OCR Text |
Show . The various sectors of the AsiatOld ASrlatio City ic side of the Pacific basin Containa Munano lias beefithe center, of ba rfi a of 7.500,000 square miles.;' the Venetian glass industry for 700 those of tbe American side nearly years! Here was the art school 3.POO.OOO square miles altogether that gave us Bellini, Tintoretto, .10,000,000 square milss of ocean, Gidrgione and Titian, but thgre is ef the land surface, little to se6 now besides the glass ofer of the entire earth. . collection at the Palazzo Communal; and the decaying eaUiedrak THE STORV OE A FAMOUS ElUD. one-fift- h , I SM '.'By ELMO PEAK of , trans-Missou- ' . . ' . . Started . Coat pockets, as is almost universally knqwn, ere the outcome of the .siit in the coat which, was made many years ago to permit thg sword handle to prbtrudd. There is an equally gpod explanation for practically every little touch iu the mans wardrobe. - and one. naturally t'liihkis of one of those Vendettas that have made notorious certain sections .of the mountain Country in West Virgini-a- 'Tenri nessee or Kentucky. Yet the soil Qf the. (West is well as that of the East in Urtics past .has been dyed red' with some of the bitterest feuds in American history. . ednsidered impossible ip r tnan' to produce s temperature, of absolute 'eero- - which ,i minus 273.18 degrees the Centigra'de scale; but experiments hgvo attained told within p tiny fraction of one degree of the goal it- Is fierp e family i Abovq Absolute- - Zer . V. ., SCOTT; WAtSON" , . Iow Pockets SsofateFolitiC Griat, The famed Greek philosopher, Socratps,. was, as great .Jn .polifields f mortics as he was als and- philosophy; unfortunately; be did not leaVe any written-recordof hitf thbughts oq this sub- . - In the1 West most of these feuds' wrre 'range. .wars. fight? between two ''factions for controf'of' dcsiabl'e grazing country jfor their herds or flocks rather than intcrnecfnc family conflicts. Dutstanding'among them were the- Lincoln County war in New Mexico in thfe early pightic$,'and the Johnson County war, or Rustler war," in Wypirtitig irt 1892. Tiut.ta' Arizona the. ditin-ctioof having a civil'conflict fn which Was gocjj both, a family vendetta :as fierce as any. ever carried 'on ampng the mountaineers of the past and a range war as bloody 'as Any mr staged on the plains or in. the mountains of th.e West. feud was c.arricd b.n'.n a locality known iml, of all places,-thi' ' I . ts ricasant 'Valley in-th- e - s - ject - . ; Cartiers Landing Place 400 years agd Jacques Car Over Some if th Bash Knife Cowboys Part in the Feud. driven uer,. by a fierce storm, took tri unknown bay, and goan the. Grahams, apd the Tewks-- , In August his son, Hampton' refuge, Malo navigator burys were partners In rustling ' Blevanq, aooompanied by four. ing ashore, the opera thins, then, fell out nver.--th- Hash Knif$ cowboys and three . named his landing place Gaspe. divlsioii of the Spoils; There '.frem the Graham ranch" started' Boston Tea Tarty Tea Costly in search for him. They stopped b$ some element of truth may Jf you have- ever, read Zane.$T ' in both stories but the fact reTea was sold' lor approximately Middleton ranch where; .the pt or Man To Last the Grey's with a. ferocity and ruthlefisness 33- a pound, depending an the qualimains that (lie hostility beand Ed Tewksthey found Ji-.pane' Cbottciged The Man. Kith'. almost unparalleled in the histwo adher-- . time f the Boston .Tea the which factions and of Some their tween, ty, bury 'ers, .you have Taught glimpses tory of the West.- BcfcJre it wns ents. .Hot Words between the two Partyj and the tax was 3 pence developed might not slowly of the Pleasant Valley war evert ended phe family, the Grahams, have bur.st into the flame of parties were followed immedi,' about 8 cents) per pound. . though nc.ither novel follows the was completely wiped-ouand of open warfare if It had- not been and' norby to ately blazing feud- in detail pretends their allies, the Blevans, there for an event which took Cultivation of: Sympathy .place when the fighting was. Over give an: historically accurate ac- tfns only-one- ' Burvivor among the SO years ago this autumn, Just To and cultivate sympathy you must B.levans another Hampton count of it. Biit the war. has its father pnd five sons.. Of the t.hree ' Forrest It thus i records two and others he among It. cowboyywere.dead .living beings and thinkhistorianEarle Forrest, Tewksbury brothers, one was of their party wounded. This was ing about them; to cultivate adwhose-booThd . are Arizona's Dark and 'killed driving Tewksbufyd during tho wnr,one died the 'Mogol-lon- the first white Rians blood spilled miration, amqng beautiful 'things published re-- a natural death