Show THE OGDEN SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 25 1928 BABIES HUSKY Ml ALL Many Mothers Take Babies to QUIET STANDARD-EXAMINE- R The city accepted the gif and mi)ved it from her home near Fifteenth street to the lot on Kinth street where the branch fire sta tion ia located and built over it a substantial frame cover And all thlese years Mrs Shaw has been There has kiiown as the donor bden no mention of anyone else A little over a year ago a com mittee from me uaugniers oi me bneers came before the city com missioners and according to the papers of that date said in effect: The city owns the Goodyear can- in We want it Give it to us" And it was done Only a few months ago a second committee from the same organiza tion came before the present city commission and requested that the expense of moving the city bear the cabin f oo to to the new Joea- Him on Tabernacle BOuare And s done ihtButhasnowbeencomes a Salt Lake pa matter par and speaking of this new c cites the following entirety cdunt: "The Miles Goodyear cab in came into the possession of Mrs Mlnorva Shaw who nresented it td the Daughters of the Pioneers The women presented it to the city in 1915 provided a suitable plactwks found for it butAhe city havirjg failed to do this the women have regained possession of the Clinic Well-Infa- nt are the 20 odd mothers and their babies who attended the1 Ogden City well-infaclime last Wednesday- in khe H ERE Hicks is son Frederick of the Mr at hall Mrs Insert and Fred Hicks 2S83 Wall avenue 11c is'lG mouths right city old and weighs 21 pounds and three ounces Insert at the left is Bean Paul son of Mr and Mrs J J Paul 514 anyon road He is liy2 months old and weighs 19' pounds Frederick ducked his head just as the camera snapped 'him - nt Especially Invites Young Mother's With First Child Clinic You m£y hear some lusty crying: hut you will see some husky babies if you visit the Ogden city well-Infaclinic Wednesday morning between 10 and 11 o'clock in the Ozden citv hall The clime under the direction of the public health and social serv-D ice department of the Thomas Dee Memorial' hospital has been oneratinss for more than 10 years Dr K jr Smith baby ppecialift anfJh MiRailticille Williams puper visor of the public health depart ment of the hospital are in charge nt KXTKV TiIMITED The clinic which is free treats and gives advice only to well ba bies No Information on the treat ment of sick infants ii jriven but the mothers are advised to consult their family doctor Youngsters up to 6 yars of age are admitted to the clinic They atid measured and the cdbin" - So-call- — —— We desire to thank through the columns of this paper our many friends who so kindly assisted ue during the short illness and death of our beloved husband father son and' brother Jacob Spackman In a special manner we desire to thank the North Ogden bishopric the singers and speakers the boys of the S P blacksmith department also those who furnished the many 'beautiful floral tributes and allowed use of their cars atthe funeral services That you may be also remembered in your time of trouble is our desire Mrs Otto Spackman and Family The Spackman Family MANY CORN TSES Just a few uses for corn and its stalk other than eating: From corn come cornstarch corn sirup corn sugar dextrin" cooking oils stock food nnd TnintS and varnish solvents Prom the f?talk ome wall board paper silk shirts and stocki ings - s' 4 - V !7 t r s - V s s s' ss in V - -- y v' in ""n mini - -- - -- f i Standard-Examine- r: Coming in from Five Bo4nts one can not help but see thej cabin of Miles Goodyear under its canopy on the west side of Tabernacle square It is not the purpose in this communication to say anything further in criticism of a previous city commission in presenting this relic of pioneer days to the Daughters of the Pioneers or to question the propriety of the action of present city commission in spending city money to move public property to Let us consider private ground that as an accomplished fact It is now another interesting incident in the long history of the cabin MEMORIAL MUSEUM But the writer would like to call attention to the splendid suggestion made some weeks ago by E A Battel that the memory and achievements of John Mose Browning Ogden's famous inventor could be best perpetuated by erecting on the city hall square a buildinp: to be known as the Browning Memorial Museum r Such a building need not be as large as the Carnegie Public library but Bhould be fireproof In it should be displayed models of all the inventions by Mr Brown-in- ? and his associates In addition to the above there should be permanent displays of the geologic aryl mineral resources of Utah and samples of all those products agricultural and manufactured that Utah makes and which 'make Utah' In such a building publicly