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Show nm movo herald A DAY MfflSWB- 6 Provo Foundry 5 Machine G5 :T B 4 A-t- f V- I E R FO M Self OilinJ Mini -- Stations-'In Pr.13. S l&x Establishing Paris End I PaiaurLxihe.absolute L ruler and despotic- - governor of ;th Rockies. Paris electrician's trade union, is the" , most hated, the most the most man In and most talked of beloved the Will Give Farmers Flood Warnings France ", for'iand Estimate. .Water 8upply - Pataud, the workIngmens king, Is Irrigation Statistics Will;; ' .'. short and stocky, with muscles of iron. Be Vsluat.a.. His manner is abrupt, his voice is em- written cold; Denver. That Uncle Sara is not phaticsnd over hi', heavy features,'' He sits all point wheh disposed toJ overlook-anit comes to aiding the developers' of the country Is evldeueed in 'the estab llshnient of snow- gauging stations at many points in the Rocky mountains, under the direction of officials of the The United States weather burran. the amount of snow that, falls in themountains Rocky amount of water in many of the prin cipal rivers of the country, and hence has a bearing .on the floods that devastate the middle west In some spring seasons, a The snowfall In the moun tains has much to do with determining tbe success or failure of the vaBt ir- rigatloitMjterprlses that have. sprung up, in Jhe west. The mountains act as vast t ebertolrs. - When the snowbanks are piled high In these natural reservoirs the farmer who depends on Jr- there...U no danger fear-ed- . , . Weatheri Bureau LABORER-RULE- Emit Pataud, Head of Electrician's Trade Union, Has the City "IT "at HI Mercy. " if" Cajes. Enjinc and Boiler Repairs, Iron Brass. Castins, Etc - PEAWUE THPEEEEEP IVHEPE CtLra. Nine TO GAUGE SNOWFALL 5 Weot Center, Provo, UtaH to-da- - - : .. m the-biiiJd- .it Castle Gate and Clear Creek iAiLt . - 3th North Street, JOSEPH W. DUNN, General Manager. PROVO. Both Phoxes. - - itlPQfiTAftJ- Utsth Timber Co; . ( - -- v 4. t ? y' ,1 -- for saJe 160 West 0- UTBH. ?VtlT M SMETlAttff MLAttK The distance tra? often long, but the time spent hy the industrious Shetland women ."wnp ply Iheir MiftingBeedleB oil the march o and. from the peat :nioss Summer and winter alike.. they are ever on the trot, and it is notice such a number of old women staggering under their tyuTt dens and winding their way over the desolate moors with feet enclosed in "rivlins" of dried 'cowsktrf" Sonirof of shortage of water In short "stimmerF-Bihe inore: aged if ihe matn'Tange shews Emll Pataud at Hla. Desk. crutchesto enable, them to raise them- iew snow capped peaks and Ule ut f selves with theirheavy foad after iles contain few white then the enthroned hi his little private room at A homeward lanrtipy he- - Jimut httsbaad farmer TeaHECs-thf the headquarters nf the nnion, merer la-- siait.io one of the more ancient.houses every drop of. water. -- - - - accessible than (of the will give one an idea of the Blmple life Jt!a for. keeping accurate .and de French republic; -- lAfter ascending - a a practiced a generation ago, but records of snowfall that the narrow, dark staircase, you are met at a transition- - to more pendable government is establishing these snow door at the top' of the landing by ' hygienic if less romantic dwellings. gauging stations throughout the Rocky la man who gruffly Inquires your mis In a house recently! visited by the mountains Statistics will be kept and sion, u your answer saiisnes mm yon writer the only outlet for the smoke comparisons will be made' each year, are ushered into another room; not, as was a hole or "lum" in the roof, un so the people Mississippi val you xpect-to- . meet, the. great, man,... The mn gii nil Timnh f"?flngnl-flrepla.ce. PH'fifrn low,' bleakish: hills. In the hearth, was. in the center of the floor tendant, Again - you.are . severely, feeing built in a13seiice"T3ttrees"there isacoiniensa- - instead