and the third, sheep over the rim-oBloody- Ground, in thg Pleasant Valley war but and looking at them... who'stood trial for the rtiurder'of v it Was only thp beginning. mouth' From to from the last Graham, lived on- to mqu'th Next Jim Hpuck, a Tewksbury .' Applna Way Built 312- ft. C..' become known ps the hero' of ranch to rnrich- throughout all ' ' & The Appian Way was built about man r killed young Billy Graham F.r Zane. Greys novel and the last pleasant Valley this message 312. B. C, by Appiils Claudius- Cae-cuv was and carried .in w for tl'ashing . that Tom by man of the Picosabt Valley war.! young revenge ' This paved road ran from' cowboys' in Taul Revere style: Grahrt.m.led a party of cattlemen ' Three ' . Sons. Rome Capua to Brindisi. through to : effect an was like electric The attack the. Tewksbury' ranch. '! The fierceness of .the vendetta sffodc and more In than and .the battle which siege dangerous may- be attributed in part to tlio a .chnrge'-.oDwelling Houses Limited. dynamite. For .years followed John Tewksbury, .Jr., t; ' M;; character of one of the families and one f his followers was this According to old Chinese .Imperi.Involved in. it. For the Tewks,' in the wilderness of centralkilled before the attack of the al regulations, no 'building once ocWere burys and had suecessfully held their cowboys was beaten off. From cupied by an emperor could be A jthe., sons of John D. yange against the encroachments that time on it wds a war to the used as a dwelling house.' ' X Tewksbury, $r a native of Bos- of sheepmen from the north who death, j:s ' :' . . ' Man Unchanged' ton who went to California in tlie were too to scatter only eager book Forrests is filled withthe of the gold rushps, Settled days The man of 30, 000 years ago had detail's of the various .gunfights, in Humboldt. copnty and. there same number of genes as he the ' ambushes,' lynchings, and -married an Indian woman. She has today and therefore was, .bio which marked the progbecame the mother .of three sons, the. same. 'logically, ress of the' war durihg the next John; James and Edwin, who two- years. It is a record oi alhad grown (o young manhood, Meaning ef Nonage44 most unbelievable ferocity and when the elder Tewks,jury setis a legal term deNopage cruelty, yet its- dark pages are fining the period' of life before- one tled .in. Pleasant yalley Ri 1?8.0, ! relieved at times by the chronicle . As for the other to look after proponents 'in of .deeds f high courage pnd is legally eld enough this bloody conflict, Tom and own. property,.one' loyal devotion on the part of both they were born on men and women. For. the 'wives a farm near Booue, Iowa,, went of some of the clansmen plpyed to California' in the severities and a prominent part in the war. . in 1812 located in Pleasant Vali"x ' ? By the end of 1888. the war was COMMODORE r. OWENS Tom was tle oldest, and ley, over. Jim Virtually because of the personal onmity Tewksbury had died of tuberculosis.John cently by' thip Caxton- Printers, .that later developed between the Ltd. of Caldwell, Idaho, ie the Grahams and the Ai Graham, and Charley Blevans first attempt to tell the whole he became ' the .Tewksburys, had been killed' in p fight 'with a acknowledged V,. story of that' dark- prtge" in the lender around whom posse headed. by .Sheriff the .cgttle-'4 1 annals of the Southwest. In tho t of Sheriff k-.'Yavapai county. meq rallied invaded sheep Forrest Mr. says: Commodore Owens of Apache preface the valley, Tom Graham is ' .The rieasant Valley. vendetta county .had had his famous gun in fiction of ' the . vendetta that swept through the: Tont'o' ris the lender of the riistle.rs that' duel in Holbrook In Which Andy Basin country in Central 'AriCooper (Blpvans), Sam Houston swarmed the mountains', zona during the latter 1880's a r.ufTlurv through Blev'pns and their brother-in-laqncf killer 'of 'the worst was one of the most sanMose Roberts, had been ' killed be further' type. Nothing bitter and and John Blevans waS in jail. range' from ihe truth; for he Wus guinary ' feuds the old West EDWIN TEWIvSClT.y. a quiet, peaceful man nnd honest Triumph of the Tewksburys. .. knew. Its ferocity and hatreds in. all bis . dealings. .Even after their In tlie meantime .Toro 'Graham fiopks Oder the layuriAnt were rivaled only by the bloody the invasion of war. made and his young bride sheep ' had;mariied battlejwH "SsaBslnations of certain he refused to take hdriinn .grass of this beautiful' land. had. at last prevailed upon him -- the Lincoln county war 'In New. Ilarstily thos'o- cattlemen and to take-ulife; and hrs restraining hapd , farming ndar Tcmpe. Mexico ten years before, but. .held, his followers in check until their .;cowboys saddled . their Ed a few folTewksbury It Is doubtful, even with all its . the. first blood . spilled .byttie horses and rode out to invosti-ght'- lowers .wer leftand to.' their enjoy o! terrorism, .If the .'number' Perhaps it was only' a ru- hollow triumph as winnors of the Tewksbury, forces.