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Show THE TIMES-INDEPENDENT, MOAB, U - oe In her garden, Mrs. Oscar Ky// mer of Seattle has lilies groy Kathleen Norris Says: At 97, William H. Jackson, Pioneer Photographer, Looks Back Over His 60 Years Recording (and Making) History 1Phillips THE SOLDIER OF BAY (Bell tes Syndicate-WNU which have produced 31 blossa all on one stalk which is four tall. The flowers are all clus Children Her Us Sends England | Ny at the top, jostling each other ge but firmly, for a share of the light. The lily has attracted ¢ siderable attention. Service.) FLUSHING yot fd! Vanity Tray A vanity tray is built into the of a new bathroom clothes ham (‘World Fair Site Proposed for Military Training Camp.'')-Headline. Where Futurama drew the crowds From Maine to Timbuctoo, That's where I'd train to battle for The old Red, White and Blue; The Trylon and the Perisphere Will do to mark the spot Where I got flat feet marching on An exposition lot. Start Low, Finish I i's' High out Astounding as it may seem, you according to Col. Louis Johnsory yd £ the war department, the Unjx sl States entered the World war wy as 55 planes and 35 pilots and emeyte it with 22,000 planes and 35,0 Pp ilots. II Where General Motors stood I'll let My army life take root; By Railroads on Parade I'll fight And do it all on foot. } es 5 G. W..T. W. me Up to April 20, "Gone With }poys Wind" has drawn more than Sint t 000,000 at the box office. The istay technicolor prints of the picture yfo'¥ being shown total more than 1,6le & miles of film. 9 on a STAFFS i0n Where millions flocked on pleasure bent And marveled merrily ('ll drill and drill for Uncle Sam- And think of Gypsy Lee! a Kit CLASSIFIEI DEPARTMEN'#) i III of er" PIANO BARGAIN ‘‘Streets Paris'' once held March of the Mormon "Handcart Battalion" over the Oregon Trail.‘ From painting by W. H. patey n Where Abts By ELMO SCOTT WATSON and shipped en Se ae to Omaha. Here es ee | (qfSaenetees they would Steonly OF leave Wats ‘em there ‘ (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) : Jackson | i . i ht again | local : obtained a job with photographers = whom It historian, ; peng ales 5 be such crowds a bore); filed to the served near the GLEN midway ° "Terrace , had a part frontier a if any pushing asi a it sent of longer, Ae in westward i eee: are i have more : Ba NO} ‘the in 1843 ‘HOTEL N. when had +. a son ; battlefield : an ing pictures by the old wet from it their fallen plate in Of the i Degen ntin ies AY ime 8 * This fact was prophetic of his | son's future career, for, as he recalls it: ‘‘Parts of the first cam- | era ever owned by a Jackson | came into my hands as a toy when I was a vee noenas bagi if hadn't any real idea wha again follow the uted to West!" advice Horace so ("Horace often a Greeley- ot Greeley's "| Go | ad-| ar ae place" for the frontier e eran and his account. He began skill to making article. great deal about the new art of photography. A similar job in Rutland, Vt., increased his knowl- Guard, was mustered into WILLIAM H. to say, quite undeserved,"' he card. I don't know who really devised the first picture postal (a German or an Austrian, I think) but I am not the man." However, he has plenty of other claims to distinction without that. Jackson's experiences during the of Jackson's And to "Gas" to "The Coast," chase that ritzy Borden are to have as 9 country it was one of greatest to opportunity promote in aaaniiitnaaametanes international Kathleen Norris HELP warns that it is terribly important . have been t foreign So they will see they will file down . foster and mother are ships business you. No strangeness may in some cases with perhaps the better homes. of th those a and and and HEARING Most of transplanted from New York or Boston or any other American city and suddenly transported to England. Ernest Thompson-Seton once gave visited. No. 268 "it wars are dark things ah ate And we must all hope that this test comes it's we will not fail. | children Again America Sets Example. This is perhaps the first time in the history of the world that one nation has thus extended hospitality to the children of another. America d : : am- | strange, it's stil] retain hostile,'' many of the ie S. State Ht e obligation. INSTITU » Sint SODA dail Laks City, FOUNT Al s co é "3 " ie WR_haye 5 few Fepcaseseod oth. ee iardshi ico dboam eabinets' and Sanpeeaa sizes. Call 3-5821 or write W. H. Bi aged Co., 579 W. 2nd So., Salt Lake Citra ad test will come for both visitors and | in one of his books the jungle's rule: when ear, hi AIDS ACOUSTICON the days all will be harmony, interest, | eagerness to make them feel com- | fortable and happy. For a few days. Then the real antit HARD OF HEARING? No need to be ham Bot Senet, any nes The Barrage for Acousticon can help you.