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Show Tin: SAUNA Sl.N. SAUNA. ITAII Intermountain News Olie KITCHEN CABINET lii fly MM'IIIC WIIIU: lllNK ri w fv xir ( fur . m 4 olt Ual Mtltlt 111 M Of IS 10 or O 0 f AVOW I vi A( It iC M taOWatlUit rtf m mil befr J l olfrl.lli, fts-- l.-- d fiM0 f fil look orrili.f ..mril.ii.f lu- end mil of 1 1. ordinary, It. by t.Wftin dainty I Unfit in lu.un ll Tlr In Irr t tl - !! I- - - h-t- rt while, nothing n.nro gratifying u limn In Hr a nh friend On mu do marvelous thing with Jul I phkle. I ul ll.l n ll.o IhitVheal f of slice spread in I l.o t fan on n ltty sandwich II d only 1 u rnal.rt tui til. It tn i r gr t well. ron-llle- ut Kllro inch aired thin tUirt, wlrhr-- s ll.tl ll.to very on .Mii fail'll Mini .lr I1U spread mi It l.av rhreae. tllco in I ho tom or of round on llio tiny tlirr of whipped cream or lar a CMrStU u( bbo st m her-muil- Uxu. yyuvrtts. 1111. se-lio- u al dual choot m! ini with (Mm with rtyrnno or paprika. If fingrr length ttndwU lot tro U'iiI. place the at llio ni.J ami at tho round ollir rnd a spot tlo tiro of a quarter of finely shredded rnrrol. A Man'a Salad.. Prepare a half dm ro Imril cooked ofifit l.y rutting Inin halves and removing llio yolk niah Hi yolk with butter, add mustard, salt and rtymno and rrtill (1. halve of gg white. Arrmifio on lettue and rover with a tnur rrratn dressing or a mayonnaise with piety of amir cream added. If liked tlireildrd onion may It airlnklod over Hi lettuce before placing lb efifi Her la another that the like: Take one bead of lelture, throe or four green onion or a allro of imlon finely miured, thro or four alirot of tweet or aour pickle and one hard cooked egg. Use (ho lelture In netla on the salad dnte, tlireil the conrarr fart and mis with onions pickle and finely chopped egg. Serve with french dressing. 16. lj' .1 I'lH'ATKI.lAl, I HA The will make a of will (our of Kemn rT and l.-- d In Wyoming In May. editor of lh NAMI'A. IDA. Mcml-rrare and Game NatniM a group of 1 jilting io roii-iru- t Irt-u- l tearing - pond, nilh a tk of m.iklng the IM- - valley a heller pt.iee to II-- h and hunt. CALDW EU IDA -- Members of frolll he I h.lto'aT of io Wilor me pl.iniMig a he eaiiigilia of puMhllJ for western Malm. The liltllll pfoji-e- t w ill I. a containing Inforof lh I hia mation st .He. CitAIA II. EE. IT.-Sn- ow dept ha Weber river of it) on w.il- le-serving lh' Fa bo r rvolr are I Ida than for several seasons, neeordint Io d.iln gathered by a snow survey roocnily. lta'ATEUA IDA. A financial to lha roort eity routmll showed Boeatello's In dehtednosa hits lean redueed from $:i.'.ti a year ago to J.Vv'jjaa) at rry inu.li ran to finaiee the annual Rlak Io he held her la Ell rhamla-- r l..r Bill dial W Way, ml l.i- ler t aJoJUimt of .rf (Ur!. Every tiolra rtiji.) I Stilt WcaUrn Ntnpipw Union ) Cold Cream Long Popular Don't let this Jnr your cold crontn, Hut. believe It or not," timt girl Indispensable cosmetic of present-dafemininity bat been keeping the wrln klea from mllndy'a fare for more thim So any a Charles White 2,000 year bread, curator of the division of medicine at the National muaeuin In Wash In fit cm. What Is more, he says It la the second oldest of all pharmnmi And do you girls ticnl preparations. know who Invented" your old standby T To quote Curator Whltebread the fragrant unguent has changotj very little from the original formula for unguentum refrlgernns ceratnm. Invented and prescribed by the Homan physician Galen, sometimes known as the 'father of pharmacy.' Magazine. Niagara's Rival ' The Afrfcnn waterfall which Is by many said to rival Niagara, Is Victoria falls, on the Zumhezl river, In Central Africa. The chasm Is about one-hathe total width of Niagara, but more than twice its depth, varying from 250 feet at the right bank to 343 feet in the center. lf Great River of Brazil The Amazon river In the Interior of Brazil Is between one and two miles wide where It enters Brazil and grad wally increases In breadth to 50 miles at Its main mouth. Where It enters the sea the distance across the water from headland to headland Is fully 150 miles. Noted Western Character Poker Alice Tubbs was