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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1938 FAC3 TWO XAB RIAXK VALLEY LEADEB Catered at the Postofflco at Utah as Second Class Blatter. Published at Trernonton, Utah, on r&araday of each week. Tre-stoato- n, Subscription Rates J2.C0 Due Year (In advance) J100 tlx Months (in advance) 50 rtre JJonths (In advance) WHO ARE YOU? The Ramsncs cf Ycur Name By RUBY HASKINS Saves Life of Doomed Seaman Washington ELLIS name hud lt8 origin In the prized fin? of St. Martin's, which was the standard of France for more than COO years. It was made of f of the Flint's blue mantle which remained to cover him after dividing with the freezing beggar at the gate of Amiens. The story goes (hat this h;ilf rif fhn cloak never showed any Blgns of decay during the succeedlnz centuries, even the moths of the monastery liplne much too re spectful to attack so sacred a relic It was kept In a "chappelie," a place for prayer, and its guardian was a 'chaplain.' from which comes the name of Chapline. In England the Chanllnes were dis tinguished and traced their lineage to Sir Francis Chapline, Knight Alderman of London, in the time of Charles IL Their coat of arms was granted in THIS and ensign the royal navy. The Little Congress is open to on the legislative payroll. There are over a thousand paper members and approximately 210 active mem bers. The "Congress" meets each Tues day eveninffw and considers 4pendine0 legislation or national importance, Rampton, Coleman of Mississippi and your scribbler have the same Real Property class at George Washington university law school and we eternally find ourselves perplexed with such problems of real property as the one contained in the following item. PATRONIZE VOUR LOCAL MERCHANTS rfirtinffiimi-mrf- a 3 M a - eiYtdCtAOaeiaeCL 1 A Blue Lake Blues Hptwtu In 1899 and 1900 certain lands ad jacent to Blue Lake in Millard county were patented to the State of Utah. He married Mary Calvert, cousin of thereafter the State sold this Lord Baltimore, and they settled In snortiy land to John and Willard Roerers. As Virginia in 1610. Their descendants time went on, as a result of the di gave valuable services to the colonies version of the waters of the Sevier In the early wars and fought in the River above Blue Lake, the waters of Revolution. Sampel Chapline was pubthis lake receded until it finally dried licly thanked by General Washington A Setting a new 1937 high for Utah dairy herds hi the twelve-animclass, the Utah State Agricultural college Jersey cattle showed an average production of 7925 pounds of milk and 439.8 pounds of buttc-rfalast iyear, dairy department figures show. Three of the twelve animals were over five years old, while eight were milking with their first calf. The herd included seven daughters of Stockwell's Golden Fox, a silver medal Jersey bull. Another official dairy herd test and record will be kept of the college Jersevs in al t two-year-ol- for Ms conspicuous bravery at the battle of Cowpens. with tin? Chaplines Intermarried Lees of Virginia; Catons. of Maryland; Caldwells. descendants of th' Unices, of Scotland, and other families of distinction. Among persons of prominence today by the name of Chapline is Jesse Grant Chapline, educator and publisher, of Chicago. Ibis noted as the founder and president of the La Salle Extension university Public Idser, Inc. WNU Servloa. on eight fundamental points, accord ing to Mrs. Frances Barlow, direc tor of the nursery school at the Utah State Agricultural college. These points arc crganic unity, craftsman ship, emotional tone, effective:1 ers, subtle appeal, truthfulness, refine 1938. ment of fundament?:! human attitudes and portrayal of life in its true per The real test of literature, Executive committeemen of the spective. she out, is 'do adults enjoy it?' points Utah Crop Improvement Association, a (group which has been influential In organizing of farmers in a weed Greater numbers of Utah college control program, met with the state men are entering forestry training agricultural correlation committee in courses now than ever beferc enroll the state capitol building early this ment at the Utah State Ag figures Jnonth to outline its program and bud ricultural college's school of foresttv Ret for the coming year, show. The Utah State college is one according to Dr. R. J. Evans, head of the Utah of about twenty-fiv- e in the country State Agricultural college department which in forestry stud give training of agronomy. The crop