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Show 'wyf'" t' frt miiifL Jft&t. AaftlS ifeAkaiS - THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON, UTAH A4.4AAIAA LkkAkkiAUiAAA History in Stamps and Stamps in MONICA, CALIF. In o! dir to live quietly yjL care as much public n the the dispatch Mrs. and V.i'.dsor mar-sre- k wing their history of His History By. Lemuel F. Part on iA of g ' r. cal c. t '' f--- 4 cn,'w f0 e civic ?le, fayt'. If ' c 's- - S. Cobb jrvin lC. jj a c cl; i sci con epics, only forth c "plaining that one Aie cv i; o to the most private Without being an- - p'; ig cro.i Is. fyerica certainly the right rewlyweds tie jifor will stare at is honcy-tj-whe- re them, or yell at follow ask for autographs or pho--- s or interviews or try to eir clothes oil for souvenirs. ,r think j I can just famous where three spots j joay enjoy such immunity McKinley in the winter. the summer and in Valley traits r , arl Browder. ing Up ears it has been my regular om to give up something Lent. Last year I gave up turnips I never eat boiled anyhow and jokes about rl Browder. 1 against secession and both made the only choice which they could honorably make when their native state of Virginia left the Union. y give up dont quarrel Ke happens, Ks Sincerity. to be the outstanding expo-Ameriof the communist ent, which has done so much nan happiness and human countries that tried fs in the as Russia. Victory Dinners. 10 says New Dealers arent smart business men? That ictory dinner means a clear of $9170, figuring the food a head and the combined os at 30 cents, which, even if verage up to most is indeed a high valu- - five-ce- in Andy Jackson's day you pay off a campaign deficit cop poles and coon pelts. And t THE LAST MEETING Reproduction of the Painting, Proposed for the New Lee- - the erras Jefferson's time est pack mule in Virginia ,'t tote $100 worth of vittles. 'urallv Jeffersonian simplic-i- d Jacks anan thrift will be i. iamably the Republicans will suit with a nonvictory din-djhat- i'i shower for John 'n's Inn ? chest. Needy will wear Liberty Leaguers ! v thes, n,le the idea of a Maine and Ver-'w- ll hav-nad- ii'ii be sire ugly opposed, pressman Ham Fish will sueh L'urg his habit un-fi f economy's sake, they his name around hind part and sene him as two Signs of Spring, T here in .,nt sign of spring not the b rds coming back. 0ur 1 rJ don't flit away, go mue ..while, being practi-Residen- I U that even bragging case of a mug that this ( jfnap' lb ts - ui from e cl." a e, or, in r TC-aril- US 1. t 4 rf or1 w u,) I m and comes Easter egg and ' 7 ns a toy balloon d r circus day. Be-- " ' is never what cozy ocean and 1 following a chill u a ' s ' n 11 Jackson Stamp. portraits of Gen. Andrew Jackson and Gen. Winfield Scott in the ovals with view of Jacksons home, the Hermitage at Nashville, Tenn., between. The navy stamp pictured Commodore Stephen Decatur, hero of the War with the Barbary Pirates, and Commodore Thomas MacDon-oughero of the battle on Lake Champlain during the War of 1812, in the ovals against a background of naval vessels of the 1812 period. On February 18 the three-cen- t Army-Navseries was released in Washington. Both stamps honored Civil war heroes. On the army stamp appeared portraits of Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman on the left, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in the center and Gen. Philip T. Sheridan on the right. On the navy stamp appeared the portraits of Admirals David G. Farragut and David Porter with a battleship of the Civil war period between. Two Great Confederates. Last year President Roosevelt announced that a stamp bearing the portraits of Gen. Robert E. Lee and Gen. Stonewall1 Jack-sowas to be included in the series devoted to the Army-Navand the post heroes of office department recently issued a statement that the stamp was to be the next one placed on sale. The President s announcement was enthusiastically received in all parts of the country and particularly in the South where it was regarded as evidence that official Washington had forgotten the prejudices engendered by the war between the states and was recognizing the fact, which historians long ago recognized, that Lee and Jackson were two of the greatest soldiers in the history of this country. Now that time has healed the wounds of that war, both men have come to be revered almost as much in the North as in the South Both had previously served their country with distinction, both counselled h, 'I he bathing suits " t0 Rut middle-ageEL'vCS disporting on d f' sch n - he modern skimpies Uid, not to say grue- spectu ie, except to students adul imian leg, ned, the double-jointed- including full-calfe- , the the spav-ning, the heavy- ricose-veinethe H j . etc. f How r gets to think-- g babies and raw 't the only things tje exhibited on the I It VI g. COBB Service, nt The size medium sized Rayons should be pressed with a warm, but not hot iron. A hot iron will melt some synthetic ma- HOLLOW HORN BEAR Only Indian Chief Whose Portrait Has Ever Appeared on a Stamp. appointed second lieutenant of the police but was again compelled to resign on account of ill health. When General Crook was sent with a commission