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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1928 Racial Mark Plainly Seen in Place Names While most the states of the Mississippi Tallej. besides countless rivers and lakes in all parts of the country, bear Indian names, but a email number only of the towns that are the work of the white man have adopted names borrowed from the original owners of the land. Not one In ten, It is claimed, of the 150 large cities has an Indian name, If we except Chicago, and among those that nave it ia usually an adaption from some neighboring lake or stream. The early explorers and settlers have left their racial mark. Up the Hudson and Mohawk the trail of the Dutchman is pretty clear. The French Influence in northern New York and Vermont and along the line of the Great . lakes Is familiar in many names. Mississippi has no "saints" in its li?t, whereas across the river Louisiana, by nine parishes and many towns, rivers and lakes, perpetuates the religious tenets of its early fathers, Kentucky and Tennessee evidence the vocabulary of the hunter and trapper, Montana and Idaho that of the miner. All the region acquired from Mexico, particularly southern maintains In Its place California, names the memory of its Spanish explorers and settlers. There are rela tively few Indian names on the Pacific coast, strange to say. North of the Spanish belt capes and towns frequently reflect the loyalty of early settlers to the older states of the Union ; for example, Portland, Ore., which was named after Portland, Maine. The story is that two eettlers to whom the task of selecting a name for the Oregon settlement fell were easterners, and that they tossed a coin to de termlne whether the town should be called Boston or Portland. Methodist Church Notes Grain Market SPECIAL? The wheat market held generally Sunday school at ten o'clock. Classes for all ages. Epworth League at Noweek the steady during ending seven o'clock in the evening. A servember IT, influenced by a sharp re vice for young people. Topic "The duction in the estimates for the Cag Anna Adventure," nadian crop, reports of less favorable Marie Brenkman, leader. Preaching weather in the northern wheat areas services at eight o'clock. Special music and sermon. of Argentina, and firm prices in for- Thanksgiving Sunday school at Corinne at two eign markets, according to the weekly o'clock in the afternoon with preachgrain market review of the U. S. bu- ing services at three. A welcome to all. reau of agricultural economics. De AMn R. Dickson, Pastor. recorn as a layed marketings of new 1- -2 sult of rains in the central west was Subscribe for the Leader only a strengthening factor in the market fZ.uo a year. for that grain. Oats and barley prices held setady to slightly higher, influ- --! enced by the strength in corn and by light receipts. Rye had independent 26-2- 7 strength with receipts and stocks was El also wood Flax small. firm Bazaar, Friday, Nov. 23. relatively er, reflecting the smaller domestic Mr. and Mrs. George Abbott and supply this season and less favorable Mrs. Lewis Abbott, were shopping in conditions in Argentina. . Ogden Monday. The Canadian crop, according to the Mrs. J. Conrade and children of November official estimate, will total California were guests of Mr. and about 500,613,000 bushels, or around Mrs. A. Persch Jast Thursday. ofmore was bushels than 35,000,000 Max Beal and Vernal Jnlinc ficially accounted for from last seasSaturday in Loean. Miss Frank Pool on's crop. Damage from frosts and Lof the U. A. C. came home with them hail was more serious than earlier estimates indicated and there is again ana then returned to Logan .Sunday considerable low quality grain in the evening. The Ladies Farm Bureau will hrAA Canadian crop. Inspections, for the of kill. western division for three months end- a meetingn PridavJ aftomnnn .w4 ut ing in October, totaling 159,311,000 home of Mrs. P. E. Ault. . Chicken-po- x bushels, showed about 39 No. 3 or is prevalent in several better compared with about 36 3 homes, but no serious cases. for the same period last season when Mr. and Mrs. Holland of Brigham inspections totaled only 93,273,000 City spent Tuesday with Mr. and bushels.". There was, therefore, a Mrs. Geo. Abbott. of volume' quality grain high greater Norma Seal, delightfully entertained ant visit with friends in Ogden SunThe married men of Wheelon demarketed in Canada during the first meetRelief social at day. a after society three months than last season. The lightfully entertained their wives and Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Durfey were specially invited guests at a splendidlower grades are being taken for feed ing. A dainty luncheon was served to Logan visitors Saturday. and also for milling purposes as the thirteen ladies. ly prepared luncheon and we are wonMrs. Nora Bigler spent several dering why other of the men folka do Mr. and Mrs. Warner Kidman were protein content has been officially re. Among the many pleasurable af- transacting business in Salt Lake days in Ogden with her sister, Mrs. not do likewise. ported to be higher than usual for Wm. Orem. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Thompson are these classes of wheat. No. 6 Mani- fairs of last week was a bazaar-socilast week. Mrs. Mary Fryer and Mrs. Jennie enjoying the comforts of a new car. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Bowen were toba was quoted in Liverpool Novem- held at the home of Mrs. J. A. Bigler. Mr. and Mrs. Johnston of Wheelon ber 16 at $1.08 per bushel for Novem- A very pleasant afternoon was fiiwnr visiting with relatives in Ogden for a Fryer and daughters were the guests few days. ber shipment, compared with $1.33 Luncheon was served. Friday of Mrs. Clarence Campbell in are rejoicing over the arrival of a beautiful boy. Mr. and Mrs. Goddard had a pleas Garland. Mrs. Joseph Seal, assisted by Miss for No. 4 Manitoba. The latest official estimate places the Australian wheat crop at 154 million bushels or about 39 million bushels above last season's revised estimate. New Austrailian wheat is being marketed and this wheat now being loaded in southern Australian ports was quoted in Liverpool at $1.45 xk per bushel. Storms in northern Argentina were delaying harvesting of new crop wheat in that country but shipments of old crop grain are still fairly heavy and these are competing with other wheats in European markets. At the close of the week Argentine rosafe 62 pounds wheat for shipments by November 26 was quoted in Liverpool at $1.324 per bushel. Wheat for December shipment was quoted at the same figure. Wheat:, The situation in the domestic wheat markets was not materially changed. Mills were the principal buyers arexport bids were generally below current quotations and very little grain was being taken by exporters.. Premuims for. good milling grades on spring wheat were about unchanged but bids for wheat to arrive were lower at Minneapolis. The approach of the close of navigation is restricting the demand for wheat for later shipments to Duluth and other northwestern markets. 12 protein No. 1 dark northern was auot- ed at Minneapolis November 16 at 3 EASY cents over the December Drice of $1.11. 13 protein was bringing 5 cents over and 14 4 cents AT THE over the December. The Winnipeg market was firmer than the domes tic markets and prices advanced about one cent, influenced by the strength Z in the futures markets and the reduced estimate of the crop.' No. 1 Manitoba northern was quoted at Winnipeg November 16 at $1.237s. Durum premiums held steady al though the low protein, smutty, and low colored durum continued to sell slowly and at wide discounts, under CASH the good milling types. No. 1 amber or mixed of good color testiner 13 protein was quoted at Minneapolis at cents over the Duluth Novem ber price of 99; cents and at Duluth at 6 cents over the November price. Hard winter wheat Dnces were een- erally unchanged but premiums were NO. 1 NO. 2 rather irregular because of the rather COMPARISON NO. 3 a of poor quality large percentage of the offerings. 12 protein No. 2 hard winter was quoted at the close of ordithe week at Kansas City at 5 cents over the December price of $1.10, $170 12 protein 4 to 9 cents over, and CONLON 13 protein 6 to 12 cents over. No. 1 hard winter with 11 protein was $125 quoted at Omaha at $1.12 per bushel. Export demand was very dull although some of the lower grades were being worked for export via the gulf. CONLON YOU Export bids at the close of the week $45.00. were around $1.23 basis. No. 1 hard winter delivered Texas gulf ports. Mills in Texas were bidding about a CONLON $1.29 for 13 protein No. 1 hard winter delivered Texas common points and $1.36 for 14 protein. Soft winter wheat held steady with DOLLAR-for-DOLLA- R demand sufficient to readily absorb Heat-retaining adsix were current offerings. Prices people. evvanced about 5 cents per bushel at St. Louis, where No. 2 soft red winter IT! was quoted. No. 4 16 at $1.43 to $1.52 depending upon qualitv. These high prices are increasing the demand for low protein hard winter wheat for planting purposes. Receipts of soft Semi-so- ft winter at Cincinnati were very light. Mills were complaining of the poor quality of the soft winter in that ter ritory. The lower crades. however, were being readilv taken for feed pur poses. No. 2 soft red winter was quoted in that market at $1.40 to $1.42. and No. 3 at $1.31 to $1.36 per bushel. No. 2 red winter was quoted at Toledo at $1.43 '4 to $1.44 Pacific coast markets contrnued dull under a slow demand and lieht