OCR Text |
Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD. DUCHESNE, UTAH ' Our New Book of Girl, Unable to Swim, Saves Life of Friend With Horse Everyday Etiquette HYRUM, UTAH Jerry Nielsen, 16, and Dean Baxter, 17, 0 were horseback riding along the edge of Hyrum dam when the bank gave way, plunging Baxter and his horse into the water. Miss Nielsen, unable to swim, rode her horse into the water. The animal swam to where Baxter was struggling In heavy riding clothes. The girl pulled Baxter out of the water. He had gone down the second time. Her horse carried both safely to shore. 5 Jt IN If os VIEW of a number of some- what sombre events that have taken place lately, it Is now a simple matter to announce Joe Louis next defense of his heavyweight championship. In the new program, Louis will meet Joe Baksi, Ollie Tandberg, V ! v Vvf ' Son Loses Grip on cott, under the following conditions If you want to be the kind whos popummd he is ,to knock out lar and never lacking for dates manners! Good manners are based each one m a sin- your on courtesy and common sense, with a gle round, for He Held Her From 1 '2 ft THE KORNS j Museum Traces Family Tree Plains Bison : Of Shaggy-Haire- d WNU Features. LINCOLN, NEB. The family tree of the Great Plains bison is being given its first geologically scientific appraisal by the University of Nebraska state museum. Research com- -' pleted in the past eight years reveals that ancestors of the shasv-haire- d creatures, which in the 19th century numbered hunters from drew and tilns I of Kan-ia- i njver the world to the plains came to jjas and Nebraska, first wayuSorth America about 500,000 years of Dseph ago. That was when the second i bod be three big glaciers of the Ice Age . . . 1 -- Ipshetm retreating from the northern 3reat Plains. Dr C. B. Schultz, museum ouse. and W. D. Frankforter, direc-lo- r, assist-s-A- nt .curator of paleontology of the ,'tuseum, report that their studiesUf far indicate two unusual tensies in evolution of the bison. first, the great granddaddy of this t'm all who camewastocharacter--from Asia 'td mainly by huge horns kich averaged 80 inches from sfjl t to tip. But the body of this v dtature, known scientifically as superbison, was less than a foot taller and a foot longer than the present buffalo. Sucshowed ceeding generations only one significant change: size of the horns. They steadily shrank to todays average of 22 inches from tip to tip. The body j' remained nearly the same. the bison, unlike Second, other prehistoric animals found in North America such as elephants, rhinos, horses and camels, first appeared on our continent as a large animal and decreased in size. The University of Nebraska scien-iVttls s a'so believe, on the basis of present studies, that the bison population has had its ups and downs. jwThe first bison, they say, apparently was relatively few in numbers since con-"se- nt V er a few scattered skeletal re- (plains have been found thus far in 4 fanEas 1 , . and Nebraska. But they increased in numbers fapHhy as the climate began warm- ,pnS P. and more food was made avaflable to the growing herds. But about 20,000 years ago a human civilization, apparently a race of V uunkrs, migrated from Asia to this ""fcnent, and the numbers of bison Were greatly reduced. These tribes, e y e r, suddenly 1 1 o disappeared from the Great Plains for reasons hich are still a mystery to scien-- , After their disappearance, hstq bison herds staged a n 'icwever, J. j comeback. 5,, The herds gained steadily in size, !Ven after appearance of the early hidi.ms in the Great Plains region. 3utj with the coming of the white bison all but disappeared ?an blue Tom the continent. The research work now under r like vay at University of Nebraska is iho to take at least five more siiom'ears to complete. t 1 nked Woman of 75 Finds "Ntw Career in Art V,., - CLARISSA, MINN. Her duties W1e and mother kept her occu-- 5 ied for most of her 75 years but '? Mrs. Mabel Radabaugh has a 'tew career as an artist. While visiting a son in Portland, four years ago, Mrs. Rada- - t pi, 9a b attended art classes the city. Her interest filtered on the painting of pastel orsl prints, which are created by eorking a chalk-lik- e substance into 1 Wat or canvas. Mrs. Radabaugh haa a , in her home here. workshop spon- - by 1 e Do $100,000 Coal Grant Remains Unused for Period of 80 Years For - intended PA. of $100,000, PITTSBURGH, years the sum 80 to buy eoal for needy families, has been kicking around here and nobody knows how to dispose of it. In the 1860s two wealthy men, Charles Brewer and James Crawford, bequeathed large amounts of money to West Penn hospital to buy coal for needy families The hospital found that there were not enough needy residents in the designated areas to spend the fund. When the hospital took the case to court, the combined funds were ordered turned over to the Pittsburgh foundation. Dog Saves Woman From Second Fire CHICAGO For the Second time, Fawn, a Seeing Eye dog, has led her