-- ' made further casuthere the mor killed after all; but with their .own-eye- war. equaled had 'learned But, alties in Pleasant Valley. Jlpth they could see them in tlie lessoii aridthey they blood were born, of distance like a gi'eat mass of feuds, .and attempts to bring sheep over thq both were fought in defiance of maggots rdlling down over the rimi of ihe Mogolions. Apparently the law of the .land until they trail from the .rim and swurming the feud was c(ver. Then' art sudOut Out oyer the valfcV at the foot after burned themselves' in.to it burst flame denly .again. most .of the paiticIpauU Im'd of Mogolions like' a plague On August 2., 1892 'Tom Graof locust-s- 'greedily, devouring the either been killed or had grown ham, while hauling grain from weary of strife. Even the well-- . grass, tearing it out by .the roots ; his Hatfield known raneh, was shot, of .feud cloud a and McCoy . ;dust already that held the West Virginia and drifted lip' in the' lazy morning neat' the Double Butte school-housEd Tewksbury arid John air .from Ihe desert' '.heyKentucky mountains under a ' were "accused f die murRhodes of for twenterror almost .' reign ty years did not surpass- the .'The die was chst.- - The. Tewks-- . der and placed undor arrest. Durlifelong hatreds born of the'-' Burys wanted wiir. Well, they ing the preliminary- hearing of . rieasant Valie'y. war. . .would get it; all they wanted the accusation against Rhodes in justice court the old' .feiid The family element in this feiuj and more than they had flared up again when Mrs. furnished spirit for." . pras by the Tewksburys Tom Graham tried .to shoot and the Grahams, the chief op' Cattlemen vs. Sheepmen. , Rhodes down in tlie courtroom ponents 'in the. war. 'But pthors So tire .cattlemen and rustier but failed in the.attcmpt. Rhodes into drawn were R, s6m.e by forget- their Own differences .choice-ariwps discharged from custody; some by force Joined, foiH-e'to resist- - the uv wer ' Which they vaston of thejr. common enemy, had- no control. For jn this the slreepmen. Daggs Brothers conflict' 'there . wr'e neu. A AtWAt&HbVulr- - ed . ; Who Took e s - - - "TUNE IN e - at"-th- Like to Barter . Indians ' With' the Indians of Mexico a S. lL IX - .d com-bin- i Benedictine Monastery About, half way between Rome and Naples Is Monte Ca6sio. Fourteen centuries have passed since 5f Benedict, the monk, established a- "monastery therv the beginning of the widespread and. influential Benedictine order. . Mon. Wed. 9:30 A.M. 'Service For The American Home .barg- a custom and a sport aining-is-, and they, are unhappy if the customer will not bargain.- .'.They begin bargaining with the" statement, This is the asking price; you of fer - NANCY FINCH - t - - 'six-shoote- rs - - . flow We Perspire . The amount of perspiration normally discharged by a healthy person varies from' about one and a half to five pints . a day. The amount Increases with exer-cis- temperature. . and-hig- e ' and her friendly visit with the modern homemaker . Utah Power & Light Co. sl - . " - I m - . - - s. .' F&& . Half-Bree- d - I - f it- ' ml All little-valle- - half-whi- te Arizona half-Indian, . . xO1 assassinations irJ Uttlil - - " M ?$ - tm - , John-Graham- w.v;fc,M I - - . - - Mul-ven- , oij I 4 u Borrowing Thoughts To borrow anothers thought, said. Hi Ho,, the 'sage of ChinaFirst Trip to America . town,' is like' borrowing anothCharles Dickens, the 'famous novers raiment. However handsome it may. be, it will not precisely, fit elist, made his Voyage to America ' . 'aboard the Britannia, the. first ybqr personality." , r steamship ever 'operated by the ' and . Space .Cunard Line, in middle pt the last Eternity ' ' When you'have explained space century. , . ' said Hi Ho, the apd . eternity, ' . The'.rhocbe . page of Chinatown, you may- claim a familiar flycatch. The to have learned the first .two letters "in the Immense alphabet of knowloften called peewee is about er, ' seven inches long, grayish olive , . edge." brown- above, with' 'a dark crown, ' Bringing Happiness wings and tail,' apd with white put ' When, persons qnly wish for the er tail feathers; when and of another,, happiness .' . . Boss Is Useless they-- never pass a day without can how be a they Dap aint a. heap o usefulness doing kindness, no way," said Uncle Eben, .to otherwise than happy? . be expected- fum de. man who ' Synthetic Jewels Old wants to be boss cause he aint t pro- never learnt ao regular kind of Synthetic jewels ' duced a century ago whan the job. . , V- - - - - , - - - wore-firs- - - '? v'v- . - ih V' IV, .C. , pictured 'ever . - . p e. r made-no-furthe- - , from-ambus- h e. - left-behind.