in 1889 to make an agreement with the Indians for the sale of their lands, Hollow Horn Bear was chosen by the Sioux as their speaker, since he was considered by his people to Le their best orator. Friend of Presidents. In later years lie became a n figure in Washington Besides the portraits of Pocahontas and Hollow Horn Bear there are only a few other instances in which the original inhabitants of this continent have been represented on our postage. The earliest use of an Indian subject appears to have been in 1875 when an idealized picture of Minnehaha, the fictitious heroine of Longfellows famous poem Hiawatha, was shown on the $60 periodical stamp. Several value.s of the Columbian series show minor Indian figures, most noteworthy of with an which are the Indian in the right panel of the which vignette and the shows Columbus piesenting natives at the court of Spain. one-ce- ten-ccn- Likewise, the series included several Indians in incidental pictures. The one-ceshowed Marquette with sevtrans-Mississip- pi nt four-cen- t, Indians hunting buffalo. The Jamestown issue had small oval medallions showing Indian value portraits, and the portrayed Pocahontas as its feature. The Hudson-Fultostamp of 1909 showed a minute Indian in as a a canoe in the one-ce- nt n d 1890-91- y 5 Leupp. He saw President T, ft become the big chief m 1,,, In February 1913 when gr ,nd was broken for the natinii.il Indian Memorial at Fort W.M .worth on Staten Island, L. I , Holovv Horn Bear was the leader t ' the 29 Indian chiefs, who toe!: part in the dedication exerc m . President Taft broke the g: mnd for the memorial and , - 1 o stepped ir came back, Hollow Horn forward from the gioup of a second chiefs and upturi.i bit of earth using a tf eh tone of Then he a buffalo for a sp ' !v to the in ir made a speech address of the In-- h ,t ux chief From New York t1" went to Washington to i c present POCAHONTAS The Indian Princess Who Was One of the Three Women to Be Honored by Having Her Picture Reproduced on a Stamp. of his typically Indian countenance. He w'as Chief Hollow Horn Bear of the Brule Sioux. Although Hollow Horn Bear never achieved the renown of such Sioux notables as Sitting or Bull, Red Cloud, Crazy Horse inhe was an e, teresting character. Eorn inm Sher1850 idan county, Nebraska, at war trail first his on went be the age of sixteen when lus father led a party agamst tl e Pawnees. Hollow During the next doradom many Horn Bear to. k part skum.sl.es against United States I s at tl e inauguration W.son. During this imon t! e cwnmrF o affaus and on the r f is t w ! resident " al'cd c f Ii dian U of the j j . THE FIRST POSTAGE STAMP Issued in Fngland in 1810. rative stamp showed an Indian as one of two figures in the central feature of the design. So the rumor that tl e post office department might issue a series of stamps honoring famous members of the Indian race as individuals has aroused the interest, not only of stamp collecwho tors but also of ate conscious of the part which these rhiefs and sachems and vvarriois, whoever they ore to be, have played in the history of our country. p Wrstern Nrw p iprr Union -- This conHorseradish Sauce diment gives the tang to hot roast beef. Mix together two of grated horseradish, one tablespoonful of brown sugar, a good pinch of salt, a teaspoon ful of made mustard and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Lastly, of cream, or add a quarter-pin- t the yolk of an egg and a little milk. tables-spoonfu- ls Dishes that have contained sugar or greasy articles should be soaked in hot water before washing. C Associated Newspapers. WNU Servtes. EMINENT DOCTORS WROTE THIS OPINION! "...colds result from add condition of the body... they prescribe ex- various alkalies cerpt from medical jour naL The ALKALINE FACTOR in LUDEN'S5 MENTHOL COUGH DROPS HELPS BUILD UP YOUR ALKALINE RESERVE Mans Full Development It i3 as impossible for the soul of man to grow and develop without love os it is for a flower to come to peifection without M. Cottrell. sun-light.-- Women in Middle-Lif- e Mr. Katherine French of 'I win Tails, Idaho, said t I was not feeling well durI had harding middle-life- . ly any strciiKth and waa I had terribly nervous. headache associated with functional disturbance and I would get hot and cold flushes. I used the Favorite Prescription and it stimulated my appetite and I came through the critical tuna of life feeling fine" Huy new I New tut, tabs. 50c. Liquid $1.00 & $1.35. SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY O Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio tor Every Room 200 Room 200 Bath .4 jl irriSfilHciSl h:.? Mexican Caballero. TRAIGHT Graustai k is the life story of Gen. Jose Gonalo Escobar, who nuy be n palliated by the Mexican deciee of amnesty for political exiles. He found his wife at a beauty contest a Texas contest, too. Sht was the famously beautiful Conception Gotldner of El Paso and Mexico City, The handsome, hard boiled and bucko General Escobar, stagi d m a long and glamorous plot of amour and fighting, was one of General Calles best oflici rs. He was the hero of the shelf of death bjttle in 1925, suppressing the Do La Huerta revolt. He suppressed the 1927 uprising and