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Show FRID AY, APRI L 5, 1929 P_ub-=li~sh:oo~a~t~M~I~D~V~A~L~E=,~U~T=A=H~~~~~~~~:~~~T~H~E~~~D;V~A~L~E~JO~U~R§N~A~~~~~~~~~~==== ====~====~~~~~~~~~ FAMO US CHAR ACTE RS west King George EnJ·oys Sunshm·e of the Andies being very dray, so dry for long distanc es raiq never falls, and people and their forefat hers before htem, have never seen rain; , .. and on the east the lands were MalMr. and Mrs. Le Ro;v Miller enterarous and unheal thy. tained at a family dinner at theit: The popula tion of these people is home Friday evenin g of last weelc about 2,000,0 00 althou gh at the time Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. of the Spanis h conque st it was estiGeorge Parry and family, Mr. and mated at 10,000, 000 to 14,000, 000. Mrs. Albert J. Crane and family and • These people are particu larly inMr. and Mrs. T. H. Miller and family dustrio us; but are very dirty. The The ladies of · the Farm Burea u story told about the Aymar a ladies met Friday afterno on of last week will give some idea of conditi ons: in the ward house. The projec t unThey say that when a lady gets a der discuss ion was parchm ent lamp new dress, she put it over the old shades . Mrs. Hall of Salt Lake was one, and keeps the former dresses in attend ance A 5 o'clock lunche on on and allows them to rot off. • was served to Mrs. J. H. Crump , Mrs. Everyt hing has had to be done by 0. R. Freem an, Mrs. J. S. H. Bodell. manua l labor; at the Spanis h conMrs. Lauis Christe nsen, Mrs. Spence r quest ,they had no horses, oxen, sheep Miller, Mrs. R. T. Bodell, Mrs. Walter pigs or chicke ns (on former times .. E. Crane, Mrs. E. J. Freem an, Mrs. they may have existed ) the only Glen Freem an, Mrs. Hall of Salt beast of burden being the llama, an Lake, Mrs. Levi Freem an, Miss Air animal with resemb lances to a sheep nie Crane and the Misses Fern and and a <;amel. They did not have any Farrell Bodell. iron or steel ,they had gold, silver Mr. and Mrs. Spence r Miller spent and copper , and some of their best the last of the week in Salt Laek. tools were made of copper with a Mrs. David Bigler and small son little gold to harden them some. They Clark, of Payson are guests ~t the did not have any of the old world home of Mr. and Mrs. Samue l Butgrains, wheat, barley, oats, or rye, terffiel d this week. but they had corn, potato es and veg(Conti nued from Previo us Issues) etables of potato family, and had exThe succee ding year Andrew Jen- perime nt station s and bred up varsen, the Mormo n Church histori an be- ieties of the plants they used. ing desirou s to visit the Inca regions They dug canals, terrace d up the nEST AURA NT & For the first time since he .Jecame 111 nearly four months ngo, King George of South Americ a, with its ancien t side of mount ains ·and irrigat ed their There is a ~ .-..... civiliza tion antiqui ties, Brothe r Jen- lands. The~ built many roads and ~~sable t~ go out fn the ground s ot Cratgw ell house, Rognor, Englun d, where. ' sen and Brothe r Page arrang ed for rope suspen mon bridge s and used ~ccompanled hJ the queen, he spent an hour In thP. h~>Rntlful ~unshlne. SATIS FACTI ON the trip, sailing from San Franci sco guano from some of the adjoini ng Your FOOD S satisfy the vation of 4,500 feet looked like pyg- Page's home Is at Rivert on and he is they called at ports on Mexico, Guat- islands as a fertiliz er. Our Experi ence assure s emalu, Nicara gua, Salvad or and Mr. Page, while there contra cted mies compa red with the magni. ficienc e connec ted wit hthe Page Hanse n Tasty FOOD S at all .La~·•.a..a:.o•~ Costa Rica. Having to wait at Pan- the high mount ain compla int (sir- of the Andea n peaks. · Mercan tile Co.. He has a particu larama ten days, they thorou ghly in- oche) ,and was hardly able to move. Crossi ng by a three day railroa d ly fine winter apple orchar d, some U.S. CAFE specte d the canal, and then sailed for This compla int is fatal in some cases. trip across the Argent ine countr y, farms and is trying to take it easy S.A.l\IAS & THOM AS, Props. Peru, stoppin g at Callao and Lima, While