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Show rd Devoted to no Party or Faction LUME TWENTY-FIVE- BRIGHAM CITY, BOX ELDER COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1919 . ID INDUSTRY But Just to All 10 CALLED BEYOND BE DEVELOPED 10 A good game of baseball, especially Tuesday morning at 1 oclock, Mrs. Evaline Dunn Hunsaker, widow of the after the fourth inning, was played yese late Bishop Allen Hunsaker of Elwood, terday afternoon on the local baseball died at her home in Logan after an lot between the Peaches and the Westillness, which attacked her last Feb- ern Optical nine of Salt Lake City. ruary. The good part of the game was that Mrs. Hunsaker had been making her . For the home in Logan since the death of her we won with a score of husband a year and a half ago, in or- first four innings, however, W. Leonder that she might devote her remain- ard, the classy southpaw of the Optics, ing days to temple work. stood the Peaches on their heads while The following biographical sketch his teammates piled up a score of 7 to of the deceased appeared in a recent our nothing. But the dam broke, Leonissue of the Relief Society magazine: Dunn Hunsaker is the ard skyrocketed and then the Peaches "Evaline mother of seventeen children. Great pulled up with four runs in one inning. has been her mission here on earth Behind the airtight ball their southand well and faithfully has she perwas hurling, the Optics gave airformed the same. She was born Sep- paw while the Peaches were support tember 12, 1853, in Brigham City, tight and dropping files all fumbling booting Utah. Her father, Simeon A. Dunn, over the field. But when Leonard was one of the first settlers of Brigwent into the air his teammates ham City, and lived in the old fort, tothe fever also and errors on gether with President Lorenzo Snow caught their gave the Peaches several part and others. Her mothers name was In the fifth session, Morgans runs. Harriet Atwood Silver, who joined shoulder went back on him due to a the church in Lowell, Massachusetts; throw to first of an iiiilcld bunt while and leaving all her family and friends went to Win- Cy was standing in an awkward posies of material may be manufac-- for the gospels sake she He was relieved by Coach Twit-cheter Quarters, where she met and mar- tion. I. for the last three frames, and , ried Simeon A. Dunn. They emigratheld down the left garden position sand company will connect up the ed to Utah in 1848. Seven children the initial sack.. a covering Roskelley railroad by running spur were born to them three sons and ith the e property and thus bring the four daughters, as follows: Sarah S., Coach whiffed the first three men with rial into direct and close competi-wit- Simeon A., Emaline and Evaline straight underhand shots that flew like sand that is taken from oth-- g (twins), Charles Q., Harriet and Hen- bolts of lightning ana in the other two innings he held them down fine. The commercial pits, ry (twins). Harriet Atwood Silver scored two more runs and BrigOptics jple who are acquainted with the Dunn died January 1, 1858, leaving came to bat in the ninth with the ham of know care. and sand tarn City gravel her 7 children without a mother's score against them. An error by alue as building material. It is Evaline was only four years old made Ramshaw safe the baseman first Jed by chemists to be the most at the time of her mothers death. She came through with and at first Ac-n- g Wight ct sand known of anywhere. with the other children were left to to tests that havo been made, the care of their father and an older a nice little safety, advancing Rammy to second. In the play that followed T. Otlbrasive test on this sand shows sister (Susannah Dunn) whose mother both runners advanced and on a long as compared with 61 on sand was also dead, and who was only fourthe both field crossed hit plate, Wight the Salt Lake pits. The Brigham teen years old when these little broth, shows 98.4 silica quartsite and ers and sisters were left to her care. coming home with a slide and a roll ' a trace of lime, making of it a In the midst of poverty, hard times that spread him all over the block but he was safe by a mile and the playgritty material that is superfine and privations incident to the early ers quit right there. , purposes. pioneer. life in Utah, the children all Tomorrow the Peaches go to Layton 8 the purpose of the new corpora-- ' young, were subjected to a life