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Show J Thursday, January 19. 1933 THE TIMES-NEW- PAGE THREE NEPHI, UTAH S, A DUTY Fisyt Jud Tunklns says even a selfish person ouyht to try to make others happier, so that those hltu won't get so blue that they're poor company. Washington Star. J o keep This Week h Arthur Foirty-WJ&- w brisoanb uver, Nature Play warn- i One Sure Way to End Coughs and Colds Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious troulile. You can atop them now with Creomulsion, an etuulsihed creosote that i pleasant to take. Creomulsion is new medical discovery with action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote is recog. nizrd by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membra nes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. 0 Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if any coughor cold, no matter of howlongstand. ing, is not relieved after takingaccording todirections. Askyourdruggist. (Adv.) ' v. u two-fol- d years since a crew of workmen, , r Y! v AL . :' 83 7? Lad Forty-NIners- R Salt Lake City's TEL TEMPLE SQUARE PILES Q.R. Pile Ointment trans-Misslsslp- Net Income of railroads in the East has risen 15 per cent la November, compared with October. 1 Building operations In America went up more than IS per cent in November, over October. We are gradually climbing up out ot the slough. Also trade is improving in Ger many, much optimism there. ra. Vbra "Sal townem ap and 4mf Deep economists tell you "the 1 olt awak In ery morn. anil acute crisis Is over." Some indus Ana s aauid la nlrk, lark, stara mem no local wrk, trial undertakings may break down W lwr HOMK PKOV1DES. INDl'STItT here and there, but the depression flood is subsiding. i 1.4 -- Y;K i 'V Friends of the "Buy American" movement who believe in spending in America, money earned In America, may utilize the following statement by Thomas Jefferson: "The patriotic determination of every good citizen to use no tor eign article which can be made within ourselves, (our borders) without regard to difference in price, secures us against a relapse into foreign dependency." What Jefferson called "the patri otic determination of every good citizen to use no foreign articles which can be made within ourselves, without regard to difference in price," Is as important today as it was a hundred years ago." Buy goods made by American workers. The "Buy American" policy was well long ago by Abraham Lincoln, according to J. P. Annin: "To a question on tariffs Abraham Lincoln is said to have replied that he knew very little about the tariff, but that he did know that when we bought steel rails abroad they had the money and we had the rails, but when we bought steel rails in America this country had the rails and the money also." ' Iriii iff j en- ' 933 t 4 2:9-23- 1 a vj .rY f By ELMO SCOTT WATSON . N JANUARY 24 It is exactly Directory STOMACH BAD? j yxy s ' Sara Brannan. gaged in the prosaic task of building a sawmill on a western river, noticed some glittering particles in the sand and picked them np to carry them back to their employer. From that simple circumstance grew one of the most "romantic episodes In the Salt City annals of our nation and before the final links in the chain of cause and NICHOLS CIUSMON had been forged the discovery ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS which they effect made that day had profoundly af8. Went Office and Laboratory Ttrnple St., Salt Lak City. Utah. P. O. fected the social, political and economic history Rox 1666. Mailing envelopes and prices of the whole United States. For January 24, furnished on request. 1S4S, was the real beginning of "the olden days, the golden days, the days of MO, Used Pipe, Fittings & Valves of the first great gold rush In America, the beNewly threaded and conpled for all purposes, ginning of an epic migration which has few Monsey Iron and Metal Co. parallels in history." 700 So. Srd West - Salt Lake City, TJtah Paradoxical as It may sound, the "Days of "49" in reality began In 1S4S. But, considering the term In Its broadest Interpretation, the title of " "The First of the may Justly be applied to three men Johann August Sutter, James Wilson Marshall and Sam Brannan. ConSEND FOR CIRCULAR Telling about quick stomach relief. A sidering the Importance of the movement which money bade guarantee if not satisfied. launched, they should have come to the end they Do not Delay of their careers "full of years and honors." But LABORATORY 1147 Herbert Am. Salt Lake City, Utah Fate played a grim Joke on this trio, and the end of all three was almost a literal proof of the old Spanish proverb that "He who finds gold will