits I. 12 I. cow bog and penes athese 102 Oct bee f the Ore on Trail M rebee. pieneee Charles Sirin, December 2. 102 Peter Thompson, ourvivae ol Cauls at Uttl Bi Horn Drcrmbee 3. 12 "YrPowitone" Kelly, scout snd Indian fighter Docrmlse If. 192 Brl. Cen. Ooeae F Lsn. U. S. A, Indian fighter Deco arbor 23. 102 35,-U- old-tim- e NOT five-fee- SLEEPJliOliTS 9000-foo- ms prospect trer good for a "buffalo hunt on Gboat ceek, but he never weakened. It la about the last survivor of th old scouts and Interpreters. II bad few equals and no superiors. "Yellowstone Kelly was n great scout. No les authorities than Gen. George A. Forsyth and Gen. Nelson A. .Miles, both great Indian fighters, have testified to that. Dorn In Geneva. N. Y.. July 27. 1849. lie served In the Civil war and upon his discharge on the Minnesota frontier, he set out to seek adventure along the Missouri rlv?r, then the heart of the hostile Sioux country. He became a dispatch bearer between Ihe military posts along thnt river when no one else would dare to take the risks whlrh that Involved. Despite the warnings that he would never return alive, he went on hunting expeditions Into the Yellowstone country, where he lived a lone wolf existence In constant danger of losing his scalp to the Indians. Out he beennifliso well aequainted with that country os to make him Invaluable to General Miles In his campaign which broke the power of the Slonx and to give to Kelly the snlAiquef of "Yellowstone Kelly. After Ills scouting days were over. Kelly was In the general service of the War department from 1S92 to ISOS and In the latter year was guide for Captain Glenn's exploring expedition In Alaska. He was back In Alaska the next year with the Harrlnmn expedition and then became captaia of the Fortieth United States volunteers In the IhUUpine Insurrection, where he saw service under General Gates. In liXK) he was placed In command of Daputan. Mindanao, and the next year was made provincial treasurer of the province of Surlgao He was acting governor there when bandits and escaped criminals took possession of the principal towns. Here for eighteen hours Kelly and a few companions stood off a howling rob of Filipinos. For his conduct In office in this troublesome period. Kelly was commended l hy President Theofriend of his. dore Roosevelt, who vvus a Peter Thompson was horn tn Scotland. He ' came to this country ns a youth and worked hs a he enlisted In miner. At the age of twenty-siCompany C of the Seventh cavalry. O troop was commanded by Capt. Tom Curler, brother of Gen George A. Custer, the commander of that famous day (June 2."i. 1S7G) regiment. On that on the Little P.ig Horn in .Montana, Thompson did not ride with C troop to its death for the reason tlmt Ids hor-- e had la.ved out and he was left behind. After a narrow escape from falling Into the hands of the Sioux he succeeded In oin-inthe part of the Sew nth. commanded hy Major beleaguered on the bluffs and Reno, which w while fighting with Reno von t lie Congressional Medal of Honor vhih was awarded to him on August 29. 1877. for distinguished gallantry. The citation tells the storv: After Inning voluntarily hrouglif water to the wounded in which effort he was shot fliiougli the hand, he made two more Miccesvful trips for the same purpose, notwithstanding tlie rcinonst ramves of Ids sergeant. It was In another famous Indian battle that Brig. (Jen Oscar F Rung, a voting New Yorker fresh from Wnl Point and then a second lieu tenant In the Fifth Infaiitr.v. won his medal of honor. This oeemred during (,eneial Miles siege of the stronghold of Chief Joseph and his .Nez Perces whom lie had corneri d in the Rear Paw mountains Irt Montana nfier their epic dash for freedom from ircjon toward (tie Canadian border. On September ,,ii young Lit itex nut Long (mj reads the citation) Inning been to order run-dow- n run-dow- n 0. g 7,-6- y .1 Ml,. ; fl siiiKisi&sKiiiii Newhouse i j 1 .MrR'I-iyrudd- y Pallia (.uipoasiA j I '() ,i -- rr fleck-nru.ti- s c . t r' |