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Show . wniBER 39. T THE WEEKLY REFLEX. KAYSVIILE. UTAH ' PAGE SEVEN YEA&S thvy wilhmake their home. i Mrs, IX E. Fackrcll returned home Saturday from K&iulolph, Rich county, where she had spent the past seven vek vbuting Mativea. Mrs. Mitscr Muir, of logsri, .Was dinner guest of Mi. Chris Nelson ATteta D I, , Items JLakenXrom Thejtpflpx of ten y eafs ago," Utril Qcober' 28 1920 : The "ladies -- f Ahe - Hardtmg and Coortdge'elub. hi WhUlf Mt A, Cc Miller Is president, held .a reception in Saturday. of Mr.- Charles R. Mabe? at honor Mrs. Flora Moss is spending three home of Mr. A. C. Christensen the in weeks Gunnison of as nd )ilr. guest By FERN RICHARDS yesterday (Wednesday) afternoon. Mrs. Theron Barlow. l Last Friday, on the Weber camPu Dramatit entertainment The Daughter of the Pioneers "of local Jtfgh school took jrevefige on the The one-awifi Session of meet Bountiful piny, lMn "Yourself" camp is being Jut oi lr the dramatic de- at the home Mr. A. J. Mercer Friday Weber academy for last yearV football defeat by winning 7 to,0. partment in an Friday, Oc- afternoon, October 31; at 2 oclock. tober 31. Tho following atudents will Andrew left on a abort term . Mr. and Mrs. Ben Flint entertained take. part: IVuuice Call, Mary IIul- - mission to Gwynn California Thursday.. He at a miscellaneous Jhbwer at their home. Wednesday CvehlAg in honor of brook, Laurem . SosMons. John lVter-,so- will labor in Fresno. . and hlel, r , Burningham. Miss Mrs. Barah A. Howard ha been Miss Blanche Woiteyand Leonard who will be married next WedHurningham, s teacher, very ill at her home in South Bounti- lLU, to on one-anesday. striving put many plays ful during the past week. Mr. ,and Mrs. William Winegar enduring the sell iu! j ear. Pupil in the Kaysviile grade school ' GirU Annual Party tertained at a prettily arranged din- hae been conducting k book and magazine gathering content In the interest Every year tin A. G. S. IX organ- ner party at their home Sunday afterization has a d.iy set apart for. all noon. Covers were laid fortwept: oL'the public "library during th past . week. the girls to ei.- house dresses, bqws four guests from Salt Iake. Wood enterMr. Wilford Mrs. and V. Mrs. wUl . J. Gailey ,of ribbon, and lc little girls again-(cntertaip a stake Sunday party of ladie at 'Dembc ratio reWednesday of iin veck was given to tained the South' Davis and school board their members partafterhome at .tomorrow her the girls to s; m or their party." The ception social assembly was - follows: Two selec- ners at ahome and Halloween party noon. last Thursday evening. Mr., and Mrs. Geo. tions by the Young were Glee Club, violin at their solo by Lucille llepworth, both acpleasantly surprised by a lew of their friend at their home Sunday evening. SYRACUSE companied by hern Richards, a talk Mrs. IajIs lhlllips vand MUq Viola on "Spiritual ami Physical Thought cntertAlned - at" a ' miscellanGraham given by Mrs. Taylor. a Mrs. J. J. Bennett entertained at eous shower at the Graham home SatAfter chol all the girls went into social at her home Thursday urday evening In honor of Mrs, Gladys he .gym Jor Uiu appuAl- - Girliiparty. 4uwu. npent-iUJd 'Taylor. They were entertained by a number ing and' games, after which a .two of educational side shows, fortune course luncheon was served .to Mr. An advertisement says that on pair telling, game-- , and luncheon was Maurice E, Stokier, Mrs. Lawrence of chiffon hos is produced by 833: silk Glen served. Criddle,-Mr- . Marie Bearer, Mr. This organization has only tyeen Warren, Mrs. Bert Beater, Mrs. Phil- worms. And another .worm that, work .the price.' formed for three years, each year lip 'Bennett, Mrs.' Samuel Norman, eight hours per day for Mrs. Elton J. Bennett, Mrs. Wallace ing an improvement over the last. ' Since 1 have .beep buying on instalNotice! . Christensen and Miss Melba Cood. . Mr. and Mr. Walter Baird of (oka, ments, the months ajV shorter and th Tomorrow the two leading teams o: the district will clash, Davis vs. Gran- Dueschene county, have been guests year longer. ite. Davis must come out on top of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Bodily for a Will you come out and support her? few days. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Norman, of Unknowingly Idaho, are gueita of their Blackfoot, BOUNTIFUL . nd Bennett Ntdaughter, " family for a month. Mis Myrtle Aatlund left WednesMiss . Dopall .GsiUy entertained . V'f I Vi ' At the Republican rally arid day for Laa Angeles, where she wi twelve of her young friend at a birthxv v v, h ...5 ; 7 r nt i ftlend ;dAiicetn:KiVvilleAl4V' at her horns Friday-afteday followed by Franklin D. Ashdown was tendered I noon.Jarty wer Games played GyilWar Cincinnati Gfr&nig October 24, a black fur Cfarfer a pleasant .surprise party at the home refreshments. ' Mr. Mrs. and of DaKa Davia an Mrs. James and Monday trimmed- coat elonglixg to Mr. Ramptqn to a foot regiment he would palk at was in time The a music evening. of arrival the spent daughter nounqe ilcCall insisted, however, that his Mrs. Quayle Cannon. ms. ' and by refreshments. their, home. Sunday. lieutenant should ride aud polntedut The Mrs. Glen Britts has returned home guests numbered forty. Cannon got a mustang which one bf ji very jsjmilar A grand harvest festival and home from the Dee hqspital wnere she had anti ,rwould appreciate coat the colored servants with the regiment coming will be held in the Bountiful been 111 for keveral weeTts V a i hi had purchased at Corpus Christie for First )vard amusement hall November Mrt. Ray' Dawson of Ogden visited Jthe ,exchuicp Xcf making three dollars, with the remark "There, 12 to 14. with her sister, Mfs. Oel C'SeilohS,' if earne i8 diacov- her Mrs.' Joseph Cordell entertained thy on Thutsdsy. . Grant, Is a horsd for you. The young srber, MJm wing rlub .at her home lieutenant bought It for $5. Grant L. D. E. Mr. and Mrs. Ctrl Luncheon was Cleo Bennett, Miss .Bertha McMurrajr records In hla Memoirs" the .result Friday afternoon. Thone Farminjton 2 . and .Fay IUnen motored .to BloomThe day we started served to the following gUests:-Mrsaa follows: on Mrs. Earl Waho, Everett, MrfcRay Divltt, 10 or Kayarilll ington. Bear Laky pounty, was the first time the horse hid ever Harold V Jlaackc, Mrs. Q. ,V. Stenberg, Saturday .and yisltyd friend. been under saddle. I had. however, Mrs. James Randall, MrivG. returned home Tuesday evening. but little difficulty In breaking him. NOTES - , -- ct ly l n, "d.-imati- ct I I -- a- W a. 1 " -- -- Exchanged Kvanertim Zmcvln Park, Chiba - -- v JCOTT WATSON JjO Ulysses 8. victorious Civil, general and President States, the United tomb of IE Grant, war af rear drive In' Is at last Idty three-year-ol- state on River-'sid- e New. York wished . snrround-inffle- nt to be planted narrow walks bor-)- t trees; granite walls, banked ratal shrubbery, will pro-udt- s for visitors; and a sculptured decorations Is over the main entrance, a of the portico directly inred motto Let Us Have Is the addl-- e statue of searing the familiar until war days, which Is to raised pediment In the of the tomb. And the tale of what prom-- I fascinating mystery; why for the sculptor, who to fp equestrian statue, of Ulysses S. Grant 1 Yet, such Is the case, Carney CL Cue, a writer fork Herald Tribune, t issue of that new the unexpected dlfflcul-v- e been or 4 encountered as Photograph of on horseback 't to aid or col-Ne- While Historical library and numert "" at discovering nd other the much-Portra- it While believe the civil war never faced the onnted during the four found who 1 ifft conflict It Is never-- t nobody can be found has aver seen such a Tribune, quest to the studio of the Chester t1 one of u known French, worke la the LT4nt on horeebeck ?! Philadelphia. 7 v, Asked photo-T.- .. OQueatrlan whn made It artist who was u April to, promptly I had none made from ef photorPh ssrwho fiveVel11 old Century K0- - "'ST he B T .rf d G r " t0 wr,t th hovJrtl f4 hlm snd hie U,t dayB diseJI iUt e 2 n why rfrke1Picture be did In the &tUei d Lead- Ttaf th V'tern dU uuvm,eBt 1 It St of Grant In f,!!1!! khlrra finally C C Bu1 U ,th4t ,n th Ph thaln,rd th general I' hlfcddlA but on the bjr th bridle at t ther ig a notable rew" Prtralta, the h.d ,hat General War. h.i..50,nuled. Is General "ber-e- f ! 