| Show THE OGDEN SUNDAY MORNING JULY 22 1934 SPIDERS KILLED Brigham Young's Picnic Recalled By Subscriber FOG AtlON BY Cyanide Dust Alsd Urged As Way To Rid Home Outing Was Marred By v of Pest News of Johnson's By! J B MARSH Army Moving V ' V-!! jMuch comment 4s being made and of be distinction the has some "Ogden instances much lann has iq I v wca Lauc4 uus tu uie presence Ol ing the home of a pioneer who at0 J Black Widow ' sniders on nremises tended the first large celebration 1857 ten in 'just of Pioneer day and in homes in this citjy While there is apparently an epidemic of years after the first Mormons setthese creatures at the prqsent time tled in this valley r Mrs Ada Burk Earl 77 years old v they have always been with us in of John H Earl of 2755 Washwife greater or lesser numbers It is believed that the past mild winter ington avenue was just a little baby failed to destroy "many of the spid in long dresses at that first big celers that hibernate out-- oi -- doors dur ebration which was held at Bright ing the winter months thus caus- on in the head of BigMrCottonwood land Mrs Her parents ing greater numbers this year than canyon Allen Burk were issued a written usual The Black Widow spider is not invitation bvr Brieham Young td or in attend the July 24 picnic That in necessarily more aggressive— cunea to attack humans any more vitation is still in her possession the than many! other species pt spiders framed for safekeeping is With la lock of found in jthls region They will invitation under glass seldom ever attack or fcita a person her hair and the hair of her sister unless disturbed and then usually ! EUa who was two years old at the i onlTwhen thev have a denosit or time Mrs Earl pioneered in Davis sac of eggs which they are attempt county in Arizona in old Mexico ing to protect i in Fielding Utah rpr severa and BITE POISONOUS is? to the years past she has resided In Og no question as There bite of the female being dangerously den and has been a constant read and subscriber to The Ogden poisonous The male of the species er is not J known to bite man The Standard-Examin- er MRS ADA BURK EARL BORN IN FARMINGTON female may be identified by her jet She tells her story of the early black shiny body which is marked on the lower side of the abdomen days as follows: ed for five years" My parents died by! a characteristic brighJ orange T was born May 28 1857" in i red markinsr resembling: an hour Farmlngton Davis countyj My f ath ABUNDANCE OF GAME i glass or two small triangles joined er was Allen Burk and my mother route through southern Utah "En at the apex They do not spin a was Emily Smith Burk They were we camped at Asa creek on the symmetrical well formed web as do one of the three first families to Sevier river and went back Into the most of the garden spiders Tneir smma navia eountv bv order of for wild game and fish mountains web Is usually an irregulf r tangle Brigham Young They settled there There were lots of berries and of threads spun in darK corners and j ia 1843 My mother was a sister to trout and other chickens deer across Dasemenx winaows Doin in- Smith famous In Utjah's early game We used to preserve the wild siae ana ouisiae ine nouse unaer history fruits shrubbery and about water taps and "Lot Smith was the man sent to in! moist places They usually seek "While crossing Buckskin moun stop Johnston's army front coming tain between atare insects because Kanab and Lee's fer damp places Utah and this was accomplished was driving the wagon because tracted there for moisture! and be- to I ry by burmng oi ine suppiy trains all' the men were needed to herd come entangled in the weps which delayed the army for about the cattle and keep them from straywoven The webs are not closely tne tivu war was on i u The road was terrible with ct compact Uke orderd tQ take 4 few men ing broken ledges two and three feet the telegraph lines across are very tough though thinly woven and guard and off that the wheels had to he did It successful straight Wyoming over and may be identified by this tough- ly Suddenly I heard a sharp drop ' ness It is difficult to break all of crack and a wagon tire rolled down "It was while we were camped at the gulch I stopped the wagon and the web loose from its fastenings enjoying that July: 24 called to the men They found the Brighton TThe bite of the Black Widow in 1857 that a messenger iron tire and they had to take it celebration E from Henry spider Quoting to tell President back to Kanab fifty miles away to on horseback came Ewing entomologist U Sj depart was on its get a blacksmith to the that army Young ment of agriculture "is followed by repair it across the Utah It toj way plains white small a Another time when we had to sharp pain and at that happy camp among the camp on the desert miles from any spot soon appears surrounding each was cool mountain pines that Brigham water my pet heifer had a little an puncture point Within half hour aching pains arise jin other made plans to resist the