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Show SAUNA SI N. SAUNA. ITAII Ill K Intermountain News Lr!, Tu'J fr la) tr.!tri j I t 1ST UN KOtll Utl VftK MIT Ut; J M.VI 11111, I llliM.t: 1 IT- - . !.'-)- 1. II M INI; HM IK I 11 J HU i'jm.-- f.,I bl.d.'ll, V,lX (ti Mall e.il'v I. AjiP. Tie p,. j. t lUVflvra fa a Wi, v.'t, r i, ...'d jivriv I V riilltuv V I'' EVIDENCE I- i"! hiIio Vist1n I)' Mi.r mki; urv ofiaiah. (...! ll.r I, )' I .(' la- i,i. a K ) i ! with fl 4r I at reiiMi f J IIimi iu lwuM ..pn-f lUr Ipl 11 MltiVtn l ly ii.r p.ia .i.iii, riaii wiihtu U.e -rir .f aGn iM,;i. bn bait bv l.r tl lr (T..,j,.lr of e willi ) I ! i, ;- ;ki;i i;m Mcd ID. I. ill- It Gut ii at rr;f dtwpc A&ccrwx, xjLw.-nrTJ.- 'r r id W - .r Ihr Ill If.vtr, il f ll.r Gl.ilrh laliwav h b. ilr. The lill'ANS tt birthday Wrl.fOhr that ff whi-l- i g thi-uh- i l.t lit Mlt"rli, umi.i) I hi,ttt I T I'.r nit n ,oll,rMri f M itilt-iiia- ,ilr t I, l wtoill ,r In I att I.f kiiiiiiiii-- at a err ana I aim up iit.nj.i-l- . 1 l.rlr chum In turhaia by urcHiilrntloiia and hU'li official,. and Mmr Unit time pinna for tin l.nr gone forward Mcaildy. At Ilia Mart tlie f.i.rtl a kerlnua ill (limit y. for no our muld nay wllti mttalnty In wlmt aort i.f tnoiae Manlilactnn wa Imrti. There were a wide variety nf uilnloti, mom Hint tin Wakefield Ionite wax only a mere cnldn, utliera tlmt It wna a real colonial niHtialnii, and Mill nttn-ra not ilalnilng tint Waxhlngtnii born at W'nlefleld at all. Student of hlMnry, however. under tin auspice of the researehea which led them to wlmt they consider Ihr truth of the mutter. No atone wtin left unturned (and I tils fnmilliir aaying Is llterully true In this rac) In the quest and no document, lu. verier remote In Ita hearing. was left unexnmlncd. When nil the evidence had collected, sifted and used In a final division, the actual plan was formulated. Then an architect was nit rusted with the task of reproducing the house and the plans which he drew tip have been approved by the National Fine Arts commission. The nest task was to acquire the land ttpon which Die restored home was to stand, and this was made possible by John I. Rockefeller, Jr., who purchased 1N17 acres of the Wakefield estate and organized a eorirutinn to hold the tract In trust for the W'ukt-fielorganization. The actual site of the house where a monument was erected with funds provided by a congressional appropriation hits been under the jurisdiction of the War department, but early last year the War department turned It over to the national park service of the Interior department, which has officially designated It as the George Washington Itlrlhplace National monument. The national park service Is with the Wukefleld association and the United States Commission for the Observance of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of the Itlrth of George Washington In the plans for rebuilding Wakefield. The Washington family first settled on a part of the present Wakefield estate in March, ltitio, a full century before the Devolution. Col. John Washington, the great grandfather of George Washington, had come to Westmoreland, Ya., In 103(5, lie d'ed and was buried there in 1(570. MaJ. 1 .awn nee Washington mid Maj. John Washington, his sons, succeeded him In the ownership of Wakefield. After their marriages, the family lived on separate parts of the Wakefield estate until the house In which George Washington was horn was burned. In 17S0. After that, the Washingtons continued in other houses on the land, and descendants still live on pr rt of the same Wakefield estate a continuous possession, in whole or in part, for 200 jears, eight generations. It was at Wakefield, then, that George Washington was born on February 22, 1732, according to the modern calendar. I'.etween three and four years later the family moved to their estate of 2,300 acres which embraced the present Mount Vernon. There W asldngton passed about four more years of ills hiyhood. Then he moved again with his parents, this time-tKing George county, Ya., to an estate (with a mansion house") which had previously belonged to William Strother, iecaUvl approximately two miles naaiM-liitio- bi-e- d , Hi I l imp mi -- lid willi dir.td.