a picturesque character of the old West where she was a fixture In the mining camps of the gold rush era. She was born in Devonshire, England, and came to the United States with her family. She died February 27, 1930, In Rapid City, S. D. Source of Supply Mary was driving through the country with her daddy when, for the first time in her life, she spied some In a swamp. Oh, Daddy, she cried, shaking his arm, look at the hot-dogarden !" Parent's Magazine. Five-year-ol- d cat-tail- A DOCTOR'S ADVICE for Stubborn Bowels Jski Blual prrpar auh o J.r II. dt iprilrc. W WIV " .a host cos II. dkiu; YV I! aii f- -r CHEYENNE. saishiLhttMid ft s summer White f Rrvmkly lluUae un 1 1. abofe IMe eunlrj, lake, Is I he are forward, la slhlptlta might iqwnd that Breaidrnt vacation there this summer, the Ml, AUtee Telephone ate! Telegraph lei- cmpai.jr la planning a phone lircuii Into Hie territory. GRACE. IMA. IJO haa hero apa rummt-sb-m-rpropriated hjf the rotiuty H tatltit t( WHIN INTIRTAININO bd n ittii m 10 HOtJl Mill K NilOW IO I liOlHT I YMK I lta IIMIal t- .Uai b li taaitit iH I'ar Ol Oil TI4 k) Huy Itssdrrs s g Have Found It" The word Eureka is Greek, more correctly lleureka, meaning I have found it" It is an exclamation of delight, appropriate when a discovery has been made. Eureka is the motto of California, In allusion to the gold discovered there. I Matter of Proportion An alienist says Insanity Is decreas- ing. But it may only seem so because yon have to be crazier nowadays to be crazy. Racine Journal-Ne- e tmSi the Western Trail" A cowboy group, tho work of th famous woman sculptor, Sally James Famhjm, ra cently sihibitcd in New York. On By ELMO . pre- -c SCOTT WATSON current ii-i- h I walked down by FI. Jamra tal. M. Jamra boltal, o early on tc. He. Am la a lira the title row the which liothum, usually Ihliik a soup I worth suiting unions It ranie out of Tin I'an Alley, a delighted with the songs In that pl.iy. And tlie ni)irity of ihein had their orlfiln, not In New York, but In I he Sou Ih went they are sung which the cow hoys tim'd to sing! Ihl Incident Is another example of the Increasing Interest of Americana In the folklore of their country. That Interest has manifested Itself In vurl-ou- a forms In the popularity of the negro spirituals of the South, In the revival of singing of hallada of past genera ions (hallada which prove conclusively that, although many of them trace hack directly to the old English hallada, America had a native balladry) and In the wider dissemination of the legends of Paul Runyan. Pecos Bill and John Henry, myth heroes created In the fertile imaginations of the lumberjacks, the row hoys and ttie negro railroad workers, respectively. The play referred to above takes Its name from a song, Green Grow the IJIac" which has been sung In the Southwest for generations. Its origin la veiled In obscurity. One critic has ventured the opinion that It truces Its ancestry hack to Robert Burns poem, Green Grow the Rashes." If so, perhaps somewhere In the line of descent nmy be found a song popular with the Americnn soldiers during the Mexican war, "Green Grow the Hushes, O!" and there Is a legend that the Mexican name for Americans, grlngoes" Is a corruption of the words green grows." Another of the songs of this play which is said to have been an old favorite In the Southwest, lienee was well known In Oklahoma, the native state of I.ynn Riggs, author of the play, Is My Name Is Sam Hall. There Is no doubt about the origin of this song for it comes from London where it was a cellar ditty. In ISIS W. G. Ross, a Scotch low comedian, was singing in Cider Cellars in Malden Lane, Covent Gardens, (tho original, Incidentally, of Back Kitchen in and My name Is Sam Hall, was one of his hit s." ltow did this song find its way to the old Indian territory? Did some adventurous Cockney carry it there or did some disgraced younger son. who could not live in England and who had lied to the American frontier where no questions were asked about a man's past, first sing it along the hanks of the Canadian or the Cimarron? No one knows! But the cowboys once vsang it on the Oklahoma range and it Is their