OCR Text |
Show TIMES, I'ARG.VAN, FAKo.VAN THE PAROWAN TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY by the PAROWAN PUB. t PRINTING Relief Shipments Will CO MAH ' V A' ' !!!,.! f Ayn-- i v , ill NATIONAL 6DITORIA1 M t ASSOCIATION T, y J. ,7' . Tramp of Famous Men To Be Abandoned. To Get Out Wheat. ASiGClATiOI. SIMI PKOi Set Record til ! i " I I , i ; r I " .i r i'I i elu f w - Jefferson I.t UTS Ilmtoric ST It. it l.e ks p.ti.ide gloat I, hard ti e trump id Mil!, famous p.e kid in. n ns LTvs.scs Grant an R bert E Lee. will soon be matted by towI 1 rv A ! ering weeds and uncut glass. eduled for abandotm ent as a military installation, the post has been declared surplus and will be turned over to the War .'lit, rod ns Second Class Mad Mat Ur at the Post Office nt Parowan. Utah. Oi tuber 27, 1915 S administration. A.-se-ts Already city officials and other interests are scrambling for the wooded acreage on the banks of the Mississippi, Homes some day will spnng from its grassy sweeps, but the history and trad.tion it has made will not be forgotten, says the United Press. Quiet Nw Pervades. Already a strange quiet has set- tied over the post, harking back to the days when it was carved out of the wilderness. A few t.ny log buildings housed men who went out to tight such troublesome warriors as Black .Undent Skulilini! Skiddn i! vu' cci.t of nil ti e 4 dents in 1911 a f.o tor in '.'uU trail. 3 p ... i i Health) Seed Seed sliou! bo saved from only he healthiest pods or fruits t..krn from the healthiest plants in the garden. 1 Pan American Agriculture The first Pan American ngricul-tura- l conference was held In Wash, injjton, D. C., in 1930. liawk. nolens Woolen farmer. ts should be dried at room temperature; too much heat or cold mats and hardens them. Drying Pigs Need Dry Quarters Pigs need plenty of bedding ai d a place that is dry and free uf diafbs during the winter. Levels The air at high levels is cold because it doesn't absorb much heat and d"f. t e.isilv retain it. Haste Buttonholes Before w ashing a sweater, buttonholes should be basti'd together to keep them from stretching. Coid i i READER ADVS. Reg Durham bull in Kiss-for-Mac- service at my home. Aieh Benson, Pa rowan. WOOD In the stick or sawed, and COAL for sale. See Clair Lister or 2313, Parowan. COAL FOR SALE in ton or truckload lots. Harrell Dalton, phone 2546 H. C. LICENSED Parcells ABSTRACTER Affiliated with SECURITY TITLE CO. Office at Court House. Parowan For Tha Best In All Kinds Of INSURANCE LIFE - FIRE AUTOMOBILE - SURETY ee W. RONDS 8LAII ROWLEY RHEUMATISM and ARTHRITIS I suffered for yems arid am so thankful that I found relief fnuu this terrible affliction that I w iR gladly answer anyone wilting me for information. Mrs. Anna P.,ut. P O. Box 825, Vancouver, Wash. Pd. Lass Is Jailed in Tokyo k TOKYO. Mary Akiva, the Viennese blonde who tried but failed to s General MacArthur in gratitude for the liberation of Japan, has wound up in a Suga-m- o prison cell with Tokyo Rose. sentence had Her nothing to do with wanting to buss the Allied commander, or with the war. She was convicted, exj lamed Mare Logie, deputy provost marshal, of using U. S. mails, a privilege domed foreigners in military zones. Mary came to Japan as Mary Dedoueh, a dancer and singer, 13 years ago. She broke into print when she invaded MaeArthur's olfice recently and wanted to kiss him. Now, she just sits in her cell or, for an hum a day, paces the in the tightly teneed cm prison yaid with T' kj o Rose. They never speak. ki--- ROOM FOR RENT by day or month, See Mrs. Edna Benson, Parowan telephone the feed short. me. The Mil.! ns no ..':oncd the im-- 1 portanee of tie d i.rv industrys part m the famine ielief program. During the first three months of this year, he said. 3i) million pounds 1'KJ million of ennni d milk ;r pounds of powdeicd milk were sent abroad f"r r. In f p.n poses, mainly for women and child! on. AdvNUEOVO I.aboiato'K h lo.