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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1931 PAGE TWO Deweyyille J Mr. and Mrs. Harper Steed and chilMr. and Mrs. M. A. Lish returned to their home here Monday, After dren returned to Marysville Monday spending four days in Salt Lake. They where Mr. Steed is employed. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Lamb and Mrs, visited their daughter, Mrs. Fred and were honored guests the Lucy Lamb went to Salt Lake City 24th of July as Mr. Lish crossed the Friday to see the Covered Wagon pa rade. plains in Mrs. Rhoda Archibald returned Mr. and Mrs. Fred Farmer and sons are taking a trip to Chicago and oth- from Bear River City Saturday where er cities of the East They will be she has been visiting relatives for the three weeks. past week. Mrs. Geo. Jensen and Mrs. Ethel j Mr. John C. Mason, of, Ogden was in Jensen were visiting friends and rela- Plymouth on Business Monday. Mra. Newel Nish and son Bobie are tives at Ogden and Salt Lake the week end. visiting Mrs. Nish's mother, Mrs. Ruth Mrs. T. R. Ault visited her daugh- Goddard at Malad City for an indefi ter, Mrs, John Becker, at Ogden, Thurs nite period. Mrs. Hannah Hess was Tuesday din day and Friday. Mr. and Mrs John Becker and Mrs. James Becker and ner guest of Miss Phebe Tims. Mr. and Mrs. Parley Archibald and Mrs. T. R. Ault motored to Salt Lake and enjoyed the Covered Wagon Pa-- J children were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lamb. rade. Mrs. Golden Mason and children are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lish and farrily Mr. and Mrs. Duett Loveland and son, visiting Mrs. Mason's mother, Mrs. Darrell and daughter, Mildred Jean, Patrick at Garland, for a few days. enjoyed a camping trip up Blacksmith Fork Canyon the 24th. day evening. ' Joe. oon of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Han Mrs. A. A. Loveland accompanied sen, of this place, is slowly recovering Mr. and Mrs. J. Bigler, of Collinston ta the Valley Hospital at Tremonton. to Salt Lake City the week end. They Mr. and Mrs. John Becker, of Og were guests of friends and enjoyed see den, Mr. and Mrs. Duett Loveland and ing the Covered Wagon parade. children, were dinner guests of their Mrs. A. F. Loveland of Logan, visparents. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Ault, of ited her daughters, Mrs. Sherley Tuckthis place, Sunday. er, of Ogden, Mrs. Arthur Pierson, of Mr .and Mrs. Paul Gardner and chil Tremonton, M. M. Gardner, Jr, and dren visited relatives at Ogden the Mrs. N. Peter Marble, of Deweyville 24th, retiming to their home here ban the week end and returned to her Har-woo- d, - nu -- We All Want to Know Where We Can Find Service Fire Insurance All Kinds, Automobile Insurance, Fire, Theft, Collision, Publie Liability, Property Damage, Plate Glass Insurance. home Monday. Mrs. Geo. Johnson is making her home here with her son, William. NOTICE Of Hearing of Tremonton City Budget For 1931 Salaries and wages Electric power Miscellaneous expense Repairs and paint, water sewer and cemetery Maintenance of streets Street lighting Library maintenance Interest Surety Bonds, Contract Bonds, Public Official Bonds. ' 7-- Farm Loans, Property Loans, BUILDING & LOAN Save As You Please, Income Accounts, uOO.OO 2000.00 Mayor LEWIS BRENKMAN, LOANS - $4000.00 2250.00 1500.00 2000.00 500.00 2600.00 1500.00 Bonds retired Taxpayers will be heard relative to the above at the regular meeting of the City Council, August 3, 1931 at 8 o clock p. m. JAMES WALTON, BONDS -- tl. City Recorder. Mrs. R D. Macfarlane will entertain the ladies of the Farm Bureau at her home Friday. When You Think Savings' Certificates. HARDWARE NOTARY PUBLIC THINK WILSON CONVEYANCING "Everything To Build Anything" Phone 11 the above together with the best of service can be obtained from All of 0111 Jg JAMES BROUGH Office Tremonton Res. BVR. Tel.