1mntli.Vln oclatlon. hav- 'ee FortfJnIer wtth 'Inquiry sr f r tlelV ., after rc if car- bo was hu.ett.,,n wlth b O t P0" to lU r . jt H he sow, with nine more ww ry t t mi. suto hi. age: APr. of those who eK Bfrf?Pb of kaf at Wsih-lPhotar- ch sovtion at Grant on Ha boulptor. , Mrs. C. N. Smith, Mrs. AJvin. Nelrt. though for the first day there .were Mrs. Thomas R. Williams,. Mrs. A. L. frequent disagreements between us as Boulton and Mrs. J. R. Boulton. s to which way we should go, sod Mr. and Mrs. Theron Barlow, of at all whether we should go Gunnison, spent a few days here this At no time during the day could 1 week as guests of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. George Clay and famchoose exactly the part of the columu I would march with; but after that, ily have moved to Salt Lake, where I had as tractable a horse as any - THE with the army,. and there waa none that stood the trip better." Grant not only .won the admiration of hla men by the way la whiph he , INSURANCE COMPANT mastered this wild horse but during IN UTAH the battle of Monterey he performed renown throughhim won a feat which New business in Utah out the army as a daring soldier and $ 4,922,185.00 . during 1929 a matchless rider. With hla characinsurance in force in teristic modesty he records the InciUtah qs of January 1, dent In his Memoirs" as follows: 1930 We had not occupied this position am.when It was discovered, that our he Companys investmunition, was growing low. I volunments (mortgage teered to go back to the point hi had loans, state, county started from, report our position to and municipal bonds, ammunGeneral Twiggs, and ask for railway, public utility, industrial . bonds,, etc.) ition, to be forwarded. .We were at in the State .amount this time occupying, ground off from I L.' L to J houses. My of the In rear the street, ride back was an expoaed one. before iremiums collected durside starting I adjusted myself on the ing 1929 tror.residents the poemy of my horse furthest from pf Utah and with only one foot holding the over Paid during the year jcantle.of the saddle. and, an arp 1929 to "Utah' policythe neck of the horse expoeed. holders and their at was only started at full run. It death looswas horse my that street crossings endowes, maturing under fire, hut these I crossed at suph ments, dividends, , ate. I . wps a flying .rate, that, generally cover of the next Invested in Utah during under and put 1929 block of houses before the enemy fired scratch." a .without out safely I got the end of .1929 tho Company. had had At During tho Civil .war Grant wtU security investments of .nearly 4k millions of dollars which cannot be several horses whose names aro .allocated by States. If gueh.an aV known. Among them ,wero Egypt--" In southern location eould Re made, our invest-- 1 admirers presented .by menu in Utah ;would b maUrialy .which bd Davis" Illinois, and Jeff than shown ahoya. larger the from Confederates, been captured , a ti," Cfinclnnf was . favorite But his In 1829, we paid to Utah the lead- Nevertkeleaa, aM a and bensfiriari big bay, aired by Lexington, n w ?me- ..of S24504L21 U racer ' 6UU i U pndjtirf ing by, a mor Ik tin tha total prfmiam coi dnnatf wu presented to himGrants after ecud ja (ho Stata. Ohio tho city of resident the gen-- , tnd at. Chattanooga .victory Ton Are Iavitad te Joial eral rode, him almost dally during the untU Wilderness campaign of 1804 ami - Cincinnati war. of .A. j1 the, the doee i waa seventeen hands high, an animal reGrant .and of great endurance mount tarded him ,aa the grpateet had. . commander sny army ; he that him of was ao.foad Grant to mouni, rarely permitted anyone else Be at least two him, although be made of Ad faror 4 On .was exceptions. ,OU miral Daniel Amman, who was a when he, drowning from Grant LinboT. and the other, was President at .visited Gftnt Lincoln coln. .When river James .the on hla headquarters s he placed Cincinnati" at the Memolrs" In his disposal and fine he writes that Lincoln was .a - my - Qndanai rede and horseman refused an offer every dsy." B once and after animal, of $10,000 for the fro him retired Lees surrender on a died Cincinnati" service.' active 1S74. Maryland farm In September, brant's ' Rut riding hones wert not was also Ho only horseflesh Interest horses. During harness fond of his years ss President In Wuhlngton . Grant visited the stables every day at In the White Phene 203-Y- 7 the close of business himself for see to wanted Rouse. H the stock wss well fed. pome-time- There are something Ilk 200 por- traits of General Grant in the library of th Near York Historical society, and amoxgjlMem are several of him In the saddle. These, however, are all engravings, etching or lithographs, ranging from Currier Jk Ives's cheapest commercial product to th fine proof etching mad by I Herder, a noted French artist The print room of the public library has another .equally largeIn collection of drawings, the nature of a photobut nothing graph from life or a of th man who often faced grape and canister on horseback, yet who