die In the almshouse." Let us consider their careers In the order of their appearance on the stage of this romantic drama. First Johann August Sutter, the Swiss adventurer, who had emigrated to America In 'fewest Hotel 1834, went west and In July, 1839, "was stranded .9 In the Bay of Terba Buena (now San Francisco). After making a Journey Into the interior, where he was much Impressed with the possibilities of the country,' he conceived the scheme of founding a colony In the Sacramento valley. California was then owned by Mexico and Monterey was the capital. Hastening there Sutter laid his plan before Gov. Juan Alva redo. He would establish a cordon of outposts and check the Incursions of hostile Indians from the north, he would gather the peaceful Indians of California together and give them employment and he would bring Kanakas from the Sandwich Islands also to work for him. So Impressed was Alvaredo with Sutter's scheme that he gave him a grant of eleven square leagues. So In 1841 Sutter established his colony, which he named New Helvetia or 200 Tile Baths New Switzerland. 200 Rooms Within a few years Sutter had wrought a marRadio connection in every room. velous transformation In the raw country. RATES FROM $1.50 Bridges were built over the streams, roads marked out, marshes drained, wells and ditches Just opposite Mormon Tabernacle dug, and many other Improvements made. The ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. Mexican government had appointed him governor of northern California and he reigned In New Helvetia in feudal splendor over nearly 100,000 acres (for Sutter had been very generous with himself In surveying his "eleven square leagues") of land, tended by several hundred white, Kanaka and Indian retainers. In his pastures grazed 12,000 head of cattle, 15,000 sheep and 2,000 horses and mules. Establishing stores Pile sufferers from Protruding, he traded from Canada to Mexico and as far Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get rellet from very east as St. Louis. Governor Micheltorena, first treatment by using successor, presented him with an additional eleven square leagues. It Is at this point that James Wilson Marshall comes into the picture. Born In New Jersey, Marshall was originally a wagonmaker by trade Q. R. (Quick Relief) Pile Ointbut he had heard the call of the West and had ment is a new remedy for the been a wanderer over" a large part of the no treatment of pile sufferers region until finally he became an matter how long afflicted, guar employee of Sutter, a sort of a foreman. anteed to give satisfactory relief Marshall had persuaded Sutter that It was high or money refunded. time for them to quit getting out the lumber Before placing this pile ointwhich they needed by hewing and whlpsawlng ment on the market for sale, it and suggested that they build a sawmill. ' Acwas put to the acid test in both mild and severe cases, never failcordingly Sutter sent Marshall to build a mill on the American river about 40 miles above the ing to produce wonderful results. fort On the historic morning of January 24 he went If yon are troubled with piles, do not experiment. Get Q. It. to inspect the mill race and noticed some glitPile Ointment. If your drugtering particles In the sand. It might be gold, gist does not carry it In Btock, or It might be only mica. Marshall, who knew fill out the blank below and mall something' about the common tests for gold, subit to jected the particles to these tests and as the reR. OINTMENT MFG. CO. sult began to believe that he had actually dis 373 South 5th East covered some of the precious metaL He does Salt Lake City, Utah not seem to have been very much excited over It, however, for it was not until two or three Q. R. Co., later that he made a trip back to the fort days Gentlemen : to tell Sutter of the discovery he had made. Th Inclosed find $1.00 V. O. Money two men immediately set to work testing the Order for One tube of Q. R. Pile metal, first with nitric acid, then by balancing Ointment to be mailed prepaid to It on scales with an equal weight of silver and placing the scales under water. In water, the Name gold dust, having more specific gravity than the P. O. Address silver, pulled down the scales. There was no On conditions that if I, am not longer any doubt in their minds as to what these satisfied with results obtained, I shining particles were. am to receive money back upon That night Sutter, as he later said, "felt the curse of the thing upon him." He and Marshall returning tube to your agreed to keep the matter secret until they could finish the mill and until they could establish claim to the surrounding lands. So Sutter called W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. together the Indians who had a nominal title to Lake You read in Genesis, Chapter VIII, that the Dove came back to the Ark, "And, lo, in her mouth wsi an olive leaf," so Noah know that the waters were abated from oft the Earth. Business and financial news- doves are beginning to bring little olive leaves, to the srk of the Fair Everything Is displaying Its ings If you have sharp eyes. 