invasion calf in the! night We had to move "Lot Smith had a farm along the on the next day 12 miles to the parts of the body followed by Weber river near Morgan and an- next water at House Rock spring Later some cramped" breathing farm at Farmlngton The next morning that young cow other inlarge become fever may develop pains tense and delirium ensue) Recov- south of where the courthouse is came in with the new-bor- n calf ery is nearly always within two now" He had eight wives! altogether having found her way to our camp weeks Fatal cases affecting man and four of them lived at Farming throught the desert are rare The Black Widows have ton most of the time Those four "After five years at Springville Lydia McBride Smith J ane we went to Diaz Chihuahua Mexgreatly enlarged poison sacs and the were Laura Burdick ico and stayed there 17 years until vemon they Inject i is more potent Walker Smith Smith Julia Smith Smith The oth- 1902 when we went to Fielding than that of a rattlesnakej er wives-werMary Gaim Smith Utah Later we came to Ogden DUSTING KILLS PEST Diantha Mortenson Smith Alice Down in Mexico the people call By careful inspection aid dust- Baugh Smith who is now living in ed corners my husband Juan El Carpintera with j calcium ing In dark 80 and Alice! Richards because he was a Ogden aged "A" outside carpenter He was dust premises Smith aged 85 who lives at Fieldcyanide the of the village at one presidente cleared of Where be this pest may time a position something like our they are infesting basements It Is ing KILLED BY INDIANS Justice of the peace We had many well to fumigate the inside premises "Lot Smith served on a jnission in friends among the Mexican people with hydro cyanic acid ga$ as this ' gas will penetrate into all cracks England and there he met Alice and we became Mexican citizens "There was lots of wild game in and crevice where they may hide Baugh whom he married in 1872 came to Utah Later he Arizona and in Mexico deer bear It Is well to discourage their pres- - after she at Sunset and Moenkopi elk and wild turkeys were plenti- ence bv a continued and nersistent pioneered destruction of their' webs jand egg Arizona- - and then at Diaz Mexico ui sacs as they dislike betas? disturbed He was killed by an Indiin at the "My sister Cecelia Burk married Do not take chances unnecessarily latter place in 1892 and jburied at Lyman s Hamblin a son of Jacob When handling the spider or de- Tuba City Ariz In 1902 his remains Ilamblin the famous scout and He was Indian interpreter of southern Utah stroying their webs use a broom or were brought to Farmington a! 62 He was died when he great piT f Another of my sisters Martha Burk long stick and wear gloves J married Fred Hamblin L oneer a brother to 'We had to work hard in the Jacob Both of these sisters are still early days in Davis county to clear hvlng Moose we have had several children the land and plant and fl$ht grass- Those living are uonn Alien ian hoppers and then harvest Vnv and thresh the grain remember Providence Utah Perry J Earl the first railroad train thatcame Oakland California: Mrs Ada lone — BOISE July 21—(UP) Local to Farmington in 1870 ft The old Fenn Mexico Hubert R Earl of Moose are preparing for & large Utah Central was being huilt from Phoenix Ariz Mrs Leona Standing Fielding Claude L Earl Mur- J' meeting here Monday at which Ogden to Salt Lake was Ella v Senator John J Davis of Pennsvl- sister Burk Merrill taugh Idaho and Mrs Vernlce "My ) vania director general will speak at the driving of the golden spike May Hansen Ogden UNITED ORDER Other supreme officials of the or- - at Promontory m 1869 She was just "Down at Sunset Arizonaon the iiave-ner ceau cer win pe witn nim- on tnetr way oia epougn 10 iim - jsi -- j r - - j I I £ff - l£ m w-ne- o 0f : : e ! STANDARD-EXAMINE- R Little Colorado river when the Mormons settled there in the 70's Lot Smith was president of thevlo- cal United Order This organization IN was a community affair Those who joined put their possessions at the i disposal of the head of the loca He Presented organization Then when the crops May Testify were harvested the profits were di Suspect With Fowl vided up and all shared alike For As Gift several years the order prospered NEW YORK July 21— CAP)— Then dissenters caused its downfall Jack Dempsey and sage hens may Under the United Order there were no persons very rich and there were figure Monday in the trial of James C McKay and William J Graham no poor" f The invitation which Mrs Ear: Reno Nev gambling and dance has preserved all these years as a hall sportsmen who are! charged memento of that famous-firs- t big with misusing the mails in a scheme ' celebration just ten years after the to defraud ' vauey was settled reads as follows former The heavyweight cham "Picnic Party at the Headwaters pion is expected to testify if he of Big Cottonwood' takes the stand that he visited Mc "Pres Brigham Young respectKay in the general hospital at VaL fully invites Allen Burk and famlejo