version, slightly changed from the original English version, which is being sung on Broadway today. In reality, though, this is not so unusual for an examination of the collection of old cowboy songs, made by John A. Lomax of Texas several years ago, will show that many of the favorite among the cowboys, especially those of the more sentimental type (and the cowboy was strong for the Bong which dripped with sentimentality!) closely resemble some of the old English ballads and probably trace Some typical directly from them. one, given In the Lomax collection, are those which hear the titles Bonnie Black Bess," Fair Fannie Moore." "Her White Bosom Bare" and Young Charlotte. More than that. Investigators of this type of folk song have revealed the fact that zzny of the best known I d hospi- day, I had often aniued myw-lby trying to wriie verm and one dull winter d.i.v In rump, to while away the time. i I begun writing a which could ho Kung to the tune of 'The Dying I made It a dying Girl's loimetit.' ranger or rowlmy Instead of n dying girl and had the ixne In Tom Sherman's barroom Instead of a hospital. Tom Sherman was a tinted character In the old rattle trail days, a big s! rapping fellow six feet six or six t seven tall, who first ran a dance hail and saloon In Great Bend in IS73 and then moved to I bulge City where lie ran the same sort of place until some time In the 'S0. All of the cowboys who came up from Texas knew Tom Sherman. After I had finished the new words I sang It to the hoys In our outfit. They liked It and began singing it. It became popular with the boys In other outfits who heard It after we had taken our herd to market In Wichita the next spring and from that time on I heard It sung everywhere on the range and trail." So The Cowboys lament" Is another example of a favorite cowboy song which was an adaptation of an earlier ballad. Mr. Maynard's version, written In 1S7C and thus antedating other versions by five and possibly ten years, had for Its first verse the following: f hm-u- i - songs are nothing more than iidaptatioiiN of wiitimchtal ballads of an earlier day. This Is true of one of the most famous of them all a song variously known us The Dying Cowboy," The Cowboy's Lament" and "The lame I'ralrle," a sung of In numerable verses and of many vHrl' tious both as to the wording of the different stanzas and the chorus which follows each stanza. In practically all versions (he first stanza Is the same: cowboy 'oh. bury me not on th lone prairie" Three words rame low and mournfully Prom the pall'd lips of a youth who lay On hi dying hed at the close of day. By making allowance for much "local color" it Is easy to see how The Ione Prulrle" song was adapted from the The Ocean Burial," words by song, W, H. Saunders, music by G. N. Allen, which appears In The Nightingale," a hook of songs for Juvenile Classes, Piddle Schools and Seminaries," compiled by W. O. and II. S. Perkins and published by Ifitson In 1S00. The first verse of "The Ocean Burial" tolls how: " 'O, bury me not In the deep, deep sea The words came low and mournfully From the pallid lips of a outh who lay his cabin couch at close of day. and Its other numerous verses describe the deathbed scene minutely and with a wealth of detail, only, of course, the scenes are laid on the "deep, deep sea Instead of the lone On pralrie-e-e.- " Nearly ns famous a cowboy song ns The Lone Prairie" is another also variously called The Cowboy's Lament and The Dying Cowboy," which lias this chorus : oh. beat the drum slowly and play life lowly. I'lay the Dead March as you carry me along; Take me to the churchyard and lay the sod o'er me For I'm a young cowboy, I know I've done wrong.'' tho Different authorities on cowboy songs and other native American ballads credit the authorship of this song to various persons and the usual statement Is that it appeared on the ranges in the early eighties." Although it is difficult to determine the authorship of a ballad, since such a song usually represents the contribution of a succession of amateur bards rather than the work of a single poet, it is my belief that, as nearly as the authorship of "The Cowboy's