at Lima, he had to make some we come to the Atlant ic ocean and at his time of life. then to Mollen do, taking the railroa d inquiri es, for his mother , of a resi- the city of Bueno r Ayres, with its His family are Mrs. Phoebe Sleater , to Arequi pa an elevati on of some dent of Utah, who was taken down beautif ul buildin gs and its popula - Mrs. Alice Sleater , the childre n of a 7,000 feeta, most passen gers stay at with this compla int, rushed on the tion of 2,500,0 00. The finest street in deceas ed son Thoma s I. Page GwynATCH REPA IRING this elevati on for two or three days train to a lower elevati on but who all Americ a, is the A venida del Mayo ne, Mrs. Harrie tt Freem an, Mrs. before continu ing the journe y to the died on the train. GOOD PROI\-IPT ~~ They have placed most of the gov- Paulin e Nielsen , Mrs. Maud Butter higher valleys . Th,i.S railroa d reache s From Cuzco he travele d all one ernme nt buildin gs, the banks ,the field, Mrs. Marche ll Wiberg , Duke, DEPEN DABL E Servic e an elevati on of 14.o00 feet (there are night along Lake Titicae a, a lake of ffiliSelms, _and picture galleri es and Roland , Mered ith and Mrs. Leici Your jewele r should enjoy the higher railroa~dsirn Peru one the Cer- the elevati on of about 12,000 feet, cathed rals all on the one side of the Whetm an; 59 grand childre n and confide nce of the commu nity. ro de Pasco, ing to a 400 foot to La Paz to capital of Bolivia and street. 5 great grand childre n. They are all elevati on), a d then to the head then on a railroa d of many hundre d Bring your preciou s stone probThe immen se corn and wheat fields living in Rivert on with the except ion waters of th~ Amazo n, to the old In- miles, glad to get to sea level. the large acreag e of flax in this part of the two oldest daught ers who are lems to me. I J:Uaran tee to reca capital ?f Cuzco at an elevati on At Antafo gasta, which is about the of the Argent ine, puts you in mind of living in Salt Lake City; Duke, whose pair your watch satisfa ctory or of 12,000 southe rn limit of the rainles s belt, lower Mississ ippi valley. home is at Nephi, and Mrs. Leici , The pe ask no pay. If yo• want anyare about nine tenths we took ship to Valpar iso, which From Bueno s Ayres, we took pas- Whetm an whose home is in Payson . Indian are of two destinc t races, gets its name from the Spanis h nav- sage for New York, stoppin g at (The End) jewelry from Salt Lake, I can the and the Amara s. The igators who after sailing along the Monte Vide the capitol of Uragu ay, &ave you money on it. being a fairly light race barren coast, devoid of all kinds of where the buildin gs and of the MI"ss Ruth Butterf ield J. S. MORG AN stature , and the Amara s, vegeta tion, came to land where the people we almost thoughdress t we were returne d to almost black race with very grass and trees were growin g, and in the United States. Then to San- Salt Lake Sunday evenin g after feature s. Cuzco, the capital named the place Valpar aiso, the Vale tos, the great coffee port, about three spendi ng last week visitin g her parhas a popula tion of about 12,000. It of Paradi se. We went on to Santia go quarte rs of all the coffee raised in the ents, Mr. and Mrs. Samue l Butter has ruins of temple s of larg~ stones in the long fertile valley of Centra l world, is shippe d from this port of field. put togeth er withou t mortar , but Chili where at that time the Pan Santos . No coffee is raised in the Bishop Crane left for his ranch in joined so nicely that a sheet of paper Ameri can congre ss were in session . iPtmed iate vicinity , as the coffee plant Idaho Monda y evenin g. Mrs. C. D. Corey, Kuna, Idaho could not be put betwee n the joints. Then across the Andes mount ains by does not flouris h at a lower elevaThe ~rimary tea?he rs and officer s Says: I will tell or write about the . than 3 000 f t The founda tions of these "templ es of the Trans- andean railroa d to the Ar- t wn enterta med the childre n Monda y at 1 • • , • ee . s ao p ao1o, a an Easter party in the amuse ment ternble distr~s s relieve d th Sorbol the Sun" have been utilized as the gentine