Calif late in July 1931 and 4 ily to attend a plc-n- lc party at took him a sage hen for a gift the the lake inrBig Cottonwood Kan-yo- n time being fixed in the memory of on Friday 24th of July McKay because It was at the open REGULATIONS Ing of the sage hen season "You will-bT: I to start The defense already has used the required so as to pass the first mill about testimony of a bacteriologist and a 4 miles up the Kanyon before 12 navy doctor to prove that McKay o'clock on Thursday the 23rd as was In the hospital during the time no person will be allowed to pass that one of the victims of an In that point r after 2 o'clock p ' m ternational swindling ring was de of that day frauded at Reno "All persons are forbidden to McKay and Graham are accused smoke cigars or pipes or kindle as backers and political protectors fires at any place in the Kanyon of the fraud ring and in this con The engagement of Laurance Spelman Rockefeller son of Mr and except at the campground The nection government witnesses have Mrs John D Rockefeller Jr to Mary French has been announced bishops are requested to accompsaid they Introduced and guaran by Miss French's parents Mr and Mrs John French of New York any those Invited from their reteed accounts in the Riverside bank and Greenwich Conn Rockefeller is the youngest son of Mr and spective wards and see that each of Reno for victims who had been Mrs Rockefeller Jr and has just finished his first year at Harperson is well fitted for the trip lured there and subsequently took vard law school The wedding will take place In August (Asso with good substantial steady xo per cent oi tne-ioociated Press photo) teams wagons harness holdbacks The two men were and locks as capable of complet- - with Dempsey of the rest and one man was reported to ing the journey without repair fight in Reno July 4 1931 have drawn a gun and fired a shot and a' good driver so as not to It was brought out yesterday just week-enthe life indivldof at d endanger before the soldier: any v adjournment that As ual in addition to vast gambling en soldier promptly shattered the The "Bishops will before passing they owned front wheel of the automobile as the the first mill furnish a full and terprises SAN FRANCISCO July shares in Reno's stockade district ' v complete' list of all persons ac—Shots were exchanged between trio endeavored t6 escape After companying them from their replaced in the militia three men and a national guard jail the being men gave their names as spective wards and hand the same Maw Leaves On to the guard at the gate sentry on strike duty at the water William Langenhovel 40 George "Great Salt Lake City July 18 front here today The sentry ar Miller 42 and O Swart 44 Of 1857" Guard officers said a quantity of rested the men We note in the invitation the care Communist literature was found on Guard officers said the three men Swart AH three that was taken at that time to premen were-helfor SALT LAKE CITY July 21— (AP) vent- accidents and forest fires —State Senator Herbert B Maw approached jthe sentry in an auto investigation Brigham Young was well aware of eft today for a tour of southern mobile while the soldier was on duty the danger of fires in the mounto promote his candidacy for at Islais Creek The sentry prompt- - Birds "at tains hence the explicit orders for- Utah liberty In a pet"store in he Democrats nomination ' for y halted the men who began London pay no attention to a kitbidding smoking or kindling of United States senator ten which roams about the place at haranguing him fires except at the campgrounds The guard placed them under ar will The odd spelling of the word "kanyon" and the term "Great Salt Lake burn them if jiecessary In self de- in good usage in those City" were BOYLES E ' ' times But Johnston's army entered the The celebration began Thursday valley the next year and proved a the 23rd continued Friday the 24th boon to the Utah ' settlements for and on Saturday the 25th the the supply trains brought ' tons of people returned to the valley with goods and the army paid precious the ominous warning in their ears money for forage wood and supU of the armed forces heading over plies that the settlers sold them the plains They were a saddened And when the soldiers left great but determined group The joy of quantities of goods were sold for ' having survived ten years in the a fraction of their value and the wilderness was now turned to a Utah people found the army had zeal that knew" no bounds a de- greatly Denenttea tne economic termination to hold their homes or status of the territory A Rockefeller To Wed DEMPSEY MAY retired mm TRIAL ENTER CHAPLAIN DEA r " - i e r lonel Axton Was Born In Salt Lake City July 28 1870 WASHINGTON July AP) Co bnel John Thomas Axton formes ch: ef of chaplains for the United Ststes army retired died ' at his home here at 6 o'clock" last night lonel Axton born at Salt Lake Utah July 23 1870 was mada a jchaplain in the army in 1903 with the rank of captain He became a major