rode Into Mexico on a handsomely caparisoned white horse, with the bands playing and the crowds cheering, Two years later, he hid in a dump of soap weed, shed his gaudy uniform, medals and all, put on a peons soiled dungarees and strolled across the national boundary line under the eyes of his enemies. He had started a revolution of his own. It didnt jell. His beautiful wife traced him to a house in Prince Arthur street in Montreal. With a lawyer, she arrived to tell him she had started divorce proceedings. He could turn on charm by just pushing a button. Senora Escobar uiled into his arms, and it has hem a Ruth and Boaz story ever sinre. The divorce His prorr rdmfis were Withdrawn. enemies charged that he had tak-ta half mil ion geld pesos with him when he fled. A fore-groun- d steam-propelle- into holes. lie-up- five-ce- where he went frequently on missions to the Great White Father and he had a peixonal acClerquaintance with every' President foil to the for mote than thire decades. mont of Robert Fulton. The CaHe was a member of he Sioux rolina - Charleston commemo- delegation which called 1891upon to President Harrison in future the him with discuss status of the Sioux who had taken part in the . Ghost Dance upAfter riding in rising in President Roosevelts inaugural parade in 1905 Hollow Horn Bear, accompanied by four other chiefs, Geronimo of t1 e Apaches, Quanah Parker of the American Ilrnse of the and Lui'e Plume Sioux Ogallala of the Biackfcet, was i resented to Roosevelt by Coo missioner Dont treat your stockings carelessly. Put them on carefully, and be sure that feet and leg seams are straight. The slightest twist will alter the position of reinforced splicings, and wrinkles always run Anglo-Cathol- t, eral Indians, and the terials. Meet Viscount Halifax. INFORMED observers of British 1 politics tell me that Viscount Halifax, who fenced adroitly with the Germ. in Von Ribbentrop, has risen within the last year to power unsurpassed by that of any other one man in England that it was his inexorable decree that drove Edward from the throne. He is better known as Lord Irwin, former viceroy of India, in which office he disclosed a mastery of political subtleties never suspected in his years of comparative obscurity. He is six feet, two Inches tall, with a long, pallid, mclamholy face, broad forehead and big ingenious eyes, the cagiest, wariest and subtlest of all modern statesmen. His father was a fervid leader of the movement in England. In the son, this religious fervor has been sublimated in metaphysical politics. He is a Tory. It was believed he was willing to make a deal with Hiller, to divis t Germany eastward, but the void now is that the fascist threat to the Balearic islands and the Canary islands, on Englands lines of empire, had implanted in his mind Fume deep misgivings . about a Get man First. Was Minnehaha well-know- n 1861-6- three-cen- t nt y Lee-Jackso- n nti In addition to having the porof Lee and Jackson on the proposed stamp, it was suggested that the central design should be a reproduction of the painting The Last Meeting by Julio, which shows the two great commanders parting just before the Battle of Chancellorsville where Jackson received the wound which later proved fatal. This suggestion has the indorsement of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and if it is followed this stamp will be a memorial to the strong bond of affection and respect which existed between these two great soldiers and great men. Another suggested series of stamps which has been enthusiastically approved in many sections of the country is one that would honor outstanding members of the Indian race. So far only two Indians have had that distinction, and in only one of those two cases was it done to pay tribute to an individual. When the Jamestown series of commemoratives was issued in 1907 the stamp bore the portrait of Pocahontas, the heroine of the incident in which Capt. John Smith (so he said) was saved from death. Incidentally, Pocahontas was one of only three women whose faces have ever appeared on our stamps. Martha Washington was the first, as was befitting the first First Lady of the Land, and the other was Queen Isabella of Spain, whose picture adorned one of the Columbian series of 1893. The Typical Indian. The other member of the red race whose portrait you will find on a stamp (it was on the blue issue of 1922) w'as so honbecause he was esnot ored, pecially famous in our history but because of the artistic merit John Paul Jones, traits series was placed on sale. The army stamp showed Army-Nav- One gallon of coffee will serve Chocolate stains may be removed by washing in cold water or by soaking in boiling water to which borax or a little glycerin has been added. 