-a- re Wife Given Weight In Silver Dollars - The mortMINNEAPOLIS. gage on the home of a Minneapolis couple v n" smaller by $2.81)6 because the feminine member of the pair weighed IB") pounds. As a sir, prise for their 25th wed1! II. Zima ding anmwrmry. of Minneapolis balamed his wife's He weight in'll silver dollars. rigged up a ha'ance scales, seated Mis. Emu on one end and then elmke silver dollars on the other end until the balance indicator po.nted straight upwards. It took 2 H'Ul dollar coins to balance Mrs. Zima's 165 pounds. The immediate decision of Mrs. Zima was that the money be used to help nay oil the balance on then- home. Parowan Service Company Claude E. Burton M nagfer Mobilgas - Mobiloil Repairs For All Cars Official Inspection Sfciicn 332 and Sales Agent for Utah Stale Fish & Game Licenses GET YOUR CAR INSPECTED HE RE. Named in memory of Thomas Jef- ferson, who died a few days before the property was bought in July, 1826, the barracks becan e one of the major military posts of the nation. Threaded through its history are such names as Jefferson Davis, William Teeumseh Sherman, Phil Sheridan, Zachary "Old Rough and Ready" Taylor, Juhn C. Fremont and Grant and Lee. The young Lieutenant Grant moved into the post on September 30, 1843. Soon after, the shadow of war with Mexico hung over the nation. Line. Ran Ilorsf-Ca- r Grant moved out with his regiment, but returned when the clouds cleared. He retired from the army and bought a farm on nearby Gravois road. There he married Julia Dent, and it was from this farm he hauled cordwood to the military post. the army to Later, he become the leader of the Union army in the Civil war. Sherman (of "war is hell" fame) also was a resident of the barracks district. He operated a horse-ca- r line in St. Louis. When he learned crates marked marble going down the Mississippi contained guns and ammunithe army. tion, he The aftermath of the Civil war is portrayed in the row of white crosses that stand guard over the Union and Confederate dead in the cemetery at Jefferson Barracks. The weeds will be growing at the barracks soon, covering many historic spots and markers. But history will remember J.B. CHICAGO. Regular helicopter air mail service will start in the Chicago area late this year or early in 1947, the post office department announced recently. Gael Sullivan, second assistant postmaster general, said the helicopters will operate on circular routes from a central airport, picking up and delivering airmail to outlying communities on regular schedules. Sullivan said the "shuttle plan had bven woiked out in strict secrecy during the last four months. It will be tested in Los Angeles this summer. Army Scientists Find Vaccine for Dengue Fever WASHINGTON. Army scientists have developed an effective vaccine against dengue or "breakbone" fever, a tropical malady which af- fected more than 84,000 troops during the war years, although there were no deaths. Development of the vaccine, first actual weapon against this mosquito-borne disease which occurs in epidemics in the warmer portions of the temperate zone, was announced by the commission of neurotropic virus diseases of the army's epidemiological board. Doctor Is Too Late for Birth, but Discovers Fire DEARBORN, MO. Dr. F. L. Durham arrived at a farm home near here 10 minutes too late to deliver a baby daughter to Mrs. Cecil Foster, but just in time to discover a fire in the home. The doctor bundled the mother and baby in blankets, and as the flames destroyed the farm house, rushed them to a St. Joseph (Mo.) hospital, where both are reported doing nicely. Woman, Aged 81, Gets Her First Wisdom Tooth PORTLAND, ORE. Airs. Louisa Dmgman, who can still thread a needle without glasses at the age of 81, chided her preat grandson, who was complaining t ah. ut ic p..in from a tooth he v. , titing "Why. I don't compl.i.n about wi-do- i;;u! An hi r mn,h to show her first wisdom tootn. v Health Service Urges Fclks To Guard Themselves From Bite of