improvement ies at present. More than 430 students association's 1938 program, designed enrolled at the college in forestry to dovetail with the state's weed con- courses the 1936-3- 7 school during trol program ,for the coming year, year, the registrar's figures show. At will be designed especially to obtain least registered the cooperation of individual farmers in the6,000 students were departments of forestry of In the state plans, Dr. Evans otner American colleges latest figsays. ures reveal, and 500 degrees were given last year to students who had Children's books should be chosen course. completed the four-year pogd oooo Fine Goto phone your CASTLE GATE DEALEU FUEL CO. t,yirle1r - -:- . 1 TTtAPPED In the boiler of an ocean liner when crew members clamped down the manhole plate and turned on the water preparatory to firing up, James Elwood, of New York City, escaped by seconds from drowning. A small flashlight pointed the way to his rescue. Elwood, second engineer on the liner, bad gone into the boiler to complete a repair job. He had been at work for about five minutes when he heard a Bound that froze him. Up at the far end of the boiler, where he had entered, he heard someone slam down the manhole cover and clamp it Almost at the same time water began pouring Into the boiler and rising around las legs. In a panic, Elwood scrambled back toward the manhole and climbed up, beating the cover with bis fists. He continued to beat on file cover and yeTL but It was soon evident there was no chance he would be heard above the noises cmtside in the en.Tine room. His Una chance was to pound on the boiler with his hammer, which he Iliad left somewhere on the bottom the Dig tank, Salt lakt City d now coming in so fast that a up to Elwood's waist as he started back, wading and feeling with his feet for the hammer. He could not see much below the surface with his light because of the reflections on the rushing water. He continued his blind search, but fast losing hope as the flood rose about him. Finally by luck he noticed that if he held his flashlight at a certain angle, he could distinguish objects on the bottom of the tank. Soon he saw the hammer, and by a series of plunges he managed to grab it and bring it up. He fell to beating with it on the Bides of the boiler. "Water was up to my armpits when a fireman heard my pounding and opened the manhole," Elwood said. "A few minutes more and I would have been drowned. For one thing, if my flashlight had not worked if just one of those batteries hadn't been fresh when I put them In I would not have had those extra minutes. It's just a. case of a little common sense and a lot of luck." Elwood has worked on world-- ! cruise ships almost exclusively for the last thirteen years. In that time he has been In the ports of practically every country in th world. h HEROES OP AMFPirAKi o,i CODV -- -r !!- k, Franco-Prussia- -- i ... 1 wwk wiu . . PHONE 35 Gate" Dealer . Your Advertising In the Leader Will Get Results V iassMaah Subscribe for THE LEADER More County Correspondence than any Newspaper in State $2.00 a Year A TARACEI ft till rytiicrf Ka o 114-- . j designated when the time CCO SAVED the hoped for special at least will give the bit? 1 jcvi. oai cany bultt, ii la claimed, tion. Robinson Presents Brief A brief was presented to th. ial committee which will consMem aspects of the pending recipe iraae agreement wiui the British ernment by Congressman J. Win L inson on Saturday, February 19. Drier considered the interests of Oai in lead and zinc. Special eim was given to the employment up for forty per cent of the Utah m ulation depends on mining hearings will be opened on Man 11 Bureau of Mines ft I I w' ;we lea ;ter li 25 in r. n - Farmers' Cash Union TREMONTON, UTAH i fe Phone 35 or Call at the I to J I The Utah delegation is sunefa its victory with satisfaction. Of cocb we are referring to the bill auto izing an appropriation of $300,000 the erection and equipment of a Ba eau of Mines Research Station at Sat Lake City. Although S. 628 hsspussed tne benate on several prevraa w casions, its passage by the House February 15 made victory assured In a speech delivered by Congra man Abe Murdock in support of bill, the Congressman said "Salt Lake City is the logical pits for the location of such a minima periment station. It is the cental one of the most potentially prat tive and varied mineral areas of 6 world. A circle of 600 miles ufi with Salt Lake City as its centers braces an area which has yielded: recent years about 80 per