in 1917 and was ap pointed chief of chaplains In 1920' He! held that post and rank until hewas retired in 1928 on account of disabilities in the line of duty From that-- ' time on he served as rhnn- laliji at Rutgers university He served in the Philippines-twi£- on the 'Mexican border for five years and at the tJort of m- barkatlon Hoboken N J dolonel Axton also officiated at thej interment of America's unknown and unidentified soldier at Arlington national park November 11 1921 He was awarded' the D S L in 1919 chevalier of the legion of honor In 1922 and the Groce Di jGuerra in 1922 He will be burled in Arlinzton cemetery Mondav but the exart time has not yet been set 21-(- t un high-yieldi- Sentry Makes Arrest Shots Are Fired ng 21-C- Tour Southern Utah d Warsaw Awaits Peak Of Flood Many Dead BOYLES HE WARSAW Julv 21— OTP)— War its low lying portions already flooded awaited in dread today the peak of flood waters from southern Poland Sixty-si- x more persons were add ed to a death toll of around 200 whein dikes broke between Snando-mle- rz and Sawwichost almost de stroying 30 villages and 'drivinar 13- 000 persons from their homes - Demands bv storm troonMn and marjchlng organizations continue to - seep snoe lactones busy or - f — — -5- - Germany h — m mrmh j 35 Plan rOrltleetingltlOnday f Moose convention Wednesday — i o Tuesday and ne malted her to see the jceremony at rxomonrory a recau now jeaious July 21— (AP)f-Clea- ance nner IS1B "In r- i on ' I I! - m davt T7C BOYLES Sale R3 o Bed Sets Genuine 1 i n Single Tub Model Regular $4995 Now 'iir"'n ©V7l3G i L ONARD Westinglioiise IT I mattress u El — - 'a- The o The - MATTRESSES Cotton-fille- d I —-- - u — —— - © © FmiEiinGEEEe-C- :' Steady-Kol- d Com- partment Beauty in Design — in I— mini - A o Electric Light Crisper THE COMPLETE REFRIGERA- TERMS mmi JWllMMlMliailWIiiii In' In 11 v -' - - ! - i f TOR EASY - All-Ste- el Cooling Unit All-Porcel- ain I ©pile Chill-Oni-Et- er Defroster 0 o Scientifically Planned Food © © BUY ONE NOW AT THE ? ilardwaro J '' Chromium !' '!' © Handy Latch Door Opener o Electric Light O Economic Defroster O Saper-Seale- d Cabinet ' o Ilermeticaliy Sealed Unit o Acid Resisting Porcelain Interior © Improved Convenient Shell T Spacing © FOR LIFETIME ENJOYMENT O or o Cold Chest 11 :3:'$59S: Len-A-D- © Ve'ge table 'SOU tmfag ! O VS SUMMONS COIL SPRING Limited Supply Easy Terms of the TWO WORLD'S FINEST ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS i Sale— Save $1000 We redeem Greea Your filled Stamps books are worth $20 here Save and get your earned discouht at— YOUR CHOICE Simmons bed and spring m Dexter Washers Allowance for Your Old Ice Box on Trade-i- n LESS THAN 2c A DAY ing paper -- Genuine ) I Extra Liberal e Bed $595 separately jj i PIONEER CELEBRATION SPECIALS You'll wonder how you've ever slept on that hard lumpy affair at home You'll almost go to sleep right in our store in BEAUTYREST'S downy depths The secret of its luxurious comfort? 837 tiny sensitive inner springs embedded in fluffy layers of felt give buoyant support yield to the curves and turns of your body completely relaxing every part which Why go on living with a makeshift mattress BEAU-TYRE just "happened" to you when you can have a ST for so little? It costs less than your mornold-tim- 1495 If'iiaifid-V- I '"3 Ji mean " Washer 5 Come into our store and take a test stretch on a Simmons BEATJTYREST and you'll see what we n Mrs M Stallard" who recently celebrated her hundredth birthday in Lyonshall England can read and sew without glasses j a i 1880 j xiaas saaa me urant with a crew seamen was under- of non-uni- u Li Look your mattress in the eye now did it get to be your mattress? You probably bought it years ago—maybe when you first started housekeeping with limited means —back in the days when mattresses were just mattresses And you've been hanging onto it ever since because a mattress is something that you can't exactly put into a waste basket Good advice to a lot of people would be: give your old mattress a kick in' the pants and go mattress-moder- n 1 reave sorjuaaua mis morning were refused by Saul Haas United States wixtwr vi customs ana me Dig passenger snip s departure was held II Did Your Mattress just happen to you? o) Ji ' JtSU 1 JLilrfS Arizona "About nine wagons and 100 head of cattle were taken along We travelled about 20 miles a day down through southern Utah were fer rled across Lee's ferry on jthe Col-up- "J orado river and then wentjidown to Springerville Ariz where we I r F7!D)Tg President John Taylor asked my father and us and some other families to go and settle in the American mall ptetsfor :esiaent urant scheduled to manned WE SAW TEliS I1USE I Was because I could notf go along too "Mr Earl and I were married in the Salt Lake temple October 18 Mail Liner Delayed As Crew Under-size- d 8XATTLE liK- - 1 mi )rUj!:)jynifUil:iii rl n- -a liii&i inuli flilimi' 1 saw! m w livl w § "O Idaho e ers Baer-Uzcud- - II -- 1 "H-T- - '""—I & delivery Anywhere " |