of to play a return game with those husky on the hardship that may be imagined only place the Brigham sand farmers. all with in direct et such to me competition acquinted with by persons are cheap. sands no matter where they scenes. will do it.from and in order to get the October 5, 1868, in the Endowment Why Romans Dread Owls. will material before the building public Evaline was Lake Some of the worst things ever said Salt House, City, Brigham ier localities, an extensive adver- united for time and for eternity to Al- about the owl came from the elder campaign will be carried on. len Collins Hunsaker. Soon after Pliny. Th Roman naturalist, who 'of the big contractors are al- - their marriage she moved with her trusted more to others observations beware o'j were 0f the almost his own, and in whose writings perfect husband to Honeyville, wliere they than and fiction are often Inextricably fact tfj6 iocai 8and and one of the lived for about eleven years, when blended, calls the owl an inauspicious nuine - prominent contractors in the in settled Elwood, Utah, being and funereal bird. He is particularly ier3 areiit js reported to have declared that they first the settlers, again pio- severe upon the horned owl, to which among lnv- md from - the Brigham City pits neering a new country. Her husband he gives, a very lugubrious character, At SlanOri best sand known of anywhere in was a farmer and sheep man. He was calling it the monster of the night that 2i lead forld. Presiding Elder of the branch for over never utters a cheerful note, but emits old from Li ten years and always received encour- a doleful shriek or moan. This owl and were especially abthe screech-ow- l agement and help from his wife. 4 horred and dreaded by the Romans as Seventeen children were born to messengers of death. As the former EBALL UNI- them, namely: Simeon A Lewis, Eva inhabited only deserted and inacs the insci L., Lily M., Emaline M., Harriet V., cessible places, Its appearance In cities was considered a very alarming omen. Ethel, Adeline (died in infancy), early days of the conLOST Margaret, Susie, Aleen, Nephi During the horned-owl a sulship happened to Oscar of two at age), years (died of into the Rome, causcapitol stray (died at three weeks), Lorenzo 3., To avert consternation. general ing be-tin ar complete suits of uniforms o infancy). the disasters which the round-face- d Amy, and Harold (died the Brigham City Baseball Thirteen of the seventeen children prodigy was believed to portend, a lusare in the hands of someone in are now grown to maturity, and all ex- tration or general purification was orCommunity and the management cept one (Lorenzo S.) are married and dered. Butler has referred to this ine very grateful if they are turn-.a- t all had that ordinance performed in cident In some amusing lines In once. Innumerable caps, pairs the Temple. be, and pai$s of shoes have been Sister Hunsaker is a faithful memHew False Fur Is Made. jUI of which are needed and will ber of the Church, being a worker in A in Jidly received if returned. process patented In France conthe ward Relief Society and helping in an improvement in the manusists is She the can. grandevery why she stufTs or objects which imimother of 74 children and has four facture of or velvet, or for use as tate fur, plush whose father (Sit. Dr. Hart and the like. The process carpets mothmeon A.) died in 1902 and their n ish in vt starts with an animals fur, or an aser in 1904. She has taken these chil- semblage of animal or vegetable fibers, dren! the oldest being seven years old and these are immobilized by freezing when her mother died), and cared for them In a block of Ice. The Ice Is them, and they are now grown men then sawed into slabs, and a slab is and women. The eldest (Simeon V. made to undergo a surface melting so as to partially free the hair or fibers Hunsaker) has enlisted in the navy. on one side, then a suitable glue or SiTwo of Sister Hunsaker's sons ward cement Is applied upon this surface. jay evening in the Second honorfilled have d in honor of the three soldiers meon A. and Lewis A sheet of flexible material acting able missions; the first to Germany as the basis of a new make-u- p is then Jhat ward who made the supreme and the latter to England. laid on, so that the hairs adhere to It, ce, have been postponed to a e For almost forty-ninyears she has and afterward the whole is freed from date which will be announced, a true the