cent oft the gold, 90 per cent of all the sfe 55 per cent of all the lead, 75? cent of all the Conner, and f cent of all the zinc produced 4 United States, including Alaska, also includes some nf trip. F!tt! if phosphate, iron, and mineral-earpr m only the United posits States, tially developed. The Salt LakeVaSr is the greatest nrwiffrnns smeiS center of the United States. The is conveniently flrpssihlp. from i parts of the area affected tmdis i centeT of a mineral field so ws and interestine- that it commands interest of mining and metallurgis tecnnicians and students in au p Of the world. Tn nnd ndiacent to Lake City are elaborate and most j usual mining and metallurgical p tte" cesses in operation, and resident are mining and metallurgical expert v& of world-wid- e experience andof ti The presence and availability plants and these experts constitute' important advantage to be ga through the location of the station Salt Lake City, as they always1 rrnitinue Anil mair Ka tVio rr)ve.m$' mnnovata ,,11,. for the benefit of the entire indtaW SANITARY UNITS INSTALLED BY FURNISHING THE MATERIAL THE LABOR WILL BE FURNISHED FREE BY THE W. P. A. so-call-ed 1 Pii-- YOU CAN HAVE ONE OF THESE fon Rescue of thirty rM r. n n from going out of existence, of which iwu were in uian, was one of the principal western conexpasinnni complishmenta of the week. All "reclamation" camps were doomed, partly on the theory that mvy wuuia De caned upon to benefit private lands. They still are to maintain a strictly nuhlifi" WMU f ivuv, Senator Elbert D. Thnmn. rof.n4n principally to Utah's Deer Creek and wuviiraiic camps. lne camps deflnitptwJ hhh ..... A.vfc v-uc." terminated. But Deer Creek, being a . . . man. .U.J project, ..kw.j, o.ucu prtsents its difficulties. Current uiai, LXlc reclamaUon fund will not be sufficient ' came fe ,u attepuuice. .ais lorethougM out The Sanitary Privy Mow to Get tie sxr mh.. . -- Farmers' Cash Union Tremonton's Exclusive "Castle m- everv a. .vjnjn, jsait Lake t but records of an mo -"- v. . ""attiitl thpm Very respectfullv Oiairman Stake Con. earth-quake- s. pro-Briti- sh niroraniiTini """"'""'s n 1 mere icijv. inv mpmKor , riA ...v..ivi wm aim y UUTlg-- I .,,1UC nrflrrf -- uicmnv 1 to the. be an accurate record of wu Mur-doc- 2:30 Please consult vour t0!.u. uels for the awards nrorr - .5 18 over. Seven points ...u w each quorum, and keen ords that accurate r.ZlKm ciwrxs ma,. made. Also, please not ,w monthly reports call for everV-of activity in each plete reports for Januarj- - anO arv- nromntlv ami "jvuu tae. . riW white j to A. L. ' Cook. Tre.Tnnr.f low copy to chairman of ward ic priesthood committpp .r1 up. As the lake receded, the land form erly covered bvv it was occuDied bvt the successors of the Rogers brothers in the belief that they were entitled to it under their grant from the State of Utah. In 1922, the land originally granted to the Rogers, together with the "relict" land left by the receding wi , . lake, was acquired in good faith by the Nicolson Seed Farms, a corpora tion, formed by close friends for the production of alfalfa seed. The mem bers of the Nicolson Seed Farms were so successful in producing? hardv alf alfa seed of outstanding quality that their product gained national recogni tion. These farmers had originally CUma BnHnn rnrr (rnm a tam. . ff , . I paid $32,000 for the land they occuvvaen uy oi Bcaooi leacners. ,1,1 she was eleven years old, herN pied, and since the inception of their brother fell from the roof of a alfalfa seed industry have spent a tobarn. Clara nursed him for the tal of $230,000 in improvements nrtfl next two years, and was uncapital investments. Recently the De doubtedly influenced at this time toward a career of nursing. partment of the Interior ordered a new survey of this redon. which sur vey showed that no lake exists. Under With fk outbreak ol the Civil War, Clara existing law, therefore, the "relict" Barton volunteered her services. All 1 !! ..... land left by the receding? water, would . rkt through the war she endured the privations and dangers of working behind the be public domain, and in spite of their firing lines. With the war over, she caryears or labor and vast expenditures, ried on her most difficult labor, searching tne Nicolson Seed Farms would lose lor missing men, and identified more than to title 12,000 graves. their lands. The above facts were called to the attention of Congressman Abe A trip to Europe during the War brought Clara face to face with the Interwho immediately introduced a national Red Cross, and in 1879. bill in the House, H. R. 9349, which, inspired her to organize the Red Cross of America. She actif enacted, would permit the Nirnisnn ed as its chief until 1904. dofcg noble relief Seed Farms to purchase the "relict" w'k- - not only in war times, but in times ol national disasters, such as floods and land occupied by them at a reasonIt can truly be said of her that she able price to be fixed bv the fierro. 