-- I IlHI-- fi-- It to. I II I .n a , - M.--- st. fl l ii Inc-1- ; ixavi U are tt-- i !le ap4'iie l ntal itgn-stlo- , kik a nr l. ! iioprv-j ; i iiint T!i apriug anuw iil-v- lo i Cnljor-a- ll.f.vlia) (u-r- . wi'l r pfuvi-- with oil and kidiiig II larva- - ! f.ie ll tmitur i. wing-- i t glid laki-tiy .thci i ti IT - TI r ("iii Ik ly Miiiiiiii.itH r to lavp tJi'r in be Iln.ilH unit nf Ihr I A3 Nr A ; y I:, owing lo grading done s U.t lug of Mrj mdnated I. a If window l a- -i tm-h- l With Midi a lived there George Washington steadily until l.ls father's death, afterward alternating Ids stays there wall Ink sojourns With his hrothrr, August. in- - Washington, Jr., at Wake field, and with his loot lor on Iter os tale at Lillie Fulls on the Iiupit hltlllliM k. when he was si ( cell, lie Mould returned ertion. After passing some time "in several pluve essential to hla am lul Interests III the count ii of Fairfax, Stafford. King George, Wesiiiion-liinand Fredericksburg (iik ludmg a visit of three mold ha hi the West Indies), and to his l duliea as official surveyor for the County of Culpe-- r and, at large, for Ford Fairfax and others' In the tpier northern neck of Virginia," as Die historian expresses It, he went hack to Mount Vernon again, having Inherited It in 1732, and oilier members of Die family lived on at Wakefield until the fire on Christmas day in 17f0, Probably owing to its comparative inaeeessihillty in the past. Wukelleld has been neglected during most of the years that It has been known us Washington's birthplace. Ilia step son placed a small tablet to mark Die spot after the fire. A farmer who later owned the laud saved It from the hands of the souvenir hunters. The state of Virginia planned to build a memorial, hut the Civil war prevented this plan from being carried out. So far as the United States government Is concerned, the first official action came in when congress appropriated $3,000 for a monument. Two years passed. Then the resolution was redrafted, making the appropriation ten times as much. More years passed. Finally, In the iMs, the monument was built. When the project for the bicentennial commemoration was formulated It was at once pointed out that the event should take Into consideration the blrthpluce of the man whose birth Is to he celebrated. Great Importance has attached to the place where he died, Mount Vernon, but it is his birth that Is to be commemorated in 1932. Until the Wakefield association its work seven years ago, this historic estate had been sadly neglected. As a part of its plan for the restoration, the association secured permission from the War department to make excavations or. the site of the house, and these excavations established the fact that the house was of brick, not. as had boa erroneously reported, of wood. (Quantities of brick had escaped the hands of visit ms eager foi souvenirs because it was buried in the ground. It was established that the brick had been made on the Wake field estate. The bricks for the new Wakefield will lie produced from the original clay pit. In fact, so dose will he the adherence to the model of ttie past that bricks of a peculiarly mei-tlesurface, burned with a liquid acid that forms a grayish fireproof the heat glaze, which were used win-rwas greatest around fireplaces ami chimneys, will be reproduced just as they were in the original. The exterior view of Die house was decided upon only after research had established Die details. A frontage about double Die depth was indi.ated by the extant foundations. These walls extend down only a few feet below the surface, and Die fact that the surface at t he present time averages foot above the level It had at least when young George Washington ran profi-ssioiia- lf-7- be-gn- n d the small Du com lu'K-- Indicated, the follow cii Dial in lln the hot !hor j was topped hy an aDIc, of a height Mlfflcjctit to admit of four tied rooms with dormer windows uud rhino Diroiu.li tin oilier end, walls The eomparulive fiicplnn-a- . lightness uf the fotiuduilons govern ihe height of Die building, of course. All this, moreover. Is strhDy in the Urgiuhi