Ice by melting, constant a been companion, leaving the hairs egular sacrament and M. I. A. and a loving mother. attached to the support. wife devoted and Rubber will convene in all the wards g e Box Elder state Sunday, even-th- e Long may she yet remain to be a serves as a good basis for the glue or cement. source of Inspiration to her posterity. usual hour. Last fall, one of the great-gran- d How It Could Be Done. children, Bassel Hunsaker, aged 19 Mike Molloy had got a job In the I and Mrs. N. Merrell Valentine years, died at Camp Upton, New York, fed home today from England. Mr. of influenza and his remains were brot joinery works and the foreman, thinkto have a rise out of him, said: nec'ttine went to France with the home and interred in the cemetery at ing Say, Mike, can you file steam?" ' F. and was later transferred to Elwood. Certainly," replied Mike, to the and where he entered Oxford The remains of Mrs. Hunsaker were foreman's surprise, If you put It In Wedsrsity and completed his course in conveyed from Logan to Elwood the vise for me. at the expense of the government, nesday morning and funeral services e pursuing his studies, Mr. Valen-me- were held there in the afternoon, afHow Fake Pistol Works. wooed and married Miss ter which the remains were brot to A new electric flashlight pistol of Mason of London and the happy this city and interred beside those of French Invention for scaring crimstarted homeward a few: weeks her husband. inals not only displays a bright light Mrs. Hunsaker was the mother of when the trigger is pulled, but also j Mr. and Mrs. Valentine arrived of makes a noise like a real weapon as gden at 10:30 o'clock and, were Mrs. J. W. Smith and a half-siste- r well. ,by Mr, and Mrs. N. J. Valentine. E. W. Dunn of this city. e Bonneville Sand & Gravel com- is the name of a corporation that Jeen formed and which has leas-hsand bank of Joseph F. Han- comprising reservoir hill. The trs of the company are Charles B. f president; Spencer P. Felt, and A. K. Chatneld, secre-- I treasurer and general manager, these gentlemen are Salt Lake land their object m taking a I oa this property is to develop land industry and put onto the let the mateiial comprising that (promontory on which the citys tvoirs are located. s lease which Mr. Chapin A. Day on the property expired a few had al- ES ago and Mr. Hansen entered into negotiations with other parties for leasing the The Day sand trap has (dismantled and taken away. The eville company is now erecting a a little farther west and it is the Ose of the company to install a irn sand grading and screening se in order that all kinds and vice-Wen- t, 10-9- ll The water was turned out of the Hammond canal yesterday for a short time, to enable workmen to put in some lining in one of the uumes. After the work was completed, the water had to be turned into the big ditch gradually in order to overcome danger from washing out and as a result some of the farmers at this end ot the canal were without water. The precious fluid is now coursing down the channel, however, and the farmers will be taken care of. The stream this morning measures 120 second feet. Part of the flume that went out last week was repaired in four days which is a record. When the break was first seen, it was estknated it would require at least ten days to make the necessary repairs so that water might be The turned in the ditch again. which was time in break the quick made good saved th mrmers 'u.-- t that much an! very litle loss, if any, will occur to them on account' of the water being out of the canal. TD LAUNCH 0.5. SNIP UIACABBOI 9-- 8 lo-j- The News editor is in receipt of an invitation to attend the launching of the U. S. S. S. Utacarbou at the Bethlehem shipyards at Alameda, Calif., on Thursday next. For the occasion, the mayor of that city has proclaimed the day Utah Day" In honor of the christening of this ship, the honor of naming which went to Carbon county because of her splendid record in the Liberty Loan drives, that county having subscribed the greatest amount per capita of any county in the state and exceeded its quota by a bigger margin than any other county. The christening will be done by Miss Horsley of Price and the festivities will be attended by a big delegation of prominent people from this state. STOKES-ALLRE- D a. La-Titi- FORMS s. n HEBAIITAGE Sunday will be visiting The News made an. error in anday of the Stake Presidency ar.d LBgh Council and the appointments are as nouncing. the place, where the Old Folka wilh go to on their annual outfollows: Willard. Pres. S. Norman Lee and ing on Wednesday next. The gathering place will be at the Hermitage In O. C. Loveland. Perry. L A. Snow and Joseph. IL Ogden canyon instead of Lorin Farr Lillywhite. park, as announced. The manageMantua. 