Show to Hie IVIin- d- Ieter o it ENDERS0N ya4lt— WNtf 0 pall -- Word Completion Test exercise there ja the followingwords That is skeleton ten ire esCh case some of the letters the let- lave been omitted Study fill in the give“ and try to to make a common pissing letters yord 1 j3 pu-- ic U! lort i ye 1 itria 2 3 4 5 ’(kt 1 giN Ct ii ti 8 9 - r- ‘IK Answers 6 attract 7 public 8 amazement 9 country 10 industry fti-- nd property visible neglect support stipend Toreign Words ’and Phrases ‘tcticsj ft lion u Deeded l°r rq ) Dr coin patten dlecnj e Net 'umber 15 ms art IHM e Billet doux (F) A love letter Dum spiro spero (L) While j jive I hope (Part of motto of South Carolina) En bon train (F) In a fair way on the road to success (L) While Flagrante delicto committing the crime caught in act the Gosse (F) Street slang for i "child” “infant” Compare “kid” “kiddie’ and the Irish "gossoon” Hors de propos (F) the purpose irrelevant Iterum (L) Again Not to ft ki totk in t Ml fcttt axitlv Ad(rik till i (F) Amour propre mitt inyaw aini in M MS JW5 that Fail ‘Pluil£p4Wcu Stomach Quickly To Alkalize Jedediah Smith the Real “Pathfinder” arvloo He opened the firet ' gateway 'through the mountains the South Pass later to be “threaded by unnumbered thousands of home seekers and from it he was to make and four trails one far to the north one far to the northwest on far to the west one far to the southwest He was the herald of the Western American empire the makers of which would follow his trails and settle in farms and towns and cities from the mountains to the sea ” And all this he accomplished during his short life of only thirty - three years’ Jeck'diah Strong Smith was his name and not unfittingly has he been called the "American Ulysses Cut nearly a century was to elapse before a Homer should arise to tell the tale of his wanderings and sing the glory of hts In the meantime achievement another and lesser man following the trail which he had blazed would be tail'd as the “Pathfinder" John C Fremont was the man but by every rule of simple justice that title belongs to Jedediah Stiong Smith Considenng the importance of Smith in the history of the fur extrade and of it seems strange that ploration publication of a biography of this giant of the Old West should have been so long delayed But it was not until this year that 8AS LsaSias Smith was engaged as hunter for the expedition and although that relieved him of the ardous task of helping drag the keelboat they (“cordelling” called it) up the Big Muddy hjs duties exposed him constantly to attack from either supposedly friendly or openly hostile Indians However he successfully avoided those dangers during the trip up the river as he did similar dangers that winter when he was hunter for the post which Major at the Henry had established mouth of the Yellowstone ’Diah won his Young spurs as an Indian fighter during the attack by the Arikaras (or Rees) on Ashley’s party the next year He also won the high regard of that leader by being one of the two men who volunteered for the task of traversing the 300 danger-fillemiles to get help from Major Henry on the Yellowstone As a result he became a captain of the company of trappers who joined with Col Henry Leavenworth in his punitive expedition against the Rees and he also became one of Ash- -' '' " Icaptains' ln teyi fndS't trusted the conduct of the trapping and trading business which that energetic leader carried on during the next three years in the Rocky Mountains Smith During widened his acquaintance among the trappers and fur traders who were already famous or would become famous later— such men n as Jim Bridger Joe Me£k Sublette and Moses reAnd the Harris (“Black”) markable thing is that such men as these prized the friendship and acknowledged the right to leadership of this slender beardless young Yankee He became their leader in still another sense in 1826 when Ashley who had made a modest fortune out of the fur business in three years decided to retire So he sold his stock of goods his company and everything he owned in the mounWilliam Subtains to Smith lette and David E Jackson The new firm immediately divided up the duties of the business Smith became the finder of new fur trails Sublette was in charge of field operations and Jackson was in charge of the company business As a finder of new fur country Smith immediately set off upon his amazing wanderings He started west out of the Salt Lake basin with 15 men They passed the Great Salt Lake and headed southwest-warThis route for California took them across the blazing desert and the hardships which they suffered on this journey were terrific But they won this time rU(( nads te it jro out tbiy mu imlk It item from hick thrat froa Pro A wlft IMS land On all sides people are learning that the way to gain almost incredibly quick relief from stomach condition arising from overacidity is to alkaline the stomach quickly with Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia You take either two teaspoons of the liquid Phillips' after meals or two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets Almost instantly "acid indigestion” goes gas from