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Show THE SUN, PBIOE, FADE SIX UTAH-EVE- RY FRIDAY, MARCH 6. 1926 FRIDAY SPRUCE UP FOR SPRING Spruce up, says spring. We have the furnishings that will help you do it. We carry at our stores a complete line of Hats, Caps, Shoes, Shirts, Socks, Ties, Suits and the like. Right out of the packing cases right onto the shelves comes these new goods. As fine a display as has been shown in many a season, including all the popular shapes and colors. Merchandise that is likeable at prices that will please you. 5 H CAPTLnrn&ifami--' STORE CO. WASATCH Winter Quarter, Clear Creek, Castle Oate and Sunnyiide. to on?- - rhtctrrv-rzv-? By ELMO SCOTT WATSON -IIEN Col. V. F. Cody (Buffalo lllll) died in 1917 Ills passing was widely lienililid uh I lint of tin "I.ual of llie (jri-ii- l Scout." Buffalo til I was u great wmit. Too inuny nriny ollleera luivo testified to the value of Id serv-l- t to dniilit Unit. Hut tin1 great amount of iuhlMty given Ida exploit by the (lime imvcl of Ned Hunt Hue and by Cudya Wild Went Show have exaggerated Hlx plnre lu frontier history. It built up u tradition of itultiilo Wit, the greatest of the great aenuts, when ml mutter of fart be wiih only the bent advertised of the jjreHt scout. Those who know the ot other neouta In our Indian wurs, men who iiever cot the publicity that ('ndy did, doubt the 1atms of Ills friends to Ids Ho, deserving us Hutfulo Hill iiiuy be of a place Sn the neleet list of great, it in not true that the race whs nxtlnet when lie died. One of them lived tto the axe of eighty-eigyears and (lied only last summer. Two others are hi 111 living, one now eventyeven years old, and the other eighty, and not until they cross the Oreut Divide will ha phrase "Last or the Great Scouts" lie true. Du July 18, 1925, there died near Selling, Okla., man known aa Amos Chupniun to his white friends, but among the Cheyenne Indian tribe. Into which he married, called 'The Man With the Cut-Of- f Ig." lie won that name and a Congressional Medal of Honor for walor In the Huffalo Wullow tight on September 12, 1874. Chapman was horn In Michigan In 1837 tend at the age of seventeen enlisted lu the army. After several years aa a hullwliacker" for government army trains In the Indian-Infestefrontier country, he rullsted us a scout for (len. Nelson A. Miles In tho campaign of 1874-7- 5 iiu-rit- rle against the southwestern tribes. During this campaign Chapman and Hilly Dixon (oue of the tie roes of the famous Adobe Walls light, earlier that summer) with four soldiers of the Sixth cavalry were sent with dlsputches from Miles wainp In the lanliandle of Texas to Camp Supply. On the morning of September 12 the little detachment was surrounded by 125 Kiowa and Ouuanclie Indians, l'rlvule Smith was mortslly woanded at the first fire and Chnpmun went down 'whim a bullet shattered his left knee. Realizing that they would soon be wIihiI out on the barren hillside. Hilly Dixon led u (1iik!i to a buffalo wallow, several hundred jards away. After reaching this slight shelter, Dixon ran buck through a hall of Indlun bullets, picked up Chapman and carried him buck to the wullow. A little later Dixon nd 1rlvute Hath also rescued Smith but lie died of hlx wounds that night. Sergeant Woodhull and lrlvule Harrington were also seriously wounded and Ituth and Dixon were struck but not disabled. Here all duy long under a blasting sun, outnumbered 25 to 1, .the Twrly taut off repealed ultucks. At nightfall the Indians depurted, but the condition of the whites was still dcNcrute. They were 75 miles from the tacurcst aid, they had no food and nothing to slrink hut the ruin wilier Hint collected lu the wallow, mingled with their blood. It was not until midnight of the thirteenth tlint they were rescued by General Miles. (Tmpuum's leg was amputated at the knee, but despite this handicap, he afterwards continued Ids services as a scout. He was chief of Indian scouts at Fort Supply until 1892, when that post was abandoned, after