3. N. Cook and C. M.. Jem ment of the canyon resort ha.va- ad) vised the Stake Central Committee sen. First Ward. Joseph A. West and that every convenience will be provided for the comfort and pleasure of Jesse W. Hoopes. Second Ward Joseph N, Stohl and the veterans and the entire play ground will be turned over to the Old Wilford Reeder. Third Ward. L. S. Burt and F. W. Folks on that day. Fishburn. Fourth Ward. Victor E. Madsen Sash Serves as Ring. and Philip Quayle. Lovers in Japan, instead of an enD. Peters and David P. Harper J. gagement ring, often give their future Burt. brides a piece of beautiful silk, to. be Honeyville. Joseph H. Watkins and worn as a sash Indianapolis News S. N. Lee. Bear River. M. L. Nichols and L. S. Pond. Corinne. Wm. C. Horsley and C. WORLDS THINK-XIElias Jensen. ERS MIGHT HAVE BENEFITED BY TYPEWRITER The regular monthly acting teachA contributor to one of the ers report meeting will be held at the current magazines deplores the usual hour in each ward. fact that Benjamin Franklin had no typewriter. He says, and' truthfully, that If the great' man had not been compelled to use a pen and pencil, he could have accomplished much more thanhe did a statement that Is so obvious It Is hardly worth quoting. The same thing can be said of all other great men of Wash-ingto- n and1 Jefferson and all the A big corps of new teachers will rest. They accomplished much; come to Brigham City at the beginning they left a greater volume of of the school year and a lot of new writing than men do In the days students will enter the high school of the typewriter. But the fact remaihs that with a typewriter from outside points. These new resiany man can accomplish about dents must be provided with homes four times as much as he could and the Board of Education has estabaccomplish with pem and Ink lished a bureau of information at the In the way of recording hls Clerks office which will also serve as thoughts, it he sees fit to do so. a clearing house to place teachers and But the contributor overlook students in homes. The Institution one thing, namely, that the will function most profitably to all conmatter of wrttihg It down Is not cerned if those who have houses or alt of a thinker's work, observes If- - FrankColumbus Dispatch. rooms to rent or who desire to take lin had had a typewriter, he boarders will file their names and adwould not have been hammerdresses with Clerk E. P. Horsley. ing It all the time. It would have aided him greatly; he A Great Record. would have had more time In Gen. John Brown Kerr, who wan which to do hls thinking; tie born In Kentucky seventy-tw- o would not have had to spend so years much time over a desk scrawling ago, was the hero of what the late General Miles declared to be the most with a poor pen. But It Is debatable whether he would have daring exploit In the history of Indian warfare. In 1891 Kerr, at the head of actually produced' more literaa brave band of 20 men, found himture than he did. Charles Dickens wrote alt of self surrounded by more tlmn 100 Outhls novels with a quill. He could South Dakota Sioux Indians. have done the writing In half numbered five to one, Kerr and his men fought so vullnntly and bandied the time on typewriter, and their guns with such effect that many thp printers would have saved half their time. t But In thqpe of the braves were killed and the remainder surrendered. days of the typewriter we have no novelists who are taming out good literature any mnr rapidly . Powerful New Explosive. than Dickens did. A new and very powerful explosive, Thomas Jefferson left a whole which may be used in mining and for library of hls writing and he other purposes, is lead azide, a salt of wrote with a primitive pen. So, while the typewriter Is one of hydromltrle add. The udd forms a the greatest of time savers, while great number of salts,- as mercury It gives an Increased product, azide, silver azide and sodium azide. and a more easily read product, Large crystals of lead nzlde and mer-curazide have been found to tie very the fact Is that the men of tosensitive to mechanical shocks, the