mistress, Miss Anita Blair, .to safety through fire. While Miss Blair, who has been blind since childhood, was giving a safety lecture at Bowen high school, a fire broke out behind the school. Miss Blair, led by Fawn, left the building along with the 3,000 students. In the tragic La Salle hotel fire of June, 1946, in which 61 died, Miss Blair followed Fawn down a fire escape to safety. ii'rvice. no grates Wood Is v apartment building a few blocks from the White House. The woman was Mrs. Helen P. Berlage. She and her husband and son lived In two apartments on the top floor of the Jeffercon apartments here. The son, Thomas N. Berlage Jr., said his mother went to the window without warning shortly after 10 a. m., and climbed out. He rushed after her and grabbed her wrists just as she was about to let go. , For three minutes, while he screamed for help out the window overlooking 16th street, the son struggled to pull his mother back to safety. Finally, his grip loosened and she slipped to an awning which covered a window on the floor below. The son started out the window after her, but her body edged off the awning and plunged to the sidewalk. Police said she lived only a few minutes. They said her husband, Thomas N. Berlage Sr., owner of an Olney, Md , farm, told them his wife had a serious operation undergone about Easter and had been depressed since. The couple had two other children. Witnesses on the street tried to Improvise a net below the woman as she dangled from the window, but did not succeed. Son Accuses X$Tx. v M4.,' JJB1 ' j V" - "V CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. ar Boxings Oddest Turn second Louis Conn fight to be a natural. It turned out the greatest of all heavyflops. The Mauriello affair And yet, wasnt even a work-outoday, Mauriello is a Cetter fighter than most of those suggested for a September massacre. It is only natural that Joe Louis would like one more fight before bowing out. But it so happens that in the last five years no heavyweight has come along who could even tie his shoes. There were earlier predictions that, with thousands, perhaps millions of soldiers taking boxing lessons in the army and navy, at least one or two could be developed. The first shock I got came from Jack Dempsey, who worked 10 hours a day with 10,000 men for many months. The best fellow Ive seen, he told me, cant even chin himself twice." Heres a target or a goal the heavyweight championship worth one million dollars. The defending has been champion knocking around for over 10 years. And yet, with sports richest prize at stake, there hasnt been even a good second-rater developed In the last five years. Baksi Mauriello Walcott Woodcock Ray Tandberg two middleweights of the past, Mickey Walker or Harry Greb, could take them all apart without any extra effort. Just why this happens to be, we wouldnt know. Golf has Hogan, Nelson and a flock of others. Tennis has Kramer and Riggs. Racing has Assault, Armed and Stymie Baseball is talent, packed with high-clas- s Feller, Blackwell, Shea, Mize, Cooper, Williams on and on. The middleweights are packed with good fighters. Ray Robinson is certainly an able welterweight. But, outside of Louis, the best you can say for the other heavyweights is that they can breathe and eat. Especially eat. The looked to be weight t. GRINNING GUNMAN CAPTURED . . . William L. Kaiser (right), disgruntled former capitol policeman, was identified by Sen. John W. Bricker (Rep., O.) as the grinning gunman who fired two shots at him in the senate subway. Kaiser was apprehended two hours after the attempted assassination, and Bricker confronted him in the office Edward McGinnis (left). of Senate Sergeant-at-Arm- s Strange Paternity Suit LOS ANGELES co d Baby Stricken, Then Twin Has Sympathy Illness An unusual occurrence BOSTON in the field of medicine resulted in identical a pair of 18 month-oltwins being taken to Beth Israel d Attendance Surprises BETROTHAL . . . Princess Elizabeth of England appears radiantly happy in this picture as she walks with her bridegroom-to-b- e, Lt. Philip Mountbatten, former prince of Greece, following the formal announcement of their engagement by King George VI. The d engagement ring given her. princess wears the ROYAL three-diamon- iywyv f'"' ( i r.y s y H sl. 4 5. V V V I j- 0 e "4 ( J JP - V , i y 4 ipss Storekeeper Faints and Foils Two Young Robbers PHILADELPHIA. I dont believe anybody would pay cents to see me against either Baksi or Tandberg. The price for Ezzard Charles or Violent Ray might be lifted to 50 cents. All of this Is fun for everyone except Joe Louis. Here is one of the great heavyweight champions of ail iiolder of the rings time a big crown a fighter who cant defy the challenging years much longer with no one to fight. No one knows this better than Joe Louis, with a purse ranging from $500,000 to $1,000,000 waiting U only one fair challenger had emerged from the morass while he was in the army for four years. If you picked out the five leading challengers