which lie settled n a claim near Selling. Dixon remained In the government service until 1883. lie died In Texas In 1913, hut his widow, Mrs. Olive K. Dixon, Ntlll Uvea In Miami, Texas. She la active lu a movement to erect nu appropriate monument on the aiite of the Huffalo Wallow fight which, as Miles wrote In recommending mediils for the our v Ivors, was "a scene of cool courage, heroism ; and which duty, as well ns Inclination, prompt us to recognize, hut which we rnnnot Ally honor." Of the two living "really great" scouts, one. like Chapman, won nryh of his fame ns a scout for Ceneral Mile. MnJ. Sage Kelly Is Ids full name and he Is now enguged 1c the peaceful of an orclni rdlst near iadisc, Oil. Hut hack in the days when the Sioux were on the warpath he was first known ns the "Lone Wolf and later as Yellowstone" Kelly, and of him Gen- ral Miles once said, "He was a remarkable man f the fyiw of Kit Carson or Ihiniel Hoonc and . Ida work as a scout was Invaluable to me." Kelly wus u nullve of New York. He spent one at (icnesce Methodist college, then at the . uge of sixteen enlisted and served during the Inst .year of the Clll war. lie was honorubly discharged on the Dskota frontier In the spring of 1863. He first went to Fort Harry lu Cnnuda and from there slurUd along through the wild country north of Devils Inke. After nu exciting experience with a war party of Sitting Hull's Sioux, he arrived at Fort Rerthold In the heart of the hostile Sioux country. The next few months found the young tenderfoot serving as a mull carrier between Fort Hertlmld and Fort nuford and making a name for himself because he dared do wb'it none of the frontiersmen around those post would cut) (lie mull without an escort Ocn-or- eclf-SHcrlfi- pur-wu- lt :lif six-inc- ht d STATE ENGINEER'S OFFICE. SALT Iak City, Utah, February 19. 192(1. Notice is hereby given that the Standard Coul whose principal place of business In Salt Inke City, Ptnli. has made application in accordance with the requirement!) of Sec. 8. ('linn. 07, Scasion 1 jiiws of Utah. 1919 and 1925, to clmn the point of diversion, place and nature of use of 1 c. f. a. of water appropriated under application File No. 4751 heretofore diverted from Beaver Greek in Carbon county, Utah, at a point which bears 10.900 feet north and 5195 feet east from the northwest corner of Sec. 4. Twp. 13 South, Range 8 Knot. Said water has been uxed for the indention of land embraced in the Eft SE K See. 15. N4 X4 NEK. NW14 RWM. St KlVi, NEK NWK Sec 22. Twp. 12 South, Range 8 East, Salt Lake meridian. It is now the intention of the applicant to divert the said 1 c. f. s. of water from mid ereek at a point which bears north 85 deg. cast 075 feet from the northwest corner Sec. 4. Twp. 13 South, Ranee 8 East. Salt Lake meridian. Said water la to lie h iron pipeline from pumped in a the point of diversion to the divide between Bearer and Soring Canyons, said puinpline having a lift of about 800 feet in two miles. From the divide the wnter will flow by gravitv down Spring Canyon a distance of 80.000 feet, where it will he used at the mines and townsite of the Standard companies situated in Spring Cnnyon for general coal mining purposes, including domestic, municipal and such other purposes as are necessary and incidental to the mining and marketing of coal. Thia application in snecificd in the atate engineera office aa File No. a 805. All protesta against the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must he by affidavit in dnnlicate accompanied with a fee of (1.00 and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after the comnletion of the nnhtication of this notice. GEORGE M. BACON, State Engineer. Date of first pub., Feb. 20. 