and if the 'object of your questioned, t(on in the matter of fuel supply by according to modern methods. At the visit meets with this second attendant's the extent of the peat boga which are back of the hearth was a fragment of approval, you are shown into a' found. Jn most of the islands; and Uw monry three feet or four little office. vhlch opens into the prito the and was the torrest who son support of Earl peats Rognvald, Elnar, vate room of the director. V seatover from- - Norway to subdue- a few cooking - utensils on,c A Pataud Jumped into prominence in chain dangledr4rom - a rafter band of pirates, is due the credit of 1907 when' he startled ParU" by pluncrook a to sup showing the inhabitants hbw - to make above, terminating in ging the gaily lighted city into utter fuel from thHr apparently- useless port the kettle or the dinner pot. The Paris her darkness. The "pride-ofitt.inerst room an tnnliided nf the old From this circumstance he bogs. boulevards took on the - appearance &d box with fashioned wooden of sliding the gained appellation of country streets and their grandeur before nls arrival great privation must doors, a large chest or "girnal" con. and magnificence were' made grotaining oatmeal,-- a ehurn with a flaglave existed by the: scarcity. a tesque by : hastily devised means of scraps or wreckage, sea-- . stone cover,-- small table, two chalrsV lighting, After a short experience of. were a "sautie backet" on the wal, a sieve weed, or even dried the authorities this Inconvenience 'Car. 1 of a sack malt. and used for burning. to Pataud's demands. , yielded Snow Gauoina Station st Steamboat or "shearing'' com NOT A CASE FOR DISCIPLINE. In June last be made, another j,8prlng, Col. mences in. la te s orim. uauall v after lesson- - was the crops have been put in the ground. flood dan still fresh in the minds of the authoriknow whether will the ley. and Position, EuiYjir?Ifir?(?d,s In hostparts "Of llie ties and they quickly acceded to his ger's'" at maximum or mlnlmum-oThen DecMe Just What You Innot are on but ground, the western rancher will not have to demandB. By this time, however, many Would Do. frequently they are on the summit of guess at tbe amount of water that will hotels, clubs, shops and newspaper ofthe hills and in the valleys. be availabla fo irrigation' purposes. fices, realizing their inability to cope Dr. . Alpha G. Kynett of Philadelphia, with a man who, by a word, could The day" appointed for secretary' of the Board of Home, Mis Then, too, in tbe Rocky mountains are the entire city In darkness," water plunge" Ex enterprises Church , Fprlnglnjjup tension of the marks "an "event-p- f jwer lo" place " themselves " beyond dwarf planned that Niagara by comparison. and a week or two beforehand the Methodist Episcopal church, is the son his autocratic control. "They provided the government estimates of good wife has brewed a large "brewst" and grandson of preachers. As such Through themselves with electric lighting the of the these snowall promoters of ale, flo as to have it in, good condi be is for. peace. .But be has a four ll of their' own," and fested con-:- : enterprises'-wibe able to plants figure ap as the doctor son, who, Bottles tion when the day arrivesthat bo far as they.were water tent,.hellevlng amount the powpf. and Jara arefiITerwIththe Drown and told" the story the- other day, dearly proximately were safe. Nonunion concerned be will available. er they that So did he a loves disfrequently fight. usually potent liquor; for It is a F. H. Brandenburg, one of the vet men were placed in. charge of the grace for the housewife tcr be told that come home jrom .school bearing .the were in a of the weather bureau service, plants and erans his that conflict the father of marks i she went too often to the. well during ' to Pataud. defy position the brewing;" or, in other wordsr di said to him n day:. ."Now Uerald. who la Jn charge.pf the.station at " Tataud was horn. In a "small town has established most of the snow' luted the beverage too much. Neigh this fighting has .to stop. If anybody outside Paris in 1869. His- - parents thffTnOTintatns. He bors assist each other atthe peat insults- youy you may. defend yourself; gauging stations in were poor and his early life was full of ' flitting, bo as to finish the work neces- but if you get into another fight with has spent thS greater part "of the vin' 30 More than stations privations.