seems to hav always run away from th camera. At th offices of Brown Brothers, who may be described aa dealer In photograph, with about 1,600, 006 In stock, the resources of tbs establishment were placed at tbs disposal of the Herald Trlbune.fA search of th envelopes on Grant and of Gardners rare Photographic Sketch Book of tho War" failed, however, to uncover anything of th general In th saddle. Asked where on would look for such a plcturo, Arthur Brown that th hunt be extended to e photoprivate collections of graphs; to th war son In th West and South, wbv some local photographer might hav made a plate, and to th families of Greats descendants, who may perhaps posssss such a relic. geem curious, Indeed, that no such photograph of Grant can b found when one considers that so much of his life was spent on horseback and that of all our Presidents, not even excepting Washington and Roosevelt, he was most famous for his horsemanship. Read through his Memoirs and you will find repeated examples of his love for horses and any number of Incidents which apparently stand out clearly In hla memory because a horse was associated with them. Go to the United States y Military academy at West Point show you among and the records, made there, the highest Jump by a cadet on horseback. It Grant upon York" and the read mark Is more than six feet. As a cadet at West Point Grant wss a poor student In most subjects. But he was a fine horseman. -- Of him one of his classmates, Gen. Egbert Veils, It was as good as a bas written; circus to see JSam Grant ride. He was far the most fearless rider there. There was a dark bay horse that wss so fractious that it was, about to be told because nobody could ride, It Grant selected It for his horse.-- Re rode It every day at parade, and how he did. ridel The, whole clase would stand, around admiring his wonderful command of the beast and his graceful evolutlona" Upon hla graduation from the academy Grant hoped to secure a, commission In. the cavalry. But Ironically enough; there? were no places open in thst branch of U service at the time and the best horseman that West Point had ever known became a . second lieutenant , In the photo-engravi- back-numb- eug-gest- er ed war-tim- Gen-l- modeling an quea-fthe plaza In front of sow has covered w the I York n -- his-L- root d o-- raising by pop Vtiop nearly a half mll- necessary for carrying i. Vml plans for this loportant of all the equestrian d r assocla-Kgage- d In The terrace, the-wi- V 14 to be Momiment - games,-followe- for more than 30 has stood In an un- which . tf , Jo-da- they-will- , - Fourth infantry I But the Mexican war gave him a chance to show his horsemanship even of though he remained a commander When General Taylor's army started its Invasion of Mexico, Lieutenant Grants company commander, Captain McCall, asked him If be did not Intend to get a horse. Grant replied that slne be belonged foot-eoldler- a. . NEW YORK LIFE . , The City Cleaning Gq. .Oldest Cleaners .& Pye;p Ogdens wishes to announce to tle people ,of sVwmingtori, that the Hess Barber Shop has. taken over, the Agency .for cleaning, dyeing, and all jklnds of remodeling and at very reasonable prices. re-linf- j All dothca are paranjeed Insured and are agaJngl fire and tnefl I DYE ANYTHING WE CLEAN EVERYTHING You take no chances. " Down Town Office Plant WuUwtaD AW. 2374 , J bn-eficiari- es . Reply to Unjpst Criticism J ... all . t - ! come to our attention that some criticism has been directed against Attorney It has C..Da,tRep4)lkan, candidate for Jojhn ,In .t).e --4eCS!lc trict . J,ud gW jf?r Delbert Green. V w n-- . Clicy-boidar- . -J- , ...The oath. f Ail, attowy Jriwthe . - -- mrrr Let Your Next Permanent yave a Tulip Steam , jtu . TheWaveThat Preei-dent- - Does Not Require 'Finger Waving - . Kaysviile Beauty Parlor , thst jj-sponsibil- ity of taking an, alignment 2f rom the .. . char jrreon with a criminal offense. When Delbert Gpsn court, to represent wy was brought, up. pn the,charge of nurfer, h? .coiirt to appoint an attorney ior . asked the . -- him, as he waA without means.to aplpy, mur-sel- T -, kludge Eugene E. Pratt, who.wMjnreajd-ingsigned Attorneys Arthur WpoUey pnd John ci Davis to defend the accused. " Theyre their services, ceiyed no remuneration ;for andnone is providd by lay inj,hch.tcas. oniy the duty any lawyer may They rfomied be called upOT l?orPt.ftDy :e 0 . ft - I cdRich, Chairman Republican Central Ccmnlitt: y14 Aarfe rt h a 1 ' i ng |