1920. Date of completion of pub., March 20, 1920 jTirjvxnir During one of these trips he was attacked by three Sioux warriors and killed them nil. The Mandan, Qros Ventre and Arlkara Indians, who camped close to Fort Itertliold for protection from the Sioux, were mad with Joy at Kellys rlctory, hailed him as The Little Mun With the Strong Heart" and crowded about him in admiration when he returned and retried at Hertlmld. Even the Sioux were impressed with the strung medicine" of this "Man Who Never Lays His Uun Down and never again tried to ambush him. Kelly next became a free trapper nnd hunter In tlie Yellowstone country until he knew It as did no other white man. It was because of his life as a wilderness hermit that he became known aa the Lone Wolf and as then-mysterio- "Yellowstone" Kelly. When Hen. Ueorge A. Forsyth was sent In 1873 to explore the upper Missouri and the Yellowstone he secured Kelly as his guide and Forsyths rejmrt, the accuracy of which he owed solely to "Yellowstone" Kelly, was Invalunblo to the army when the Sioux war broke out Hire years later. Kelly Is described at this time as "a man reticent In speech and modest In demeanor, yet highly picturesque In appearance and Iteurlng lilmxelf with an nlr of and hurdlliood which could not be'1 mlstuken. He was dressed entirely In a suit of fringed buckskin and his feet were encased in beaded moccasins. His face, darkly tunned by sun nnd weather, was except for a slender mustache and bis features were lean with llie hurd. muscular gaunt ness of a hunting anltuul that carries not an ounce of superfluous flesh. A mass of thick hair, straight nnd black as an Indians, swept buck from Ills forehead and hung below bis shoulders. Across bis arm he carried a long Springfield rifle, army model, on the butt of which was carved the name he had bestowed upon his trusty companion and guardian of hla lonely life, Did Sweetness. The rifles barrel from muzzle to stock was covered with the skin of n great bull snake, shrunk on so tightly that It resembled varnishing." Kellys services to General Miles, for whom he became chief scout during the bitter winter camwere, as Ceneral Miles bus testl-flepaign of 1870-7Invnluuhlc. lie remained with Miles until 1878 and from 1880 to 1883 was a scout for our troops lit the Ute country in Colorado. After his scouting days were over lie was In the general service of the War department from 1802 to 1803 nnd In the latter yeur was guide for Cnptaln (ilium's exploring exiaulltlun lu Alaska. Ho was buck In Alaska the next year with the Hnrrlman exjiedltlon and then became captain of the Fortieth United Suite Volunteers In tho Philippine Insurrection, where lie mhw hot service under (luneral Lutes. In 1900 he was pluced lu command of Daputan, Mindanao, uud the next year was ' made provincial treasurer of the province of Rurlgno. He was acting governor there when bandits and escaped criminals jook xseHsIon of the principal town. Here for IS hours Kelly and a few cutnpunlona held off howling mob of Filipinos and It la doubtful If the former Indlnn scout had ever been in a tighter hole, even In hla Sioux lighting days. Kellys last public service was as Indian ageut for the Sail Carlos Apaches, a post to which he was apiMilnted by President Roosevelt who had known him In the Little Missouri country. At the conclusion of Ills work there In 1908 lie enguged In mining In Nevada until 1915 when he ret'red to the fruit ranch where he now lives. The career of Capt. Luther II. North of Columbus, Neb., Is In many ways a striking parallel of Kelly'a In that he served an apprenticeship of self-relianc- e smooth-shuve- breech-loadin- n g d, peril by carrying (lie United States mall through an country. lie also performed his greatest service us a scout during the Sioux wars. No less an authority on frontier history than Dr. George Bird Grinned baa declared that "One of the greatest scouts from 18G5 on was CapL Luther North, the brother of Frank Nortlx Frank was a good scout and a great leader of men, but Lute had a much greater experience In time and In area, and, I believe, was a greater scout than Frunk." Captain North was born In Illchland county, Ohio, In 1S4GL Ills parents moved to the Nebraska frontier north of Omaha In 1850 and at the age of thirteen Luther was holding