Republ ic. moder n city of 600,000 is the Metro. . Q d polis of the coffee growin g regions . hall. Dancm g was enJoye d and refounda tions and lower walls of a ua ruple, a colorle ss linimen t, easy The railroa d crosses the mount ains Cathol ic Cathed eral, and some Catho- at an elevati on of about 10,000 feet Soa Paolo is reache d by a cable 1 freshm ents were served to over one to apply and not expens ive." . lie church es and monas teries. previo usly travel had to cross at an chain railroa d of many, many miles ! hundre d guests. Get more inform ation at Midval e The Inca empire extend ed for about elevati on of 13,000 feet. There is a and will be remem bered by all who te:t::n adnd tMrsf. Al.blerdit. J. Crane e~?-- Drug Compa ny or write Sorbo! Com2500 miles north and south, throug h statue of Christ erected at the boun- travel over it. I e a a ami Y nner at their . . . home Easter Sunday Covers were pany, Mecha rucsbu • Equado r, Peru, Bolivia and Northe rn dry stating as long as grass grew rg, Ohio . F rom S ant os we next came t o R IO jl id · 1 • Chili, on the higher lands and val- and water flowed, no war would take leys. The causes of them living in place betwee n Chili and Argent ine. of the Amaso n and across the Sar- ' these region s were that the county Our mount ain here with a base ele- gossa sea with its seawee ds retard- I ing the speed of the vessel, to New York, and home. In 1926, he arrang ed for a visit to a particu lar friend of his, an Elder Wilfor d Booth, preside nt of the Armenian missio n (Elder Booth has since died at his field of labor), at Aleppo , Syria. He took a French touring steame r, visited the Island of Mader ia off the coast of Africa , Algiers , where the French Legion troops, tlie native Algeri ans and that fightin g body of men were prepar ing to fight the Riffs who claime d inde- 1 penden ce in Northe rn Africa , but . who shortly afterw ards submit ted I fo~· withou t the war being continu ed. 1 From there to Naples . At Naples in conseq uence of French fightin g : that strang e race, the Druses in Sy- 1 • ria and having bomba rded the city of Damas cus and not being willing to get into a war zone he change d his mind and instead of going to Beyrou nt, Syria, to meet Elder Booth at Aleppo , went north from Naples to Rome and differe nt places in It. aly, Swi~erland and France , on to London where the usual gather ing of 114 N. Main Stree t Phone Midvale 212 Midvale, Utah the family to central Wales where i the family of the Gwynn e and Page "Ente ring Our 26th Year In Business In Midvale" had about al !died out. Those left of the family live in London , Eng., and. among the valleys of Utah. Then to New York and home. Mr. • p Thomas Phill1p age I .. -HERRIMAN ITEM W I . 15 Suff ered From Five Yea rs ~ro.We~e~d~~~~~ai~fu~r~t~w~e~n~~~f~o~u~r~gu~e~s;t~s~.~~~~~a~ll~~~u~g~~~s~~~-~~~~~~~~~ WHA.T WIL L YOU PAY FOR A COLE MAL LEA BLE DOW N DRA FT RAN GE? We have one in· our window, the regu lar price is $135.00. Com men cing Mar ch 21st, the price will be redu ced one dolla r each day until sold. See.the rang e on disp lay and decide in your mind wha t you will pay for it and if no one beat s you to it, it is your s at your own price. "If It Goes In The Hom e .We Sell It" I I W·EST JORDAN LUMBER COMPANY SO THE PUBLIC MAY KNOW It is generally understood that our MEATS have a better ftavor and hold up longer than meats you buy elsewhere. WE have often been asked what is the reason. If you will take the trouble to examine our plant you will find a small dark room called the dripping room. There tl1e carcasses are detained from 12 to 20 hours. You will noti£e ventilators rn the floor and in the cei1ffig. There all the animal heat is drawn out of the carcass before it goes into the cooling room. If that animal heat is frozen into the carcass it will save the owner abount ten lbs. but the meat is not so goad. Buy your meats from RASMUSSEN'S and you will always get the BEST. P. C. RASMUS EN & SONS '{OU BEt t'ER Go AWAY FROM ""ff..E ~{)JO = '"tUAT AJJIJOUJJ(EE:R, SOUIJ OS J.,JJ(E J..IE J..IAO A ~OLD Wea~ Newapaper Union |