today, I believe Louis, given 20 rounds, could stop them all In a single September evening Provided no motorcycles W'ere allowed In the ring. 15 many churches which were heavily damaged by German bombs and rocket shells which rained destruction on the London area during the war. Father in ' A suit seeking have Lester Burnett, 46, declared father of two children born to the former Angelina Pizzuto while she still was the wife of his son, Lester Jean Burnett, 28, was entered in superior court. She now is the wife of the elder Burnett, whom . she married the same day she was divorced from maryoung Burnett after a riage. The son claimed the elder Burnett-admittepaternity of the children, Lester Bryan, 8, and Rose Marie Burnett, 6, now in his custody. His petition stated the younger Byrnett, now remarried, never claimed the children as his own and that his father has assumed responsibility for their support. The suit alleged that 10 years ago the elder Burnett and Angelina, then 17, prevented from marrying because of her parents objection to their difference in ages, arranged for her and young Burnett, then 18, to marry. The young couple never lived together following the ceremony, the suit claimed. The three set up housekeeping in the same home, the suit charged, and subsequently Angelina gave birth to the two children. W NO ROOF BUT HEAVEN , . . Kneeling worshippers fill the roofless ruins of St. Georges Catholio cathedral in Southwark, England, during the pontifical high mass marking the coming of age of the diocese of the Knights of Columbus. This is one of Great Britains What? placed on ridges built into a flat piece of iron. There is a draft in the front of the stove and in the hearth, which has a door for removal of ashes. The stove has had no repairs in its 71 years of service although hooks were welded on the stove lids to permit easier lifting Miss Howe's father brought his wife to Zumbrota from Norway in April, 1876, as a bride. He stove has Send 25 ners. movie and date manners As usual, being a cents in com for New Hook of Everyday to Vteeklv Newspaper Service, Hiqiiette quick thinker, it re- 243 West 17th St, New Vork 11, N. . Piint name, addiess, bookltt title and mained for Louis to call the turn on No. 45. a September fight In these words $2. hospital at Boston in comatose conditions one of which was real and the other "sympathetic. Little David Renda of Revere lapsed Into a coma while suffering from a rare disease blood dyscra-si- a or lack of coagulation properties. His identical twin, Daniel, otherwise in good health, lapsed into No Haystack a coma at the same time. The infants physician, Dr. Milton Workers IDAHO FALLS, IDA. explained that while only Levine, In the city sanitary department was ill, Daniel went David actually were stumped by this request. A into the coma from what is known on to the be them asked woman reaction by an as a lookout for three sewing machine identical sympathy twin needles which she accidentally After several hours at the hosdropped in a garbage can. The de- pital, Daniel regained consciousness partment handles about 600 tons of and was taken home, but his strickgarbage weekly. en twin was kept at the hospital. The twins are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Mario Renda. tMBROTA, MINN. Another of the "good old days ' 4 is in use here. The cook stove li h her parents purchased when hey began housekeeping here in ih7 still is being used by Miss Sect illie Howe. Furthermore, the g nal stovepipe, which has a right angle elbow instead of the Cmed elbow of today, also is still In m OKLA. Still Is in Uso 'r icn VIEW, you complain loud and bitterly about that mounting levy which Uncle Sam surreptitiously sneaks from your pockets in the form of income tax? If you do, particularly if youre a farmer, you may obtain some consolation from local banker, who contends that ne federal income tax has helped Oklahoma farmers. R. M. Kobs, president of the First National maintains that bank, many farmers are making more money than before because of the income tax. Paying the tax, he insists, forced farmers for the first time to add up income from the little things like milk and egg checks and feed sales. As a result of having to figure their tax, the banker concludes, farmers have come to know just what profit they are making from some crop, instead of merely guessing theyre getting along all right. Cook Stove of 1876 tnant t he I'll MOUNTAIN Apartment WASHINGTON The wife of a Maryland farm owner slipped from the grasp of her son after a struggle and fell eight floors to her death from the window of an r , few simple rules thrown in to guide you. which the price of Do your manners measure up? Our No 45 answers your questions admission will be booklet about introductions, dining out. table man- Window Near White House. 