owned and centrally located a collection of pioneer relics would Be fvisited by thousands of local peo ple and would attract tourists - ' ' ' v ry'W '' 'J ' -- j Bemand !ft' a "ITW" "' 5 X v v's 1 Aft Jth' The walls of such a building would offer convenient space in which to display paintings by Utah should artists of which the city ' own a collection If a building of this kind were5 bvilt Jby the city or presented to the city as a memorial of the great inventor the city would without doubt make liberal provision for its perpetual maintenance as it has in the case of the library donated by Andrew Carneglev COLLECTION'S OF CURIOS Moreover there are now in the hands of numerous j Ogden citizens small collections jof curioa or! workjs of art which fn the course of time would find their way into this public collection n For Instance Don Maguire mineralogist ts the owner of a very notable collection" 6f rare s minerals of ancient and would no other curios which-hdoubt tak pleasure in loaning to a public museum C- - W Hadley has spent a life time in collecting rare boioks and other antiques which would be a valuable addition to a pufelic ma seum If all oyr local treasures Include ing the Goodyear cabin could be assembled in our central park theii educational values would supple merit the wrork of the publie library and would become not only an attraction to tourists but ol lasting benefit to the pupila In the public schools Mr Battel's idea isjone that deserves to be realized and some day it wilj be realized This city ha? definitely started on a policy of attracting tourists and" tourists are slow to 'come and prompt to leav£: if there is nothing worth while to Well-know- fire-arm- The cabin la perhaps the first one built in Salt Lake City but it is not as old as the Goodyear cabin Log cjibin were probably built and occupied by white men in Utah as early as l82 4 when Jim Bridger's party spent the winter In Cache valley They no doubt built a cabin to live in which Would be promptly urned by the Indians as soon as the whites left But the! next year other parties of American trappers from St Louis came into the Utah country and epme of them stayed through the winter That meant more cab-An- d not a year passed ins built fromi 1824 up to 1847 that did not see some group of white men spending the winter in the Great Salt lake (valley ONr SPAN I SIX TRAIL explains why the first set Tht tlers (in Cache valley found the re mains of k cabin and of a black- smithing outfit on Blacksmith Fork That explains why nearly every! county In Utah has its leg end ff "lost cabins" and old Spanish mines For Utah had within its boundaries about 400 miles of the !"Dld Spanish trail" and the Spaniards are good prospectors Moreover about 1828 General Ashley built a fort on Utah lake at a point supposed to be near the Later it present city of Provo J l -- : -4 - yr- Vl - v v The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for is lonly cm pain But it's: just as important to know genuine Bayer Aspirin The name Bayer is on every tablet and on the box H it says Bayer it's genuine and if it doesn't it is not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin" So are colds and the pain that goes with them even neuralgia neuritis and rheumatism promptly relieved' Get Bayer— at any drugstore— that-ther- with proven directions Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin it does NOT affect the heart Aiplrln U tit tride mark of i cas-car- Byer Manufacture of MonoaceUcacldeater cf Ealieyllcacid r ws libattdoneci and of cou se de strbyed by thej Indians Jjet us consider another iristajice Fort Uintah was a trading post on th§ Duchesne river near Use pres cut town of White Rocks infUintah county Fremont stopped there while on his return from Cailfor Whitman vifited it nia in 1844 on his famous winter ridfe from Oregon to Washington No there were many cabins In Utah before the pioneers Of 1847 caine Miles Goodyear's cabin th4 oldest survivor But it was not tna first isettner is tnat one in Salt Lake City the first 1IISTOHY KXCITING One thing that makes thfe study of i history so exciting is the fact thdt it Will not stand still Just as lyou think that you can pepend onia storv like that one about Gebrge Washington and the hatch along cornf s some hard-haile- d ttj inVesticator with a bunch tal rea o filths and UDsets the whole parr ' i beans t is ' so 'just 1 about the repent Of course history 6f thif cabin th writier like W'ill Rogeris does nof know anything about ttila except W'hat he reads in the papers : 1 ty-fou- ar s EGG COSTS VARY collected by F L Mor Figures d But according to the accounts rison during tne past live years from time to time In the showed that the cost to 23 typical Mrs Minerva Shaw of Mound fairms in Medina county Ohio for ' J Fort presented the Goodyear