offerings. No. 1 hard white wheat was quoted at San Francisco November 15 t $2.10 ner 100 or $126 per bushel, O No. 1 soft white at $2.05 per 100, or $1.23 per bushel. No. 1 hard winter 19 LOGAN wheat in bulk declined to $2.00 per TOO. or $1.20 ner bushel at Los Ange les. Never-Endin- B obolink Pure Thread Silk Hose for Ladies and Misses All Newest Colors, sizes 8 East Tremonton -I- to 10 Our Regular $1.00 Pure Thread Silk Hose will be on Sale NEXT MONDAY and TUESDAY, Nov. only I - 79c pair GeBhart Stores Co. at Limit, 3 pair to a customer TREMONTON 1-- . GARLAND Collinston al Nature a Kindness to People of Green Isle Among other benefits of being an Irishman there Is to be listed, it is asserted, an ability to break one's bones with relative impunity, as compared with Englishmen or persons of other races. At a recent coroner's inquest at Camberwell, England, Dr. Reginald Larkin, a police surgeon familiar with accident cases, took occasion to report experience that broken bones of the Irish heal more rapidly and strongly than similar fractures, the victims of which are English; thus Justifying, perhaps, the Irishman's traditional preference for the shillalah. a plaything relatively harmless to his countryman. In all animals the repair of broken bones is the duty of millions of tiny living cells which accumulate at the place where the bone is broken and cement the severed ends together with stiff, cartilagelike tissue which then slowly hardens Into bone by deposit of compounds of lime. Baltimore Sun. Of Another Calling En route to fulfill an engagement in New England once, Smsa got oft the train at a station to stretch his legs for a few minutes. Before he could look around an excited woman rushed up to him and frantically demanded : train pulled "Has the nine-thre- e out" "I don't know," he replied. -- "Why don't you know?" she shouted. "Why do you stand there like a log? Aren't you a conductor?" "Yes, I'm a conductor." "A fine conductor you are," she ex- inied contemptuously. "Well, you see," he humbly replied, "I'm not the conductor of a railroad train; I'm the conductor of a brass, band." The Brimstone Path evangelist added. A young man could stand no more, and got up and walked out "Yes, and there goes a young man who will go to hell, too," Torrey shouted. Reaching the door, the young fellow turned around. "Yes, I'm off," he called back. "Ta, ta. Any message for auntie? Or shall I tell her you'll see her later?" Portland The Only Girl Jack had just asked Jill to marr.v him, and she murmured "Yes." "Jack, dear," she ventured, after a " tog silence, "am I the only girl The young man's arms tightened about her. "Jill," he interrupted fiercely, "don't ask me whether you are the only girl I ever toved. You know It as , well as I do." VThat wasn't what 1 was going to say at all, Jack," she answered. "1 was going to ask you If I was the only girl who would have you." Diagnosis Little P.ettle Easteiduy of Indianap oils had been visiting her grandinotb er at Sclpio and lind contracted a cnse of mumps from some of her little ploy-mates- . Mumps must hnve been painful fm little IVttie because she dlnjrnftwf the pnln, when iisked how il.t felt h snjinjr: "Tin hurt ,!;ist Ul:e ha vine ihc uvv In lay neck.- "- I ritlisjn-- ! Comparisons Prove the Worth of this GREAT WASHER Clean Washing Fast Washing Safe Washing AND ; OPERATION 1-- 10-1- 18-2- CALL LOW PRICE OF $125.oo FREE DEMONSTRATION (Terms if desired) 10-1- When the revivalist, Torrey, was holding meetings in London, he was annoyed by persons who disapproved of his sermons leaving the ball. Preaching a regular hell and brimstone sermon one night, be told his hearers what a great sorrow it bad been to bim because he believed one of his aunts had died impenitent "And she has certainly gone to bell," the tnyi'.Hie , : i .: COMPARISON 2-- COMPARISON The ordinary highpriced washer has features, of course, but not one of which is not found in the CONLON (Thrifty) WASHER. Cut Gears Bronze Bearings Durable Dentproof, Tub Quiet Beyond Belief Salesmen for the nary high priced washer boast of fast, efficient washing. The (Thrifty) WASHER is the fastest washer known, pound a minute, sixty pounds an hour a big family wash for THINK OF The ordinary highpriced washer costs cash. The (Thrifty) WASHER costs but cash. SAVE The (Thrifty) WASHER is the GREATEST value er built into a washer. NOTICE wringer rolls with which the CONLON (Thrifty) WASHER is equipped wring more suds from the clothes than either the extremely hard or soft rolls THINK IT OVER! "We stand ready to prove the above statement" J. L M ONTROSE East First North Keen the cutting edare on your brain as keen as the cutting edge on your chisel; both grow dull by neglect. CO; UTAH Milton McCrary is the Conlon Agent for Box Elder and Oneida Counties |