a Job as mall carrier lietweeu the towns of Columbus and Monroe, making three trips a week and risking his life to the perils of weather and roving Indiana for the munificent sum of $25 a month. At the age of sixteen he was serving In the Second Nebraska cavalry which In 1803 waa sent up '.lie Missouri river under the command of Gen. Alfred Sully against the hostile Sioux. In 1804 hla brother Frank North, who had become closely associated with the Pawnee Indians, was authorized to organize a company of 100 scouts for service against the Sioux. The luwnees had adopted him Into the tribe and given him the nume of "lanl Le Shar, meaning great chief of the Pawnees" and chief even of the hereditary trlbul chieftains. No Indluns and only one other white umn, Geu. John C. Fremont, ever held that title. Thia compuny scouted for Generul Connor's expedition In 1805 and were mustered out in the spring of 1SCG. The next year General Augur asked Frank North to enlist four conipnutes of 50 men each, with a captain and one lleutenunt, white men, for each company, the whole outfit to be conuuunded by Frank North wiih the title of major. Luther North was placed In command of one of these companies. The full history of the Pawnee ocouta would fill a volume. Doctor Grlnnell has best summarised It when he said, For yeura the battalion did good service on the plains and In the mountains in Nebraska, Kansas and Wyoming, serving under Generals Augur, Emory, Carr, ltoyal, Mackenzie and L'ruok, some of the most successful Indian fighters lu the department. The Pawnee scouts were everywhere and at all times brave nipn, Tbs good soldiers and victorious warriors. amount of property saved to the government, the settlers and the railroad (the Union Pnclfic) through the efforts of Major North's commnnd can scarcely bo computed. Some of the high lights In their career and the careers of the North brothers were the battle of Summit Springs, l'oloH In ISttfi where Frank North killed (he famous chief. Tall Hull (a feat which Is usually, but erroneously, credited to Huffalo Hill. klN as also In that battle), their guiding or Hi w.d Mackenzie to lied Cloud's camp at (lie o) idling of the Sioux War of 1870 when that great leader's warriors were dismounted and disarmed; and their part In Mackenzie's attack on the vtllugn of tlie Clyryenne chief. Dull Knife, In the wlutcr of lt7d. The first sltol lu this buttle was fired by (apt. leather North, who killed Dull Knife's son when the boy sprang Into his path nnd attempted to shoot Win. After their scouting days were over, lie North brothers went Into tho cnttle business op the I ! mnl river in Nebraska and took Huffalo Bill Into partnership. Frank North represented Platte county In the Nebraska legislature several Hines before tils death on March 14. 1885. Luther North also served as deputy collector of Internal revenue and held other federal positions until be retlrsd to private Ilfs In 1917. Indian-Infeste- d . STATE ENGINEER'S OFFICE. SALT Lake City. Utah. February 19. 1920. Notice is hereby given that the Standard Coal company, whose principal place of bnsinesa is Salt Lake City, Utah, has made application in accordance with the requirements of the Compiled Laws of Utah. 1917. aa amended hv the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 and 1925. to appropriate 1 r. f. s. of water from Beaver Creek in Carbon county. Utah. Said water is to h he pumped in a iron pipeline from the point of diversion, which hears north 85 deg. cast 075 feet fmm the northwest corner of Sec. 4. Twp. 13 South. Ranee 8 East. Salt Lake meridian, to the divide between Beaver and Snrin? Canyon, said pntnpline hnvi"g a lift of about 800 feet in two miles. From the divide the water will flow by grnvltv down Spring Canyon n distance of 30.000 feet to the Spring Cnncon mines In the Cnr-hn- n County Coal Mining district, whrrr the water will he used from August 81 -- t of ench year to Mar 1st of the year following for general coal mining purposes, including domestic, municipal and such other pnrposca as nrc incidental to the mining and marketing of coni. This application is snecificd in the state engineer's nffiee as File No. 9874. All protests against the granting of mid nnplt-entiostating the reasons therefor, must he hv affidavit in dnnlicate accompanied with a fee of 1.00 and filed in this office within thirty (30) ilnys sfter the eomnletton of the piiWicutinn of this notice. GEORGE II. BACON. Stnte Engineer. Date of first nnh.. Feh. 20. 