cabin pnonunns trgga varied from 19 tojthe city some twelve years ago cej hts a dozen to 63 pub-lislle- pa-De- Ii " I - iis 'I I' 1 our Opp ortuniw t j" : t to Invest in a mQ UTAH INSTITUlTIoiN ''!' ' s i THE PIONEER FIB CORPORA- TION makers of the moving picture entitled THE EXODUS bich was produced almost wholly in and around Salt Lake soon will have this masterpiece distribution Fin ready for world-wid- e ishing touches are being given the pic- ture at Hollywood Its trst showing is planned for Salt Lake drfring the latter part of December Othersuper-picture- s are to be inade in a magnificent studio site in Sugar- planned for a twelve-acre house - ! THE EXODUSa thrilling storv of ns I super-productio- ns TITLE GK0&S EARNINGS ' t- Covered Wag-oWay Down East 3000000 3500000 Four Horsemen 450000 Birth of a Nation King of Kings Wc 11 wofnen that ThcHooyer reus to g vc proof f Won't you have a comparative test of The Hoover moves more dirt per riiinut than against any othlr cleaner or clean 'any other cleaner We like to have ers ? Wc leave he decision to you them challenge that fat-- proved But wd know th it "Positive Agitaby a series of exact scientific tests tion" will do wl at it always docs It gives us an opportunity to com—make a: showing that no other pare Hoover cleaning with that of other cleaners cleaning methoCLcan approach— re J Our records show thajt eighty-fiv- e move hi ore dirt and do it more quickl)! and easily than any other per cent oi such compafativi tests sale of aHov'er There method Telephone when you want result in the is only one explanation of such a us to cpme unmisThe You pan get a hoover for no more Hoover gives showing than the cost of an ordi- taKauie prooi mat iq does remove more 'dirty nary vacuum cleaner— For genuine Hoover Service at reasonable per minute than other Only 5625 down balance prices see the Factory machines Branch Service Station monthly Liberal al low- Won't you challenee ancc tor your old cleanen — 5000000 $5000000 THE PIONEER FILM CORPORATION has ijccn financed by outside capital Opportunity now isj given Utahns to own stock in this very promising concern: Stock may-bhad it $55 per unit being one share of preferred at $50 per share par together with jfive shares of common at 1 per share iar total $5&t i COUPON— ! PIONEER FILM CORPORATION Continental Bank Bldg Salt lake City Utah: I am Interested in the securities offered by your corporation Please send further details 317-32- 0 Name Address i bark on the logs of this particular ' ' ! ' f state of Utah" Wise Buyers Read Classified Ad First in The Everything for the Home in " That is a eaxeless use of words — If t it weeks-jon-eml- super-productio- But whether Miles Goodyear'i cabin is to rest on public ground or private we ought to quit speaking of Miles as "an old trapper" He was not old Ho was young SOLD HALF OF COUNTY When he put over the first bifji real estate deal in the state of Utah and sold thi west half of Weber county to Captain James Brown for $3000 gold coin in hand paid he wa only 29 yenfl old and jwhen he died in the first rush to the gold diggings in Ctt4 lornla he was oni 31 and eft in that generation of long he ir and full beards 31 yr ir- - was net con sidered did Moreover Miles did not confin" An himself to trapping above he was a good real statij estatej salesman Also he was a trader H fur buyer a guide for emigrants! and above all a stockgrower and! a farmer There is no doubt but he expe rimented with corn wheat oat and other seeds with varying suc cess Iti was probably as a result of his experience that his friend Jim Bridger made his famous of fer to Brisham Younjc to pay a Koodiy stm for the first bushel of corn raised in the Great Salt lake valley If he were living today in his establishment down there on the? Weber river near Twenty-eight- h street he vvould be called a ranch er for it is in the record that he turned over to Brown quite a number of horses a herd of work oxen and much cows and over 100 Mexican goats which he had trail eu In probably from southern California NOT "OLD POST'' And it Is hardly proper to speak of Goodyear's place as "an old trading post" It was not old It had been in existence perhaps four years certainly not over fitfe years and It had probably been added to from year to year Even in th Ogden of today a house buil five years is not considered old The pf-bo- you don't feel the netsd of any ai l j of any sort for So tho only habit you get! from caacaraiis that of natviral'andi normal regularity How different from things ctae must usua ly repeat on the morrow! Cascarn is the'ideul western lore and romance graphically portraying the marh from Missouri to Utah which was led by Bnglfam ypung is m a class with the COVERED WAGON ahel other high-typ- e I Eaniings of some of the arc shown as follows: see cabin may