-- Utah Bell Tel -- -- 101 31J.2 , Fronk Chevrolet Co. Phone 21 H IBILJinLID)M(S? If so it will pay you as it has others to let us estimate your needs in building materials no matter how little or how much. We are the authorized agents of the famous J. I. 3 By EDITH A L. VATSON Tb Ckorokeo , The whit eenBet f the United States was hard apoa tvery tribe within Its borders, bat the Cherokee wools' appear to hare ' borne more than their share of misfortune. Has large nation, which formerly occupied the entire Allegheny mountain region, naturally resented the encroachment of the whites, and as early as 1759 we find them warring against the : w 1 English In Caro- CASE FARM MACHINERY Full Line of Hardware, Oils and Paints REMEMBER We give $5.00 in SCRIP for every dollar cash purchase or paid on account tea i our uooa yyiu uur uesi Asser Mr. and Mrs. James So re nsen, of Sevier County, spent Saturday and Sunday visiting with Mrs. Mary and children. Mrs. Eva Siddoway, of Vernal and Mrs. Leland Hansen, of Tremonton, were Thursday dinner guests of Mrs. J. M. Sorenson. Mr. and Mrs. James H. Miller had as their Sunday evening guests Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wadsworth and Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Bosley, of Tremonton. David Nelson and Frank Jensen, of Ogden visited with Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Hansen, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kink of Brig-hawere Sunday and Monday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Lafayette Grover. Mrs. J. M. Sorensen and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Coford at Preston, Saturday. The local base ball boys were defeated in their game at Deweyville, Sor-ens-en m lina. Perhaps some prophetic chief of the tribe saw, far ahead, the trail of suffering they were destined to tread, and at whose hands they were to be for they took sides against the Americans during tuid after the Revolutionary war, and with good reason. For example: In August, 1776. General Rutherford, with an army of 2,400 men, crossed North Carolina on an errand of destruction. -- IX 1 I il. V.-t- M IT l. .. DaorIak m Crystal Springs, Tuesday. Miss Marie Larson returned Sunday from Salt Lake City where she has been the past three weeks. Miss Larson was selected aa one of the dancing girls for the Covered Wagon pageant and has been in daily practice for the event having taken part in all the group numbers present ed. Effie Shaffer returned to Salt THIS WOMAN LOST 64 POUNDS OF FAT I Mrs. H. Price of Woodside, L. I . writes: MA year ago I weighed J 90 lbs. I started to take Kruschen and now I weigh 126 and never felt better in my 'life and what's more, I look more like 20, yn. old than the mother of 2 children one J 9 and the other 18. livery one, of ir.y friends say it's marvel us the way reduced.' To lose tut with ;eel take a half teaspoonfui of Krusclien in a g!asa of hot water, before breakfast every morning don't mi93 a morning an 85 cent bottle last 4 weeks get it at .the Wallace Drug Company, Tremonton, Utah or any drug store in Ameri-ic- a. If not joyfully satisfied after the first bottle money back. 1 ' x were towns Cherokee burned, the cattle and horses driven over the fields to trample them down, and then killed or driven off. The In dians fled before this scourge, but finally gathered in opposition at a mountain gap, and there waged a bit ter fight, in which the Cherokee were worsted. "One of the Indians killed on this occasion was afterwards discovered to he a woman, painted and armed like a warrior." Many of the Cherokee, hoping to es contact with the cape the ever-closwhite men, crossed the Mississippi, and found, in what is now Arkansas, a wilderness where they hoped to live undisturbed. That part of the tribe which remained la the South east finally allowed missionaries and teachers to influence them, and In 1820 they adopted a form of government, modeled