'VI The Dove Appears Jefferson on "Buy American" The Rails and Money Loud Voice of Cash Y clean and health tat. n.. Tliey regulate aiul stomach. Adv. Ilere'a Pleasant 1'elLta. bowels Sally Sez ilium mini mum iinnm Panning for Pay-Di- rt f "Sonny Boy" Some way when a little boy is called "Sonny" by his parents one has a feeling" the parents do not whip. Atchison Globe. GIRLS WANTED hi Teil Ui Fill til iHitr fnlHsm in Coupa far CUU( . Nam less and travel stained, waving In his hand a 8Ule Cltj flask of gold dust as he shouted, "Gold, Gold, School of Beauty Culture Quish Jr flaw bn Tteatm Has. So. 751 Gold from the American river." Again Sam 'llitlatklSKf Halt Laka titjr. Utah Brannan was a "first" the first to bring to San Francisco authentic news of the gold discovery. Prehistoric Whale There was a rush to the diggings, Sam's MorThe remains of a strange animal mons following his lead again, "as if he had been found on Glacier island, in Alaska, the Pied Piper," says one chronicler. Within a in November, 1930, were identified few days only seven men out of three hundred as those of a prehistoric whale. . were left In the town. By June 2,000 miners were at work near the sawmill, now called JOSEPH WM. TAYLOR, Inc. Coloma. By July 4,000 were there. Funeral Directors & Advisers. The earliest arrivals were of the better class 125 No. Main St.. Salt Laka City and Sutter had no trouble with them. They Consult oar public Adrlaory Depart mnt of all their and stores purchased for any phaaa of Modern funrral methods patronized his 5 of Sfrrlce. and charges. supplies from him. But when the gold lure drew corners to California an Influx of men from all THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY of the earth, there came more bad . men than good, who corrupted his Indians with their deadReporters say that Governor ly firewater and Influenced his hitherto faithful Pioneers of the bockakin clothes, sriddl President will bargain emnloyees to desert him. Squatters settled on Roosevelt ascountries loa cabina save as lntermoun-tainee- rs for tariff cuts cakes, and his lands and Jeered at his efforts to dislodge with other a rich heritage. "Intermountaln" our tariffs in reductions symbol of Sumeans, to as. more than them. His vineyards were trampled to the and make the believe perior quality it means home and destiny. that Many accordingly. stores his looted livestock : his stolen, ground Correct parchaainc indicates the mind's at- -' . make a tention to reason. That's ths reasons Use, and the improvements which he had made ap- best tariff policy would to tariff wall high enough keep Intermonntain Made Goods. propriated for the use of the maddened gold LELAND J. BOSEN, foreign goods out of the United seekers. Ephraim, Utah. The titles to his lands received under the States, compelling Americans to not were American made Mexican labor, government by buy goods grants from the Ruddy Duck Peculiar 1he'49er Memorial inLosAnqeles respected and Sutter appealed in vain to the paid for with American money, inThe ruddy duck is peculiar, American authorities. He brought suit against stead of building up foreign indus- among all ducks in having the. 18 these lands and from them leased twelve square more than 17,000 persons and spent more than try, enabling depreciated foreign slender and stiffened,, miles of the surrounding country. Then he sent $200,000 In prosecuting his claims. From being money to nullify our tariff. with, coverts much abbreviated, an employee named Charles Bennett to Monterey the greatest man In that country he found him tail. ; producing a woodpecker-lik- e to have the lease confirmed by Colonel Mason, self A bandit, stopping a letter car becoming the most hated because of the liti not the American military governor of California, In which he was involved, and eventually rier and taking his $1.50, did On the way Bennett, stopping at Benlcla, re- gationhatred resulted In the destruction of his touch the letters "It's your dough, the not Uncle Sam's," said he. vealed the purpose of his Journey. Curiously 1 Lt jp1- I IflA h!s ITT home, the Hermitage, to which he had retired I want, enough, few who heard his story believed it and before the onrush of the argonauts. After sev- The bandit knows that Uncle Sam Place Your Order Now only a few went to the American river to In- eral rears of litigation In which he was repeat catches and punishes mail robbers, For Willi litlnrss, Kids, licks ml tttiir atpilir knife, his Secret Service, no matthrough vestigate. former the found defeated "king," Sutter, edly PttduliM tild nil Udlnutit. 