Ticks. - Tin public is WASHINGTON. the public h alth to by ar pealed .sir vice to safeguard IhrmsiBes fmm Roikv mountain spotted :tV,r ueits Ticks, the whuh carry the often fatal malady, lli.unsh during the summer months. alSeieial cases of the disease this year, been reported have ready reports the United Pi ess. found in infected ticks have been t 42 of the 48 states but the gieat-esmounthe Rocky danger is in tain and Eastern states. One of the most heavily infected regions is made up of Maryland. Virginia and the District of Columbia, where Ltd fever cases were repotted last year. Public health officials estimated that one tick out of 360 is infected. The disease is so acute, however, that the puhh : is urged to consider all ticks dangerous. The health service said that any one exposed to ticks should be examined carefully at least once a day. Effective Vaccines. "Children playing in uncleared land, campers, fishermen, picknick-er- s and people who work in areas should have this inspection," it said. Two effective vaccines have been developed for prevention of the fever but because of the limited supply, it is usually recommended only for persons exposed to ticks in the most heavily infected areas. The vaccines must be administered each year, preferably during April and May. The National Institute of Health recently developed an immune rabbit serum which, according to health officials, is probably of value" in treating infected persons. It is the first specific treatment ever developed. The first symptoms of the malady appear from 4 to 12 days after the tick bite. The attack usually comes on suddenly with a chill, rapid rise in temperature, headache and insomnia. After three or four days a skin rash, pinkish in color, appears. The rabbit serum should be given as early as possible in the course of illness, preferably before the rash has been present for three days. An emergency supply of the serum is kept at the National Institute of Health at Bethesda, Md., and at the Mountain laboratory at Rocky Hamilton, Mont. Dogs Carry Insects. The public health service said that dogs which run at large also are dangerous because they frequently bring infected ticks into the home. The danger can be lessened by examining the dog carefully each day or having the entire family vacblood-suckin- g cedure to follow: Remove the tick with a small forceps, eyebrow tweezers or a small piece of paper or cotton. Be careful not to crush the insect; it is possible to contract spotted fever by getting the blood of an infected tick on the skin. Paint the tick bite with an antiseptic, such as iodine. Then wash hands and forceps thoroughly or rinse them in alcohol. There is danger of acquiring the fever if an infected tick has been attached to the skin from 6 to 8 hours or more. If it is removed before it attaches itself or within an hour or two afterwards, the danger of infection is considerably less. After removing the tick, a careful watch must be kept on the person involved for any symptom of the fever. At the first suspicious sign, call your doctor. i ' v Special!,! Would T,::. u lot xe cli..n-- ! Mnltit, a mg. l Lien-Cial-'- U. S. Pardons I - Hafis LOS ANGELES. CALIF. Salnh. cunviited here in 1939 of selling naval mti lligenre to a Russian agent, was pardoned recently under a geiioial amnesty order for World War II veterans issued last by U President , toek for males. . ln V i .. , s ,, , , .d7,V,r ' " , , rr' ' 1 c ,'. ,et. Ronald S. Attorney Walker announced. Walker filed with the clerk of the Wood-Inla- y Model Takes district court Saliehs honorable discharge showing three years and two months army service, and a $10,009 fine was remitted. S.i hell was granted military leave after serving two years and nine months of a four year prison sentence at McNeil island. He was convicted of selling navy secrets, while attached to the naval intelligence, to Mikhail Nicholas Gorin, Soviet tourist agent heje. 7 Yeans: r-- J HOWS z r r'rr3u?7- 