not have been dry yet when it was sold to Brown Also we ought to be careful about setting up the claim that the Goodyear cabin is "the first cabin built by: a white Irian" or that it is "the first house occupied by a white man" in the state of Utah There is no of that ' In fact the to the contrary all proof ii In Skit Lake City on the tab ernacle grounds is a cabin very old and they hae' been selling postcards with pictures of it and a printed description proclaiming it to be "the first house built In thfc " ''' -- way and like the On wholesale hardquotations ware "subject to change without notice" Let us try to get this one stjraiKht If Mrs Shaw was dissatisfied with the handling of her gift by the city and wanted it turned buck so that she could j?ive it to st meone else that sounds reasonable Her wishes are certainly rn-- ti led to consideration as she appears to have been the only one with the vision to appreciate the value of this relic of the old days and more than 30 years ago rescued it from beinK reduced to But that does hot k ndling wood o: plain why the city should spend public money moving the cabin to the Tabernacle square It occurs to the writer that some or reporter got his wires crossed hid his finders crossed when ho wtote the Salt Lake story Any-hfcthe fact is that we all expect tdo much from the city commis sioners We are always asking for another street thingson generally our corner Ten months liiht irt the year! we ask for things and wte snend two months kicking aiout the taxes FRANCHISE GIVEN Someone objects to a $12000 s public comfort station on someone corner and the city commission nas it torn out then comes the Amer lean Legionl and has the plumbing frlom the comforj station aonaicu td equip the new chateau on Twen street And all kinds of pleasant man Pfred gentlemen from the further eilt dron In on us and go awav with franchises in their rhekets for gas or electric lights or what have you loose Buck Anderson ought to declare aj closed season on city commis-sioneruntil the end of the year For what will they do if the Ladies' Aid society of the Methodist church droDs in on them with a demand fdr the windows out of the city hall to put Into the new church? O A KENNEDY 50-ve- f TX- - laxative and the familiar little randy Casjaret Is doubtless its ideal Children beg fdr these jtasty form tablets find many men and wpmpu woul-it think of taking A N V Tli IN'O iclse for the purpose And HVFRf drugstore has them v 1 - - laxative that conies to ifiind Take one the druggist can assure you is made with CA SCAB At Just as flectivo an using force and it's Indeed it good for the system a helps make good blood For is nothing but the bark of a tree The Indians chew this bark and live to an old age without a day's sickness What happens when you cascar-ix- e the bowels? They will usually function well for SEVEKAL DAYS One more dose — no larger and perhaps smaller than the first — and thp bowels' function of their own tinu" I'ntil ""T'l f"f st!H w ' Editor - i Pioneer Relics Could Be Shown On Display And Paintings By Utah Artists Might Adorn Walls of Building Curios And Works of Art Could Be Collected Urges Writer - BARKER TO BE KIMBALL AIDE CARD OF THANKS — Museum Is Suggested As Browning Memorial w succeed him Mr Barfeer is at present secre tary to President Georpre Thomasis ofa the University of Utah He son of the late F E Barker who was reporter in the Third district court in Salt Lake for years Mr Barlow was elected to the city bench at the general election held early this month a way of overcoming the tendency to constipation And hero is how you can PROVE it The next time your bowels need any assistance don't tajse the first a ed When gimon Barlow reporter in Judge James N Kimball's division of the Second district court takes his place on the bench of the Og den city court next year F G Barker of Salt Lake will probably mm mere lt SUBJECT TO CHANGE that is just the way withOf it and esp?(And hereSo inmuch Utah is written in It is thus pos to determine whether the babies' weight fend age correspond and determine whether their gain in weight Is normal Proper' Information on diet hab Its and car© and suggestions for the correction of defects are given by those in charge BOYS FOREMOST TVia clinic caters esneciallv to vourig mothers who have rot had the-- experience- of "raising a baby previously About 100 infanta are handled each month There are always 20 more boys during each month than girls Among the Eirls Betty is the most common name by all odds comforters or pacifiers are taboo Mothers also are re minded that advice from mothers mothers-in-laand neighbors con ia not al rerning the cam of baby r best of the ways Bible Constipation - are-weighe- d results tabulated ABOUT J I ' What a Doctor Knows U I L Lil: — ii " oli- - landard-Examine- r 2 |