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Show tiie Spanish fork press. Spanish fork. Utah ;; News Notes It' m Prioiltgt to Lit) in Utah $ ST. CE0RGE Tha liveMork ml agricultural Industrie and fruit growing ara forging ahead In Washington county, with quality high and production oxpanding. The county ranked aecond in production of pcari. MT. PLEASANT Mora than feeder limb from local aheep. Mt. growera have moved from It ! essential that mf car Pleasant and Fairvlew to Ogden and shouU always operate prop the In Colorado past during points erly and accordingly 1 use week. The average weight waa SO 2 centa. 10 waa Spark Hugs. and the Champion pounds price have LOGAN anowfalla Is Early Champion the better Hocked the road through Logan canpark plug bccauM It hat an exclude sllli yon, it waa announced recently ly ir tnonito Insulator I he road will the atata commlavion. treated with to C piobubly be closed all winter. K. stand tha much higher Wrj;l.t, assistant ch'd engineer of temperatures of tha unmads an th road department, modern hi successful attempt to go through the engine. A lo a new solid copper patented canyon, reporting that eighteen inches toket-seths.remad na of snow bad fallen rear the summit. gas-tigabsolutely Utah-ldaho RICH FIELD The under high compression. Special analysis sugar factory at Elsinore, Sevier electrodes which assure county, will start slicing beets about fixed spark-ga- p under October 20. A large tonnage of all driving conditions. beets has now been atored In the bins at the factory, under supervision of Elliott Larson of Monroe, who is inspector of beet loading station SparlCPlttg Some of the beet fields are reported an Tolub, Ohio to fifteen from fourteen yielding tons per acre, considered better than for Every Enrfne Dependable n - i. S an average crop. PRICE Conslructioin of the n ear federal aid highway through Price Aviators Ituve Found canyon has been completed and the Use for Old Chute a road will be thrown open for tarffie Mullb's for aviators are laving muda was announced soon, it recently at the office of the state road commis- from wornout purnchules used lu the viutlou brunch of the United states sion. There have been several delays army. In the work because of floods, dev. I'lirncbutcs are made of the finest. elopment of a new coal property and Softest Japanese silk. They are made removal of the Price and Helper pipe breuk lines. The project Is about four miles In tunny plcecs, so Hint If occurs It will not run the entire length cost has about and $140,000. long of the cloth CHICAGO Sixteen carloads of A parachute usually lusts about five .Utah lambs topped the Chicago yours. The silk Is then turned In and market October 15 and 10 when tho the larger pieces are used to make Farmers Union Livestock commission mufflers for pilots. The soft silk sold them at $13.65 per hundred. serves a valuable purpose In protect Eight double decks belonged to Jack lug the throat of the wearer fmm Berg of American Fork nnd eight chafing of the helmet strap, etqteclal-Idoubles belonged to Bolev Brothers. on long luqx. The fat lambs sold at $13.83 and feedAfter the World war the discarded ers at $13.50 per hundred weight covering of airplane wings was much Mr. Bergs lambs averaged 77 pounds III (Icninn I by both melt and women for four doubles sold October nnd for outing shirts. nearly 80 pounds for 'four doubles old October 1C. Clung to German Mark MARYSVALE Nine ca: loads of When the will of a weal I b.v out range cattle were loaded here recentman was Itlcd with Assistant Atly, destined ns follows: Three cars torney General Stubbs, of Maine, for for Murray; three care for feeding assessment of taxes on financial Interpastures in the north end of tha ests of that state, an unusual clause state and three ears for California. was found In the will. That part of The steers brought around 10 cents, the doeiiiiani referred to 143.tNKt.tkNt.. heifers close to 9 cents and the cows Oini.ihhi German minks which the nmn nround 8 cents. The cattle were In bad bought during the war. and In good condition considering the fact Ft meted the- exeentor to retain the that tho ranges have offered seant currency until It could be redeemed feeding areas the past summer. The nt a reasonable price" rather than stock was shipped by Andrew Anderworthies. praise it as prarth-allson of Koosharem. The man bought the marks for about VERNAL Shipment of lambs $6,1 KN). to Uintah from feed yards In county other states is under full headway. Plentiful Supply A total of approximately 40,003 lambs "Were going