-Write for ee 47, demonstration. already;th come over charge, and wiare friends. with be PETERSON LABORATORIES nj wi 3955 So. State St. Salt Lake City, Ui rver little scared and more than a little secre ote are ars cag will bethey will be absorbed into ave much own American Geiss sue as is aes And for a few | children wouldasif our they were suddenly Jackson's lf dd ANALYSIS homesick; Where glamour doth abound. . Wpnnlyuie of Fouls, Steen end pai We have many fortunate babies h uld mothers We : a and unhappiness. ones nurse who couldin @ € good ; in the athss; Dinners and Sandwiches ary p - CHEMICAL All these children won't come from | to go without capital. investment. Write, Luncheons, s minnie plan of | tota1 ignorance of politeness or any | manners, with homesickness the OPPORTUNITY POPP trooping over; | rapturously absorbed by rich grand- from REAL mobile finance at 154 South Main-POPULAR PRICEBS vegetable lack of training, daTnotie to | dins him, with erences. K. S. R., P. O. Box 1555, Salt Time ' INEXPENSIVE MEALS ae The best food tn Set Lake ° serve o, . have to deal with temperament, with most combat, oe Site . 15. WANTED was oft and homesickness. and cribs ; of aonthe All the history our | | friendship. SOR ae the small girls and boys who of to b t away for of | awhile are to to safety. be sen Lae in the Southwest | r othe cow Right into Flushing bay. Some of his . and deadly activities | The next one could by any chance cto Be run by Billy Rose? aera INSOMNIA final feline riot wanes, mournful mutts are mute including a 3,500-mile trip by pony | And sledge across Siberia in the mid- JACKSON plant the prairie in company | army | of 300 Mormons and other immi- | drawgrants who banded together for cards. protection against hostile Indi-| me a ans. (In after years, Jackson regret was to go over the trail, or parts writes. ‘‘Somehow or other the legend has grown up that I am the ‘inventor' of the picture post ‘‘Coke,"' "Norway" now nocturnal quiet reigns, of it, in other tation-train, forms of transpor- automobile and air. plane). In Wyoming he left the Mon- bim-now nearing 90-going over the old histrailti again, snapping picith a "‘vest . tures, this time 1a "vest poc Bt Camera, anid widoing some more ss vith and in. MEN stincts of the jungle. In handling these guests we musi use infinite patience and tact, and an entirely unreasonable amount of kindness. eo eat ipsa oe disciPineda or subjected , to rules, even WA NTED! | Tatler find in FOR } mount THE U. S. ARMY | andStorie:ice. un- | , than 5,000, which ‘‘a town had in of less 1867 all the charm it lacks today .. . Los war included the battle of Gettys- | Angeles iar ie honestly aa quaint, ke frankly | rather thanwas merely blatant. Soon Arrives on Fri. Three times William H. Jack- tana-bound train, went to Salt In 1937 the surviving members | Lake City and, after three months | of the G. A. R. met on Riverthere, joined a mule train for Cali- | side drive for what was to be fornia which brought him at last | their last Memorial day parade. to Los Angeles When Comrade Bill Jackson didn't show up, some of the aged Boys in Blue shook their heads sadly-"Too bad Bill can't be! here." But a few minutes states, his was a minor part. His leita afterwards he started east again | regiment was assigned. to guard | -this they saw time with a party of nine | down and along him-running the street withup press the baggage trains behind the Be cece aa out es ~ perillines so he missed the actual fight. een | taking Ous task pictures of driving a of ing but afterwards his outfit es. band of 200 € parade! | wild mustangs back across corted 2,300 Confederate arias. the William H. Jackson spoke truly mountains and plains to the Mis. when he said of his eioture-maie ers to Fort McHenry near Balti=e river settlements. ing career: "It was something raore. Incidentally, 75 years latThis three-months' trek ended without er Jackson was one of four of beginning-and is still its ! at Julesburg, Colo., where the without an end.'' that I Award no Praise