Lament" can he determined, credit for it belongs to the late F. H. Maynard of Colorado Springs. Colo., an cowboy. Here is his story as he told v it to me several years ago : During the winter of 1S7C I was working for a Grimes outfit which had started north with a trail herd from Matagorda Bay, Texas. We were wintering the herd on the Salt Fork of the Arkansas river on the border of Kansas and Indian territory, waiting for the spring market to open at Wichita. , One of the favorite songs of the la those days was called cowboys The Dying Girls Lament,' the story of a girl who had been betrayed by her lover and who lay dying io a hospital. I don't remember all of the song but it began something like this: old-tim- e As I rode down barroom by Tom Sherman's barroom o early one day. There I espied a handsome young ranger AH wrapped In white linen, a cold as the clay. "I see by your outfit that you're a ranger " The words that he said as I went riding by, 'Come, sit down beside me, and hear my sad story, I'm shot through the breast and know I must die." By Tom Sherman' CHOIIUS: Then muffle the drums and play the dead march; play the dead march as I'm carried along; Take me to the churchyard and lay the sod o'er me. I'm a young ranger and know I've done wrong. The version of this song, ns given in launnxs collection and as it is often reprinted, starts out: As I walked out In the streets of Laredo, As I walked out in Laredo one day, I spied a poor cowboy wrapped up in wnite linen. Wrapped up in white linen as cold as the clay. 'O, beat the drum slowly and play the fife lowly, play the Dead March as you carry me along; Take me to the green valley, there lay the sod o'er me, For I'm a young cowboy and I know I've done wrong. I see by your outfit that you are a cowboy," These words he did say as I boldly stepped by. Come sit down beside me and hear my sad story; I was shot In the breast and I know I must die." From which it will be seen that In In which the fame of this poor cowboy who done wrong" has spread the scene of his untimely demise has been changed to Laredo. Texas. But before it is too late, I want to register this footnote to history and say that it took place In Dodge City, Kan.! I know, because the man who killed him (in a song) told me so! the years (. 1131. Wootora Kcwspapar Union. lit. NAMI'A. IDA. 150 men hava employed by Hie Oregon Short the work of Lite railroad 51 miles of Ihe track on Its right of way between Ibis city and G Jenna Ferry. MORON I, I T. Citizens have a haul corps to fight lh coddling moth and lo preserve apples and oilier fruit frotu destruction. TOOELE, FT. An extensive war Marled by the farmers of has Tooele county for the eradication of ground squirrels. The pocket gopher campaign started early In M a reli has been stirci ssful. BKOYo, FT. Adoption of a uniform wage scale for strawberry juekrrs was agreed uin by unanimous notion of ropresontailvc growers of Irovo I.ouch at meeting hold recently at Orem. FARMINGTON, FT. The dales for the Davis county farm huronti day and fair were set as August 25 and 2 at a meeting of Davia county farm bureau officers. lKOYti, FT. Strong condemnation of any increases in tills years lax levy ill lrovo City and sehool district was voiced in a set of resolutions mlopted by the members of the Irovo real estate hoard at a recent meeting. OGDEN, FT. The Uth Ward L. D. S. chapel at Adams avenue and Thirty-eight- h between Thirly-sevenlstreets, erected at a eost of $53,000 was damaged to the estimated amount of $20,000 by a fire. SFANISII FORK, FT. At a meeting of the Nebo district hoard of education members voted to bond the district for $250,000 in order to carry out a building program. The hoard will conduct nu educational campaign for the Informing of the public as to the need of the expansion. MONROE, FT. For each quart of flies Monroe residents catch and bring to the city council in April, fifty cents will he paid. In May the price is to he 25 cents per quart.. Tliis announcement was made with the order of ci!y officials to dean up yards, ditches and corrals. TONOIAH, NEV. V now ore body 30 feet wide has been struck on the Gold Dome mine, miles