lindition of Die period, for, (hut type of house was not uncommon n the first half of the Fightis-nlecu- tury. The room In with li George WashingImrti was at Die left, hack ton corner of Die house; that Is to say. Die right, front room from the other side; for the house was double faced. in Ihe custom of the period, willi one front towurd the highway uud the oDier toward the water, two front doors connected by a hall running across the house. The kitchen, outside, will he rebuilt on the site of the foundation of the great chimney whose foundation is still there, ouiside the main foundation walls Indicating that it was large enough to roast an ox iu. The cure-take- r will live there. It was iu that spot that the excavators found many pieces of broken crockery and hones. Some of these pieces nre now on exhibition in the National museum at Washington. A round table, saved from Wakefield at the time of the lire, and which tradition in the Washington family in says was brought from lOlO, 1ms been presented hy Mrs. H. L. president of the Wakefield association, for placing in the house vv lien it is restored. The broken Washington platter, in the salt glaze in vogue in 173.r), has been restored hy potters and duplicates will tie soon available. Cither pieews of furniture and other belongings from the original house are doubtless extant In various parts of Die country, and the association hopes hy purchase or by gift to acquire them for the memorial. These will he entered in Die Golden ltook of Wakefield, as a record of ttie donor. Among t lie pictures that will be placed on the walls are a replica of Gilbert Stuarts portrait of Washington as President, and Itombrandt Ieale's Lafayette, painted in Paris, which have ulready been presented by Mrs. U I. Graves and Mrs. 11. I. hImivc in-y- s I pro-vhR- I i I vv.-i-s Woodruff. Another project, apart from Die re- building ai.d refurnishing of the house, which tlie Wakefield association has undertaken, is Die rebuilding of the It will stand on ancient leg tlie site of a log house that used to be on the estate. Furthermore, the iissin i.ition has pun based, by formal Iced of conveyance cxeuitid by the present Washington heirs, title to the family burial ground. In the ancient arched vault ten members of tlie Washington family, ineluding the fa- e buried. Dier of George, Tlie Wakefield Memorial association has asked tlie United States government to dredge and improve the harbor, to admit visitation by boat from tlie Potomac river, to build an adequate wharf and to landscape the grounds, after the present granite shaft has been removed from tlie site of the birthplace. It is expected that will be given, so that such everything will be ready for the com- memoration of the two hundredth anniversary of Washington's birtli iu ' rnd. 1 1 .V. Ihr oppruprla Idaho's 1932. by Western Newspaper Union ) airl-- i tildrst lo re lluke hain. from Ihe t'nivi rally of Idaho lliila-a- . TiiC present own era ate said lo have adviuuvd lo Ihe St Ci fiad level. 1'lioVO, l'T. A new record fur prodllet lull fnr laiWX lo Ulali femily Hairy Herd neinUrs Improvement was made hy a cov heluiiging lo Die Ptali Male liuapital herd during 1 l n er. Isiylun. a grade of Die hospital herd produced i Niiindi of hii.ierfnt d.irlng the month to break Die former of SO iiounds. HOISK, ) DA. Idaho fish ami game oflielals art willing to eiKqK-r-atwith Utah to make Pcnr a Imaaa for fivhei men. Tlie Idnilo state li department is iirg.ng a plan making Illegal the seining of on the Idaho fist from Hear side. The Idaho authorities nre highly In favor of a plan whereby the two states roiihl establish joint fish rearing iwinds to restock the lake. Twelve SALT LAKE CITY Utah fresli fruits nml vegetable products totaling 1,713 carloads were unloaded In "S cities throughout tlie United States dining 1929 by tlie according to a report Salt Lake branch of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. The consuming territory extends from Ixvs Angeles in Die west to New York Uiiy on Die east, ami from Dallas nml New Orleans on the south to Chicago, according to tlie report. lU'PKUT, Mary Rol.lt, 17, is dead and her two companions