painting. Son has tried to ‘‘retire''-once at 60, again at 81 and "‘finally"' at fi = it was " use-in 1935 the department commissioned him of to thepaintinterior a series of murals for its new building in Washington and he did it. Two years later he was again busy taking pictures. It came about thus: guest surely And stays . . . and stays. -Nan | more she has never | No woman important one | Should blooded necessities between nations, and misunderstandings and bitter- tanks that today. we Just hung out a sign wanted ice."' *- BY'@ SOLIDARITY Bathrobe workers have just won a pay raise. Had it been refused, the slipper, pajama and shaving cream workers wer out in sympathy. the ‘sane Weitere poo right, h Seceese es i miuteue of fact, gone to them, too. pee, TOO Although MUCH MAKEUP I'm ready to agree My gal is from sainted I'm positive far she couldn't $2 As bad as she is painted. -Avery Giles. of giving For we have to remember on the same side then. Russia might well have welcomed English children, for Russia was one of England's allies. So 80 that this is a very solemn and thing that we are doing. We are saying to England: we De ps aa biped, ‘thou. and. I." We whe saving her the keenest pang that her danger knows, the fear for her children, and we are proving that, even though we are not with her in war, what we can do for her with- me ae a st reates equipped ENLIST saa omestic fa weeaire letel to the do. Problem. bab oe i 4 his ‘ valley et hun tice tr NOW lery, Engineers, Signal Corps, Medic | Corps, Quartermaster Corps, and oth non Arms and Branches. early CONTACT -_littive D U. S. Army Recruiting Station, 223 Ness Building Reged Salt Lake City weed M excite HOTEL given com- | BEN OGDEN, : an . LOMO UTAH , : mele eS - visitors, and be sure that they have plenty of outside pleas ures and ex. cursions. 7 eeatu ‘ o in all our communities, experienced mothers, doctors, diet Specialists to keep an eye on the poe Valle Sou und Handle With Mass Effic iency. We should make this an under. taking entirely separate from ordinary line of our charities the and sympathies, and handle it with mass efficiency, and with the proper pub. licity to prevent the difficulties that will be inevitable if the Smiths and the Bakers and the John sons all are permitted to stretch out welcoming hands to small Londoners who, with. in three weeks ‘member means ae over to the baby. If the child is older-and the ages of these chilGren supposedly ceca ahaae nursery pay Vacancies now available in Air Corpsyily Infantry, Field Artillery, Coast Artil marvel very of the es intoeee any home Strange is a serious thing.childIf|| of complete comfort, rae erent and ‘in: good . GOOD PAY | | simply to meet the pat the alignment of warring forces of small children. There are has been different in all the wars. | needs certainly, significant thins te them to individual foster-mothers in the fashion in Eu- | scattered homes. rope, during the past 600 or 800] There must years, to exchange children when | ies many emptybe in our various cit. : buildings that could : ; : children were in danger, how difeasily be fitted with cots and lock: ferent be the history y of the pedi, might & ers and refectory tables, and world! YOU! between the ages of 18 and 2 ot, them together in something as like | a great boarding-school as possible; | will find good-hearted Englishwomen | who will understand them, and act | as nurses, cooks, guardians, teach. ers for them. That would seem to me a far truer hospitality than the one AWAIT Single U. S. citizens of good character, told undertake exchange that may be the opening | seemingly-kindlier of a better day. If it had been TRAVEL Dardi who wants to shelter one rather than Scattering the smal) English arrivals, will keep many of ness may easily upset them. But | when we say to their children: ‘Come to us for safety and kindness | and good times and friendship,'' we | do something that goes far higher | than any business agreement goes; | we begin a new type of international | * 2 @ For example, 20 years ago French Ice and coal wagons are being ere ee well oe been aie used as substitutes for tanks in the | (™*° *!4ly or Spain, for France an Italy were militia war games. Which explains a letter to one mother from a boy at camp which contained the paragraphs: "Trapped big force of enemy ND it unless she is than this. If it succeeds we will willing to regard the experiment have knitted our