hyperacidity “arid headaches” — from in food or smoking— and nausea are relieved Try this Phillips way if yon have any acid stomach upsets Yon will be surprised at results Get either the fiquid “Phillips” or the remarkable not Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets Only 25 for a big box of tablets at drug stores' AUO :Q rORMt M TABUT tabUt tiny a th quinleet ( taupoonfui t twain m Phillips1 rScnisw hair falling dandruff— bald spotst for They call sue of 1) !guur Glover’S Mao Medicine followed by a shampoo withGlorer’l - Medicated Soap Scut tod? ec a — youi Btlbf ( G loess's tog Uniatait ix Cuwim hsJt i IN UTAH AND er!y blood its Ufl whrt J" lined ingb jfnr1 (Prs JOE MEEK such a portrait of him has been available and the complete story of the real “Pathfinder” told by an authority on the He is Maurice S Sullisubject van whose “Jedediah Smith Trader and Trail Breaker” was published recently by the Press Inc of New of the Pioneers York This book is based upon a copy of Smith’a diary which Sullivan unearthed after a search lasting many years He found it in the possession of a remote branch of Smith’s family and with it was a map of the Pathfinder’s travels Yankee Pioneers Smith was born in the little vilN Y on January Jericho of lage 8r 1799 of a line of “tall vigorous stern God fearing Yankees” who had “reared successive ten New erations In Massachusetts Hampshire and Connecticut and pushed their way westward and aouthwestward conquering the land as they went” He was the sixth of 14 children all of whom had their schooling under a Connecticut schoolmaster bearof Tiing the impressive name tus Gordon Vespasian Simons The westward urge struck One young ’Diah Smith early factor in it was his reading an account of the explorations of Lewis and Clark At the age of he was hunting and twenty-onRock river trapping near the and in the rapids in Illinois strode into St 1822 he of spring a and pack Louis bearing a rifle are The contents of that pack consisted of a few Interesting-Ind keepsakes provisions books including a Bible a collection of Wesleyan hymns an “Evidences of Christianity of Rolun English translation “Ancient History” and the Lewis to and Clark book In the years associated come he would be Chawith some of the roughest America racters in the history of who — trappers and fur traders man nor nor God neither feared But either for had reverence some quality In the young Yanthat kee would to Impress them they would gladly wilhntf and leader him as their untold hard follow him through i d m TK2 Etta tni °9n’ Finest 3S0 t ir”c:3 One of Utah’s Best loom 350 atfc t® Room T - 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Lobby Piteous Service Com0ft Convenience 'll be found at HOta “Cou°rGDCN- CUNC l W BEN LOMOND - wT°rV R h MS ships and dangers Jedediah Smith The Odyssey of ! to SL Loui tom It fur cpiul m!n tn lt Place straws in lunch boxes when cocoa or milk are Included The children will delight in using them during the lunch period of the world in that spring of 1822 There he joined the famous Ashley - Henry expedition which proposed to go up the Missouri and tap the rich fur resources of its headwaters and its tributaries and by doing so he became associated with men whose names would loom large in the future history of the Old West-G- en William H Ashley Maj Andrew Henry William L SubJim Beckwourth lette Hugh Glass and Thomas Fitzpatrick (“Fitz of the Broken Hand’’) m ioti(V Leftover boiled rice served with cream sugar and topped with Jelly usually appeals to the children for lunch dessert It’s very nourishing too f iSMa tariS' :laani( ioS y M Paper white narcissi planted In a bowl containing pebbles and water will last from November to March if bulbs are renewed as those in bloom fade out ELMO SCOTT WATSON E L)ISCO ERED the central route from the Rocky mountains to the Pacific he was the first white man to cross the future state of Nevada the first to trav-j- j erse Utah from north to south and from east to west e "a' ’e lirst American to enter California by the overlaml route thus its future change foreshadowing t mas ers e was the first white man to scale the High Sierras and e irst to explore the Pacific sloje (rpm San ’Diego to Vancouver By "JIM BRIDGE through safely snd from a mountain top Smith looked far “Jedediah far away to the horizon The land ended there was water and an What island In a vast ocean the through passed thoughts mind of ’Diah Smith as he gazed upon this wonder we can only conjecture He may have thought of the Greeks of whom be had read who after long wandering came Joyfully at last to the sea He may have thought of Balboa ’silent upon a peak Use scissors for cutting up leftover fish meat or fowl This also applies iq leftover vegetables Sometimes when the gravy from roasts is not quite as dark as you want it to be try adding a little Just bouquet enough to color it kitchen C Bell Sjrndu ate — NU Senlcc I)r Tierc’ Favorite Preemption make weak women atrong Sold No alcohol by drugguU in tablet or liquid— Adv Intellect snd Heart would nut undervalue the culbut would exalt the culture of the heart I ture of the Intellect JEDEDIAH STRONG