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Show r THE PROVO POST NOTICES LEGAL Probata and guardianship notice Consult County Clerk or the respective signers for farther information. f SHERIFF'S SALE North 23 degrees IE minutes West, 83 feet; thence North 56 degrees 45 mlmtues east, 797.E feet to the West side of State Road; thence South 47 degrees 45 minutes Bast, 119 feet; thence South 1 degrees . 2 minutes East, 871.7 feet to beginning. Said sale will be held at publie auction at the door of the County Court House, Provo, Utah, on the 24th day of March, 1923, at the hour of 12:30 oclock p. m. of said day. Said property will be struck off to the highest bidder for cash, and proper conveyance to the purchaser at said sale executed by the county By the Order of the Board of County Commissioners of Utah Coun ty, Utah. Entered February 19, 1923. Attest: MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1923 GETTING EVEN STORIES OF INDIANS QREAT Scott By Ebno r Ceprrlcht. list. WMtra . i Sale. To be sold at Sheriff's Sale oh the 30th day of March, A. D. 1923, at the Mates Om fbwst htt dMctlsta tto snrM wfttset tetitac. Another Unequalled Product I00F ia 6AB0EX CAKE CHOCOLATE For Icings and Flavorings. At Your Qrocers i. e. McDonald chocolate cs. Satt Late front door of the Court House in Provo City, Utah, at the hour of 11 oclock a. m the following ' deJAMBS T. GARDNER, scribed real estate located in Utah Chairman. county, Utah, i: 9 WALLACE M. HALES, The Southwest quarter of the Caloric ( SgsiI Southwest quarter of Section Nine ' First Feb 21, 1923. publication, (9), Township Ten (10) South, Last Mar. 1923. 21, publication. Range One (1) West, Salt Lake MeJudge Now, young man, I am goridian, together with all water ing to discharge you, but I advise rights, priTileges and appurtenances you to keep away from bad company NOTICE TO WATER USERS thereunto belonging. hereafter. Office, Purchase price payable in lawful State Engineer's Young Man Thank you, sir. You ; Salt Lake City, Utah, money of the United States. see me here again, wont March 1923. 9, Dated this 7th day of March, 1923. Notice is S. D. that given hereby J. D. BOYD, Powelson, whose postoffice address Sheriff of Utah County, Utah, HIS SINGLE VICE is Goshen;' Utah, has made' applicaBy D. R. ELLERTSON, tion in accordance with the requireDeputy Sheriff. STEWART, STEWART & ments of Sec. 8, Chapter 67, Session ALEXANDER, Laws of Utah; 1919, to change the Attorneys for Plaintiff. of diversion and nature of use point First publication, March 7, 1923. of Last publication, April 7, 1923. (.2) of a Sec. Ft. of water from an unnamed spring in Utah County, Utah. Said water was to have been diverted at the point NOTICE TO CREDITORS of issuance of the spring, which point bears S. 64 deg. E. 5811 ft. from Estate of William R. Baxter, de the S. E. corner of Sec. 28, Townceased. ship 10 South, Range 2 West, Salt Creditors will present claims with Lake Base and Meridian and used vouchers to the undersigned at Go for stock watering purposes. It is shen, Utah county, Utah, or to Booth now desired to allow .the water to & Brockbank, attorneys, rooms 1 flow down the natural channel of the 13 and 14 Knight building, - Provo spring to a point S. 86 deg. 53 min. Utah, on or before the 28th day of W. 5347 ft. from the S. V corner of Sec. 26, township and range aforeApril, A. D. 1923 J .GRANT BAXTER, said, where it will be diverted and Philippa Yes; Billys a good Administrator. a distance of 500 ft. andLer. He has one bad habit. He smokes Dated February 26, 1923. there used for stock watering and do- - cigarettes. BOOTH & BROCBANK, mestic purposes. This application is Flossie That s nothing. Most men Attorneys. designated in the State Engineer's First publication, Feb. 26, 1923. office as No. a700. J em , Philippa But they re my clgayett Last publication, Mar. 26, 1923. All protests against the granting of . said application, stating the rea-- 1 he smokes, sons therefor, must be made by affi davit in duplicate, accompanied with NOTICE OF APPLICATION MIXING PRESCRIPTIONS a fee of $1.00, and filed in this ofDISINCORPORATE In the Fourth Judicial District fice within thirty ( SO ) days after the Court of the State of tJtah, in and completion of the publication of thls notice. for Utah County. R. E. CALDWELL, In the matter of the Dissolution State Engineer. of Paysonian Publishing Company, a Date of first publication, March Notice of application 12, 1923. Date of completion of corporation. to disincorporate. Notice is hereby given that Pay- publication, April 9, 1923. sonian Publishing Company, Is a NOTICE TO WATER USERS. corporation formed under the laws tor Utah State Engineers Office . .oLihe State of Utah, in and Salt Lake City, Utah, County, and has tiled a petition March 2. 