1920.. rinte of completion of pnh.. March 20. 1920 six-inc- n. NOTICE TO WATER USERS STATE Engineer's Office. Rule T.nke Citv, Utah. January 27. 1920. Notice Is here-h-r given thnt R. U. Arnold, whom post-offic- e address is Price. Utsh. has mnde snnlicatinn in accordnnee with the 0f the Compiled T,wa of TTth. 1917. as amended hv the Session f sws of Utah. 1919 nnd 1925. to annron-rist- e three hnndred and twelve ten fhons. sndihs (.003121 e. f. s. of water from a spring (n ITnrdsemhtde Csumn in Cnrhnn "opntv. Utah. Said water is to he diverted at the point ef issuance of the serin "hich hears 12220 feet north and 409 4 et west of the eouthaaat enmar of See 41 Twp. 13 South. Ranee 9 Fast. Rnt she meridian, and cnnveved in a two-"ne- t, pineline a distance of six thousand feet, where it .will he used dnrln the e venr fur the Indention of dm seres sf !ed rmhrneed in the REM See 11. Twn. 13 South. Tinner 0 Salt t eke meridian. As mneh water as neees-er- r will he ned during the entire gear nr domestic nnmnnes This gmliciiflna diwlenafod tn tf,e state enineer'a office "s FUe No 9804. AH nmtesta a"nint the "ranting nf said nmdiestinn. statin (he mmn therefor, must he hv sfftdsvtt In hiTilicnte necomoanled with a foe of 1 Ofl s"d filed in this office within thrtv (30) 4ers after the ropr'oni of the nnhtlcn. on of this notice. GEORGE M. BACON AND NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE Sale Under Chattel Mortgage Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed by S. A. Denna, an unmarried man, an mortgagor to First National hank of Trice, a corporation, aa mortgugee, dated Jane 5, A. I).. 1925, and filed in the office of the county recorder of Carbon county. Utah, on the 0th day of June. A. D 1925. in File F, No. 9341 of the files of aaiil office, and iqion which chattel mortgage Bnd the note seonred thereby there in due on tliia (late the date of the first publication of thia notice, the principal sum of 3250.(M), accrued interest $87.75 anil $325.00 attorney's fee, to-t$."IMS2.75. the undersigned, First National bank of Price, Utah, a eorimration, the Miid mortgagee, will foreclose said clmt tel mortgage by a sale of the property described therein and herein described nnd to that end will expose and offer for sale nt public auction on Sutnrdny, the 13th day nf March. A. I., 1920. at 1 o'clock n. m.. on said dny at the Manhattan Cute building on Alain street. Price, Carbon county, Utah, the following personal pnqierty described in said chattel mortgage, towit : All furniture, fixtures, equipment, supplies, at the Manhattan Cufc, located on Lot One (1), Block Forty-One (41). Price townsite survey, said furniture and fixtures being partially desoak cribed as follows, towit : Thirty-si- x restaurant chairs, two oak higlichaira, nine stools, seven tables, oak, for four counter, oak people, one twenty-fire-foand pine, one twenty-five-fopine bark-ba- r, two wall .mirrors, plate glass, eight feet, one coffee urn, one hy twenty-fou- r restaurant stove, one Majestic four-hol- e water cooler, one National cash register, medium aixe, one complete set kitchen utensils, thirty dosen silver knives and forks, forty dozen caps, saucers and platee each, one desk. Also, all other furniture, fixtures and equipment in, on and about the said cafe, together with all supplies, nnd including all furniture, fixture, equipment and supplies that may from time to time be added to the foregoing or which mny be purchased to replace the same. The goodwill and right to transact business in said cafe. Also, all right, title and interest which raid parties may have in and to a certain lease, dated Jnly 1, 1923, by and between Mrs. Olive Mill-bur- n. party of the first part, and B. A. Denos, party of the second part, which la evidenced by a separate assignment of said lease. AH right title and interest which the raid mortgagors may have in and to a certain building erected on the land described in the said lease. Property will he sold to the righest bidder for cash. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PRICE. Mortgagee. L. A. McGee, Attorney For Mortgagee. First pub., Feb. 20 ; last March 12, 192(1. nl ot ot NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION of the Interior. United States Tmnd Office At Salt Lake City. Utah, February 23. 19211. Notice Is hereby riven that Frank Liddell of Sunnvside. Utah, nt who on June 22 Homestead 1921. mnde Rtoritrnia-in- e Entrv No. 019022. for 23: RtRWK Rcc 24; RURU Rcc. NEMNWK. NUNFK Ree 2(1; NWq NWVJ. F.UWX. RWRNEK. RWK REK Rcc. 25. Twp. 13 Ronth. Range 13 Rnlt Lake meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make three-yea- r proof to etnMili rlnim to the land above described before the clerk of the district court at Price. Utah, on the 7th day of April, 1920. Clnimnnt name as witnesses George Westwood. Andrew Mortensen. Ezra Branch nnd Orson Turner, afl of Ritnnyaide, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOR. Register. First pnh., Feh. 2(1 ; last March 29, 1929. Fast. TION NOTICE-FOH-PUBLICA- DE -- partment of the Interior. United Rtatea Tjind Office At Rnlt Lnke Citv. Utah, Fehrnnrv 24, 1929. Notice is herehv given that Emil O. Know of ITeiner. Utah, who on August 31. 1923. made Rtockraiing Homestead Entry No. 032059. for E14 Ree. 9; Tot 7. See. 3; Tints 1. 2. 8. RE14 MY if. RWM NEK. NFMRWM. WM RF14. Sec. 10. Twp. 11 Ronth. Range 1 Rnlt Lnke meridian, hna filed notice of intention to mnke three-rha- r proof to establish clntm to the land shove described before the clerk of the district cnnrt at Urlce. Utah, on the 12th day of April, 1929. Osimnnt names as witnesses fli pries Fon-le- s and Orlando Crow of IleUier, Utah. Dominic P1nia of Rmfield. Utah. n"l I .enter Christensen of ITeiner, Utah. FLT F. T1YT.OR Register. First pub., Feb. 29; Inst March 29. 1929. Fast. en-ft- irq Et. FOR PUBLTC'TIOV DR- partment of the inferior. United Rstea NOTICE land At RiH Lnks Citv. Utah. is lirrehv given that Wi'iiam Milton O'drovd of Ennntnin on Mv 20. 190) ms4e Green. Utah. StocVvntsing TTnmeatend Entrv No. 029889 for F.U Rcc. 17- - FU Ree. 29. Twn. 11 Ronth. Ranee 7 Fnt. Rnlt Tke meridian, has fil"il notice of intention to make three-vea- r proof to establish claim to the 1sn,l nhnrg described hefnrg the clerk nf the district court at Nephl. Utah, on the 15tli dav of April. 1929. Claimant names as witnesses Abe Livingston. Andrew F"lneer, r"te of firt nnh.. Foh. 20. 1020. Morgan. John ,T. Oldrord and T. J. Old-rnhie of coiiinhdinn of nnh , Mamli 20. 1120 all nf Fountain Green. Utah. ELI E TAYT.GR. Register. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE Firt pub.. Feh. 29 : last Marrh 29. 1929. Seventh Judicial District of the Stnte nf Utah In nnd For Carbon Count v They mv radio is still in its infancy. ernes Rolando. Plaintiff vs Afeff Suhse. tliat'a wliat makes it behave Maybe Defendant. Notice of Sheriffs Rale. Tn he o'd st sheriffs sale on the ?9th dav of so badly when the ownrr of a act has arch, A. D.. 1920. at 1 :30 oclock n. m. company. "t the front door of the eonrthnne at Trtce Cnrhnn countv. Utah, the d Run spots are said to he thousands real estate; Tot Twelve of miles in diameter. Yet some Price f121. Block Four (4). THeh School nnh. dMston to PHee. Utsh. Prooertv will he crirla make an awful fuse over a little sold to the highest bidder for rash, RAY freckle. DEMINO. Sheriff Orhon Conntv. Itsh. First pub., Feh. 20; last March 19. 1920. Birth announcement rardo. The 8an. an issiw OUiee Fehrnnrv 24. 1909. Notice 8fe rd follow-describe- pmrawws (i m |