SMITH in Darien’ Certainly he thought of the vision which had drawn him through suffering and danger the first white man to cross the continent from the bank of the Mississippi to the California shore “Now lay the second gate open the high road charted westward the course of empire saw its way In the young Yankee hunter sitting his horse on the rim of the world lay the end of hope for ’EnglAfidor' for’ Russia to talte California for Spain to regain it or for Mexico to keep its slender hold" Ills Odyssey Begins So Jedediah Smith came to the end of his first remarkable journey But it was only the beginning of others even more rein - many markable respects When he arrived in San Diego looked the Spanish authorities with considerable suspicion on this invader who might be coming to spy out their fair country for those westwardpushing Americans who had so recently extended their domain from the Mississippi river to the crest of the Rockies After spending some time at San Diego where hq purchased Smith led his men supplies still seeking good beaver streams Failing to find them on the San Joaquin and the Merced rivers he pushed on to the Stanislaus Then he turned his eyes eastward where the Sierra Nevada range lifted its peaks toward the sky Leaving most of his party on the Stanislaus Smith with two companions seven horses and two pack mules set out to scale the range For eight days they fought uie snowdrifts and finally emerged on the eastern side But ahead of them was the Nevada desert worse even than the Mojave For 20 days they marched across that inferno and by the time they had finally conquered it they had eaten all of their horses but one and gaunt with hunger they managed to reach the summer rendezvous of the trappers on Bear lake near the present Lakewood Utah Instinct The Pathfinder Smith had traveled a great circle over country never before trod by white men But his unerring pathfinder instinct had led him straight to his goal Undaunted by the experiences he had been through he set out again after only a short rest this time with 19 men and two Indian women This time the Spanish fearing no good of Smith's explorations had incited the Indians against him and at the Mojave villages beset bis small party Ten of his men were killed the two squawa carried off to captivity All hia belongings were lost With- the remnants of his party he reached California To make matters worse the Spaniards clapped Smith in Jail at San Jose and later moved him to Monterey But he Anally succeeded in getting his freedom by signing a paper that he would leave the ' country Immediately - North he headed with his party for 300 miles to the American Fork Beaver here were plentiful The traps were daily yielding rich catches and a small fortune in furs was being gathered Into Oregon British territory the party went for these fur trad- - ers had little regard for political boundaries They encamped on the Umpqua river There one day while Smith was away tha Indians fell on the camp and virtually wiped it out Only two men The Indians took the escaped entire outfit and that rich haul of furs Smith came back to find everything gone One of the men who had escaped joined him there and - the two headed farther north for Fort Vancouver There strangely enough the good Dr greeted them warmly although the Hudson’s Bay company frowned on invasions of its fur empire McLoughlin sent out parties and made the Indians disgorge the loot they had obtained in the massacre of the camp Then he paid Smith 920000 for the lot The other refugee from the camp reached the fort and in March of 1829 Smith and his two companions set out up the Columbia to drop over the divide and make his way back to the mountains where his company was operating He joined them this time in Pierre's Hole and there the three partners were united for the first time in two years The following year Sublette and Jackson well satisfied with their returns from tha fur trade decided to retire and enter the Santa Fe trade Don't let tfJinter catch yon unprepared The Fatal Decision Loading their wagons with 190 packs of furs Smith Jackson and Sublette headed for St Louis passing out of dominance In tha CHANGE TO DR JOHN McLOLGnUN fur trade which had given them all Independence As It turned out this was a fatal decision so far as Smith was concerned In the spring of 1831 ha led a caravan out of Independence Mo headed for Santa Fe One morning in May his men found themselves entering a barren stretch of country between tha Arkansas and the Cimarron rivers It was known by tha Mexicans as “La Jornada” (tha journey) with tha implication that it might become a journey of death And that was just what it was for Jedediah Smith After three days of thirst Smith rode ahead to find water At last he found it—ajLuddy hole in the dry wash of the Cimarron As he drank a war party of Comanche Indians surrounded him Young ’Diah Smith made the peace sign to them But their intention was not peace So under the stabbing lances of the Comanltes the career of this American Ulysses this “Pathfinder” came to an end on May 27 1831 STATS 17tJTBR Ql fju 1 real O Wtticr NfLpr Vmlem Hull frit 35 t £ :vt |