1,000-year-o- ld V OUR manners label you. Which fork you use, how you make inViolent Ray and troductions all these acts tell the Jersey Joe Wal- world the sort of person you are. Ezzard 'Charles, .. Mother; Fall Fatal BOONS FAMILY TREE . . . First comprehensive study of the Great Flams bisons lineage is being made by University of Nebraska state museum from its collection of buffalo skeletal remains. The large skull and horns (foreground) are 500,000 years old and belong to the to roam the Great Plains area. The skull at left is gfjjt tjpe of bison one at right Is a buffalo, nearly jqjjoo years old while the same as the present type seen in parks and zoos. Dr. C. B. Schultz, of the museum, is on the left, with VV. D. Frankforter, assistant curator of paleontology , at right. Mind Your Manners Mrs. Cornelia Vitorelli, storekeeper, said she swooned at the sight of a pistol held by one of two young rob- bers Recovering, she found the intruders apparently had opened the cash register but found nothing All the money m the candy atora was in her pocket. d PatrolOil, THE SHME OF IT . . . Gien a choice by man Joseph II. Dries (right) as to whether he wanted to serve fhe days in the cooler or drive for one month with prominent "Tralfic Violator stiiker on his windshield, Muharl ODonnell wept quietly into his hankie as he made his decision and it wasn't the jail sentence. He was one of 90 Los Angeles traffic violators to whom officials posed the same question. All 90 chose the sticker. stern-fingere- The number of human feet that find their way through various turn' stiles is always the main tip on pub- lic Interest. It is also one of the main arguments among camp fol lowers. Each rabid fanatic is a hot rooter for his own game. There was an early report that baseball, racing and boxing, three of the major sports, would take a dip this season. The pessimists were only partly right. In the check up to date, the answer is that baseball is still the national game, witn lengths to spare. Racing has taken Its enly Important dip in New York It is setting new records in California. It is O K. In New Jersey, where Monmouth has more than made good in public comfort. Boxing is well down for the simple reason there are not enough good fighters left to fill out a card. Or half a card Louis, the heavyweight champion, has no opponent In sight Only the middleweights have any combined class with Zale, Graziano, Cerdan and La Motta The lightweights are a drab lot, as far as any public appeal Is concerned The major surprise has hit base ball Few figured that 1947 would approach the more than 18 million who visited big league parks in 1948 But, despite the worst spring In history, plus a wet, cold June, there ts a good chance this 18 million mark will be broken. FARMS AND RANCHES WASHINGTON FARMS We specialize In WELCOME! VISITORS Suburban Homes and Farms. Seattle Real Estate Co. 1012 - E. 65th St. Seattle S, Wash. MISCELLANEOUS ROII. PFVFI OPFD Overnight Service. Hi Gloss Prints 1 5x7 1 ill irgement. All sizes, 25 cents Re prints e ich 3 cents. H SI 11HOS, ISox 1158, liilllnie, Mont. PERSONAL DISC IIARGF, Birth, Mirrlnee legal Papers Photo copied 75c side Wallets 1 plastic Photo mail Profession seal $2 Ftt. Dev 1 roll (Urn, print 8 exp Inmbo sie 50c CHAKLSII MINOR S7 It axle Rock Rlvd Lot Angeles 41, Calif. ru. WANTED TO BUY HE BUT AND 8FI L Office Furniture Files Typewriter!. Adding Mxhlncs S ifes Csh Registers . SAIT I ARE DFSK tXtllANGE Mate St., bait Lako City, Utah 029 feoutb JIul (Bsi&L dnvsudmsmL JlfL IfjDUA.J'UlllAJL Smj. 1A. $. SnuinqA. (BdjicLl Washington, D. C. June 23, 1947 Bubble Gum is not to blame for juniors upset stomachs or any of his other pains except maybe aching jaws, the Food and Drug Administration sauj today. (Adv.) 1 Pure Resinol Soap, mild and refreshing, J specially suitable fill gently vU vUfot the tendei skin Soothing, f I 111 for cleansing i oily Resinol Ointment medicated to relieve itchy burning of mi- Baby nor skin irritations. HOT-- HASHES? Women in your 40'l Does thl functional 'middle-agperiod peculwomen iar to cause you to auger hot Gashes, nervous hlghstrung weak, tired feelings? Then do try Lydia E Pink ham a Vegetable Compound to relieve such s. Its lamout tor this purpose Taken regularly Plnkham s Compound helps build up resistance against such distress Thousands have reported benefltl Also e very effective stomachlo tonic Worth trying1 e' I wtn.mmMS comVouns May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with Its hurry and wor-- v, and irregular habits, improper eat nginlee-tion drinking its risk of eiposure and work throws heavy strain on the e to are of the kidneys. 1 hey apt d and fa I to filter exceas acid over-ta- n and other impurities from the blood. You may auffof naptnng backache, headache, diarmpu, gtiung up ntfchts, fuel constantly U g pams, iwcliinfc tired nervous, all won out Otiur a ko of kulm y or bladder diaord r are aome-tlrburning, aanty or too frequent urination Try lfoani Ptlla. Doona help tna body kidneys to paa oil harmful excess half waste 1 lu y have had more than recom- a approval. Are cvnlury of public ful asera everywhere. mended by grat Ak your nlinior, |