on that of the United States. About this time Sequoya evolved the Cherokee syllabary and the spread of education which followed brought the nation into an encouraging era of prosperity. It was not to last long. Gold was discovered on the tribal territory and immediately a movement was begun to make the Indians leave their lands. Opposition was of no avail. Several years of struggling against the greed of the conquerors finally weakened the Cherokee and they sold their land and agreed to go west Indian territory. That Is, some of them agreed. The rest, less humbled, hung on to their homes with a tenacity worthy of greater reward. It was necessary to use troops to force the unwilling people away. It was winter time, and the coutnry was as cold and bleak as the hearts of the Cherokees, as they retreated step by step from the land they had called theirs. The pitiful journey must be made on foot, and men, women and children faced the west and started reluctantly for the unknown future, bearing the most weakening of burdens, heavy hearts. Fully of them died from the struggle against unyielding men and unsympathetic nature. Part of the tribe which had gone to Arkansas had moved on into Texas, and there held a grant of land from the Mexican government. The Texans refused to recognize their rights, and in spite of the championship of Gen. Sam Houston, war was declared against the Indians and they were finally driven out of the state, at almost the same time as the expulsion of the rest of the tribe. Dissention within the newly settled nation In Indian territory caused Those who had further trouble. agreed to the treaty of removal and those who had opposed It formed hostile divisions. This difficulty had scarcely been overcome when the Civil war brought a now problem. The Cherokee territory was overrun by both armies. Many of the Indians enlisted in the Southern service, others In the Northern, and the close of the war found the country and the people exhausted. In 1906 their lands were divided, the Indians became citizens under the United States government, and the Cherokee nation became a thing of the past Thirty-si- & OTMS r 1 US liil. Watrn Gum-Dippe- When the One black wampum bead was worth two white ones as money. The Miami worshipped the tun and thunder. "Scalp" Is not aa Indian word, but Is derived from the Low German. Among some eastern tribes, .to see "lot-tin,- " or "Spirit fox" as they called it, was a sign of death to the beholder. Copper plated with a thin coating of gold has been found In mounds In the Ohio valley. National Bu- reau realized that their Bulletin No. 634 was being taken advantage of by some advertisers they issued a Bulletin dated July 10th as follows: "In our Bulletin No. 634 entitled 'Definitions of Terms Used in the Tire Industry we pubished definitions of First Line Second COMPARE Line PRICES Fin. J(SmU: tea OUfUld Tym Si Brand Cull 4.40-2- 1 itoM OldftM Order TIr TM Oik 4.75-1- 9 5.25-2- 1 6.00-19H.- pointed out, 'Although each manufacturer's or distributor's first line tire may represent his best slanJard f Vie 4 or 6 ply tuv, there ij not necessarily cny eruality tf Prlc Ptr Pr. $90 8 $. first line competiii-.tires as to materials, workmanship or price. D. II.40 pile, under the treil e a a. 10 11.40 TRUCK Q BUS TYPE p 17.95 34.90 305 under Ih This interpretation also applies to all lines of tires.' "We therefore recommend that advertising to. the consumer shall avoid the use of these terms for the purpose of com- - 7-- $ (rd) 6.00-20- (8 pile. under Ihe uretdi 15.35 1S.3S PRICES 19-8- FJr"," definitions "Our f4.98 s.69 ll.io 6.6$ 6.63 lS.oo .