oil an auto ride. Volute Denny, 17, mid Olen. Kenchcr, 24. in a serious condition at a local hospital from Injuries suffered iu an auto crash near Paul. OGl'KN, UT. Ik J. Fineh, disof the U. S. bureau trict engiiv-eof public roads, reports that during January, this year, contracts have been awarded on federal aid projects in Utah and Idaho for a total of $709,329.41. This amount includes $310.S10.rri in Utah on five projects and $l.V.r2I.9() in Idaho, covering 19 projects. RPIIK.UM, UT. Alma Larsen had the end of Die second finger of his left lmid taken off by a power saw while cutting kindling. A few years ago Mr. Larson had one finger cut off and another badly mangled in a saw mill. When a child he had still another finger taken off by a clothes wringer. MIDVALE. UT. A i t of the Jordan American Legion, et.tiih-d hero. e t l'ost 33, lias bc-It is tie fist p st of the Am rican i n formed in Salt Lake C'oi. lily outside of Sait Lake City, W'hiad Ilf IIu--lei- hax-ni- j heart? I I Turn You lut, thal'a why I a! tu mu you tii ge il Marled ag.,:n, j e ke il-- j t i iii--- j t J. ( ll- -t l !is- - of III- - 111 i ill'll Ixiriligs or steel elded by Ihe ! h. S ll s heel i ii V ehipliti lit of II b lie. x il 11 I'll'! lirujili II ihg to. I tin Kings of lids bob! together ihom-l(e soil, In priiht.ibl teinelled. Hilt in the form of well i otnpiioto.l lirt ijnetles. sin h lis Du- - hull liilu is cii pat'Ie of pro lueing. Do scrap eoiiMi-- i 4 1)1 lilt-( i I IIIilteli.it Dull euli vvIDi as little lo-- s us j pig-- Iron, in i i: i wliieli was proiDec, formerly wotlii .7 a tmi is imw vv ?2t( - e ; Too, Too Much "You inu4 mil figlii. Haven't you been taught tu love your etiemle?" "Me. Is not my enemy he I my in-t- brother." Very - Is her I iD.ei fat? Pat? Why. man, instead of lucking a napkin under Ids chin tie I neks it between his chins. lei l!n I Ii j Care of Stutter y Purling. I I till. George. ay it again." "G g goodness! 1 s s said ii th Di t time." three t t times t tu f "D-- So " lien you tiit anything." Kiss cular- - Rlieumalic Aches and Pains It Coca go t'icin oar with a counter-irritaDistrcvring muscular soreness anil silliness genir-all- y respond pit asantly to gcx-- old Mus-- 1 rile. IXictors call it a it gets action and is not juvt a salve. Musterolc hri-- bring and pain to the surtace, and tints fixes naruraPelicf. You can feel how its warming action penetrates and stimulates blood circulation. lur do not stop with one application. Apply this soothing, cooling, healing ointment generously ro the affected area once every hour for five hours. Used by millions for over 20 years. Recommended Ly many doctors and nurses. Keep Musterolc handy ; jars and tubes. DV dont hunting yon lum'.-aro- "You nre not always win ii you go motoring." that lucky nt , 1 counter-irri-K-cau- sore-r.'.-- ss s Salted ? First Hunter And how cun you de ?" an Second You smell a faint odor oi peanuts on Ids breath. loot SOMETHING SWELL To Mothers Musterolc is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Childrens Musterolc. Life Savers Good Record tin last 22 (apt. Sam Goodman, acting us a life guard at III r Ix-g- AMERICAN FORK, UT. Holler at the state trainroom school lias hy A. W. Pulbegun ing ley and Sons, excavation contractors, vv ith Die breaking of ground. Actual building of the farm dormitory, first of five buildings to he eompeUd this summer, will begin like something swell in "Same tiere I won't take frumpy-lookindame, either. 1 a Lake Ilopatcong, N. .1., has tlie record of saving 312 lives In the winters tie follows tlie same profession In all the year- he lias in Florida. work he lia received only done one gift, a wrist watch. car. oul a - g si-e- Saving and Spending must extend With contemplation Slave In knowing when to spend As well as how to save. Our w.Kdoin Used to It Hosier Don't lie seared; the pup don't mean not Ii in' by it. lie always growls like that when lie's fed. Neighbor Oh, I'm not scared But he acts so much like my husband during his meals. UGLY GOITRE Goes in 4 Weeks Long and Short Mrs. Cayenne That new ii.it makes your face look short. Mrs. Fashionable That i very strange. It made my husband's face look long. Avoid Dangerous Operation! "Vomt four week home treatment endei my Mrs. J. M. Spencer, Attica, Ohio. goitre "Mv doctor sad operate But by your treatment I ended my goitre m 1 month. 