4a 4 z. Ns. Sm, And GREYHOUND takes you direct to tii &u7etti acationing Fist? Grev hound takts to all points ot inurtst roe tin o all the big uties all ilu- vacation lands. One tirlet one baggage check to anywhere. Go on frequent, well timed schedules in rm ihair comfort. The ost is less than driving your own car aCdac?t and an ivm runup, pri,',,. driver w at. In s tin r jil watch tlu v, t n, rv Phor, frierdlv Overland (n I. tor low (.iris and lull ml. , i Hr AIR CONDITIONED BUSES OPtRAilO CT wlrr, our tananle ndu - 1 pit, tti tl I if aims barns HOllba BtS" fron 'bt tar ikconcat fib nr HO .lAVC, NO Ui'.'E." INlIRSlAlE IRINSII New Higher LINF Pa) for the Army! NEW PAY SCALE IN ADDITION TO CLOTHING, FOOD, LODGING, AND LIBERAL MEDICAL AND RETIREMENT PRIVILEGES 3 Of' Struct $185.63 151.88 129.38 112.50 101.25 90.00 84.38 CHICAGO. Bumper Crop of Peaches Expected, Say Reports WASHINGTON Peaches will be plentiful this seas. n. But the crop will l,e per c(,nt smaller tr.an tie record crop of last year, department of te foreca-- t agriculture Putting up pat las important, ffu, commercia"y meet ton.xi.'i i r fie ter and spring. . . IN ADDITION 5 hecau-- i next e n.t win- ONE OF TO COLUMN 20 50 THE ABOVE: Incraatt hr Strvk Ovmritau Incrtatt if Mtmbtr of Flying o' Ohdtr Or. of Strict- Incroato in Pay for Each 3 Tear, Highlights of Regular Army Enlistment 1. Enlistments for IV2, 2 or 3 enlistments peryears. (One-yea- r mitted for men now in the Army with 6 or more months of service.) 2. Enlistment age from 18 to 34 years inclusive (17 with parents consent) except for men now in Army, who may reenlist at any age, and former service men depending on length of service. 3. A reenlistment bonus of $50 for each year of active service since such bonus was last paid, or since last entry into service, provided is within 90 after last honorable discharge. days 4. Up to 90 days reenlistment furlough with pay, depending on length of service, with prescribed travel allowance paid to home and return, for men now in the Army who reenlist. years service incrfnSvjrs'sfr'1l pJJ t quarters pay af'r (Retirement income or T F,r' L life Master h $185.63 per moi fe ,1 active previous r vice counts Mustering-on- t the 8. Benefits under rnen fnr Rights assured f. bran, of 9. Choice and oversea, open) on . enl.stn ENLIST AT TOUR NOVI NEAR'51 RICRUITINS U. S. ARMY length of servile) to all men who are discharged to enlist or reenlist. U. S. ARMY RECRUITING r. T on or before O.tober privileges. pay (based upon 7. Option tn retire at half for the rest of our hf after pay 20 ' J 5. Consult your Army Recruiting Officer for other furlough 6. especially Ml Off DEN Dentist Beside Patient Robbed at Point of Gun Dr. R. A. Behnke, a dentist, was held up by a masked bandit while attending a patient in his office at 5803 W. National avenue. The robber, about 18 or 19, took Dr. Behnkes wallet containing $175. He made no effort to rob Mrs. Anne Blair, 1444 S. 56th street, the patient who was in the chair. A blue stocking cap pulled over his eyes and a red bandana handkerchief covering the lower part of his face, the youth burst into the office brandishing a .32 caliber revolver. Stick em up give me vour wallet, he shouted to Dr. Behnke. The dentist handed him the wallet and he ran out. The robber was described as six feet tall and wearing khaki trousers and a brown leather jacket. t , ., m He , O I . ,,, aiiJ Jet Truman, u . or chan.;. The t .. J - H urn.,: i, at birth He i. Sold Secrets to Russia Christinas Assistant a - 1 al idei.t.t;, tout'd on Who Ex-G.- I. n ! ' teal J, tick-infest- cinated. Helicopters Will Carry If you discover a tick on yourself Mail in Suburban Service or your child, here is the best pro- a-- BUY YOUR HUNTING AND FISHING LICENSE HERE. 'I Warns Against envy Post Spotted Fever Left to History Dcspirati F.fiorts Are Made Pan de Ground That Echoed Robert B. MitchelL Publisher, Mgr. cy Cld UTAH, JULY 26. H46 I i- r- OFFICE TEDERHL n St |