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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE. UTAH CL Girl Helps Blind Man Across Street; She Dies LONDON. ENGLAND. June WsN Smith was known in Heanor. Derbyshire, where she was born during the blitz, as that girl with the sweet disposition. She was always helping somebody. The other day she helped .Isaiah Wilcoxen, 74, a blind man, across the street. As he felt the opposite curb with the tip of his cane, he thanked her and went on his way. June, who was 6, didnt quite make it. As she let his arm go, an automobile struck and killed her. . . Kyle McGrady, mailman on the most unusual delivers mail in an oil drum mail box." j States,"moored to the shore of Idahos Snake river, pce, is wildest bodies of water In America. Since the level much as 30 feet, standard mail boxes are not (rums and wooden boxes are utilized instead. 4l t - tD Women Meet Death FOUND . . . This is found and hitherto unpublished photograph of Abraham Lincoln while be was still a resident of Illinois. The picture was presented to the Decatur, 111., library by Miss Grace Farnwall. NEWLY copy of a newly On Mountain Peak Made it Impossible for Them to Cling to Perch. Cold An American League umpire named Jack Kerns had a phobia against calling games. No matter how dark it got, Kerns felt that a ball game was nine innings or tuore. Onevday when Kerns refused to call a game, the pitcher in desperation huddled with his catcher and whispered, Listen, you keep , the ball in your mitt. Ill wind up and pretend to throw it. You pop it into your glove as though youd caught it. There were two strikes on the batter. The pitcher went through his motions the catcher popped hia mitt. Strike three and out! bellowed Kerns. Strike? screamed the batter. Why that ball was two feet CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Deaths of two FE. mountain climbers were ascribed to biting cold which made It impossible for them to cling to an perch long enough for their guide to summon help. Bodies of the pair Miss Mildred HES STARTING HIS HERD . . . Youngest bidder at the annual Hartig, 25, of Evansville, Ind., and club Future Farmers of America sale held at Cary, 111., was Michael Miss Frances B. Krauss, 34, of BalHaverly, 7, of Dundee, 111., who purchased a Holstein heifer for $150. timore were recovered on precipiMichael is shown explaining to Otto Schnerlng, president of Curtis tous North Truchas peak, in the Candy company, that be bought his calf, which they are admiring, to Sangre da Cristo range north of start my own herd. here. The guide, Sam Martin of Truchas village, said attempts to rescue Miss Krauss, who slipped in demountain, scending the 13,275-foo- t led to the double tragedy. The accident happened as the women turned homeward on a weekend outing from the Los Alamos atomic project. Both worked there as Atomic Energy commission secSANTA STATES Shikin. JUJTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS N. M. ice-glaz- ed lugs Letters, Supplies, i 4--H fc lists,. Up Wildest River ly; WNU Features. i 'J iDA. Long heralded as one of the worlds tk Qt Kyle McGrady is back on the job dthe most unusual of 103,442 routes imrr'men, erail kioat on aSftve3f', g approximately 300 residents of Idahos traverses- the wild and rugged reaches of was sus'5rivr. viceboats were nJ McQjOr tisnporarily Sjgr dur-to- g the period level Ot Which varies as of !!n witflT .y feet n!ry Unjian. comiCsrce has been are, JfioGrady trip up the Snake river a mechanics Hu iston to take the post of- deliv-n"ain-t, which alls for and par-- , well as for a dtp ices to resi-hrei sl, sjf 1 boy and official for , es 71 a. rists ft t trip up the Ida-fivjorence or packets. 1 assortment of i Xi) t . JIcGrady also ,.(4 accommodate .As fg icted a lodge on w tho XLl.i ferocious part I k f er v, rive ryniate fee all over the g i Jswxryed to t for the fhe round trip e Lewis-ibtala- f' tie I.hw, I. spec-onraeyJ- Y. current of f 1ft that it the trip 1 wrs to return. AT 1 S t" iiii Mfrfs re-,25- Church rc:'!ities cizlveds KT. - . Special planned for who are ma.inf CGC UO'k "Own Church in rly 4 ' the Ujtorical small kCh tiade famous by bcm it was built. Jilcii 'I Worthington, - rxi the former ' property across )urch. He plans (Till l cabins on the phic studio to iewlyweds and 'j!J 'g dinners and ac-vp- UtLJng u f - Sinned. long has cere-fa- s reached in pies were mar- - The Snake is called the wildest river in America. Hells canyon is the deepest gorge on the North feet 1,000 American continent deeper than the Grand canyon of the Colorado. McGradys boats on the trip up the river against the current must buck and growl over many treacherous, boulder-studde- d rapids. A Tough Trip. The boats are no plush, showy affairs, but they are sturdy and can withstand the pounding of the unmerciful Snake. And you have to be tough to fight the Snake and Hells canyon. The only time Lewis and Clark turned back during their famous expedition was when they tried to find passage through the canyon. A railroad man surveying the possibilities of a line through