south for the winter." are being trailed from the county, What? With so much of It right partly to Watson, for shipment over here in Alaska?" the narrow gauge railway to Mack, Colo., on the main line of the D. & R. G. W., and part to Craig, Colo., for shipment over the Moffat railway. A total of not less than 35,000 lambs rs owned by the Uintah county are grazing on Colorado ranges, and practically all of these will be shipped from Craig, bringing the grand total of Uintah county lambs this fall to 75,000. The Doctor 1-- ape-clal- al ht Champion ) By LOUISE M. COMSTOCK TEN Sira, florin rt lloovor or Sira Al Smith acts up tier domestic menage In the White House next Slnrch. she a III do It according to customa established hy 32 redeisors women of unusual personalities and talents who have molded to Its present form the glamorous role of First lauly of the Land. Love, romance, adventure, sue. es and failure have come to them while mistresses of the nation's first home. Three of them. Letltla (Tirlstlan Tyler, Caroline Scott Harrison and Ellen Axson Wilson died there; three more, Julia Gardner Tyler, Frances Folsom Cleveland Mnd Edith Cult Wilson, hy marrying men already In nice, came to the White House na brides. Only two of our Presidents were bachelors wlen Inaugurated, a proportion which allows them to be no exception to the rest of humanity In this particular resiiect. They were James Buchanan and Grover Cleveland, and Mr. Cleveland remained single only a .venr after his term began. Three Presidents were widowers when they took the oath of office and to daughters or sisters fell the responsibilities of First Lady of the I .and. Martha Washington, the first to hold this position, had no White House In which to entertain the dlplonmts and foreign guests of the pew Itepubllc, but the elaborate formnlity of the receptions. levees and muslenles held In the temporary Presidential residence at Philadelphia set a definite soelnl tradition. "Lady'' Washington was a widow when she married the famous general, the mother of two children, and she brought hint a $100,000. estate which heled make him the richest colonist In his part of the country. She Is described as a quiet, unassuming woman, a good ' mother and a charming hostess, who held court with her Idolised husband with ease and grace In spite of the lavish ceremony the times demanded. , It was thus to Abigail Smith Adams, wife of the second President of the United States, that fell the distinction of being the first mistress of the While House. She was Introduced to her new abode on a bleak November dny In 1800. P.ehind her lay a torturous stage-coacJourney over the miles of mud and wilderness which lay between her and her luxurious Philadelphia home. And before her well, read what that staid and hril Hunt woman wrote her sister a little later: l arrived about one oclock at this place, known by the name of the City, and the name ts all you con call so, as I expected to find If a new country, with houses scattered over a space of ten miles and trees and stumps In plenty with a castle of a house so I found tt. The Presidents house Is In a beautiful situation. In front of which . . 1 hate been to GeorgeIs the IVomac. It Is the dirtiest hole I ever saw town. for a place of anv trade or respect ability of Inhabitants. . . . This house is twice as large irs our meeting house. I believe the great hall Is las big. I am sure It Is twlee as long. Cut vonr coat according to your cloth but this house Is built for ages to come!" Mrs. Adams was compelled to endure embryonic Washington only three months, for President Jefferson moved In the next March. Jefferson was a widower and affairs at the Castle were ordered .by his two daughters and h.v the vivacious and popular Dolly Madison, at that time wife of the secretary of state. For 16 years, while Jefferson and her husband were President. Mrs. Madison 'built to colorful dignity the social life of the new White House; for over f0 years she held undisputed sway over Washington society. She was not handsome: It has even been said that, though brought np In the Quaker faith, she rouged, took snuff and played cards for high stakes. But, according to one of her biographers, this daughter of South Carolina is believed to have made a greater contribution to the social life of the country than any other woman who had the honor of living in tbu White House." W h ... izwzn -- KTL'Sxzrr&ivzr years Though Dolly Madison was twenty-onyounger than her distinguished husband, they lived years. When he together happily for forty-tw- o died