hearts to those of | with the utmost seriousness. England forever. Trade treaties, Keep Arrivals Together. franchises, taxes, these are coldMy own hope is that America, the And leaves on Sun. The And originated a broken, absolute; : dle of winter ; his career and for the next three-quarters of of the Detroit Publishing as head | The ultimate drunk has vanished in | compathe milkman's rumbling wake, , a century his life was to be inti- | 2Y Which made post cards and | And now I'd get some sleep but for | mately bound up with the history other pictures in color. (Its colthe noise the sparrows make. | of the West. lection of nearly 40,000 negatives -T. F. Finnerty. Jackson secured a job as a| 2r& now in the Ford museum at ee bull-whacker with a w Z eel Eetaios Dearborn, Mich.) In 1929 BOARDER-LINE CASES I ee ade Sc Mahan. named research secretary he was of the The guest that I ka City u hs Satie es eben tare Oregon Trail Memorial associaConsider fun id See minke Barn op, Ser tion. The next few years found Atrives' on Fri.- wis and Federal service in 1862 and be- | Jackson's first trip schooner) over the Ore-| came a soldier in the Army of | gon trail was made the Potomac. Even in the he had time to continue his ing, most of it on small "That practice has brought small fame-which is, I list and adventures can only be hint-| edge of the subject but the out458 tant - en oe q| break of a the Civil war brought a ies : voveree | wagon" 9» migration change in his occupation. Plains (the railroad acrosslreadthe ' Tas | Jackson enlisted in the Rutland | pushing west and would soon sup- Light and From ed at-his work as a photographer for various railroads, his 18months' picture-taking trip around | The the world for Harper's Weekly, good win- From na- - 25¢ ERPERIENCE ADVENTURE. tir de densed within the scapeot this | S47 HG, do vou suppose |_| alent I seting some exam | pine, or subjected to rule, even | | "NO WRI NETC ONG im of dow cards for merchants, placards announcing church sociables and posters for political rallies. Then he got a job as a retoucher for the leading photographer in Troy, N. Y., where the Jackson family was living, and learned a his photographs of this mountain which inspired one of Longfellow's best-beloved poems.) The fullF record of his amazing - artistic in ofCross the famed Mount in ae dentally, : Started at Fifteen. At the age of 15, young Jackson turned man man's and Holy se wecnson sre Wonid not cow red cliff dwellings oer ae palette we positive against any intervention in this showing of these pictures had | Most training camps are dullish much to do with the establishspots- ment of the national park there. There's color found; He took the first pictures of the | A World's little fair site should be a camp ey brush the "firsts" is an impressive one. He | took the first photographs in what is now Yellowstone park-and the been forthe camera andthe pen paint of the i the time when I didn't tem draw pictures. It was something without beginning-and is still without an end." For that fact Americans should be grateful. "Had it not cil, hearts American women to know of us who so-called "civilization,"' | 1] learn to be a soldier boy vice was far too obvious to be and views of the magnificent Within this army post; startling,'' he observes succinctWestern scenery never before Wh Court ly. "Go West? Of course g0 West. | pictured and, ere Peace stood d the the f famous "Court in some cases, nev i * F 3 Where else?'') He arrived at ce er before visited by white men.| py Jearn the blitzkrieg way, Joseph, Bese | er Mae. Gx ‘ieee In fact, An un- a oe with, eensovary and ords tive state, untouched by the white | PRINTS mat Large used all Speier. prices stock for school machines, opening. makes. fA T wn that these children receive unusually kind and considerate treatment. They are living in a foreign land l strangers wi ith di fferent That they are trusting us | | among customs.totalAfter all, ahs piinte a : : ildren at this | | they only children with with their mre chi vison: || arene are lemparemets Ui' mors Vv VI Standard Brands 16 ReRUGEES Child refugees sent from Eng: |dubdito Aisertoc for saléee oie Ho #| guests this year several thousand little refugees from wartorn England. ' in Ice.'' girl and | the next nine got the feel of a camera almost before I could walk. It may sound foolish, yet I can't help believing that this childhood _ experience helped to