day are not doing any more sensitiveness increasing with the size writing than was done when the of the crystals. Even the breaking of matter had to be scratched upon u single large crystal Is said to bring a sheet of paper with a stick or quill. about explosion. the-regul- - h m ' NUMBER go Miss Emma Francis Stokes and Mr. William D. Allred of this city were united In marriage on Wednesday by Justice H. M. Figgins. The bride is the charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Stones and is one of the prominent members of her social set. Mr. Allred has not resided in Brigham City many years and came here from Idaho where he engaged In agricultural work in a very successful way. He has purchased a residence lot in the Second ward and is now erecting a home thereon where he and his bride will begin life together. In the evening, the families of the contracting parties gathered at the home of the brides parents and enjoyed an informal social and wedding supper. Harbinger of War Fabla. Since ancient days the locust has been the flying wing of superstition. from 1912 till 1919 that People the locust baa markings on bis wings wSich carry a distinct .'letter W, which, when noticed, usually results In many stories that war Is at hand, the letter W being supposed to stand for he word, war. But the fallacy of such a supposition Is In Itself evident from the fact that the word for war In FreDch does not begin with W. nor does it in Italian or Spanish. frgt Few Now Search for Gold. With the exception of the years of 1915 and 1916, when discoveries of tungsten brought a horde of wealth seekers to the Colorado hills, the search for gold has steadily diminished since the gold rush 25 years ago. At that time, old mining men say, the mountains were full of prospectors searching for new veins and placer deposits. The new generation has not followed In the footsteps of the old and one of the picturesque features of Western life Is becoming extinct. t, His Regret One shrewd old farmer who had heard his first lecture on dietetics said if hed known as much about feeding children as he did about rations for cows and hogs his familyd have been a heap healthier folks. ls When Actresses Were Unknown. ancient times actresses were unknown. The people of Elizabethan times were perfectly content to stand for a young male Juliet. Around about 1656, though, Charles II of England began encouraging women to appear on the English stage, and since then actresses have been appearing all over the world with varying degrees of In suc-oes- s. NOT WEAKENED BY PEACE How Warring Instinct Survives In Groups Explained by Writer in Scientific Journal. Is not the fighting Instinct something very different from the warring In- stinct? The fighting instinct, answers Ireland la the Journal of Heredity that is to say, the instinct for personal combat, is an individual trait, Al-ley- She Had to Walt Jean had been promised a kitten by one of the neighbors and after receiving the consent of her parents took a gunny sack with her in which to bring the kitten home. After having been gone all the afternoon she returned Her father asked her where the kitten was and she replied: "Oh, I cant have it for awhile. It just came out of the hatch." empty-hande- The Target at Fault company of militia had been out all day for target practice, and on their return the captain said to one of the sergeants: How are your men Well, sir," coming along, sergeant?" said the sergeant, with an air of great pride, my men shot very well today, very well, but they would have shot better perhaps If the target had Sjtood a little more to the left! A finding an individual expression, as, for instance, in the bad man of the This Instinct, early mining camps. having a very low survival value in a modern civilized environment, is probably disappearing under the pressure of a gradual elimination of the males, in which it is strongly developed. The warring instinct, on the other hand, is a group phenomenon, and is simply one phase of the instinct of As such It has a high gregariausness. survival value in the conflict between human groups, and it is not subject to an eliminating pressure. It is a mistake to suppose that the warxing instinct Is weakened by long periods In order that this effect of peace. shouid appear we should have to accept the inheritance of traits acquired from the environment, a theory to Is alwhich the opinion most universally opposed. |