south of Battle Mountain. The new ore was opened on the 250 foot level and will he developed. MOSCOW, 1I)A. Concentrates to the amount of 31,701 tons were proy duced by the Ilocla Mining operating in the Coeur dAlene 'district in northern Idaho, the past had a year. These concentrates value of $1,700,70!). IDAHO FALLS, IDA. Declaring that Idaho needs a greater outlet for her potato crop if the state is to continue in the market, the Idaho Potato Dealers association decided to file a freight rate complaint with the interstate commerce commission and the Idaho public utilities commission. Reduction on all potato shipments to territory east of Chicago will he asked. "Drink at haM all glaw-t-of water daily preferably hefor meal Eat hulkhr foods, auU a vegetable, fruits and roar bread Im a mild laxative M needed. Thai L Dr. OvldweR'a adrir ta II people with !uMiru bwel aiwclallred on Ihe bowels; treated thousand for ronMlpiiUofl and It h ued over HI The and over In bla practice bn become the world's Hipular laxative! "Fyrup IVpln," a it la Bow culled, was tested by more than 47 year of practice. e n preM-rlptlo- mt Today you cun g.-- t Dr. Caldwell's h'jrup I'epsln at any drugstore In America. It U ulway the same; nude exactly according to the original prescription, from laxative herbs, pure jh j.sIu ntid other viilunhlo Ingredients. Nothing In It to harm even a baby. It doe not grljs-- , sicken or cau-- e any discomfort. But It move tlie bowel; It get rid of all the souring waste w lih h clogs the sjsleiu: make you bilious, headachy, gas,y, bloated, weak, half sick. A dclor should know what I lxst for tho bowel. Fyrup l'epsln I a famous doctor' choice of a safe, pleasant, effective laxative men, women, olJer folk, buble and children. fr Da. IV. B. CviDwm'i SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's ramify Laxative ft-- r la-e- com-,pan- Rooster "Firebug Brunswick (Maine) farmer ba a firebug on his farm In the form of a rooster. He reports that while on Ihe way to the burn be smoked a cigarette and placed the lighted end on a well curb entering the barn. A moment Inter the rooster the barti with the cigarette, st ill burning. In his beak. The farmer shouted, and ns (he rooster turned and ran It dropped (he clpi-relt- e Into ehaff, which hurst Into flames. The blaze was stamped out before It had spread far. A e COUGHS 4 4 I f First dose soothes In-- -- Relief GUAR- AM TEED. mtantlt. , lot J Boscliees At all Syrup druggists Welcome Prohibition Friend Of the two apartments we looked at the other one srtmed much the better. Why did you choose this one? In this one Young Bride they forbid all cooking. Boston Transcript. Some youthful acting the fool" docs no harm. Indeed, It may be necessary to ripen judgment. PILES File sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Iiles, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pi!e Ointment Q. It. (Quick Relief) Tile Ointment is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long afflicted, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this rile ointment on the market for sale, it was put to the acid test in both mild and severe cases, never failing to produce wonderful results. If you are troubled with piles, do not experiment Get Q. It. Pile Ointment If your druggist does not carry it In stock, fill out the blank below and mail It to a R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah OGDEN, FT. A lady, recently arrested by the police, has brought suit for damages totalling- - $15,000, for alleged loss occasioned by the arrest. Q. R. Co, Gentlemen : Inclosed find $1.00 P. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. R. Bile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to IDA. About G500 CALDWELL automobile licenses have been issued in Canyon county this year. A reduction of licenses as com pared with last year is shown. SALT LAKE CIY, FT. An increase of $9.532.10 In total resources of all 12 hanks of Salt Lake City is noted in the comparative statement of 1930 and 1931. Name P. 0. Address On conditions that if I am not satisfied with results obtained, I am to receive money back upon returning tube to your |