direct my life. the atte: his lens-box was intended for; but I e aeda Cased to BRA peditions known officially as the | With soap bubbles did their stuff; | time is sure to Vermont, | "tnited States Proor oO Geological Survey | fancy I'll hear officers fidence and affection that natwork as an | of the Territories" which beganin| In Cry "Ready for a raid!" . . urally exists between the two | *‘artist'' in i Styles' nes 1869 under the leadership of Dr. We've orders for a state of siege Gallery of Art," became engage great countries Even F. V. Hayden and continued for! those Around the Aquacade!"' to a charming young ; who, with a camera of his own. ‘‘Beauties real V4de joy faction that . I'll stand maneuvers any time In wintry tough Upon the spotweather where dancers years. During this soon after the daguerreotyp- | when that engagement ended time he took pictures of Indians ing process was discovered in | a lovers' quarrel, he hae "iin | which are priceless historical rec-| i ys." Tr Is a their comrades . Roll 16 printst+ Ogden 25¢ 16 Ulery ypépil a} Developed 5c. REXand PHOTO confidence and affection that naturally exists between the two great countries. | ° lespo: ryPeueaee By KATHLEEN NORRIS se, 5 MED. ice at the end of his enlistment, returned blacksmith carriage-builder, over National cemetery there. Ho ose' Went . Jackson of Keeseville, | 4.) up ofa in flew OA . trusting us with theirLee That they are i proof Creof the TR children at thispintime is sure 5 atives ranging in size from stereoscopic views to huge ones meas: : uring 20 by 24 inches. . ; Some of his greatest work was| Mustered out of the Union serv- | gone while accompanying the ex-| of ji he was born near | ss the and GOLDEN-Reno's OLDEN -Rene's Iatarzest and Eat 2"! : sions éa : airplane, | Process on pack mules or horses | py go guard duty many nights remin- | he traveled far and wide over In weather vile or nice, baancaed of that historic conflict | the plains and mountains the | aon soled by distant memories West, securing thousands ofof negand strewed roses over the graves distinguished : career ; when little town soldiers-who btful | broadcast at le wie them federate corn Salt Lake City, e HOTELS FE ana? ee sp sult = Club." Iv tion as the foremost photographer the MUSIC 74 So. Main St. veterans-two Union and two Con- | of frontier. ing the his American bulky apparatus for. Loadmak- an tne autnor posure.' It began away backi: ma the BROS. ats sui ‘ , Autobiographies o fmen ne who? ' f : of the last 40 years and based upon | liam became the sole proprietor | 11 Jearn to swing a rifle near The ‘‘Living Pictures" gay, the Old West from 1866 to of the business. | , egos one cane ss -1872. The other was the publication Photographer by G. P. Putnam's 's Sons of the Frontier. kk | AndMy capture Sons, . lovely a a fancy twice day; | New York publishers, i autobiography under Mr. Jackson's Jac «SO ae sigoln the highly-appropria pu sonee firmly peeent t e oftitle established his reputaof ‘"Time Exposure. r ing; Oe BEAUTIFULyi PIANO". Very atestate Can becolon purchased a Greatly Paseo, Reduced Pig a te py sights Grill on soldier grub: Balcedk eGhniss anid-ateee Want thale so bad ia- | tographers" started business in| given to the Oregon Trail Memorial associa tha litie frontier ety! Wd 0 paintings and water colors, represent- 1 || Vithgrew from the frm Later. er an d Wilil had a won't ne | Where ee 8 oe one oe of the a i most remarkable Americans out. InEd, thecame living . today. oflater1868 bought spring his brother, on| One was the announcement from Scottsbluff, Neb., | Troy to join him and' ‘the os. r-painter- | firm of ‘Jackson Brothers, Othat William H. Jackson, 97-year-old pucieraphe : SLIGHTLY USED SPINETTE a These sacred little will have household bewilderment war-scared responsibility; evans in a State and disfolk we are want them always to remember American their visit as a time of happi- will range from 6 | ness and affection; we want them to -_ > indnitely go back as so many separate amei eriths hones aepenny great countat ry friendship between - and another f 550 Rooms-350 Baths - $2.00 co $4.0 "amily Rooms for 4 persons $4Air Cooled Lounge and Lobby Xe rill Room Coffee Shop Rechoake Qsmetae Banna detve Tap soon, ee Ses ae % ty Te Chamber ofof Commerce an d Ad Club |eouta : Hotel Ben OGDEN. Lomond ey for UTAR Come T.as &vou Fitzgerald are yi San Me > » didten a ( <l * ct Lee ee Pe $ \ . |