1923. praying to be allowed to disincorNotice Is hereby given that Mafy porate and dissolve, and that Monday, the 2rd day of April, 1923, at Zabrlskle, whose postoffice address 10:00 oclock a. m. ot said day, or Is Springvnlle, Utah, has made apas soon thereafter as counsel can plication In accordance with the rebe heard, has f been appointed as the quirements of the Compiled Laws of The Doctor If you indulge In some time, and the court room of said Utah, 1917, as amended by the SesDistrict Court in and for the County sion Laws of Utah, 1919, to appro- cheerful recreation youll live longer. of Utah, as the place in which said priate One (lf4Sec. F. of water from Go and see the new Moonshine comtwo unnamed springs In Utah Coun- edy at the Pleasure palace. application is to be heard. In Witness Whereof, I have here- ty, .Utah. Said springs issue at The Patient Js It funny? unto set my hand and affixed the points as follows: No. 1, at a point The Doctor Youll die laughing seal of said Fourth District Court of N. 48 deg. 30 min. W. 2717 ft. from at it. 28, Townthe State of Utah, in and for Utah the S.7 E. corner of Sec. 3 East, Salt South, of ship Range 26th December, this day County, AT THE DANCE Lake Base and Meridian; and No. 2, 1922. N. 50 deg. 50 min. W. 2850.5 ft. from WALLACE M. HALES, the same corner. The water from Clerk. (Seal) both springs will be conveyed in a First publication, Feb. 26, 1923. line a distance of 1250 ft. and pipe Last publication, April 9, 1923. there used during the entire year for bathing resort purposes. After PUBLIC NOTICE been so used, the water will Publie notice is hereby given of having be returned to the natural channel at the intention of the Board of County a point N. 52 deg. 40 min. W. 3970 (Commissioners of Utah County, ft. from the S. E. corner of. Sec. 28, at Utah, tcrell public auction at the 'township and range aforesaid. This! door of the County Court House at application is designated in the State office as No. 9195. Provo, Utah County, Utah, the fol- - Engineers All protests against the granting described lands, lowing of said stating the reaapplication, Beginning 2630.7 feet West and 223 feet North from the corner of sons therefor, must be made by affiSections 16, 17, 20 and 21, Town- davit in duplicate, accompanied with of $1.04, and filed in this ofship 7 South, Range 3 East,6 7S. de-L. aficefeewithin the B. and M.; thence South thirty (30) days after of this of the completion publication 39 573 feet minutes West, grees Nell Im afraid Im losing color to the Denver, & Rio Grande West- notice. E. R. Belle. CALDWELL, terribly. thence ern Railroad State You are perspiring a good y Engineer. Belle aid of East side the along Date of first publication. Mar. 5, deal, my dear. North 22 degrees West, l523. Date of completion of publi- 300 feet; thence North 25 degrees 16 minutes West, 200 feet; thence cation, April 2, 1923 BOUND TO IMPROVE New tat to-w- - Glasses at Wholesale EXAMINATION two-tent- hs broth-convey- 5 v f . t f j I to-w- it: right-of-wa- S3, 00 You pay $3.00 ter have your examined, and get your glasses for the same price you would have to pay any wholesale optical comeyes pany in the state. ed I v DR. PETERSON With Anderberg, Inc. 36 West Center Phone 52 I HOUSE PAINTED inside and out, from top to bottom. AT LESS EXPENSE than you could do it yourself. REASON : The best of materials and a thorough knowledge of their use. W. R. Scott Phone 683-THE PAINT MAN 369 West 2nd North W PROVO TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Typewriters Repaired, Bought and Sold. Repairing a specialty. All work guaranteed. PHONE 207-W y; . FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING WORK CARLOAD,' WAGONLOAD OR BUCKETFUL, its all GUARANTEED Get our prices on town work and long distance trips. one to us. We selFcoal of the best quality In any quan- PROVO TRANSFER of course if you tity cheaper, the carload; cheap order by enough If you buy . in smaller it out as quantities. Figure you may, best coal at best & TAXI CO. Phone 665 prices here. Smoot & Spafford PHONE 17 I - '1 It--- .J. .Mother (to frightened son) Officer, my little son here Is swearing badly. Policeman Practice makes perfect, mum hell soon Improve! MOVING THE TIMBER LINE -i ; 1 T Our fitting of glasses and examination is done by the latest scientific method and expert skill. Headblurred sight reache, 105 W. Center Utah Timber & Coal Company f90 West Fifth North. Phone 232 CASTLE GATE KING CLEAR CREEK BLACK HAWK ROYAL STANDARD Lamp, Nat and Slack Kindling, Lumber, Shingles, Roofing and Cement A Square Deal to Every Patron eye-strai- n, moved. . Absolute Results Guaranteed. t DR. G. H. HEINDSELMAN 1 Witha Heindselman Optical and Jewelry Co. S Broken Lenses Replaced. Union. Mrs. Blusox Sour husband Is quite a "highbrdw, is he not? Mrs. Baldwin He is not. Only, since he lost his hair you cant tell where his brow ends and his dome egins. BAKER & BAKER Attorneys and Collection Counselors-at-La- w and Adjustments Everywhere 108 West Center Provo, Utah ? XT average school histories assert America has been victorious in all of her wars. But they are strangely silent about a conflict In which one man defied the power of the United States and dictated his own terms of peace. That man was Red Cloud (Makpiya Luta), chief of the Ogallala Sioux. When government commissioners sought the right to build forts along the Bozeman trail to the Montana gold fields, Red Cloud