-- He had little or aa schoolsary for tha requirements of one house out a very good reason you will have ter at the task. was put to w.orkv while still Mr.' been erected have me." with settle to. by An earry Brandenburg ing and in a single day it posime. Hfs. young. Colorado-alonparents selected thejrsde In e, A few day later bfe'akfastls'partaTien "6T,and "oaf ban- to one been- - an - exceptionally of bricklaying for him, but he pie-- " home lunch, "This sconesrhome-roadunexpectedly day has nock8,.'sooau ferred electricity and entered an elecTwork. good.season f or beglnntny-th- e cheese; ham and eggs, etcf-- heap the saw that Gerald had been fighting, ' trical shop. While yet a boy he organbeen he "What have. Mr. yon the fortifies of said doing?'' measuring snowfall," table, and a substantial meal ized the employes and as their spokesthe body for a long day of toil. After asked Brandenburg, ,"lf the amount of snow man secured hetW pay and shorter a said with . Gerald, on The has guilty is for "Nothing;"' the subject. the breakfast a start made any bearing News of from their employer. hours -snowfall Jn the Rocky mountains has the party carrying a look. his success spread rapidly among-thhave tn haven't in heaviest the been.; fighting, been straw "caizle" of provisions, others a ."You; " many years. and five years as;o ' some places in the mountains ' the workmen of Paris basket of - bottles containing' milk or you?" he was.made the ruler of the electri60 sir." 40 or five to "Yes, which and are with feet dep. drifts regale "Didn't I tell you that .if I caught feet on a level is a. common occur- cian's trade union. themselves later, on, while still others ' would have to rence. Some of the snow gauging stabring the necessary implements for you fighting again you - -"settle with mer tions have, been established at tre- A MEMORIAL TO ROOSEVELT. cutting the peats. A "flaying-spadesir,!' is used for cutting away the turf or mendous altitudes, as at Boreas Pass, Yes, "Well, now, speak up. What was La Vets' Pass, etc., but most' of them fibrous covering of the moss along the Design for Statue of in a strip about this about?" are well below the timber line," edge of the to Be Erected in North John Jones said my father was three fppt wpp- ;The- bank js the One of the new snow measuring sta Dakota. lobster,' and 1 Jufei sailed tions- baaTwen estaDiisnea at Jdteam-boa- t edge of exposed mass left from the big. ' I previous year's cutting, and may ex- Into him before thoueht. Springs in Ro'utt county, where Bismarck, N. D. Theodore Roose "1 stopped my sermon right there,'' accurate estimates of the snowfall on tend from fifty to Beveral hundred feet veil's" life for two, years on a North in length, and yields from one. to four says the doctor In relating, the story the western eldeof the Great Divide will be, made. A few weeks ago" the peats' in depth. The moss is of a brown color near the surface," but gets Missionaries 40 Years Among Creeks, telephone line.