3d Minus Ina lur Make way now for Sam Brannan Who Sut- himself a ruined man. The state of California ter what it costs. The way to dis tl iiir brsodir!. Hi in Sistrlbatsrs tor ter and Marshall were and what they did is granted him a pension of $250 a month but courage banditry is to make It danbiooiiu, mil Uncoil iiriui Indus. Writs fir special srlclt Hid cask discount ra udirs sliced am. known to virtually every American school child. after receiving It for 14 years he voluntarily re gerous to the criminal, instead of, as at present, making it dangerous Hatcheries: Ramshaw But history has strangely neglected this flamboythat bounty, 3637 Si. Stall Stint, Salt lass City, llak the public. ant character, Sam Brannan, who was. If any- linquished In 1872 he sent his two daughters to Bethle only for thing, the most romantic figure of the three. hem, Pa., to enter a Moravian school and later Here or abroad cash is the ;i Back in the late thirties and early forties Bran- transferred They Fiiil to Reply them to another school In LItltz. American stu e strong nan was a Journeyman printer, a fish a to naturalist, There he made his home and spent his declining dents atargument. According the University ot Vienna have no method of communication. writer, an editor and "a natural born promoter." years In numerous visits to Washington and In were victims of offensive rowdy We had .noticed that they do not Also he Joined the Mormon church, when that futile secure fedto from the Justice attempts sect began to flourish, and from an editorial Job eral government, which he claimed had allowed ism. The American Minster com respond to. lines we .drop ,them. on the Messenger, a Mormon propagandist news- him to be robbed during the gold rush. He died plained, with little effect. Now Atlanta Constitution. j discovers that foreign paper, he soon blossomed out Into a In Washington on June 17, 1880, and he died somebody " a FOB ASK DRUGGIST YOUH students year, $1,750,000 spend elder in the Church of the Latter Day Saints. In poverty. more than all the Austrian students SYL-O- e About the time of the exodus of the Mormons As for Marshall, he received the same treat snend. and that has caused a from Nauvoo, 111., under the leadership of Brig-ha- ment from the gold seekers that had been Sut.'I change in the attitude toward PRODUCT AN INTERMOUNTAIN Young for their Journey westward to find ter's portion. California gave him a pension of American students. the promised land, Brannan chartered the little $1,200 a year, then withdrew It because the legtheir American v.iJ American Far in Lead ship Brooklyn, filled it with some 300 Mormons islature believed the money was spent in drink studies In doctors, finishing Vienna, spend a half milWith only 11 per cent of the" and set sail from New York via Cape Horn for to which he had become addicted. In August, there yearly. the American .; , world's California. Late In July, 1846, the Brooklyn 1885, five years after Sutter's death, a lonely. lion dollars If American students and doc continent population, haa 1,624, or about 47 per. old man died in a tors would return from passed through the Golden Gate and Brannan's embittered, poverty-stricke- n foreign cent, of the world's 3,424. lan Mormons were the first American colonists to ramshackle hut in the dying town of Coloma. It would find better guages .and dialects. they . .... ; reach Yerba Buena, the little Spanish settlement was James W. Marshall, "the man who discov- countries, ' universities and better medical on San Francisco bay. ered gold In California." schools here, and have the satisfac It Is doubtful whether Sam was at heart a As for Sam Brannan, he enjoyed a period of tion of spending their money in Mormon, or anything else in a religious way. He glory and of prosperity for a time, then the the United States, where they exwas an opportunist of the first water and curse of gold overtook him. pect to make their money for his purposes, was as good as any GASOLINE With the incoming flood tides of adventurers other religion. At any rate, It gave the rover nnd settlers, Sutter's fort expanded Into Sacraa sort of clerical standing and a chance for lead- mento City and San Francisco became a metropBritish newspapers say the death ership which he was not the man to overlook. olis of many races the most