the canyon came back and said, Impossible. The Rockies were sissy 'stuff compared to that canyon. The trip up Hells canyon with McGrady is becoming one of the most unusual tourist attractions of the United States, with many people journeying thousands of miles just to make the jaunt into one of the remote areas in the United States. Overnight Journey. McGrady makes the trip twice each week Wednesdays and Saturdays. He leaves at 6 a. m. and arrives at the lodge in time for a hardy supper. The return is made the next day. McGrady charges tourists approximately $14.50 per person for the trip, lodging and food. Those who have seen Hells canyon remember the awesome beauty and ruggedness that held Capt. Benjamin L. E. Bonneville spellbound in 1831 when he paused on the brink of a chasm overlooking the canyon and scrawled in his journal: Nothing we had ever gazed upon in any other region could for a moment compare in wild majesty and impressive stern-es- s with the series of scenes where the Snake river is overhung by dark and stupendous rocks, dominated by immense mountains rearing their distant peaks in the clouds. I a baa S church was com-a- , who had returned to a airing teacher, was fcSo at the dedica-an- d he obliged with written seven years f5 nine-year-o- ld ARE ' SMALL TOWNS - Isle-sTow- l) y, snow-covere- Ozark Hills Father Admits Burying Two Babies Alive ENVOY . . . Burmas Ambassador U. So Nyun, first to be ap- Texas County HOUSTON, MO. Sheriff Charles Fazel announced Ozarks hill farmer that a had been charged with first degree murder In connection with the burying alive of two children born to his pointed to the United States since Burma became an independent state, calls at the White House to present his credentials to President Trnman. common-la- wife. Fazel identified the farmer as John Monroe Garrett and said that he admitted orally he buried the first child Immediately after its birth in 1945. The second child, a boy, was buried in the stony soil of the Ozarks road hills near a three miles west of Caboll immediately after its birth on June 28, 1947, Fazel said Garrett had been living for the past six years with Anna Ruth Robertson on their south-centrOzarks farm, three miles west of CabolL farm-to-mark- V PENSIVE . . . Ollie Tandberg, Swedish heavyweight champion, appears bemused as he contemplates the bout in which he will make his American ring debut when he meets Joey Maxim of on Jan-nar- y Cleveland in a labor in farming, new rural occupations will have 9. to be created. Otherwise local population losses are inevitable thought-provokin- NEW HAS BEEN ADDED . . . John Snyder, secretary of the treasury, is leafing through some of the 80 different school textbooks which now contain material on United States savings bonds. Inclusion of the plug for bonds is the result of cooperation of members of American textbook publishers with the savings bond division of the treasury department. SOMETHING chal- g lenge to small town America from Earle Hitch, noted student of rural sociology, in a series of timely articles starting in our next issue. "SMALL TOWN, LIVESTOCK PATTEN HOGS FASTER by stimulating their appetite with Dr. LeGears Hog PreAlso an ideal tonic for brood scription. sow and pigs. Has helped increase profits for million of hog raisers. Satis, guar. HELP INCREASE MILK PRODUCTION of skimpy milkers by stimulating sluggish LeGears Cow Prescripappetites with Dr. A cow tonic guaranteed tion in their feed. to give satisfaction. MISCELLANEOUS HUNTERS! Write for Information. THURLOW GLOVE COMPANY 100 N.E. Union Ava., Portland It, Ora. HUNTERS Frontier Leather Co., Sherwood, Oregon, will tan your deer and elk hides. Write for Information. Frontier Leather Co., Sherwood. OregoR Let Ul Tan Your Deer and Elk Hides. WANTED TO BUY WE BUY AND SELL Office Furniture, Files, Typewriters, AddMachines, Safes, Cash Registers. ing SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE OSS South Stats St.. Salt Laka City, Utah Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! Farmers Produce Practically All Margarine Materials Farmers in all but four of our 48 states Maine, New Hampshire, Nevada and Rhode Island now produce practically all the material that goes into our annual production of over six hundred million pounds of margarine. In 1946, we produced 572,537,990 pounds of margarine in which we used 222,830,000 pounds of cotton seed oil; 206,718,000 pounds of soy bean oil; 13,794,000 pounds of peanut oil and 6,589,000 pounds of corn oil. In addition to this, margarine contains about 16 per cent cultured pasteurized skim milk, one to one and a half per cent of skim milk solid, three ier cent of salt and one per cent vitamins and other ingredients, all of which are produced in the United States. Adv. $50 Robbery Is Thwarted by HAS MACHINES displace Thats the NOBODY BUYS MORE PAYS MORES ...OR al Cab NEWPORT NEWS, VA. raDriver E. M. Harrels two-wa- y dio did a $50 job of thwarting a robbeiy. Harrel was driving a passenger from Newport News to Norfolk by way ef ferry when a fellow passenger invited Harrel s fare aside for "a little drink." That little drink cost the man $50 all the money he had in his wallet. Harrel used his radio to report the theft to cab headquarters and by the time the ferry docked, police were on hand. The $50 was returned to the robbery victim, Harrel was congratulated by police and everyone was happy including the thief. The victim refused to press charges. Two Boy Scouts Credited With Saving Life of Chum Two PARK, ILL. Highland Park Boy Scouts were credited with saving the life of Buddy Walters, 13, who fell into the Illinois river while exploring Starved rock state park. Fellow scouts identified the rescuers as David Cox, 15, and William Wehrmeyer, 16. The boys were among the 31 scouts from Highland Park on an outing at the park. Walters lost his footing along a trail and slid Into water near the Starved Rock dam. YOUNGEST NATURALIZED CITIZENS . . . There Is no age limit inCox and Wehrmeyer peeled off volved in becoming an American citizen. Born In Greece, the their clothing and rescued Walters. twins, Urania (left) and Mary, 15 months old, are shown with Other scouts used ropes to pull their mother, Georgia Mistiloglou at U. S. supreme court in Chicago. the boys to high ground when they They became Americas youngest naturalized citizens. Their father, were unable to make their way up Theodore, will join them here when he is released from the Greek army. the steep tralL HIGHLAND U.S. A" Earle Hitch Converted to Exotic Carden Once a tropi-aa- a of magnolias, i aka, fcaya and pines, the Mlingrath gardens, 20 of Mobile on the river, today rank tribe moat popular meccas . ivers. The gardens, start-jbbdraw as many as tea fat a single weekend, wfalch have stood and llyear-ol- d azalea 250-fo- ot CATHEDRAL WITHIN A CATHEDRAL . . . Regardless of their food shortages and economic travail, the British people hold lovingly to the trappings of tradition. Here, a skilled artisan is working on the restoration of the famous model of St. Pauls cathedral by Sir Christopher Wren. Recently returned from its bomb shelter in the country,' the model now is inside St. Pauls cathedral in London. It was viewed and approved by King Charles II in 1670. DYING By Pb ALA. Martin said Miss Krauss lost her footing and injured her head and leg tumble. As the guide in a and Miss Hartig sought means to get her back on safe ground, she d slid farther down the slope. Both women were unable to climb back to safety, Martin related, and clutched a small rock above a ravine as he clambered up and around the peak, and descended to their horses for a rope. Thereafter, Martin said, while he tried vainly to reach them from above and below, the women wept and begged piteously for him to "please do something, were freezing to death." Meanwhile, darkness and dropping temperature froze the moun. tainside glassy slick, and Martin was unable to reach them. Near midnight, Martin went for help. State police, answering his summons, helped Martin find the broken bodies. Cabby Using Radio to Report I bridegroom church bell y, the pastor to k pull Jr, just as you f bell rope. txrch in a pleas-jnc- e served the Old Bradford, a T two miles from j after it was by-a- d in 1868, but jk church alive, aauty of the site lurch later was Its, a young vis-jsi- n wrote his to Little Brown In 1857. He put and it was retaries. KID X . . . This arrived in U. S. with $1.50 all in pennies to seek his fortune. He is a refugee, calls himself Johnny Fagan, does not know his name, nationality or who his parents were. USED CARS bushes are among the outstanding features of the gardens. Thousands of other azaleas, trees, shrubs, plants and vines have been transplanted in Bellingrath gardens from all parts of the country. In the midst of all this beauty is the old Bellingrath home, suggestive of the English Renaissance period d and handsomely built of bricks and traditional iron-lac- e grill work. THAT OLD JOB . . . Henry J. Kaiser, industrialist, turned the clock back 50 years when he revisited a Utica, N. Y., department store where he once worked as a bundle-wrappfor the munificent sum of $1.50 a week. hand-presse- ante-bellu- er I Mis-tilogl- How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you with the uns bottle of Creomulsion derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Couzhi. Chest Colds. Bronchitis WNU W 5347 May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modsra lit with Its hurry and worry. ad Irregular habita, improper eatingInfectiodrinkmg it mk of exposure and work n-throw on th heavy strain of the kidney. They are apt to become over-taxe- d and fail to filter excess acid and other impurities from th blood. You aaay suffer nagging backache headache, dixaineea, getting up nights, leg pains, awelling feel constantly sign tired, nervous, all worn out. Other someof kidney or bladder disorder are time burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doan's PiU. Doom help the . kidney to pa off harmful exeesebody hail waste. They have had more than recoin-mended century of public approval. Are by jgratefuJ user everywhere. Ask your nsxgkborl Immi |