- - OuUDf. steamboat darker and denser below, nd the More than a century of service In Springs would not work. Linemen black peat Is thd hardeiv and richer the missionary field .among., the In were sent out on snowshoea and with in heatigivlng properIIii.Tiie peat dians of Oklahcuna.by .one family-wa- s pfovl5loTis:nTBwn un sledges The Cut nearest, the surface is spongier and celebrated the other day when the linemen returned, stating that- they burns away muoh more rapidly." Cer- Robertson memorial chapel In Haskell found "the" tops of the' telephone poles tain kinds of. moss produce peats was dedicated. Many of those present 40 feet below the surface of the Bnow whlch-ur;wlth"ft "Etrone: snlptnirous werefull-blooCreek Indians, among In many places. A temporary line ivasa i ; smell and leave a residue of fed ashes. . whom Re v w L Kobertsoji preached fixed by stringing wire irom tne tops a called .The so in is used worked two The spade and long. cutting daugh of the tallest trees7Jaekson's Hole; JLll-h- zi "tuskar," and oonelsts- - of a'. narrow ters of the family.. Miss AllceEoh artsteel blade about a foot long, bent at son, postmaster in. Muskogee,- and park,, has bad an unprecedented of Jlaskell,-- - were fan of snow'thls winter.- - So deep have right angles- - to itself, form Ing a heel, Mrs. N.. p. Moore i to gauge thewfdtlT"and "thickness of honored guests.- been- - the drifts in the. mountains' that This 4a pressed down in the Indian cabin tha elkot which .there arejhousands. were drivisnow : the si te of Haskell la this big game paradise, yielding moss to a depth" f15 Inches, below.-,-- Finally the ofthe Rev: Mr.-- Robertson- preaehed the first en to oTth,oreabouts. "by -1ectlon- worker, applied to a step fixed 7ri the eernion ever IpTeaThetT-tir-thi$10,60- 0- to handle. - Usually it is the women's part of the country. He was at that time feed these elk. . to catch thewet peats as sliced out stationed at the Creek . mission When the government his.: TnllehSssee. r The memorial chapter by: the" tuskar, and to- - arrange-thesnow measuring stations along Deslgrr for Status to' Roosevelt. edgewisa. in rows on the top of the TBeTnttTrTrest-o- f the coirtrnent, from flee erected at a cost of $4,000. It con the Canada line to thewRIo Grande, Dakota ranch Is to be commemorated bank to dry. The labor of is very arduous, especially to the tains seven memorial windows, one to the results should prove most Interest- by a statue to be erected within "" " '. V of the family, the design for which is shown each of women." ing as: well as TSTaaurer'Tnniaflon here.)!-Thstatue has. been dtstgnrd how will be able to determine just "In the islaudsjorunst and Yell, in Island in the Androscoggin Gustav Kuropean i VIgeland, Floating by resource a Its lt"haln" "snow; sculptor, and accepteda noted great Shetland the jaU are mostly carried Jy-th- e commit- :hacK8-'-o- f poiilesrthe high water on the Androscoggin came In lowponies being driven or occasionally led ashore, on the Lewlston hank, of the ace is threatening the farmers ciation; of which J. il. Worst of tlie are where floods common. moorland er altitudes; over tracks. the file in Indian falls tbe above tbe other Agriculturnl College of Nor "a I5 river day, ' menace be will flood 'Checked The The peats are carried In ."malyles," Is president and II. O. Fjelde cf ; It was a Island floating regular one susgradually as "reservoirs are construct creels- - of open ropework, is secretary. It is proposed to came down which and drifting iatq the" f from the catch ed to Rocky pended on- each side of the pony from shallow water. It was of statue at some place wIkio the erect re quite wooden-saddlmountala snowseach season, but Ihen a placed on seen be will gonerally fcy oung jv on, were" . slzeand Jf trees, the snow- - ganging statistic, wlli be val. It its fck. However, In general Ihromjh-ou- t apectable "dept:-'for l!. of them described as being six several accepted uable, showing, as they ..will, how pleTbe Shetland, women do most of tbe or Is !ioi corr;r,iLUL"$ the monument In" diameter. Inches; They eight added to the he reservoirs will as well as the agricul.much subuj'tti-'sketches four an of of .were ly probably part overhanging ' ' ;, r tural work. In a community ..where liie hank which the'water undermined and through the winter a snowrall. Vfeeland. "In "tlx-men are mainly angaged ' In. fishing. when he t.: has i t.'