cosmopolitan and of Calvin Coolidge is "more than In the hold of his ship he had brought with the most lawless city In the world. Between the the death of an it is For Medicines him a newspaper plant, the machinery for a two cities as his bases of operations Brannan the death of an era. With him has Americans are estimated ' as Dour mill, plows, harrows and other pioneer ne- grew rich and prosperous. There was no gone the America that was pre spending $6 annually per capita species ' cessities. He assumed leadership from the day of Industry beyond his exploitation. He was occupied with its own narrow af- for medicines. h of his landing. He preached the first English gambler and banker, merchant and hotel owner. fairs, relying on simple, mm tf" jii.iani uuiui.i. sermon ever heard there, solemnized the first Importer and exporter, gold digger and real es ioned creeds." American marriage on the soil, set up the first tate speculator, shipowner and perhaps a bit of Let us hope the British papers flour mill and gave the little settlement Its first a smuggler. Everything was grist for Sam's mill are mistaken. The Coolidge era was one of newspaper, the California Star. It wasn't long The great commercial house of Osborn & Branbefore he cut loose from the Saints. Or, rather, nan, specializing In oriental merchandise, be plain Americanism, with a Presi the Saints got rid of him. A Mormon sketch of came one of San Francisco's biggest institutions. dent concentrated on the interests his life saya, "His course and habits were not And Sam Brannan ruled the city like a man of America and of Americans. The Coolidge era was one of consistent with the life of a Latter Day Saint darin. He spent money like a prince, entertained " which he always urged . economy, and he was disconnected from the church." Cheap lavishly, drank deeply, played for high stakes It has been said, "the only thing But If his career as a Mormon had ended, his and became the most spectacular figure in a de while setting a good example. An "end of the Coolidge era" you can get for nothing is advice.", career as a California promoter (perhaps another lirious city of magic and madness. be a- very bad thing for the And it's often worth it. historic "first") had Just begun. He got out a This lasted for a while, then came the turn would special edition of his Star, within a few months In his fortunes. Misfortunes began to rain down country that ' elected Coolidge Self after his arrival at Yerba Buena, and sent two upon him and he sought solace In drink. The President. To rule one's self, how hard, but thousand copies of the paper overland to the usual thing happened. Friends deserted him. Governor Blackwood, of South how glorious! Mississippi valley and the eastern states, extol Business men whose enterprises he had financed will be congratulated on ling the virtues of the country to prospective out of his own pocket looked askance at him Carolina, hta rlArislnn tint to nprmit Mrs. settlers. or passed him by without recocnitlon. His per week will be paid wlfej Beatrice Ferguson Snipes to die in tow the beat CI Then came March, 1848, bringing with It to uivorceu uim nnu ins cmiuren rrom nlm. the electric chair "as soon as her .rticle on "Wh too Yerba Buena the first news of the discovery of were Rhoutd more Intermountaln made ase there After tbat "ups and downs," baby Is born." The plan was to Bend Goods" Similar to above. gold on General Sutter's lands. A brief account during which he "reformed," quit drinking then was until the wait born, baby verse or to roar by story in prows of the fact was published in a rival paper, but force of his will power and electric Products Column. P O mother in the the lived Put to' eventually Brannan's editor was Inclined to discredit the the Box 1455, Sslt Lake City. If yoar age of serenty before death claimed him In chair. That proceeding would bt news, as were also most of the new colonists. 1SS9 not In snch poverty as had been the lot unworthy of the Fiji Islanders, and story appears In this column job will But to Sam Brannan It was a bugle call to new of Sutter and Marshall but far from check for being the thanks are due to Governor adventure. He went to the scene of the alleged who had once ruled the wood. bad find and in a few weeks he came galloping back Week No. 333 W.N.U. Salt Lake City of San Francisco in the Golden Days of '49.1 (.1932. b Kins featurei Syndicate, inc.) to San Francisco, rushed through the Plaza hat- - city" I C by Western Newarpaper Union.) Gen.. John A. Sutter til iJtl s Fifty-year- tail-feathe- rs . - s 1 free-lanc- d APE m Mor-monls- Packed With Power -- old-fas- 1 aMasrr-i'ai!hg- - fill $r ff $5.00 |