steadfastly opposed this encroachment on the choicest hunting grounds of the Sioux. In a council of his people he declared: Dakotas, I am for war! Col. H. B. Carrington entered Wyoming, nevertheless, to build the forts and Red Cloud sent him this defiant message: I shall stand in the trail. A war followed In which the Ogallala leader killed 81 soldiers under Colonel Fetterman near Fort Phil Kearney. This loss was avenged the next year when Red Cloud lost half of the 3,000 warriors whom he sent against 32 soldiers In a wagon box corral. Despite this reverse Red Cloud remained master of the situation. In 1868 he delivered his ultimatum to a peace commission. The forts must be abandoned and all further attempts to open the Montana road must cease. More than that, he fixed the ooun-darle- s of the Sioux country to suit himself. The commissioners agreed to every demand, for the Ogallala chief refused even to meet them until the garrisons had actually been withdrawn. His victory was complete. From the day he signed the treaty he kept his promise to live at peace with whites. Ninety-on- e years old, blind, almost deaf, he sits dreaming of the past, writes one who visited him No wonder he Is irritated by then. the Idle Information seeker. Who would be called back from the dreams of his youth? Slrhtless and infirm, he Is reliving the days of his youth when he sat on his herse as king, th pride of the great Sioux nation. To his ears must come the ar of the hunt as the countless bison herd, like a tidal wave, rolls by. And again the great day of his life, when his band swept down on the hapless Fetterman troep. Even now his heart, must seem to stand still as he lives over again that fearful day of the Wagon Box fight, when he hurled the pick of the Sioux nation against the riflemen. On December 10, 1909, the old mans dreams ended and Red Cloud, the greatest war chief of the Sioux, died. THE We endeavor to show sympathy and consideration in everything we do in connection with burials we conduct. We understand perfectly the nervous strain there is at such times and treat every circumstance and every act with the utmost consideration. This fe an item that does not appear in -- our bill. Our charges are for actual work and materials only. Hatch Undertaking Company Phone 532 Service Economy . Have Your Freight Shipped Between PROVO AND SALT LAKE via THE UTAH CENTRAL TRUCK LINE PROMPT SERVICE WE HAUL HOUSEHOLD GOODS red-blanket- right-of-wa- - Nwappr RED CLOUD VICTOR IN AN AMERICAN WAR - In the District Court, in and for the County of Salt Lake, State of Utah. Utah Credit Adjustment Association, a corporation, plaintiff, rs. R. P. Radlch, defendant. Sheriffs , Watson V- - ' ' When Ordering, Designate Oar Line PHONE Eat at STORIES OF QREAT INDIANS By Elmo Scoff Watson Copyright, CHIEFS 1922, Weatarn Newspaper Union. 74 - Email's omuit REGULAR DINNER From 11:30 to 7:30 40c and 50c SPECIAL 75c STEAK, r Short Orders Half Block North of Fountain Phone 820 EMIL NELSON, Prop. NAME WAS , Sioux war of 1866-6-7 DURING the chief of the Ogallalas was a man known to his people as Tashunka Kokipapl. Once a careless interpreter translated this name Into as English and this title, with its implication of cowardice, stuck with him through history. Accustomed as the white man was to curious Indian names, this one was particqlarly interesting and many attempts were made to explain it. The literal interpretation that he feared his own horses was scarcely compll-mentor- y to a war chief of the Ogallala Sioux. Then there was a story that he owned a great many horses which he was constantly afraid of losing and that once when the Shoshones attacked his camp he left his family In the hands of the enemy to rufi off his horses. More creditable was the interpretation of his being such a great chieftain that even the sight of his horses Inspired fear In the hearts of his enemies. The true Interpretation of his name, as given by his son, was He Whose Fear Horse They (literally : Ta, horse-- ; kokipapl, his ; shunka, arose from the This fear they it). fact that he had a vicious pony. His English name is an example not only of the frequent poor translation of Indian names b the whites but also of the fact that some Insignificant incident may be the decidIning factor In naming a great dian warrior. retained his position as head chief of the Ogallala until 1873. At his death In the late 708 the name passed on to his son, who was prominent dur1890-9ing Ghost Dance troubles of After the troubles were over a Washington newspaper correspondent was sent to Interview The correspondent took an Interpreter with him to the chiefs asked them tepee. to dinner. They ate. Then wanting to do the right thing but not knowing whether It was proper to tip a big Indian chief, the newspaper man dropped three silver dollars into the hands of the chiefs wife and had his interpreter say : In my country a compliment to a mans wife is thought a double compliment. The interpreter repeated the statewho to ment came and the left tepee rose, grunted, back witl four more wives ! 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