.y ..... they broke loose were held to the trouble with the family skele- sculptor says, ' roots. Ken ton is that It Is never as dead as It give the idea of the l'no .'.... v '..: '; The peats are carried 6a the back gether by the intertwined ' . he will finish the statu. la straw or heather calzlea and sorae- - nebec Journal seems. ruder the more, gfenlal climate of a bygone period tt is believed that native woods existed in,the Orkney and Shetland Jslainla. Evidence of this "is Shown by the preHence of tree trunks m ijeat- - bogs an4 sometimes uprooted from the bed of the sea- - in places which, at. earlier, tim'ej. nmsniave been dry land. How ever, no native trees exist at the present time with the exception, of. some dwarf birches and mount atn.. ash indigenous, to a few sheared valleys in re - apparently only These Hoy stunted remnants of a iarger growth, shtmingr altered cllmatie ondit4onr and 4he-sainreason. tb native ponies, cattle, sheep" and collies of There Shetland are all diminutive. are, it is true, a few plantations which have risen from young trees ; bttt they have only attained a restricted size owing" to constant exposure to the time's In sacks. ll versedi . deeply-embedde- - -- dRftUpa-inowsth- at the-comi- ctrry-"hecks- "- -- ut -- s - &t prob-ably-fo- the-presid- ent a w... n 74 incnfirDiJEP- fl ij - -. va - m w i -- Jffo. 6 for - '10 for " ' 2 for 8 for , " 4 for all points eastr. Sanpete points. all points east Tintic points all .", . . ? 9:31 a.m. u .JS:18 .7;; ....... - 4:25 f m- jt -No.-12- 2 Nofia 8:34 1:5b , , ;, .; . . -- ... LEAVH PROVO FOR NORTH 425 " : . ARRTVB PROVO fromJnobth from Heber ... 77 1 77777.... . - - a.m. -- ... - Peat-cutti- , 777:. 3:45 p.m. the-previ- The gnly line to" Ogden and Denver without change'. Free reclining chair cars, through sleeping oars and elegant diners on - " all through trains. - "F. Foots, . L Al Button, S. K. Hoofer, G. A. P.--D Or Pr ATr A Uigent -- -- - of-fue- l, 9.51". .... .V. . B:30 . Torf-Elna- r. p.m. w :.. for Heber wide-linke- d - LEAVB PROVO FOR WBST No! 6 for west and north,.,, , . 7 for salt Lake- 1 for all noints west and north and Ogden , iJ'm fig for Salt Lake west and north (0I gn poiQts -- feet-hig- p.m. ..... . ; . . . . ; . .r 6:04 " ............... 8:41 pointaeast... e, -- ........ 7'. in-th- innectiththe f- LHAVB PROVO FOR BASI , -- ove-tb- Current TIm Table , . g r . cotrntry-the-bogs d low-lyin- - peat-cuttin- g &iong-and- great'-importnnc- - - teen-year-ol- d Via r MMM Route" AfltocWay comfort Tall ;the- - way when you travel ' eastr:' Don't: "Means -- viaa brokenioute buy a ticket Go Direct: OVER- ROUTE as far as it. It means saving of time goes." in avoidance Of changing cars, broken connections, etc LAND GST Ask any Short Line Agent for 'TOlTKnow VVherTYoii rates and particulars. r, e -- - -- -- ''home-brewed- Tell the agent, "THE - Den-ve- " " " peat-bahk- - . red-face- d - - - -- MffolEiSl.; - n. d . . : X$ - - within 24 hours of your very doof.Jt'Btii place for rest and rec . Golfing, Automobiling. reation, health and pleasure. be ttoor anct other cat indnlged in every-da- y Bports may '."Yactting" : ; in the,"winter " the-pea- tr a. on-wh- at - the--foo- t- the-valley- s stalhad-trjpprtmrtate- ... "testab-Ifshe- d Fifty Dollatrs R.oind Trip Ask the is the fare and tickets are good six months for return. can how you go to BALT LAKE ROUTE man to tell you San --Franoisod-at alight ad-- .: Southern California and retttrB-- vi ditional oost and stop over moat anywheraT . ; -- - -- . ' Ir.::fc;'J:a nJ UcScls. 1C3 Sj. ' . t!da St.Sd( Iskc -- m dedieated-fcentIy-i-iit-8tone-ed- i' peat-cuttin- the--state- , " "-- " - U)jja-of.aheecjrj- - , :el htme-on"tn- run-of- . tvo-horne- d " peut-can'iln- - Tin FOR ALL THE IEVS - ? - - " e t |