'A helped relieve the world's springs. of Interior. The bill was referred tary to tne House Committee on Puhiir Lands. On Friday of last WPP lr Tr Murdock succeeded in having the bill reported out favorably and placed on the House Private Calendar. The rri-- 1 he wrote a letter which consisted of to get all features going at once. The vate calendar will come un at m one word: just delegation is worried about starting early date, and the Congressman "Boo!" comment mat the House will nn ht the Duchesne tunnel, part of the Pro Sensible Security Dili. vo River development with Jeers have greeted the identical out an appropriation scheme, in Congress. White House Guest resolutions of Senator William H. However efforts of the four on the A conservative Denver hnsinpsa King and Representative Maurey Utah delegation, Besides petitions man who spent a nicht at th whir Maverick (Texas) which authorize from home are concentrated on the the President to call a naval disarm P.ffnrt . f no nt,-- i ,s . Mouse as guest spent an hour nr ji. . n. ament conference. Nevertheless, if the Of Utah clauses inunuci me i nomas like most White House past bills, Deer ing letters to friends on VhitA TTniiap suggests conference were to incor vreeK and its alUed features has set porate the suggestion of Represents.. up a sum between $1,250,000 and stationary, just to trive 'em a thrill so that actual work may bej.0 one or the few western tories tive Hamilton Fish (N. Y.) by invit ing japan on a basis of naval equality gin. The Thomas amendments providmere would be a real chance of sub ed that when works relief nn otw- MICKIE SAYS stantial naval disarmament. funds lapsed through non use, theyj ine American nress has hushed the fact that at the 1935 DOW EXPECT TO naval conference flop Japan offered ADVZRTirG 7UDAV AND io uesiroy au her capital ships, or 1 QUIT TOMORROW which could possibly be nseri ships customers move v for aggressive purposes against the Move away mew ones unuea btates, if America and Eng-ARE AWaSGRQWlhl'UP! uuia wouia ao likewise. But "doitnr OURE AOr TAlKlkl'TO diplomacy" and "the white man's bur aen answered with an A A14rr MEEriHG, emphatic a. - . p. m. tn JCoi UTAH uJTr . ior tne utann. , offslm' Ji one-hal- - 1L . . WENDELL AXDEKSO:: To Your Town M l"aiL . nti.wii.i A word of commr.,,. efforts in making f3,rU..n fe, lections. Everywhere there report of the increase of th tne people are t. lay by their fast the boys to arrive on to them tn frto k;cu date that we are form over the stake th, K of each month. Saturday k u- K. ' you are now jroino-& ri mat day Key Men. and n. priesthood leaders, r, at Garland on the second VT1 MUU4T each month, Corelatirm D. C. A Chapline? The smashing victory of Calvin Rampton of Bountiful as speaker of the Little Congress on Tuesday of last week nlaces a Rockv Mountain The inly rlae in K U. S. whet ratalofs an J man in the speaker's chair for the jractiuni' matter connf any line of bunnra first time in nineteen years or Little or modiirt can be obtained Kree And Wit bout is (Ke American Industrial Library. ObKgati-Congress history. Urn for Buaineaa Arvertiin Matter you ara inter emlcd in; aam wiil be promptly forwarded. Rampton attended the University of AMEHCM IffCUSTCIAL LIBRARY Utah four and a half years, the last Kaai aaari u 11 uiJ dia g, Ciioa so. I 111 ao i year an a half being devoted to law, before he turned eastward more than a year ago to become secretary to VANATIONAL EDITORIAL J. Will Kobinson. While congressman ASSOCIATION ( I the "U." Rampton distin attending Ate.jyXeJL. 193 5 guished himself as a debator and pub lic speaker. Hampton s victory was a severe blow to a reactionary cliaue who had been in control of the "Con 1503. gress" for several years. Coleman of Isaac Chapline was one of the first s campaign was of the family to come to America. He Mississippiana ne Hampton was successiui in roil manager counhad been a member of the king's mg up practically a two to one vote as well as to your Country 1n an cil Free to Publifc Arr'.c,Priesii SOS From Inside Ship's Boiler Utahns In Se p |