- , - - pijr-gnin- ed - TM precious eyesiglit of yours is valuable beyond price. Yop wouldnt lose it for all tbe mone.y fn tbe world , . , s - -- trals, ' ta of. Flagstaff, at 'that, time the ' men in northern sheep leading Arizona, 'needed' net-- range ,Ior , Among, the- - others who. w.cre dragged Into it .or voluntarily took' up arms were several men already noted, or soon tobp notorious-, ip tile tfnnals of. the Wild West. There 'was Tom Pickett;, who had beep a warri&r tvifh Billy the . Kid in the Lincoln County war in New Mexico but who was then a 'cowboy fcfr the famous Hash Knifb outfit. Tfiero was Charley- Buthet, frontiersman and a gupfighter fn the' wil'd days of Dodge City, Kan. And there was the famous Torti Horn, scout aud packer in the - Apache campaigns, later, a stock detective on the- Wyoming ranges and destined to.' be tlirt central figure in one of the most baffling murder mysteries in the- history . of the West. - - . A Wild West Sheriff. Among the law officers who tried unsuccessfully to quell the feud was the famous Commodore Perry Owens, the long - haired sheriff of Apache county, a bizarre figure who might have stepped out of the pages of a dime novel thriller and who, during the course of the feud, was the survivor of one of the most amazing gunfights in the history of the Old West. And these were only a few of the antagonists in a war waged theif- yvoolies.' They hn'd heard pf tle trouble between the Grahams and tire Tewksburys, and decided to tiyn it to dnrir ad- And yet you are taking serious chances of, when it ' impairing your lighting-ihot what it should be. . - MRS; THOMAS II. GRAIIAM restraint impossible. But he hag been held .'responsible all these year? for khe acts ct others. . .A Short Trigger Man, ' .Chief among these, others were tlie allies of the Grph'ams, the Blevans, wh6 was known in Arizona as. Andy Cooper, mainly-beenura tshoriff back in Texas, -- e where Ihe Blevans came from, fpr him. Copper, or Blevans, was noted as a sho: trigger man, a killer by instinct, pnd he. soon became the leader of the rustlers who preyed upon the cattle herds in that part of Arizona. The origins of the feud ire wrapped in mystery. Various reasons have been given for the hatred which existed between the Tewksburys and the Grahams but none of them can he fully substantiated. One story says that a woman was at the bottom of it, that the attentions of a man In one of the factions for the wife of a man in the other faction started It. Another says that w'as-looldn- g breaking the united rnnlvS of the cattlemen in Flqa-par- it Valley nnd open;that rich grazing land for. their $hecp. So they made a deal .with tire Tewksburys to send a band of sheep into rieasant Valley under the protection ot the Tewksbury feuns and share profits with them. The cattlemen ..immediately rallied to defend their grazing lands and Andy .Cooper, the short trigger nran, proposed armed men to to lead a party-owipe out the sheep and their herders. But Tom Graham held him in check, hoping to be able to scare off the sheep, ir.eq without loss of life or destruction of property. However, the reckless cowboys soon got out of hand and in February, 1837, they drew first blood by killing a Navajo Indian sheepherder. Soon afterwards the sheep were withdrawn from the valley but the peace which came to Pleasant Valley one. was a short-live- d Old Man Then Blevans, father of the Blevans boys, allies of the Grahams, disappeared and was never again heard from. vantage by- .,,,. i : s i . . . - A . - , Atisyliii TIIpMAS f ,n. - x- . . Make seeing safe in your home! Be Taisto ypur eyes and the eyes of your family! . It will cost you rio thing to have your home lighting measured. Phone for orteof our trained home lighting advisors to call on you. - She will gladly check up your light, with a scientific instrument and give you thq re- -, suits of her survey. GRAIIAM e Then the long buttle to convict Tewksbury began. Found guilty of the. murder, Tewksbury obtained a new trial on a technicality. and in .the second trial in 1895 the jury disagreed. After the passing of another year, the prosecution; evidently believing that a conviction would now be impossible, filed a motion to dismiss the charge. When this was granted on March 16, 1896, the curtain fell on the last act of the bitterest blood feud in the history of the old West a story that has become a' legend of old Arizonas cattleland. Wrstrni l!nin. See Your Dealer or UTAH POWER S. LIGHT CO. ' .' |