at Montpelier, his widow returned to Washington and though then nearly seventv nnd In straitened circumstances, she made her little house opposite Ijifuyette square, now the home of the Cosmos club, a magnetic center of social life. Her death In 1810, when she was seventy-seven- , was mourned by the entire capital. Her Immediate successors, though perlmps less well known, each left the stamp of her personality upon the social regime of the White House. There was Elisabeth Monroe, n quiet. Intellectual woman of stately bearing, nnd Louisa Johnson Adams, who, though born abroad, educated In foreign courts and "a person far beyond the average of her generation," was prevented hy III health from continuing the festivities Initiated hy Dolly Mndl-Ron- . Though Rachel Jackson died, perhaps of a broken heart, some months before Old Hickory" was Inaugurated and though she was mueh maligned during the stormy campaign which preceded his election, his passionate devotion to hei memory was responsible for momentous events during his administration, though social life at the White House was actually In the hands of her , And It was Mrs. A. I. Donelson. and a Angelica Singleton, his daughter-in-lacharming belle of the South, who presided over Van Buren, a officlni dinners for President e flock-maste- Went j i Letltla Tyler, mnde First Lady of the Land by the death of President Ilarrlson only a few months after his Inauguration, died In the White House. President Tyler met the woman who was to hr his Second wife. Julia Gardner of New York, In story book fashion. They were brought togethe. hy the death of her father, who was killed In an explosion on the Potomac and whose body was brought to the White House immediately nfter the accident The brilliant activity with which the new .Mrs Tyler brought her husband's administration to a close ended abruptly with the entrance of Sarah Childress Polk, a beauty of the dark Spanish type with a regal manner, whose strict religious beliefs caused her to banish dancing and the serving of refreshments from White House functions Mar- garet Smith Taylor undertook the duties of First Lady of the Land reluctantly, resenting the demands this new honor made upon the husband she had already seen though the hazards of a spectacular enreer as Indian fighter. Consequently, so It Is snid, she sat quietly knitting and smoking a favorite pipe while her daughter, Mrs. William Wallace Bliss, saw to the Installation of new lighting fixtures and furniture In the PresI dentlal mansion nnd entertained for her father. Abigail Powers Fillmore, a self educated woman and a school teacher before her marriage, was another who. this time because of lameness, put the burden of playing hostess on a daughter And Jane Means Pierce entered (he inqtortunt role under a cloud of grief for the death of her son killed In a railroad accident. it May Be , sister-in-law- widower. nnd though a competent If somewhat detached hostess, she had such a dislike of polities that they were never discussed In the Presidents home while slip was around I During the administration of the bachelor Pres Idem. James Buchanan, Ids ravishing niece, Harriet Lane Johnston, one of the most beautiful and popular of the women who have held that position. played First Lady of the Land and brought to the historic mansion once again n period of high festivity. Then came Mary Todd Lincoln, a plcn!.nt-fnred- , cheerful'womnn, w ho would he In her place," whose life nt the Cap satisfactory Itnl. darkened hy the death of her son Willie nod the Presidents assnsslnatlon. eotil.l not have been a very happy one. Her successor, Eliza McCardle Johnson, though she taught her husband to rend nnd write, was an Invalid while she lived In Washington and was forced to relinquish the duties of her exalted position to a daughter. A new soelnl era, as well as new furniture and decorations, entered the White House when Julia Dent Grant became Its mistress. A talent for entertaining nnd unfailing energy enabled ffer to promote a continuous round of gain functh ns among them the brilliant marriage of her daugh ter Nellie, one of her four children. I.ucv Webb Hayes, also an excellent hostess, modified the nature of White House entertainment hy banish Ing the serving of Intoxlcatin liquors. And the custom of lavish and efficient entertainment estah llslied by these two was ably continued hy Mrs John E. McEIro.v, sister of President Arthur, and successor to Lucretln Garfield, whose term as First Lady was cut short by Iipj husbands nssns sinntlon. Though President Cleveland