3 ears ago. Goitre never reThat Mrs. V. A. Pease, Cre'ton, B. C. turned End Goitre Quick Comes High SALT LAKE CITY. The annual rv port for the Salt Luke diocese of p the Catholic cliurih reveals a of 17.323, in the state of Utah and part of Nevada. mem-liershi- at Heins have treated goitres at home this harmless ay. Many sev 4 goitres ended in weeks even though other methods had failed. J'g 44 pace dlustrated FREE BOOK by Battle Creek Goitre Specialist tells howr to end gome qmcJc. 200, 0r0 Lawyer And jiisi how had do you want t Ids divorce. Mose? Mose It only cost me a string o' fish to git married, suh. hut. please Gawd. Aild give a wtiaie to git rid of her. Exchange. people ea-y- iiidJLoAlsu Treatment and Advisory Co. Sanborn Bid.. Battle Cttek. Vich. j me FREE bonk Ho to En1 Goitre Quick S I without luaogef or OiernUcfl. rPiyucinfc . j l.e I j Cheer Leaders of Ihe dav Vui-lou-- l cuHlva'.e, he. ane He mav he lainli-irheera hv way of furiiishinis hia own r;daue. The Ilia ill II. ibli-he- -- i r Ul.iri-S..- y. rum. doll I you know Mind.iiig slows down Do uiDou of ! ran) oil hair gold mine la Mill in . d'.cd in 174'i. ugiiln-- t the MlKlOW, f-- j v.iio 'I !. pri.ml-- - r :iI prijs-- t prnvhl.iig no i.u nry U r SI, 1931 ak)M for A hy th priie.f Lm Us-- for, miiittdhin Dull Die ili-mi- tj e CHItORCM C Metal Turning rvi.ti'y n-vl- d.Mdtd eati.'d f.uln Fredcrn ksl.urg This prs-rihis father, Augustine Washington. pur based on November 2, 173.S, and fVre AuguMine Washing-to- . ttt--i(u- -. H'GAN. I y n hours lliehiiine y Voi.r vrA.gcVva IAV ATiVt-TONl- a I Wat. , lir Us -- if. llir "? any i Alt. Gilmore Ave Kali-b(TarteMoM' 1 'ily. Kali., t I pleat. He ay v ; "I lave iiet CeM. rtda fig Kyrtq with Alible and P.lly al Hteit live. Uhetevr lliey le .n,Diilt'l or iiliiv l la tlaio comfortable, buiq-yin a jiffy. I'beir woiMeriul rtaM.. proven toy pi a woiko. IM M Kill ( ihi -- - Do iin- - it pure v g ti.bi i loilo ii.a I ig ,y rup w inn h'ealti, longue, dulttict--- , . er! Inn, ll- -l etc.. !.ow Ih mad help. a i.li-- l s Weal 1 192T ratlin ira. ailmhg laaiilt iila i.f land muni). aim frit (lint It tlialti-- r i.f liatiohnl mim-ri- i M tl.Ht WkMiiet..n n( ill I.IiiI.j.Ib r rutiiiarallfrl) unknown In tint Amer liaa and lliat .liuira i.f bioiM-fklarljr reprrenlil aa tl.i l.irt lij.lui i u'lr, i j - Tl.r prim. r Il f l errln T ay. Tvliuw-.M- k'avl Irilitlr Wlun be )otitig'r cm,be f reiiul, up!. of HEART STIMULANT i ij. relnr yot Ihr (if Ii.r ililita W r riv. oiilldi flat lie thing, I tint P laliHx it Pappy, iiul, i.f Da ta la VC loUlul they uU t'lt-ttli- l a tl.il C u oil ( rilli'l f r d I, Ix-r- - pltk pile Wot k at,,) r 'l",nr. but Ihr p.,ri. Ilvhe Falhwr f Ilia at tta 'v fouinlallttiia aHi m ti l.nl fur a inn WtkrflfM Id t.Mt uju Ihr Ki::nal M liiitr f I In ('rut klnj by !! M Mlilliftiitl !ii irlihialuti H-yvaf I li 11. .tal,.. it f ia. I H- bull!' kill bait n t i.mj.li li J 1 'III ft l!tt Ifl'-iaiii.i.f Half. bald l du .rlii. III Ihr ttaki- bald Nallnii.il Alt nit.rit.l lalioti, IiIiIi turlgiti.iti-- I. I.! , j w l if Il UTL MM I uM-m- lh "Judge f.r yome-lf- , Vdi-lawyer. lie him he Wa a aloliar-- year iobu with Dm govern-- ; tiM-and giving hla eoDie valary ! Ida w.te for pin money. (! r fp.n.ii Wl'l - ( Iqti (1, ii 11 A la. I li t m amt a a dev ol Mi I kt Wit) M lt-- j f.lx-- it lf'ntit lpmi with to I ) ..r .i JuM hif Pir t.llll Hgir b ill I lrid k, lli!-1r.- j if i I'riiVir l.-- S AMI !' K. m- - .a t.Vif luufs-i'- ) u a M tl'.llnf r ILMO ICOTT WAT SON r i -- ,-- null under d l trliofovi, fiot. ('- - It li v Idea Worked! had a evTtk r Some a,J be Some kiiid ottielrt ine, I liiaiiy a lawyer walked iu wim knew the lloli Will, Tu the t.ewiilorr IfieJ apeuled Iu a) whether Ihe ihdl vlOual III qucMiuti Ms fHirruIJi wr I -- I. Jc Wdl IViyt Grand Larceny Friend Whom does your little son look like? Happy Father His eyes are nun?, the nose is my wife's, and his voice. I think, lie got frirj ur auto horn. W. N. U.. Salt Lake City, No. i |