$7 8.57 16.7 $4-4- c OMPARE Third Line Heavy Duty and Super Heavy Duty Tires. Fir. MttI PHe. Prte Etc sn;,m BVi" Flmt... sitiin, Ma,f c 4.10-2- fl.JS 1 4.S3-2- 0 4.SJ-2- 4-7- 3 4.8J 1 4.T3-- 1; S.ti t.75-2- 0 S.7 5.00-1- 9 9 j.5.00-2- 0 ,5.00-2- 1 5.25-2- 1 6.10 6.30 7.37 $4.35 4.78 4.35 5.68 5.75 5.99 6.10 6.30 7.37 Prt" $3.0 1b f-- 40 2i.X4 IJ.a Xl.t XS.) XS.40 X4.S parinsconipetitive products." A "Special Brand' Tire U made by a manufacturer for distribu- It tors such as Mail Order houses, oil companies and others, under a name that does not identify the tire manufacturer to the public, usually because he builds Itis "best nual. O M P A R PRICES FtmteM AMMr Tr r 1 Hmv, 0.t Cttk Prlw , v Better Business N.wspaDor Union.) Taos men, unlike those . In other pueblos, wear their hair in two long plaits. As a result, our business and that of other Firestone Dealers throughout the country, increased so fast that it has been necessary for Firestone to run their factories twenty four hours a day and Firestone sold more tires in April, May and June than in any like period in the history of the company. In our advertising we do not make com parisoiis involving laboratory tests which you cannot verify except in a laboratory neither do we make comparisons of con struction or price based on misleading classifications such as first line tire, second line we do not make com tire or third line tire to mislead you as to confuse and parisons we only make actual values and service statements and comparisons that you can verify for yourself in our store before you purchase the tire. Come in today and get the greater safety, extra quality and extra values found only in Firestone Tires. WHEN we advertised the fact that Fire. tone was furnishing us complete lines of d Firestone Tires that not only met the price but beat the quality and construction of every grade of special brand tires sold by mail order houses and others, the mail order houses made vigorous protests to Better Business Bureaus and made demands upon newspapers not to accept Firestone or our advertising. We cannot blame them for they did not want car owners to know that they could get, at no more cost, a better tire made by a leading manufacturer, bearing his name and guarantee plus our guarantee and our service. When car owners awakened to this fact, they came to us, compared the sections we had cut from Firestone Tires and special brand mail order tires, and were astounded at the Extra Values we were giving. d When a Cree man's wife died, It was his dnty to marry her sister. Farmers' Gash Union - Miss Lake with them for a short visit Mr. and Mrs. Mock, of Salt Lake City were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Shaffer. Cherokee, ((E), ASK FOR IT East Garland " one-four- th MAKE GOOD OR WE DO Tremonton, Utah t TALES ... olAeTRIBES Plymouth J Saturday. Odell Redford, of Logan, is visiting his cousin, Arthur Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. James VL Miller and family spent Monday in Ogden. Miss Madge Nielsen spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. John Isaacson of Honeyville. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Larson, Jr. left for their home in New York Monday, after a pleasant two week's visit with relatives and friends in Utah. Mrs. Myrle Crowther, of Perry, was the Muse guest of Miss Eva Adams from Sunday to Wednesday. Members of the F. G. Korth family 4.50-2- 0 4.5021 4.7519 SS.fl S.7f ' Mltl i'M Jlr. r" t $8.70 8.8S 9.75 .7 IMI 6.6919 14.66 1S 13.05 13.35 14.95 6.00-2- 0 n.ae is.35 t.SO-1- 9 16.61 16.65 S .25-2- 1 5.50-1- 9 nrt.t.ie tiresthder his iy" name. FimtoM ill IISMr c owJj fV F1ratnn n..t. u: name on every tire he Aackw TyM makes. Nh,, Outr PARE S PRICE Ftretttft " Cuk PHm Cwlr ,B,,M Tm cart ain rlm cHr crt M" Prrlf 7vfo 16.)' Double Guarantee Every tire manufac- lt.ee tured by Firestone bears the name Fire$tone and a.e Sf.oV carries Firestone's un. limited guarantee and ours. You are doubly af.001 a.f 3.Se S.rvlee Dealers O M protected. 4 S.rvle. Srtt .. You 303 O $3.7 fHm 74 $3.75 4.40-2- 1 3.69 3.89 4.30-2- 1 4.4S 4.4S 1.99 ' S.6S Mty UTAH AUTO & IMPLEMENT CO.JI WINCHESTER SERVICE Phone 28 Tremonton, Utah Phone 103 Tremonton, Utah a |