entered office a SALT LAKE CITY Official probachelor, his marriage to Francis Folsom soon after gave Washington one of the most popular clamation designating Saturday, Oet. hostesses tt has ever known. The young Mrs 27, as Navy dav, and calling uton the Cleveland was the Idol of the women of her gen i' citizens of Utah to commemorate the oration, many of whom still remember the dresses birth of the United States navy on she wore nt her famous public receptions. Caro that day with fitting exercises In every city, town and hamlet, was isline Scott Harrison, an unusual woman, skilled I painting nnd music and the first president general sued recently by Governor George H. of the Daughters of the American Revolution, died Dern. The proclamation also urges In the White House, leaving per responsibilities to especially that appropriae exercises be conducted in every school and in-- 1 a daughter, Mrs. McKee. slitution of learning throughout the At the close of President .McKinleys rdmin Istrntion, a quiet one socially, due to the HI health state on Friday, October 26. It Is as of his wife, Ida Saxton McKinley, Edith Carow essential that the people of a great, inland state should know their navy Roosevelt, another woman still fondly retiiem hered, became First Lady of the Land. She was just as well as those living in the an engaging. Intelligent person, keenly Interested coastal states, who are thrown into In the activities of her famous husband and such dai-contact with the active forces a devoted mother to her five rhlldren that she of the great fleets, the proclamation has been called the American Cornelia." The declared. This year the country is best remembered occasion of her life In the hit celebrating the 153rd anniversary of tortc mansion Is the marriage of Alice Ronseveh the inception of the navy, the proto Nicholas Longworth. present spenker of Reclamation sets forth, and during the house. intervening period between that date With Helen Herron Tuft, the new Interests of and the present the navy has grown modern woman were Introduced into the Whip from small sloops to one of the two House. Mrs. Taft was active In civic enterprise greates armadas afloat. The counnd was the founder of the Cincinnati Svmphorr ntrys efficient sea force today is an orchestra. Her successor. Edith Axson Wilson effective instrument of peace, a buldied during her husbands first term In office am wark of protection, and a living was followed h.v Edith Galt Wilson, mistress o monument to patriotic pride, the prothe nation's first home during 'the trouhlesom clamation declares. times of the World war. Florence Kllng Hardin VERNAL Utah s alfalfa vvns again a modern woman with modem Men sed crop is expected to amount to 8,000,-00- 0 holng the first President's wife with the powe to vote. pounds this year compared with To the demands of a most elaborate social pre 15,900,000 in 1927, according to a crop gram Grace Goodhue Coolidge. who after sevc forecast issued recently by Frank years ns First Lady of the Laud yields her pnM Andrews, statistician for the United tion next March, has lent a charm and tact tha, States department of agriculture. The have endeared her to the American people. She Is figures refer to the weight of the seed a graduate of the University of Vermont Hnd as it comes from the thresher. In before her marriage I night In a school for the terms of rccleaned seed, the crop this deaf In Northampton. Thu.ugh the death of one year will be about 7,000,000 pounds of her two sons. Calvin, J.'.. the long Illness of as compared with 14,000,000 pounds her mother and the death of her husband s father last year, the This report sfafes. through wearing years of continuous publicity, years crop was materially reduced she has maintained a calm, gracious dignity, ani by dry weather, ' been alwajs a true First Lady of the Lund. . i j When your Children Cry for It Casrorla Is a comfort when Baby It fretful No sooner taken than the little one is at ease. If restless, a few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done for Castoria Is a baby remedy, meant for babies. Perfectly safe to give the youngest infant ; you have the doctors word for Hint! It Is a vegetable product and you could use i every day But It's in an emergency that Castoria weans most. Some night when const! pation must be relieved or colic pain? or other suffering. Never be without It ; some mothers keep on extra bottle unopened, to make sure there will al ways be Castoria In the house. It 1? effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with It- - |