4,000 Dr. Mi Kinley is a native of Emporia, Kan., educated in liberal arts and medicine at the University of Michigan. lie conlinurd his studies In bacteriology as the holder of a research fellowship rf the Pasteur institute of the University of Brussels. He gained eminence In his profession in teaching and research uoik at the University of Michigan, Baylor university and the college of physicians and surgeons of Columbia university. After his work in the Philippines, he was dean of the school of tropical medicine at Puerto Rico. He is a member of the International Leprosy association and the American Leprosy foundation. lie is an authority on the filterable virus, the author of several books In his field, including The Geography of Disand a member of many ease, learned societies. News from the Philippines is that chaulmoogra oil, the ancient Indian remedy, is proving increasingly effective at the Culion Island settlement, although it is not yet an absolute cure. But this, with the isolation of the germ, gives hope that the dreadful plague of mediaeval Christendom will soon be vanquished. stamp in the new army series. troops and in raids on the la- commissioners office he saw the borers who were building the rifle which had been taken from Union Pacific railroad west. Af- him when the military ordered ter the conquest of the Sioux in the confiscation of all Sioux arms 1876-7Hollow Horn Bi ar set- at the close of the Ghost Dance tled down on the Rosebud war. Hollow Horn Bear recogreservation in South Dakota nized the weapon by a rawhide where he became a staunch ad- wrapping on the barrel and it vocate of traveling the white was returned to him. mans road. This, however, was Hollow He was made captain of the Horn Bears last appearance in Indian police on that reservation Washington. He rode in President and in 1881 it fell to his lot to Wilsons inaugural parade but in arrest his predecessor, Crow the inclement weather of that Dog, for the murder of the great March day contracted a cold and Brule chief, Spotted Tail. Five the old chief who had defied years later he resigned and was death on countless war trails for more than half a century died of pneumonia in a Washington hospital on March 15, 1913. In addition to his portrait appearing on a stamp, a photograph of Hollow Horn Bear is said to have been the original for the portrait of the Indian chief which appeared on the five dollar bill, senes of 1899. Design for the commander of the Bon year before, I gave up (at page 2,749) and all Little Theater move-Th- e year before I gave up Sinclair as my spiritual guide 25 foity-three-ye- Homme Richard, and John Barry, commander of the Lexington, our two outstanding sea captains during the Revolution and between them a picture of typical warships of that period. On January 15 the two - cent est. ;ters political. this year I decided to of y, Starting fiotn scratch. Dr. McKinley, one of the cleverest of the G men who patrol the .fubmicro-sco- j ic w in Id, caught up with the outlaw in 20 years, lie is the old dean of medicine of George Washington university. II s announcement was made ns he arrived in Manila, where he was with the Rockefeller foundation in 1927 and 1928. He will conduct further research among the 6,000 lepers of the Culinn island leper colony. This woik will be in behalf of the General Leonard Wood Memorial fund nt island all the year round. z graven headlines years ago. nt nobody s!"lir in honored. All of these are oblong in shape and, in addition to the portraits of our military and naval heroes shown in ovals at the left and right of the stamp, they show in the center a view of some patriotic shrine or some historic American scene. For instance, the new one-cearmy stamp, placed on sale for the first time on December 15, bore a view of Mount Vernon, the home of George Washington, with portraits of Washington and Gen. Nathanael Greene, of Revolutionary war fame in the ovals. The new one-cenavy stamp showed por- ' x l Simultane-ousl- cups. Dr. Earl B. Me- - that would accompany a dessert Kinley announced the isola- - after a dinner. turn of the leprosy germ and When cieam will not whip, add Emil Ludwig published his the white of one egg and thoroughbiography of the Nile, where ly chill before whipping. the germ first was mentioned coun-tr- y daily every time he gets ready to mail a letter, in fact. For the United States Post Office department has begun issuing some new stamps, known as the Army-Nav- y series, which bear the portraits of heroes in both arms of the service, some of whom have never before been thus u.t Catches Fp With Outlaw Leprosy. VTEW YORK. months. hes going to the United be absorbing that knowledge sccl '4e Illiriy 7 To make lace look new, squeeze soapy water, then in cold water, and then in milk to stiffen it. Press on the wrong side with a faiily hot iron. Li hot, frrft tTi mrttnt tytytt? Medical during the coming And a secluded Household Questions WHOS NEWS THIS WEEK... By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HETHER he want3 to or not, the average American is going to learn a lot more about the n.ijtfeWindbOK. LIS !ra JS sasaiBtEidi, HOTEL Temple Square Rate 9 $1.50 to $3.00 The Hotel Temple Square ha at highly drsirnlilr, You will always find it Immto and ulatr, aunrrmely) comfortable, on ran there horoushly fore understand why thi hotel lai o. 1 agrn-alil.- HIGHLY IUXOMMT NDED You can also appreciate why t ft's a mark of distinction to slop f tht beautiful hottelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. -F- OUR ;f?OFM!LK OFMAGN ONE TASTY n CuruoM If rf w r C Nett t Scimcc Ft ..lures The Original Milk of Magnesia Waters Jli jffifigjftf |